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[personal profile] treeskin
Today is six weeks until the plant sale. I've waved goodbye to the idea of getting enough sleep between now and then.

Not much news, just busy. Not even an interesting busy, really. I go, I work, I go home, I crash. (I ought to be working now, but no noe else is here yet, so that gives me a little play-time.) Had lots of volunteers and general people all over yesterday, so I did lots of running, without feeling like I got anywhere.

By's mostly got the pattern for a rather nice pair of shoes for me figured out. (Making the pattern involved tracing my foot, then smooshing tin foil over my foot to get the correct shape for the upper. I told people he was trying to protect me from aliens with foot fetishes.) Since the pattern seems to be working on my smaller feet, he's going to walk me through the steps on getting the pattern for his feet. (Can't do it on yourself, it comes out wrong.) Hopefully, this will give him some decent, period-looking footwear to wear to Norman next week.

Been knitting on my fluted bannister socks, trying to get them off the needles so I can start something else. I ought to have those finished soon-ish; I'm half done with the foot on the second sock, as of last night. Next up will be the same socks, for Cammie (should go fast, since mine fit her perfectly, and I'll have mine to measure off of). I ought to finish up the second pair of pale green alpaca gloves, so I can have those needles back to start Turkish socks on. I'm trying to resist starting another "frivolous" project, like the skull-and-crossbones lace that I've been mulling over for weeks. (I even found some yarn in the stash that would work for some trial runs.)

I think that staying home and being quiet is on the weekend's agenda; maybe I'll get some quality time with my string.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 03:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iarraidh.livejournal.com
A tip about foot-smooshing...

The way Bald Mountain and the other custom boot places do it.
1 - You don an expendable tube sock.
2 - several strips of duct tape are laid flat, then a second layer on top of this one, perpendicular
3 - You step onto this 'sole' and keep your weight on it
4 - the outline is traced, and the excess cut off
5 - more strips are laid down, long enogh to wrap around your foot
6 - you step down again, now with the duct tape sole
7 - the ends are wrapped up and firmly burnished onto the sock in the shape of your foot/leg
8 - enough more duct tape is applied, following the 'grain' or direction of the area being covered. Several layers are used to build up form in the approximate density of boot leather
9 - the duct tape sock boot is then carefully cut along the line where your fastening device or gusset will be on the finished product

You end up with a damned good prototype for the footgear to be made, from which to take the pattern

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 06:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] treeskin.livejournal.com
We've tried that method. It's not foolproof...the sock will still contract when you get it off your leg and foot, even with the tape. (And, that does assume that you've got a sock that fits well enough to do that with. Most of mine don't.)

This also seemed a bit faster.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iarraidh.livejournal.com
Well that's why you build up layers of the tape, to maintain the form.
Then the elasticity of the sock is nulified.

But, it was just a suggestion :)

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