No, the two don’t exactly relate to each other. It snowed Sunday morning. Like, the powder kind of snow that I’ve only seen maybe twice in my lifetime. I’m only saying that because there has to be a time before yesterday when I’ve seen snow like this, but I can’t think of one. When Nate was making his snowman, it looked like he was rolling up a carpet. Seriously. It was the weird-freakiest thing. If you’d like a ton of “Seattle family in the snow” pictures, accompanied by my semi-sarcastic commentary, click the link at the end of this post. For knitting content, stay right here.
This is my white hat. It is finished. Please have mercy on me and don’t ask me how I made it. I can tell you generally, but I have no desire to even try to walk you through the decreases. At least not today. I don’t want to have to think that much. But if you’re dying to know, I’ll do my best. (If you want to see it better, there’s a link to a monster-big version of the side shot in my sidebar).
But it’s pretty, no? I was hoping, because the stitch pattern has strands that you pick up and pass over, that the edge around my face would be scalloped. It wasn’t, so my good friend Gayle crocheted a soft, scalloped edge around it for me. I like it a lot. I wanted a somewhat dainty, feminine white hat, and that’s what I have.
I was planning to call it “white hat” and be done, but Nate wasn’t content. He feels that since we named Hayden, all my hats need a name, and a woman’s name at that. (His first suggestion was Maddie. For those of you in the know, I thought you’d enjoy that). I left the naming to him, and while working on a secret project, he came up with Esther Williams. Well, he came up with Esther, and when I protested on account of not wanting my hat named after the “artist formerly known as Madonna”, he clarified. Apparently, Esther Williams was an actor in the 40’s or thereabouts, who was known for her synchronized swimming. It started to dawn on me as he began shifting his weight and looking uncomfortable, why he chose Esther. Yeah, after telling me that my hat sort of resembles her swimming cap, he left the room. Rather quickly in fact. The stinker. So, Esther Williams it is.
As promised, here’s the snow adventure of a Seattle family that quite obviously doesn’t make it to the mountains much.
January 9th, 2005 at 11:06 pm
Ah! As soon as I saw the photos of you with your pigtails, I thought “Poor Miss Elsa”!! I just love that hat!! It is so pretty and feminine! I sure hope you can post how you did it, it is just lovely!! And yes, I can see the resemblence to the swim caps of yester year. When I was little, you HAD to wear such in public swimming pools. It IS a pretty white, you could always call it Edelweiss, haha!
Isn’t that funny, you have all that snow, and we have had rain! What’s a totoro?
January 9th, 2005 at 11:07 pm
Love the hat, I love feminine pretty things but alas, I cannot pull them off too often.
The snow pictures are hilarious!
January 10th, 2005 at 1:29 am
I’m jealous! We got nothing down here in Portland.
January 10th, 2005 at 2:13 am
I love the name Esther Williams for your hat. I would consider it a compliment.
As a side note I knitted up and gifted two more Haydens for Christmas. They were big hits.
January 10th, 2005 at 7:01 am
The little photo essay on your snow day was adorable. As for the hat being named Esther Williams, take it as a compliment; Esther herself was a babe and she aged well :-).
January 10th, 2005 at 8:13 am
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
I would have died laughing if you had named it Maddie…hee, I love being in “the know”! I’ll have to mention this to her, since I don’t see a comment from her.
BTW…the hat really is pretty, and Gayle did a nice job on the crocheted trim.
January 10th, 2005 at 10:22 am
I love all the hat names and Esther is lovely!
January 10th, 2005 at 3:33 pm
Jenny- I think Edelweiss is a GREAT name! Totoro is a Japanese fictional character, and there is a cartoon movie about a couple of sisters who meet a huge one, who is King of the Forest. It’s a great story.
Thanks, everyone!