Well so just try it
Wednesday April 17th 2019, 10:52 pm
Filed under: Family,Life

My sister-in-law asked two days ago if we were enjoying everything.

?? Enjoying what?

Today the doorbell rang: it was the truck driver she’d been expecting to arrive here. All those pictures she’d taken last year, all that inventorying, all those ranked choices between the siblings, the conference calls–she was looking forward to all that work on our behalf paying off for us.

Boxes and boxes and boxes and I’d had no real idea.

The soft but entirely synthetic afghan, so not my thing but made the way my allergic mother-in-law had asked for. I was just at the very start of teaching myself to knit lace at the time–there was no such thing as online knitting anything other than this still-new little group called the Knitlist.

But then the Barbara Walker books came back into print.

I chose a pattern that was a mixture of feather-and-fan and cables. Because cables. They were more my thing, but I figured if I did a whole swath of lacework like that I would be forced to keep going and I would make mistakes and learn along the way how to correct them and I’d get more confident at it. I committed myself inwardly to an hour a day and pretty much held to it. My own mom said an afghan should be long enough to cover your toes and go up to your chin–and my father-in-law was 6’7″. I was a careful newbie at this yarnover thing. It took me three months.

I stretched it out and looked it over, quite pleased: I did a good job with that, and that was actually really nice yarn.

I have grandkids coming in two days and my living room was stacked high with moving boxes and I wanted them out of there. Books, quilts, old cameras. An electric can opener! Something we’ve never bothered to buy, but it would be nice and now we have one. The yellowing plastic dated it to, I dunno, around the time we got married? Things lasted then, and so have we.

Pulled this thing out and guffawed in disbelief. Burlap? Is supposed to hold water across the desert? Was this some kind of a DadH practical joke? Because he would have loved it if it had been, that would have been just his thing.

Richard was surprised at my surprise: everybody knows those work, right? Of course they hold water!

How?!

You’re the fiber artist, you tell me!

Me, slightly bug-eyed, feeling that rough fabric: it was tightly woven, but. Uh… No. Just no.

But the thing does say it’s patented, so? If we believe hard enough? Or something.

Maybe if I tried filling it. I’m not sure which way would disappoint me? If it works? Or if it doesn’t?

It’s got to be waxed on the inside. Surely. Right, so I don’t need to make myself have to try to figure out how to dry it back out.

Where on earth do I put such a thing?

 


4 Comments so far
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That would be a waterbag down here although that one is somewhat tarted up to what was commonwhen I was young. Soaking it makes the fibres swell and it becomes water tight but needs soaking if it dries out. It is hung from front bumper bar of car. Hey presto! Chilled water when you reach your destination. Always known downunder as just a (canvas) waterbag. Not nearly as common as once now most people use eskis to keep things chilled.

Comment by Jan 04.18.19 @ 3:09 am

Feather and fan was the first lace pattern I ever used; made an afghan with it for each of my granddaughters and just used it to make afghans for my first two great-great grandbabies and the first two great grandbabies for my late S.O. We used the waterbags hanging from the hood ornament on our cars–evaporation chills the water as you drive.

Comment by Sherry in Idaho 04.18.19 @ 8:42 am

Alison,
You didn’t grow up in the desert. One of the reasons the canvas waterbag was used: evaporation would keep the contents cool.
Dad

Comment by Dad 04.18.19 @ 9:23 am

What a treasure trove! I’ve never heard of the water bag: please try it out!

Comment by ccr in MA 04.18.19 @ 11:07 am



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