intro

Dec. 5th, 2018 08:46 pm
mouthlikeawolf: spliced color and black & white screen cap of Sameen Shaw from the TV show Person of Interest (Default)
[personal profile] mouthlikeawolf
what's up, I'm J. I'm a big fan of lists so here's a little bit about me in the form of a list

I love:
- mountains
- women
- sweaters
- YA lit, especially fantasy. big fan of fantasy romance (ex: Sarah j Maas) or straight up fantasy (ex: Tamora Pierce, Kristen Cashore, Traci Chee) or well executed contemporary fiction (ex: E. Lockhart)
- gay repression or homoerotic repression, such as Dead Poet's Society, A Separate Peace, The Eagle, etc. big fan of that
- knitting! just starting out but I'm a HUGE fan
- the social network, enough said.
- about 10 hockey players but the rest of the NHL has BEEN on notice. if I had to pick a team, it would be The Leafs
- over analyzing media like a true English major

I dislike:
- chemistry
- spiders
- oysters. I'm sorry, they're just too salty for me? not a fan.
- George Eliot. Listen. I'm sorry. I'm honestly too basic to appreciate her, I think? I love the Brontës and I love Dickens but oh my god I'd rather die than reread The Mill on the Floss.
- most literary fiction? exception: Days Without End. truly a masterpiece.

I am:
- dog owner
- writer
- kind of private online
- student (until June)
- disabled
- queer
- not used to dreamwidth but I'm here bc Tumblr is dying and pillowfort doesn't seem to have their shit together. please bear with me! <3

Date: 2018-12-06 06:12 am (UTC)
rivendellrose: (dance)
From: [personal profile] rivendellrose
Hey, welcome! If you're still figuring Dreamwidth out, I believe [personal profile] melannen has a good guide written up on how to make conversation happen on DW that might be useful to you.

As a fellow recovering English major, I respect your feelings on George Eliot and raise you a big fat "Whoops, I never got around to her." Despite taking departmental honors in English, even. I also avoided the hell out of James Joyce, and am not a fan of Hemingway (except "A Moveable Feast," which I vaguely recall liking).

What kind of knitting do you like to do?

Date: 2018-12-07 03:33 am (UTC)
rivendellrose: (dance)
From: [personal profile] rivendellrose
No worries at all! There's also this post that has a ton of stuff, some of which I didn't even know (and I've been on this site for years, and migrated from the very similar but, in the end, sadly evil Livejournal).

I was really surprised by how much I enjoyed a class on modern poetry that I took! I like T.S. Eliot a lot, and also Auden -- I still have part of "Roman Wall Blues" (this site has autoplay video ads sometimes, so be careful) memorized from that class, and that was 12 years ago. Most of the stuff I really loved wound up being things like Austen and Shakespeare that I already knew I liked, though, or more contemporary stuff that I've now forgotten the name of.

Congrats! By gauge do you mean that your loops aren't super even in size? That happens to most new knitters, I think, and it seems to always work itself out as you get used to holding the yarn. Or if you mean figuring out how big something is going to be, you get a sense for that over time, too. Supposedly the thing to do to be sure is to knit up a little square swatch and wash and block it (pin it out to try to stretch the pattern out evenly), but I will be honest and say that I almost never actually do that, and it's only bit me in the butt a few times over the years. ;) I'm working on a little drawstring bag, and a heavy cardigan that, realistically, won't get finished until summer.

Date: 2018-12-13 04:27 am (UTC)
rivendellrose: (dance)
From: [personal profile] rivendellrose
Oh, man, I always meant to read Wide Sargasso Sea and never got around to it. I should really get back to that soon. Is the Engels for a theory class? We read so many bonkers theorists for my lit theory class, and most of them have kind of blurred together by now, but I remember sort of enjoying what a total troll Nietzsche was. I always got the sense he was just sort of yelling things to upset people, you know?

Sweaters are totally doable! The current cardigan was actually a sweater first, but it was waaaaaay too warm for where I live (Seattle is pretty mild, and we don't visit my in-laws in Alaska often enough for me to have a sweater just for when we go up there!), so I pulled the whole thing out and started over with a new pattern. It's light gray, nothing fancy, but it'll be very cozy when it's done. Once you've got the basics down, Tin Can Knits has a lot of good patterns and their Basics collection is meant to sort of lead newcomers through increasingly complicated concepts -- the pattern pages include tutorials for techniques that are new to that pattern. The Flax sweater and the Harvest cardigan are the ones I did / am doing again. Oh, and the first time? Consider doing a baby size even if you don't have a kid you could give it to, because it'll let you get through the basic concepts a lot quicker than you will at adult size. You can always pull it out and reuse the yarn after, if you don't have a niece or nephew or something who'll appreciate a sweater!

And oh my gosh, don't apologize for delayed comments. Half the time mine are delayed just because I looked at the email, thought "Oh, great, I'll reply to that after I've done some work!" and then forgot to come back to it until days later. Also GOOD LUCK ON FINALS!

Date: 2018-12-06 06:13 am (UTC)
maharlika: just another stolen relic (Default)
From: [personal profile] maharlika
hi i love u!!!! ♥

Date: 2018-12-06 09:58 pm (UTC)
whimsicalimages: (Default)
From: [personal profile] whimsicalimages
love u & welcome.. i haven't used dw since the decline and fall of LJ so i'm functionally starting over here too. sigh

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mouthlikeawolf: spliced color and black & white screen cap of Sameen Shaw from the TV show Person of Interest (Default)
mouthlikeawolf

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