Laura Ricketts Designs

"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands..."

Laura Ricketts Designs is a personal and business website for Laura Ricketts, hand-knitwear designer, author, teacher, crafter, mother and wife.

National Tragedy

Today, my brother-in-law ran the Boston Marathon.​

He decided just last week that he was going to do it.  He qualified by having an incredible time in his first marathon in NY, a year and a half ago. I found out about his intent when my aunt Cynda texted me for their contact info.  I was in on the loop right away.​ I got to tell her how good he is, as he is rather quiet about his accomplishments.

So, today I texted right away after I got on BAA.org and checked his progress at the 15k mark when he had been at it just over an hour. The phone app on my sister and aunt's phones wasn't working, and they quickly became dependent on my texts to know where he was at. 

They were in the Metro on their way to Heartbreak Hill along with my 10 and 8 year old nieces; the hill is around the 35K marker of the race.​

What kind of weird world do we live in?​ I live in Indiana and I was the ground team. I tracked him kilometer after kilometer.  I texted his whereabouts. He's "right near I-95." He's at the "30k mark!" Now, "At 33.33K.  You guys still with me?!" "He's very near Boston College.  Maybe past Crosby road?"... "34.5k"... "Lake Street."

They finally saw him.  He stopped and drank my uncle's water... My response: "Are you able to follow him on your devices so I should shut up?"​

"No keep sending!"

I was in it to the bitter end. By this time, the five fans had hopped on the Boston Metro to try to make it to the finish line.  To Copley.​  He had 7k to run, but he ran it faster than they could ride a Metro, and...

They never made it.​

No, they were not injured.  Thank God, everyone is alright, although my niece said it was the scariest day of her life. They got stuck in underground traffic, and were late to the finish line, met up with him, and congratulated him on his fantastic run of under 3 hours, then went to a nearby restaurant.  As they finished up there, they heard the first explosive detonate.  A bomb? One said.  Second one went off.  Thunder?  

Confusion.  ​

Ambulances went by.  The restaurant was evacuated.  Confirmation of a bomb.  People on cell phones.  Metro line halted.  Police tried to keep them from crossing to another area.  Aunt shepherded them toward the other Metro line which they were able to board and exit the city to the suburb in which our relatives live.  ​

You know the rest.  The pictures of the injured.  The numbers of the dead.  The rising numbers of those wounded.  But, what remains with me tonight is the horror, the grace, and the fantasic technology that shaped our awareness of it.  I got first hand information off the AP before CNN had it posted via a news editor friend I've never seen; she's a fiber friend from Twitter.  Another friend tried to comfort me with texts about the bomb squads that were sent into the area.  Instead, I quickly saw the ever widening scope of tragedy.  Other friends from long ago contacted me on facebook to tell me they were praying for my family and my sister's family.  Amazing.

I felt more touched by this than I have some of our nation's other tragedies.  Yes, my sister and family, and uncle and aunt were there.  But, in a strange way, so was I.  I guided them through the streets.  I saw my brother-in-law through each curve and hill.  I was at the finish line when my sister couldn't make it.​

This tragedy will again have far reaching results.  How do we provide security in large sporting events?  Will fear and/or costs keep them from taking place?  Will my niece feel secure in going to school tomorrow?  In having her father run another race? ​

As they wound through the streets and avenues in Boston, my brother-in-law told his daughter:  "We won't let the terrorists win."​

We won't, indeed.​


Knit Along

Please come join us at the WWMDFK group on Ravelry (please click for immediate link) as we begin a Knit-Along based on my Comfort of a Friend Shawl​. A Knit-Along is a virtual knit group.  Knitters from all around the US, or the world, can meet on this site, talk about their projects, ask questions, upload and share pictures. If you are not on Ravelry, a knit and crochet community, you can join it. All you need is an identification name. Warning: there are three million members. All the good names are taken.

The What Would Madame Defarge Knit? and What (Else) Would Madame Defarge Knit? are the brainchild of Heather Ordover, Craftlit podcaster, and woman extraordinaire.  Seriously, I don't know when she sleeps. Every week, Heather posts both Craftlit and Just the Books podcast, and has just started Just the Benefits feed. Each presents a book of literary merit, read aloud by a reader, after which she talks about the book, teaching the chapter to come or the points we need to pay attention to. ​In addition, she writes multiple patterns, does tutoring, substitute teaches, and raises her two boys. It makes me tired just to think of it all.

As for myself, tomorrow is a full day with a big presentation a church tomorrow. Next week, I prepare some patterns for publication, and prepare myself for short trip to visit a ill friend.​ So glad the KAL is virtual and will travel anywhere!  

I look forward to seeing you there!​

Back to the Drawing Board

Today, I rewrite patterns for new formats, wrestle to get the Shawl pattern available to a clammering crowd, and work and rework an un-vented cast-on for a new design.  But first, the last set of obligatory beauty from both the Vesterheim:​

​The Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah, Iowa is the largest museum in America dedicated to one immigrant people group.

​The Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah, Iowa is the largest museum in America dedicated to one immigrant people group.

​part of the Sámi Alaska exhibit: woven Sámi bands

​part of the Sámi Alaska exhibit: woven Sámi bands

Sámi ​tin bracelets

Sámi ​tin bracelets

​cuff from a Sámi mitten

​cuff from a Sámi mitten

​woven wall-hanging

​woven wall-hanging

​the edging of a lace knit petticoat

​the edging of a lace knit petticoat

beautiful ​thumb from a Norwegian mitten

beautiful ​thumb from a Norwegian mitten

On non-Sámi fronts, the Vesterheim has other Norwegian artifacts as well!​ The three pictures just above are from the Norwegian majority, or recreated in America by Norwegian-American immigrants.

While in Decorah, I also really enjoyed walking around the town and visiting some stores.  What a beautiful small town!  Luther College is, of course, its lifeblood.  Students huddled in the streets.  Crazy students were jogging in the near 0F weather.  ​

Decorah is about 8,000 souls -- just larger than the small town in which I live -- but, it is oh! so alive.  Main Street had only one closed store front among 5 or so blocks.  The place I stayed, Hotel Winneshiek, was a fabulous oasis in the sea of corn.  And, even on a quiet, winter Sunday night, Mabes Pizza was a jumping joint. The public schools are walking distance from downtown.  The houses nearby are charming and sweet.  The town even had a tall bluff and a beautiful park overlooking the Upper Iowa River, and the college campus.

But, all good things must come to an end, and mine did dramatically as 5 inches of snow blew through and made the roads nearly impassable.  My ride back to the family took over double the time it took to get there, but all was well.​

​Since then, I have sketched, written and knitted up one of the mitten patterns I viewed. But now I must get back to the hat I am currently working on, and the pattern corrections.

Good day, all!