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Stitching together a T ride

Knitting on the MBTA

Some T riders read, some snooze and some stitch. Lovekoan shows us the dish cloth she's working on as she rides the Green Line and wonders what other T stitchers are working on.

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....she'll be able to knit a turtleneck sweater that would fit a giraffe on a daily basis.

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By the time we land, you'll probably have a rug

Sid Caesar to Nancy Olson in Airport 1975

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I'm a knitter but the redline is too crowded to knit.

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Actually all lines can be too crowded to knit. I wouldn't want to be standing next to someone with those knitting needles on a packed train... and, no, it's not easy to move around or even get on a train at times during peak hours. I'd hate to fall into those with a sudden stop. No one takes their back-packs off, etc....

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We know how to protect our yarn and needles from you landing on things and either breaking the needles (they do break), or getting blood on our work.

Actually, the needles can work as a deterrent - keeps creepers away. ;-)

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I have definitely used my knitting to deter creepers on multiple bus/rail lines throughout my adult life. That said, I rarely have any kind of room on the T; I did knit on Amtrak today, though.

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Is this fiber handspun from unicorn fibre gently spun with organic bamboo and an artisan drop spindle?

Granted that most non-knitters greatly undervalue the cost of supplies or time and skill but that's preeeeetty high. I guess if you're not willing to buy your own fibre and don't know a knitter to whom you can provide enough bribery or inspire enough affection for a bloody hat, well, that's something I guess.

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...is this stuff expensive. And I say that as a 10-year knitter who regularly makes sweaters, hats, socks, scarves, stuffed animals, baby clothes, etc. With gauges that big, those headbands (and many of those hats) might take an hour or two to make, and "peruvian merino wool" can cost as little as $5 a skein, AND since the CEO's mom owns a yarn shop, you can be sure she's getting her supplies at wholesale prices.

I just....$200. For a hat.

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And she apparently does. It's not me, that's for certain!

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I usually keep it simple; right now I have a pair of socks for my commute (Forest Hills - Mass Ave).

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At my college, there used to be a weekly gathering called Stitch & Bitch. Might be worth reviving for the long winter ahead.

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One that already exists in spades. Tons of knitters in and around Boston already meet (I meet up with the Orange Line sock knitter above when she's not out doing other things). There are also knitting and spinning guilds that meet regularly - year 'round. Not solely a winter sport.

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Stitch & Bitch.

LOLOLOLOL ;)

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http://www.amazon.com/Stitch-Bitch-The-Knitters-Handbook/dp/0761128182

Going to Baseball Games - organized version: Stitch & Pitch

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I'm making a sweater. Would love to meet other T knitters.

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I attended a couple of Common Cod meetings. Met some nice knitters - we were all newbies that the cliquey regulars wouldn't even deign to speak to. Maybe we just happened to catch the meetings when all the nice knitters were home sick and/or busy. I haven't been back. There are a lot of knitting groups in different neighborhoods in and around Boston. Look them up at Ravelry.com - the Boston Yarn Party group maintains a list.

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I guess I'm a little more of an extrovert. :)

And yes - seconded for Ravelry - a locally created fiber behemoth.

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I keep my knitting off the T mostly for space concerns - both the space between me and other people and also space in my bag. I used to work with someone that took the commuter rail from Middleborough every day, and she was able to knit pretty impressive sweaters during those trips.

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Fun fact: I knit most of this on the commuter rail over a 7-month period.

(sorry, couldn't get the image tag to work at all, so you'll have to click thru)

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