Monthly Archives: April 2019

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box of socks, April edition

Hmmmm, I wonder; what could’ve been the inspiration behind my new socks.  Could it be… cherry blossom??  Yes I totally have pink on the brain right now… apologies for my current obsession, though I have to admit that actually I bought the yarn before we left and knitted the socks during our holiday.  Can I say I was pre-inspired?  😉

 

I bought the skein of Saltwater Yarns 80% merino 20% nylon in colour way Shell Pink from Calico and Ivy just before we left, experimented on the plane, and by the time we’d got to Tokyo I’d worked out my “cherry blossom” design  🙂

 

I adapted my tried and true Patons basic sock pattern to my tastes, and I’m thinking I might write up a real pattern…w hen I get time! but for now here is just the lace design..

there are 60 stitches in the leg part of my sock, dividing neatly into 10 x 6 stitch repeats.  The 6 stitch repeat pattern is as follows:

row 1; K1, K2tog, y fwd, K2, P1  (repeat these stitches for the 60 st round)
row 2; K5, P1 (repeat for the round)
row 3; K2tog, y fwd, K1, y fwd, ssk (repeat for the round)
row 4; K5, P1 (repeat for the round)
row 5; y fwd, ssk, K1, y fwd, K2tog, P1 (repeat for the round)
row 6; K5, P1 ( repeat for the round)
row 7; K1, K2tog, y fwd, K2, P1 (repeat for the round)
row 8; K5, P1 (repeat for the round)
row 9; K5, P1 (repeat for the round)

……

the current denizens of my box of socks!

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fabric and yarn shopping in Japan, another guide

So this is my third fabric shopping guide for Japan?!  because every time we go I discover wonderful, new-to-me fabric and wool stores.  Japan has a truly impressive abundance of the most amazing stores for sewing and knitting related shopping, honestly I wish I could go every year.  Hmmm, that could be dangerous though!

My first guide to fabric shopping in Japan can be found here…

and my second guide to fabric shopping in Japan is here…

As in the past, I recommend taking plenty of cash, since credit cards may or may not be accepted, and you do not want to find out the hard way when you have that adorable and on-sale nani Iro print in your hand and no cash!! And for foreigners, the best place to easily get cash is the ATMs in 7Eleven stores.

Nippori Fabric Town

Arakawa, Tokyo Prefecture

google map location

Nippori Fabric Town is worth mentioning every time because it really is that good… my previous shopping guide to Nippori is here… honestly; a whole street of fabric stores and  there are so many fantastic ones along the street it’s pretty hard to narrow it down, you could spend hours here and still not cover everything.  And there is a very handy 7Eleven on the street in case you need to pop in for more cash!  #shamelessenabler

I was quite restrained and bought only one piece of fabric, and some leather bits and pieces from the shop at the end, hopefully to be some shoes in the future!

Okadaya

Okadaya, 3-chōme-23-17 Shinjuku, Shinjuku City, Tōkyō-to 160-0022, Japan

google map location

Still in Tokyo, and I visited the fantastic Okodaya store in Shinjuku… this has four whole floors of sewing/knitting/crafting opportunities; different handcrafts on every floor.  I spent basically all of my time on the knitting floor and bought a crochet book and some raffia… I’m going to make a hat!!!

SOOOOO excited for this, it’s gonna be a nice challenge since the instructions are 100% Japanese.  The illustrations are excellent which will be very helpful.  Stay tuned!!

… like a moth to a flame, the sewing/knitting blogger in the wild answers the primeval urge and returns to graze in her natural habitat.  Photo taken by a bored husband 

Incidentally, I also bought another two excellent craft books from a newsagent in the Matsumoto train station… and can I just say, you know how Australian newsagents used to have really good sewing/knitting/making books and magazines once upon a time but don’t any more? well Japanese newsagents still cater to peeps who love to MAKE, hallelujah!

In Kyoto; I couldn’t resist hunting down Misuyabari – the famous, and yet quite secret, handmade needle and pin store…

Sanjodori, Kawaramachi Nishiiru, Nakagyo-ku, Kyoto 604-8036, Kyoto Prefecture

google map location

This little oasis is notoriously difficult to find! and I found not one single guide on the internet that made the task any easier… in the end I used google maps and still struggled! so I shall attempt to make a clear and unambiguous one myself…

When walking westward along Sanjo-dori, after you’ve crossed over the bridge spanning the Kamo river and passing Starbucks on the right … keep heading west and after a few minutes you’ll come to a T-junction with Kawaramachi-dori.  The intersection is labeled Kawaramachi-Sanjo (lefthand picture, below), and the entrance into the shopping mall where the shop is located is directly in front of you, looking like this (righthand picture, below):

Walk into and along the shopping mall, and very shortly you’ll see a shop on your right (north side) that looks like this:

That there passageway leads to the needle shop, and you can see a glimpse of the charming gardens already!  If you’re in luck, the cherry blossom out front will be in full beautiful bloom too

if these directions fail you, here is the google map location… good luck!

Anyway, I bought a few little treasures… some of the exquisite handmade pins, one for each of my fluffy girls:

and some more regular pins, and these beautiful little hand-sharpened? I think? thread snips and cases.  I bought one for Cassie too.

Avril pépin

Avril, 606-8185, 20-1 Ichijōji Takatsukichō, Sakyō-ku, Kyoto, 606-8185, Japan

google map location

We also biked out the to Avril knitting shop in Kyoto, it’s a bit far out of town but not too far from the Higashiyama Jisho-ji temple, and/or the Honen-in temple so you can combine visiting them together in an afternoon quite nicely.  I bought some more raffia, to make… a bag? another hat?? well, something from one of those Japanese crochet books!

And for the next I owe many thanks to my dear friend Yoshimi, who introduced me to her favourite sewing/knitting/craft store;

Yuzawaya Kichoji, just adjacent to/inside the Kichijoji train station

Yuzawaya Kirarina Keio Kichijoji, 180-0003 Tokyo, Musashino, Kichijoji

google map location

Note: unlike all the other pictures here which as usual, I took myself, I made the above collage using two images off google search, I was too overwhelmed at the time by all the incredible STUFF to think of taking my own picture… sorry.  Unfortunately the pictures do not adequately convey just how very treasure-packed this store is.   Trust me, this store is WELL worth taking the train for a reccy.

Take the Chuo line out from Shinjuku station towards Mitaka, and be sure to take the train that actually stops at Mitaka! because we learned to our chagrin that not all of them do, and if you’re on one that does not then you will have to get off as soon as possible and catch a return train that does stop at Mitaka.   Then take the other local Chuo line for just one stop to Kichojoji, and head for the South exit.

So, if you have been fortunate enough to secure tickets to the Studio Ghibli museum then you can combine your visit to the museum with a side visit to Yuzawaya since they are easy walking distance to each other.

From a sewing/knitting/crafting perspective, Yuzawaya is pretty mindblowing, two floors chock full of the most amazing hand making fabulousness I have ever experienced in my life…  along with the expected leather, fabrics and yarn; I saw tools and bits and bobs for handcrafts that had never even occurred to me even existed.  I bought quite a lot of stuff while I was there with Yoshimi, an embarrassing amount really! and then after we parted company and she went innocently back home and wasn’t there to curtail my dreadful tendency to excess, I went back in and bought even more! several, um…quite a lot of balls of irresistibly discounted sock yarn… *blush*   I’m not going to post pictures of the all the stuff I bought because all will be revealed no doubt! the sock yarn probably during my box of socks challenge that I am doing this year … however I will post this one little teaser picture…

I am SOOOO EXCITED to make this up! yes your eyes do not deceive you…  it’s a kit to make your own umbrella…  HOW COOL???!!! just uber uber cool, that’s all.  Yes, a double uber.  I went there.  I juuuust managed to squeeze this into my suitcase, thank goodness, because obviously I could not NOT buy this!!  I am hoping, once wedding related sewing is out of the way, to make it up tout de suite!

Tokyu Hands

google map location of Ginza store

speaking of leatherwork… or were we? well we are now!  the fabulous chain store Tokyu Hands actually has a pretty good leather working section in its DIY section, though it is a little expensive.  I bought some small pieces of very high quality leather – clogs! and a few leather working tools from the Ginza store, although the Shinjuku store is bigger… and incidentally, the Shinjuku store is very near the superb Shinjuku Gyoen National Gardens, which is absolutely spectacular during cherry blossom season.

google map location of Shinjuku store

Obviously we bought other stuff in the Tokyu Hands store too, because this is the kind of place that stocks things that you never knew you needed, until the moment you clap eyes on them in this store and then suddenly you can’t live without it.  You have been warned!

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Japan in the spring; a travel wardrobe

So, we’ve just recently returned from a fabulous holiday in Japan! had the most wonderful relaxing time and have come back all rejuvenated and charged up ready to dive enthusiastically back into the wedding-related maelstrom that is currently my life…

My typically bloggy habit is to do a bit of reflection and analysis of my travel wardrobe and think about what was good and what… was not?

Time away:

17 days

Where to:

Japan… time spend in each of Tokyo, Kyoto, Kanazawa, Matsumoto, and up in the Kiso Valley area

Season:

early spring, expected daily temperatures of around 4C-ish up to 24C-ish

Expected activities:

as much viewing of cherry blossom as possible! with tonnes of hiking, some biking, visiting the studio Ghibli museum and a hedgehog cafe, shopping for fabric and wool – obviously! and hanging out with my lovely friend Yoshimi

Colour scheme:

mostly pink/red and whites/ivory, with splashes of blue and yellow/mustard….

What I packed:

all items are linked to their original construction post. I made everything here except for the shoes, handbag, and the apricot scarf was a gift from my Mum…

from L to R, top to bottom, the numbers in brackets after are the number of times each item got worn;

yellow/white sundress  (2)
apricot scarf, a gift from my Mum   (4)
cream infinity scarf  (5)
striped sweater  (4)
lt blue jacket/cardigan  (9)
cream beanie  (2)
pale pink raincoat  (3)
lightweight ivory sweater  (3)
white polar fleece turtleneck  (8)
pale pink twist top  (5)
pink mohair sweater  (5)
jeans  (7)
gold handbag (every day)
lime-green hand warmers  (5)
3 x pairs of socks, plus 1xsockettes  (11)
two lightweight white T-shirts plus lightweight striped T-shirt  (every day as thermals)
red mini-skirt (4)
mustard skirt  (4)
blue bathers (not even once)
pink thongs (none)
hiking boots  (8)
2 x prs of black tights  (10 days, sometimes doubled up)
little black walking shoes  (3)
black ankle boots  (5, plus most evenings for dinner)
(not pictured) my pyjamas, knitting bag, toiletries bag and a selection of (me-made) underwear

My daily outfits:

Thoughts:

After a few weeks of obsessively stalking the weather forecast in Japan, I packed both wintery things and a few warmer weather things too, since it all seemed quite variable.  So, it seems like a lot of clothes… but I needed everything!!  For most of our trip it was absolutely freeeeeeezing!! and by freezing I mean, yes it actually snowed several times!  Those expected temps of 5C to up to 24ish? well, it plummeted to 1C and highs of 11C on a coupla days! brrrrrr…  So even my warmer weather lightweight T-shirts got worn every day, underneath everything simply for thermal purposes, and my just-in-case jumpers got worn layered and oftentimes doubled up too, just to stay cosy enough.  Several days that you see me wearing tights above, well I’m actually wearing BOTH pairs of tights, doubled up!!

My white fleece turtleneck that I made for our Alaska trip was a lifesaver; it’s funny, I never wear it at home but it’s got worn a tonne on two consecutive holidays now.  I know lots of people loooathe fleece, and I’m not the biggest fan either; but for warmth and the fact that it weighs practically nothing, it’s so easily washable in a hotel sink and very fast drying… well it’s a traveller’s no-brainer really.

In retrospect, I should have taken a coat, but you know what? I survived!  My old woolly blue cardigan was kind of a coat substitute and I carried it nearly everywhere.  It was ok, and I enjoyed that I could get by with what I had brought, but I have to admit I was bored to tears with it by the end of our holiday.

The weather was just so cold I thought I wouldn’t get to wear my yellow/white sundress at all… and I hate it when I think I’ve brought something for naught! but fortunately on our last two days the bitterly cold winds abated, the sun blazed delightfully and I joyfully freed it from its cobwebby corner of the suitcase and wore it two days in a row…   yes, I still needed the tights and the trusty blue cardi but still; hurrah!!!

I wore my hiking boots for hiking and biking, my little black walking shoes for city walking, and brought my heeled booties for the plane and for dinners every evening.  I love having smart shoes, just in case! and these ones are both stylish and comfortable. I took my bathers and thongs, again just in case! and didn’t even wear them once.  Oh well, at least they don’t take up much room…  Each of the hotels we stayed in had Japanese style, segregated public baths and I did take my bathers down with me the first time as a precautionary measure, but embraced the Japanese bathing way when I saw I would be the literal only person in bathers.  And I didn’t die of embarrassment!

The one thing I really wish I’d brought?? a pair of gloves.  My arm warmers were great, but one day biking in Kyoto it was like 3C and sleeting rain and my hands got SO COLD.  Craig kindly let me wear his gloves …  btw; I think I did an excellent job choosing a husband who has perpetually warm hands and doesn’t need gloves.  Very good planning on my part, if I say so myself; hehe.

So that’s that!  Now please allow me to bombard you all with a million cherry blossom laden holiday snaps, ahem…

on the Kamo River, Kyoto

 

 

 

 

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