First of all, in mentioning the length of P.S. in my earlier posts (93 feet and 9 inches, soon to be over ONE HUNDRED!), I forgot to mention that the DIAMETER is now over 18 inches (here’s proof):
Kind of fun to see it against one of my very first photos:
Next:
Project Scarf has been to TWO theatrical productions over the past two days!
Last night, P.S. came with me and sat on a blanket at Tallman Mountain State Park in Orangetown, NY, where my star actor son played the Duke of Exeter in Shakespeare’s Henry V. This amazing production was put on by the Children’s Shakespeare Theater, (they can also be found on Facebook) directed by the magical Diana Green. Everyone did a great job, and it was a blissful setting for knitting and theater-going, with PERFECT weather. If you’d like to see pictures of these talented young thespians, click here.
Then this afternoon, Project Scarf had the pleasure of accompanying me to the Penguin Repertory Theater in Stony Point, where we saw Shipwrecked! It will be running through September 4th, and tickets are selling fast, so if you are local, get yours soon! Many thanks to Artistic Director Joe Brancato and Executive Director Andrew M. Horn (all around cool, talented guys) for inviting us as their guests today.
Wow, our “roll” is just 12,8 m long. But we still work on it. It is posted on ravelry: http://ravel.me/knittingcouple/5bg04
Should take a current photo soon.
very cool, and thank you so much!
One question:
Is your piece entirely one knit piece, or do you have seams between each section?
The reason I ask is that For Project Scarf I am attaching pieces in separate scarf length sections (with cast on and bound off edges), so that I will be able to disassemble it easily into individual scarves when the Project is finished. I am using a contrasting, brightly colored yarn for the seam so we can easily see where sections are joined. This means I won’t have to deal with cutting/sewing when I take it apart to donate the scarves. Individual scarves are of varying lengths…
p.s. if you have already created one long continuously knit piece, don’t worry about it- we’ll make it work! I will still be honored to take it. But if from here on out you could do individual scarf lengths, that would be much appreciated!
Again – thank you for joining Project Scarf.
Knit On,
Betsy
[…] Feel free to use up scraps like Betsy. It looks like that. […]
Ups. Sorry. I’ll fix that.
Annette
Hope it’s not too much trouble – your scarf is so beautiful! Thanks again, Betsy
[…] kann natürlich auch Reste verstricken, so wie Betsy das macht. Das sieht dann so […]