Emily M. DeArdo

Emily M. DeArdo

author

Wednesday Notebook #7

Wednesday notebookEmily DeArdoComment
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It’s the third Wednesday of Easter!

Raphael, The Resurrection

Raphael, The Resurrection

It’s also the feast of St. Catherine of Siena, and the wedding anniversary of Prince William and Duchess Katherine!

St. Catherine with a little memento mori!

St. Catherine with a little memento mori!

Making

Boothbay Cardigan

a fun comfort knitting scarf with color change yarn

Elementary wrap is still going….

Reading

Drums of Autumn, Diana Gabaldon

The Other Queen, by Philippa Gregory (finished—this one is just OK. Too many characters. Just the women would’ve been much more interesting, get rid of the whole George plot line!)

The Sex Lives of Cannibals (yes, terrible title. It is FUNNY, though), by J. Maarten Troost (finished)

Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati, by Maria Di Lorenzo (research!) (finished)

Knitlandia, by Clara Parkes

Angel of Repose, by Wallace Stegner

Watching

Norma, the Met Opera. SO GOOD.

Giselle

Catholicism

The Prince of Egypt (I just love this movie!)

Links and Such

How to get through these days? Lots of E.G.

You can still join to Consider the Lilies with Take Up & Read! Here is all the information!

75 No Cook Meal Ideas

The Living Memento Mori Book Club!

book clubEmily DeArdoComment
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I am so delighted to bring you this virtual book club!

I know, Lent’s over, but I still think it’s worth getting together to talk about Living Memento Mori, because it’s a message we need all the time, not just during Lent.

Here are the details:

The kick-off is Tuesday, May 12, 2020 at 3:00 on my Facebook page.

The entire schedule of meeting dates can be found here. We’ll meet every Tuesday at 3:00 on my page from May 12-August 18, so this will run almost all summer. We’re taking a chapter a week, and there are fourteen chapters, plus the epilogue.

You can purchase the book at Amazon, Ave Maria Press (where it’s on sale until April 30!), or any other bookstore (links to various retailers can be found here).

It doesn’t matter if you use an e-book or a hard copy—we’re just taking it a chapter a week, so flip to the appropriate chapter.

I’m really looking forward to doing this with you! If you have any questions, drop them in the comments and I’ll answer them!

Seven Quick Takes--Second Friday of Easter (and BOOK CLUB!)

7 Quick TakesEmily DeArdoComment
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What a week!!!

So my body has decided it needs to misbehave….so I’ve got a sinus infection and my gallbladder is acting up, but since the last place we want me right now is a hospital (and I do not one to go to one), we’re trying to treat at home. The cipro I’m on for the sinus infection is really knocking it out, thank goodness, but the gallbladder issues are a bit harder. OH WELL.

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(Because people always ask—yes, I am on cipro. I’m on a lot of antibiotics prophylactically, which means to keep me from getting sick—I’m basically the human version of a chlorinated pool—so that when I get an infection, we have to use Big Guns to knock it out.)

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Around here this week:

Wednesday Notebook #6

And the big Ave Maria Spring sale continues! My book is available for $9! (The sale ends next week, on the 30th, so hop to it!)

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Also!

Take Up & Read is going to begin studying our first book, Consider the Lilies, on Monday—and we’ve made it available in a digital format!

We’ve never done a digital copy of our studies before—normally, they are published by Amazon. But with the pandemic, it’s hard to get our studies right now, so we decided to make Consider the Lilies available digitally!

This is the perfect study for right now. Do you feel lost? Confused? Upset? Wondering where God is in all this mess? Then you need this study. It’s a beautiful one!

I hope you’ll join us! Here’s all the information you need.

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OK SO BOOK CLUB!!!!

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KICKS OFF MAY 13!

3:00 PM EST on my facebook page (link above).

We’re doing one chapter a week: here is the schedule.
Check back on Monday for more!!!!

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I’ve started research for my next book!!!! It’s exciting! It’s about saints who were single—single in the world, not single like priests and nuns. So I’m researching and getting to know these saint friends, and how they found their purpose, which I think is important for singles now. As you know, if you’ve followed me for awhile, I have Thoughts! :)

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How are you doing? Any prayer requests? Concerns? Need to talk? Drop your thoughts in the comments!






Wednesday Notebook #6

Wednesday notebookEmily DeArdoComment
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Second Wednesday of Easter

“The Resurrection of Christ”, Paolo Veronese

“The Resurrection of Christ”, Paolo Veronese

Making

The Boothbay Cardigan!

Elementary Wrap

Rachael Ray’s Smoky Black Bean and Rice Stoup —this is amazing and mostly a pantry meal! It has bacon so don’t make it on a Friday if you don’t eat meat on Friday. Super easy. I used soy sauce because I was out of Worcestershire sauce—it’s fine. I also used pressed/crushed tomatoes instead of tomato sauce. Also fine, and indeed I might like it better. If you go that route, make sure they’re really crushed. Like, liquidated.

Also, REALLY mash the beans when the recipe says to. They don’t have to be perfect, and it doesn’t have to be exactly half, but I did a really good job mashing last night and it makes lots of difference.

This reheats beautifully. It made a huge pot for me—serve this with some bread and you’ve totally got a full meal. You might not even need bread or salad. It’s that filling.

Reading

The Two Towers (YES STILL)
Voyager, Diana Gabaldon (finished)

Drums of Autumn, Diana Gabaldon

Slow Knitting, by Hannah Thiessen (finished)

The Other Queen , by Philippa Gregory

Habitat: The Field Guide to Decorating, by Lauren Liess

Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati: Journey to the Summit, by Ana Maria Vasquez (finished—research for book two!)

Kateri Tekawitha: Mohawk Maiden, by Evelyn Brown (Finished—also book two research!)

Watching

Return of the King

Outlander (series re-watch)

Catholicism

Rise of Skywalker

Links and Such

The Quiet Wisdom of Audrey Hepburn

A Virtual Tour of Prince Charles’ Garden at Highgrove

Seven Quick Takes--Easter Friday

7 Quick Takes, hearing loss, health, holidays, journal, the bookEmily DeArdo1 Comment
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HE IS RISEN! Wooooo!

Let’s try to party as much as we can? OK?

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Little bit of business first—Ave Maria Press is shipping books again, and my book is on sale!

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The book’s sale price is $9, so grab a couple, stock up! Or buy some other great books—Joyful Momentum , Pray Fully, and Giving Thanks and Letting Go, are other great reads!

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On the blog this week:

Wednesday Notebook #5

Emily Knits a Cardigan!



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Whew, I feel like I have a lot of things to tell you, but I don’t know if I really do! :)

My birthday was last Thursday—Holy Thursday. Obviously we didn’t “go” to Mass. I watched Bishop Barron’s Mass from Santa Barbara—his Masses are captioned, so that’s why I watch those in particular.

There was cake….

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There was mucho birthday yarn….

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There were other gifts, too, but I didn’t take photos so I’ll have to talk about them next week. :) Maybe I’ll do a whole birthday post so we can have some fun?

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And Easter was weird, too…..I mean, no Mass, for starters. I did watch a Vigil recording at my home parish. BUT—IT IS STILL EASTER. So even though it’s not what we’re used to, the Resurrection still happened. :) We are still Easter people!

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(LONG!)

A couple things that I’ve been thinking about—If we’re all going to be wearing masks for the near future, I, and other hearing impaired folks, are massively screwed, because we read lips. (Well, some of us do!)

Can I just ask—if someone asks you to pull your mask down when you’re talking to them, can you step back and do that? Because otherwise, I really have no idea what you’re saying. In hospital settings my doctors and nurses don’t wear masks, because we end up having a “What did you say?” marathon. It’s just not practical. I’ve seen some pieces that have talked about face time calls or having someone with you to “translate.”

Massive sigh.

Guys. First off, if I had to bring one of my parents to every doctor’s appointment I had, they’d go nuts. And they can’t go to every one. Second, this denies me my agency. I hate to say that because it’s sounds so jargon-ish, but people need to talk to me, not the other people with me. ME. THE PERSON, THE PATIENT.

There are, apparently, masks with clear sections around the lips for lipreading in development. They have to be FDA approved, for starters. And then put into production. And honestly, I don’t think they’re going to be produced for a while yet, because they’re just not a priority.

It is already hard enough for me to get hospitals to email me or talk to people who aren’t me because I can’t use the phone. But if mask wearing becomes super en vogue, a lot of us are really screwed, and I’m going to be either having meltdowns in stores, or I’ll be answering all the wrong questions and looking like an idiot.

I’m trying not to freak out about something that might not happen. But I would ask you all to be aware—if you’re talking to someone and it seems like they’ve really lost the plot, and you’re wearing a mask, chances are they’re hearing impaired.

Oh, and also—and this is just in general—if I ask you to repeat yourself, please do it. Don’t huff about it or be annoyed about it. Just repeat yourself. You don’t need to start with “I said.” And also DO NOT SAY YOU SAID NOTHING. You clearly said something.


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On that note….happy Friday? :) I’ve been watching a lot of the Met Opera live streams. If you’re an opera fan, be sure to check it out. If not, check it out! Tonight is Madama Butterfly, super popular, and a great first opera! Also, this is a gorgeous production.

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Wednesday Notebook #5

Wednesday notebookEmily DeArdoComment
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He is Risen! He is Risen indeed!

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Happy Easter!

Making

#Emilyknitsacardigan

The world’s BIGGEST SWATCH :)

The world’s BIGGEST SWATCH :)

Elementary Wrap

Reading

Voyager

One Thousand Gifts

The Two Towers

The Small Rain (finished)

A Severed Wasp (finished)


Watching

The Met’s Romeo et Juliette —GORGEOUS

Jesus of Nazareth

Star Wars: Rise of Skywalker (birthday present! :) )

rewatching Outlander from the beginning….I keep thinking I’ll do a series about Outlander and Catholicism, so I’m re-reading the books and re-watching the series to get the information fresh in my head.


Links and Such

A poem about the harrowing of hell in Anglo-Saxon (with commentary!)

How to sleep better during COVID-19

10 Ways to Create a Calm and Peaceful Home (Some of these things you might not be able to do right now, but you can think about them!)

We might all need some Padre Pio socks! (Or Mary….or St. Therese….or St. Dominic….or St. Joan of Arc….or St. Augustine….or JPII…..they have so many!)





Emily Knits A Cardigan!

knittingEmily DeArdoComment
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Yes, folks. The time has come.

I am going to knit a cardigan.

If I don’t do it now, when everyone is at home and I can ask EVERYONE QUESTIONS ALL THE TIME, then when can I do it?

Now is the time. It is the spring of our discontent but it will be the SPRING OF THE CARDIGAN.

So first up, what pattern?

I chose Hannah Fettig’s Boothbay Cardigan, because it can be knit in pieces and them seamed.* I definitely wanted to do one that was knit in pieces so that if something went horribly awry, I could rip out that piece, and not the whole thing. I’m not that great at frogging (ripping back ) to a certain point and then trying to pick up the stitches. So, a seamed knit it was.

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Images from Hannah’s website, Knitbot

Images from Hannah’s website, Knitbot


I didn’t want a brown cardigan so I chose a medium heathered grey, which is one of my favorite colors just because I think I look good in it! :) And it goes with a lot of other colors, as well, so it can be worn a lot. It’s Quince and Co Lark (the suggested yarn) in Kumlien’s Gull. (picture at the top of the post)

A few things, before we really get into the cardigan goodness:

When you’re knitting a garment you obviously have to choose your size. There are various ways to do this. The way I did it for this was measured my upper arm, and then chose the number on the schematic that was closest to this.

A schematic looks like this:

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So, you want to take the number that is closest to your actual measurements (I am generally going up here) and you also want to look at the ease, which is listed in the pattern. Ease is either positive or negative. Positive ease means the garment fits more loosely; negative ease means it’s more form-fitting. This cardigan has a positive ease of 2.75”. So knowing that, I also chose the higher number for my garment, because I want he cardigan to be able to go over a long-sleeved t-shirt or a dress.

Knowing your measurement determines how many skeins of yarn you need to get. In my case, it was 17, and I threw in an extra one for swatch purposes.

Once I wound all the yarn (as you can see above, it was a lot of yarn), today (Monday) I cast on to knit the swatch. Gauge is fairly imperative when knitting a garment! So I had bought an extra skein just for swatch purposes.

BIGGEST SWATCH EVERRRRRR

BIGGEST SWATCH EVERRRRRR

The swatch was then blocked (ie, it took a bath!), and is drying.

Once it’s dry, I will check the gauge. If I’m bang on, it’s good to go. If I’m not, then I will knit another swatch with either larger or smaller needles, depending on which way I’m off. The book gives instructions for this, which makes me very happy! The fact that Hannah puts in so much good information in her book is one of the other reasons why I chose it for my maiden cardigan voyage.

So, that’s the beginning of Cardigan Adventures! Stay tuned….

*Hannah’s book Home and Away (from which Boothbay comes) is full of lovely projects, and all of the cardigans and sweaters can be made either seamless or without. There are also really useful essays in the book, so I highly recommend picking this up!


Wednesday Notebook #4

Wednesday notebookEmily DeArdoComment
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Liturgically:

It’s Spy Wednesday. Tomorrow evening the Sacred Triduum starts, with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper. This is followed by Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. And then, of course, EASTER.

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Making

Easy and Good Pot Roast, from Like Mother, Like Daughter!

Elementary Wrap—it’s still chugging along! I’m on the second ball of yarn now, so the project is 33% done. :)

Another loaf of whole wheat bread

Reading

(Lots of various things, I’m dipping in and out….)

Dragonfly in Amber

A Ring of Endless Light (Finished)

The Two Towers

Angle of Repose

The Dark Night of the Soul

Inside the Passion

Death on a Friday Afternoon

Watching (and will be Watching)

I always watch The Passion of the Christ on Good Friday.

Jesus of Nazareth is also excellent viewing.

The Shawshank Redemption

Opera: Les Pecheurs des Perles, Macbeth, Norma, Aida, La Fanciulla del West, Falstaff, Parsifal, Romeo and Juliette, Don Pasquale, Cosi Fan Tutti.

(Parsifal actually takes place partially on Good Friday and Easter….)


Links and Such and programming notes

It’s Lamb Time At Colonial Williamsburg!


Speaking of sheep—remember Ma’s Delaine dress in Little House in the Big Woods? Meet the delaine merino sheep! The wool is soft, fine, and wrinkle free, so wonder Ma liked it! A beautiful fabric that doesn’t wrinkle?!

The Long Lent and the History of Quarantine

NO seven quick takes this week since it’s Good Friday. On Monday, though, BIRTHDAY WRAP UP! :)

Also the ebook version of Living Memento Mori is on sale until 4/15 on the Ave Maria Press website.

Seven Quick Takes--5th Friday of Lent

7 Quick TakesEmily DeArdo4 Comments

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Post from around here this week:

Yarn Along

Wednesday Notebook

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And a bit of business: The Living Memento Mori ebook sale is still going on at Ave Maria Press!

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So this week…..whew. It wasn’t a bad week, but there were some hard days. I’m just trying to take each day at it comes, as we all do! My days do have a rough “shape” to them—mostly around the Liturgy of the Hours, and I am doing basic chores and things like that, just to keep myself sane. But I miss my people!

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My birthday is next week, and it’s basically the highlight of the month for me, since the governor has said that the stay-at-home order will be in effect until May. We all sort of figured that was coming. My birthday is also Holy Thursday and it will be beyond weird not to be at church for those celebrations. I’ve always loved the triduum. (I was born on Good Friday, it’s in my nature!) But my parish will be streaming their Masses, so it’s not like I can’t see them. It’s just weird, like so many other things these days.

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I did, however, discover the wonder that is Tiger King. Man. I needed some of that absurdity.

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We’re having a proper spring here in Ohio, which is nice. Sometimes we skip spring and go right to summer. But the days have been nice enough to leave the windows open, and the tree outside Orchard House is getting the pink buds on it. :) I love my hawthorn tree.

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Finally, I leave you with Crookshanks in Quarantine Photos (which are explained in my yarn along!)


Yarn Along #96: Comfort knits!

yarn along, books, knittingEmily DeArdo2 Comments
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OK, so story—

this is Crookshanks. A stuffed Crookshanks (obviously). I’m not allowed to have a real cat or dog—someone else would have to clean up after them, and since I live alone, no go. But in Quarantine Time, when no one is allowed to come over and give me hugs, the stuffed cat is going to have to do. And, for my amusement and the amusement of others, I’ve been posing her doing things, so I thought I’d start off this yarn along with something (hopefully) amusing!

Anyway, she’s holding one of my “comfort knits” that I’m doing during this period.

I decided to raid my stash and take out yarn that I’d been holding back (why, I ask myself), and just knit it up. I have three skeins of this City Tweed from Knit Picks that I’d been saving and I decided I was just going to knit them. They’re on size 9 needles, cast on 22 stitches, and just knit. There you go. This color (above with Crookshanks) is called Rhubarb, and I also have Chipmunk….

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And a third skein in Morning Glory. So these are really simple, the yarn is yummy, and I love working with it, so, there we go.

I also have two skeins of Quince’s Osprey yarn in Peacock that I’ve been using to make Puck’s Scarf.

I have not abandoned my Elementary Wrap. It was just that last week I wanted basic, basic knitting. So this week I will resume my work on the elementary wrap.

(Also, if you’re not on Quince’s email list—you’re missing out. They’ve been sending out FREE PATTERNS every Friday during this pandemic time—happiness! [Well at least some happiness, right?])

I’m reading many, many things (you can see what I read last week here), but right now I’m reading A Ring of Endless Light, one of my favorite books, and sort of appropriate for right now, given that the book revolves around the main character’s grandfather dying, and discusses the nature of life and death and God. Yes, a lot for something categorized as a “kids’ book”! (and no, the movie with the same title does not follow the book really closely at all….sigh.)


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Wednesday Notebook #3

Wednesday notebookEmily DeArdoComment
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MAKING

two garter stitch scarves—if you knit, use an aran weight to cast on 20 stitches on size 10 needles, and just garter stitch the heck out of it. Or, with DK weight yarn, cast on 22 stitches on size 9s and do the same. :) More on knitting in the Yarn Along!

King Arthur Flour’s Classic 100% Whole Wheat bread—this is really good! I didn’t have vegetable oil so I subbed olive oil. Worked fine. This is a really good bread to serve with soup or pasta as well.

READING

The Moon At Night (finished)

Outlander

The Fellowship of the Ring (Finished)

33 Days to Greater Glory (Finished)

Revelations of Divine Love (Finished)

The Red Lotus (finished)

Angle of Repose

The Two Towers

The Young Unicorns (Finished)

A Ring of Endless Light

(Also, my book is still on sale at Ave Maria Press—ebook version only)

WATCHING

The Fellowship of the Ring

The Two Towers

(The trilogy of extended editions is on insane sale at Amazon right now—more than 58% off. It’s nuts! So if you’re looking to get them for your Blu-Ray library, now is the time. The packaging is not nearly as nice as the DVD sets, but…alas.)

LINKS AND THINGS

This list from Mason Dixon Knitting—100 self-care ideas—is gold!

The Pope’s Urbi et Orbi speech (from 3/27)

Meet Gus the Rabbit!

Queen Elizabeth’s weekly art project for kids!