Sunday, 29 September 2019

Lantern as plant display

Plants are pretty plants are life
Especially if they're easy going and/or have dope colours like our pal here: Tradescantia Zebrina


All this was grown from a stem that I accidentally broke and panic-planted in some soil in hope to save it. It had three leaves attached to it at that moment. A year later... I think it was a success?
Oh and a Pothos leaf makes an appearance on the right. It's from its last pruning, dunno what I'll do with it yet.

This plant is suuuper easy to propagate. Snip right above a leaf and stick it in dirt. Boom. You can also root it in water, but either way works just as well and no rooting hormone is needed. Actually we kept close watch on a stem that we put in water, and after only 11 hours we had a wee beginning of nub poking out. What is in the nursery pots were directly planted in soil from tiny cuttings. Did I say it's an easy going plant? It's an easy going plant.


Look at this beauty, pictures don't do justice to the shimmery silver stripes on the top.

Anyway, we have enough of it to think about giving cuttings to people and start decorating with it, and the latter is just what I'm about to document here.

The idea was my husband's, backed with enthusiasm by yours truly. We were at a garden center with the intention of just visiting around and have lunch at the bistro upstairs, but being surrounded with so many pretty things was too inspiring.
The man has been into lanterns since the game Amnesia: Dark Descent came out I think. If the idea of hiding in a dark corner hoping unkillable monstrocities don't find you and rip you apart doesn't warm your heart, I don't know what will.

We almost came back with a swirly grey and brownish pot, but decided to go with glossy black. To make the plant the star of the show.

Since our gal Zebrina likes a lot of light, we wanted to have some contraption where we could put a grow light right above it and have fun watching it grown in a pretty setting. Well, prettier than the herb light it's in right now. Which was meant to grow cooking herbs. And now I don't have herbs. Only Tradescantia. Oh well.


So the top came off with a hack saw and the bulb socket (?) was glued in with some... glue-putty-thing? (English as a second language, have pity) Next will be a couple coats of black spray. As fun as said-putty is fun to poke, it's a bit unsightly. I won't show a picture of that step, let's just skip to the fun part: propagating!


From that stock we managed to also fill in a pot with what was rooting in water. Fingers crossed, if this goes well, Mother-in-law will have a shiny new plants in a few weeks!


After choosing healthy-looking tips from the big mama plant and leaving a proper lenght of stem on it, we crowded the pot, on top of normal potting soil with slow-release fertilizer in it. We then gave it a good sip of water. 
Note that the pot has a drainage hole at the bottom. Unless it's terracotta or some other porous material, I think a pot should always have a drainage hole. You don't ever want the roots to be sitting in soggy mud. That's the #1 house plant killer.

That's also when we noticed that we probably should prune mama plant more often, as it's kinda leggy. But oh well, we love her anyway, she's happily trailing over the whOLE DAMNED WORLD and takING OVER OUR PITIFUL MORTAL HUMAN RACE. Happy plant, happy house, immaright?


This is the beginning of something cool. The light bulb is rrrreally bright. Really bright. I think plants around it might get a growth boost, so that's neat. It kinda kills the picture, but be assured, it's more colourful in real life.

Also, seen on the left is some bits that didn't make the cut (OOOoooh word play) for our project but we didn't want to just throw it away, so we replanted it. Let's see where it leads, and let's think of someone to give it to when it inevitably grows to take up every square meter of the house.

I could wait a few weeks and post what it looks like then, but I think I'd rather hit "Publish" now and give an update picture in a new post, when progress shows.
So this is the conclusion for now. A sweet, life-loving Tradescantia Zebrina in a good looking new home.

:)


P.S. Pothos seems happy as well, we planted it at the same time as the rest and it's already pushing out a new leaf! We're doing something right! My heart is full of rainbows.

Tuesday, 10 September 2019

My first knitted sweater: La Grasse Matinée by Anna Johanna

Here's a project I undertook last Spring. Since I hurt my hands and can't knit for a while, I'll revel in past accomplishments.

It all started at the yarn store in Jyväskylä. The store Titityy.


I stumbled on this. Black, grey, some speckles of pink, and the soft texture of merino wool. What's not to love? I bought a couple of skeins on the spot, then ordered one more when I figured out what project I wanted this in.


What I was looking for was a free and easy pattern to try my hand at a first garment. A pattern that wouldn't make me sew sleeves on either, something top-down that I could work as one piece.


I quite enjoyed this raglan construction. And I also liked to work the simple stockinet stitch, I could just space out or watch videos on YT, and keep going. I worked at least 2 hours every single day on this and it took me 2 months to finish it.

After reading almost everyone's project notes on Ravelry, some changes were brought to my own project. The original pattern had 3/4 sleeves and was a loose boxy fit.



I worked some decreases at the waist and increases before the hips, and added lenght on the sleeves. The result is pride and joy. Look at that fit, look at that colour! LOOK AT THE COLOUR!! *swoon*

And now the temperature is finally dropping slowly. I'll be able to wear it without self-immolating, because merino in the summer is a death wish.

Technicalities~
Pattern: La Grasse Matinée by Anna Johanna
Yarn: La Bien Aimée - Merino Singles

Colourway: Drogon

For the future, I have a few stranded yoke sweaters on my list. Two of them already have the yarn bought for! Only waiting for some tendons to heal...

Thursday, 5 September 2019

Introduction of blog and myself

Voilà, boredom often leads me to create a blog that I then forget and end up deleting.

Let's see how long this one lasts.

I thought for a little while about what this should be about, and decided that I liked too many things and that limiting myself to one sure wouldn't give this blog a great chance of survival.

So this'll be a mishmash of all sort of things.

  • Knitting
  • Indie perfumes
  • Plants
  • Video games
  • Painting
  • Metal music
  • Food
  • etc
Y'know. Whatever the flavour of the day is.

I hope this entertains someone as it entertains me. I'm not taking any of this very seriously, I just want a bit of fun whilst talking about things that float my boat.

Bit about me!

I'm a Québecoise living in Finland.
I studied as a cook and as a florist and am not using any of it at the moment.
My pet history is a lil birb (zebra finch) and a kitty cat. Both in better places, I can only hope.
7 years in marriage with my best friend and partner in derpness.

That's about what I can think of for now, methinks.

Oh and I'm terrible at ending posts.