There hasn't been much time for tatting - my brain can't keep up with language arts and social studies etc, AS WELL AS, ds, -, --, and RW. All I have to show is what I WAS working on before I came to care about prepositions, pronouns and the American Revolution...
Above is progress I had made on testing a tatting pattern I am attempting to write up. And below is an unfinished motif - I BELIEVE it is part of a vintage pattern, but I wouldn't swear to it. If I ever find the pattern, maybe it will be finished...
Knitting has been my friend lately. I still have a bee in my bonnet to make some socks for my dad and the pattern is simple enough that I am able to work on it as I wait... and prod... and wait some more... for homeschool work to be completed.
Unfortunately, not so simple that I didn't make a mistake while shaping the heel. I'm such a newbie at knitting that I can't immediately tell where my mistakes occur and things started to careen out of control as I began ripping back. I thought all might well be lost and reminisced lovingly about how hard it is to retro-tat and how apparent a mistake can be in a tatted piece (SOMETIMES, that is...). You're never going to see a piece of tatting unravel and return to a pile of crinkly thread before your eyes as you attempt to fix an error and figure out WHERE you are in the pattern!
I put the ever shortening sock aside and scoured the internet for help. That's when I found JL Yarnworks' post about lifelines. THANK GOODNESS!
I'm happy to say that adding a lifeline has put me back on track and I didn't lose anymore sock than the heel flap. I'm going to take Jackie's advice and keep my lifeline in as I continue knitting in case I find myself in water over my head again...
Why the ELO song?
This is the song I found myself humming as I stitched in my lifeline. I do love me some ELO!