We're having a new driveway poured. 1. It's smelly and noisy, we won't be able to use the driveway until they're done, and Batdog is upset. 2. My side yard is full of half-naked, muscular young men.
And He shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain; for the former things are passed away. ~ Revelations 21:4
Batdog and I were in line at the Post Office when a small voice piped up "Look, mommy - that grandma has a puppy!" Of course when I told Brian he laughed.
Nothing that grieves us can be called little; by the eternal laws of proportion a child's loss of a doll and a king's loss of a crown are events of the same size. ~ Mark Twain
Compared to Ireland, Brian got off easy. I visited only two yarn shops. The first was in Verona, a tiny but memorable shop named after the owner, Jenny Klaer.
The selection is amazing for the amount of space she has, and she carries vegetable-dyed merino from Dr Valentina Ferrarini. Why oh why didn't I buy more?
In a moment of pure serendipity, when I strolled back to the Piazza dei Signori after getting not nearly enough yarn, there was a demonstration of yarn spinning and dying with none other than Dr Ferrarini herself showing off her plants and her process.
The second shop was a chain called Tricot Cafe in Padua, and offered a variety of quilting, knitting, and beadwork supplies. I resisted temptation too successfully, I'm afraid. I only got the book. The bag came from the street market in San Gimignano. Other than the yarn and some ecclesiastical necessities (rosary from the Vatican for a nephew who is being confirmed, etc), I didn't buy a lot; a couple of cheap scarves from street vendors in Mantua and Florence, the obligatory refrigerator magnets, a tablecloth. Of all the towns we saw (Rome, Florence, Monteriggioni, San Gimignano, Florence, Pisa, Mantua, Verona and Venice), I liked Mantua the best only because it seemed such a personable and friendly town. If it weren't for the cobblestones (original, knobby, extremely difficult to walk on), I could see myself living there. UPDATE: The lavender is laceweight 100% merino and is going to be either a stole or a shawl in a lace stitch. The grey and the variegated are sock yarns and are going to be...socks. I'm thinking of trying these socks for the grey. Dr Ferrarini's merino is 200 meters and I have no clue what to make that will not be too plain (ie stockinette) and still show off the color gradations. I wonder if she does mail order and how much it will run me to order two more skeins.