Last night I accomplished something I've been trying to learn to do for years: making a granny stitch rectangle. I've tried about a dozen different printed versions that never turned out right; read blog posts that made no sense to me, and attempted it on my own a dozen different ways with no luck. This is a beginner crochet pattern, too, so it really annoyed me that I couldn't figure it out. I learn best by watching someone else and imitating what they do, so I found a video by a Canadian maker that showed step by step how to work this simple pattern. Following along proved ridiculously easy. Now I finally get it. This isn't the time of life when I am happy abut what I can do. It's more about trying to hang onto what I can already do in the face of diminishing abilities and vanishing dexterity. Learning how to do this pattern really gave me a nice spiritual boost. If you want to learn how to do the same, here's the video.
I finally got around to measuring all the fabric that came in my yarn & fabric lot. The pretty silk-like synthetic linings totalled 5-2/3 yards. I also got 4-3/4 yards of this dark gray denim synthetic that would make some nice trousers or shorts. I found a brand new pillowcase wrapped up with the twin-size flat sheet, and together they add up to almost four yards. Finally, this gray synthetic suiting fabric measured five yards, certainly enough to make a jacket and skirt. All together the fabric in the lot totalled 28.64 yards, much more that I'd imagined. I'd price it at $3.00 a yard resale, or $85.92. The twelve skeins and nine scrap balls that came with the fabric would be worth about $65.00 resale; add that in and the lot value totals $150.92. I paid $8.99 for everything. Savings: $141.93.