Archive for the 'Knitblasts with a Tale' Category

05
Mar
10

Single White Mouse King WLTM Ballerina

“Right you ‘orrible lot! This ‘ere is an important day fer ‘is Royal Rodent ‘ighness (me). I’m going to find me a young lady to woo and you scummy little soldiers are gonna ‘elp.

As you can see I’ve dressed meself in me finest royal outfit. This ‘ere is me Royal Crown ‘anded down to me be me father, King Longpointyfurryface the Seventh.

A right royal rodent

A right royal rodent

This ‘ere is me Royal Trident wot ‘e once used to poke out the evil eye of the fearsome black-’earted ginger menace of the lower garden shed region.

Riiiiiiiiight turn!

And this ‘ere is me Royal Cloak red from the blood of the thaaaarsand violent vixens that me great grandfather Spindlytail the Mighty slayed in the Great Fox Wars of the Cheeseless Famine Era.

Aboooooooooooout face!

Front and centah, where I can see ya, boys! I’m not going aht there with just any old raggedy bunch!

Preseeeeeeeeeeeent arms!

Not bad. Not bad…

Take that smirk off your face, soldier! I aven’t done wiv yer yet. ‘ow abaht yer shoes, lads? Can I see me face in ‘em? You ain’t a real man’s man if yer walkin’ boots ain’t up to scratch, fellas. Look at mine! Ya could eat ya elevenses off that shiny surface.

Preseeeeeeent shoes!

Me dear old mum would be prahd (Cheesus rest her soul after she was taken from us in that ‘orrible incident with the ‘oover).

Very nice, boys. Very nice. What woman could resist us, eh, eh? She’ll melt like Camembert in me paws!

Aaaaaaaaaaat ease!

Now where’s that bleedin’ four-eyed owl oos been teachin’ me ‘ow to talk to ladies? Drosselmeyer! Drosselmeyer! Get your tatty tailfeathers out ‘ere!

Hoot!

No need to look so shocked, blunt beak. This is my wooing ahhhhtfit. Ain’t you ever seen a royal rodent in ‘is finery before? And as for you where are your trousers and what’s that on your back? Are you wearing some kind of truss? What the flippin’ ‘ell ‘ave you got on?!

Not regulation uniform

Well it’s too bloody late to change now. It’ll ‘ave to do. But for next time, you woolly wombat, you’d better ‘ave some bleedin’ pants on!

Right! Into the coach with you all. Drosselmeyer get yer talons out of me robe! Watch where you’re stickin’ that spear! Ooos tail is that? It poked me right in my Royal Eyeball!

The Royal transportation is rather cramped and smells of sandwiches

There she is, lads. There she is. Brace yerselves for the wooin’. Boys, you distract ‘er with a bit of gentle stabbin’ wiv yer spears. I’m goin’ fer ‘er ‘ead.

Poink! Poink! Poink!

Prang! Prang! Prang!

That’s it, boys! I’m nearly at ‘er ‘ead… I’m there! I’m there! Let the wooin’ begin!

Errrrrr…

‘allo luv…

Bugger...

Drosselmeyer! Drosselmeyer! I can’t remember a bleedin’ word you told me? Wot was that abaht a summer’s day? Oi! Where ‘is ee?! Drosselmeyer, you twit-twooin’ twerp!?

Hoo?

Umm…

Well…

…’wotcha, darlin’. Do ya like cheese? I like cheese. Maybe me and you could go and get some cheese. One evenin’. I know a nice little place that does melted gorgonzola on-

Oh. I see. You’re ‘lactose intolerant’, are ya? Can’t eat dairy. CAN’T EAT DAIRY!?!?

The wooing

Terrible shame that. Terrible shame…

Is that the time? Blaaaaahdy ‘ell! I’ve got The State Opening of Parmesan in at ‘alf two! ‘ave to be going. Lovely to chat. Sorry abaht the footprints up yer back and that hank of hair I pulled aht on the way up your scalp and that…

Can someone help me down from ‘ere? Boys? Boys? Bleedin’ ‘eck, this is one crowded lady. And I think I pulled a tail muscle climbing up ‘er calf.

After the romance has gone...

It never would ‘ave worked aht. Wot with ‘er being 100 times the size of me an all that. Still laaaaahvley pair ov legs on ‘er though. Went on fer miles..

Moving on

Allo! I wonder if that Sugarplum Fairy is seein’ anyone. I like red eyes in a girl’s ‘ead. Makes ‘er look classy.”

For less shouting and less mousing but more Nutcracker Knitmare Before Christmas see Knit the City’s Stitched Symphony.

03
Nov
09

Attack of the Tubeline Trolls

My rodent rescuers

It has been a long time since I fell asleep on the London Underground and fought the dreaded Tube Sanitiser for my life, only managing to escape due to the tiny fluffballs of fearlessness that are the London tube mice.

When I do return to the underground I keep my eyes open and my double-pointed needles nearby.

I am well aware how wrong things could have gone down there had I lost my battle.

Far below London where you can wander through the endless tunnels for eternity seeking an exit sign you never reach, pressing an ‘assistance’ button that spits back sinister static giggles, running wildly up an escalator that only ever descends, swimming through swathes of hollow-eyed commuters who stand in perpetual wrongness on the left, and surviving on discarded KFC bones and the dregs of cans of Special Brew you find in empty carriages.

Each time I descend into London’s belly I prepare for a fight. Call me a paranoid purler. I call myself prepared.

Lucky for this sneaky stitcher I was right to be watchful.

The final tube home, I travelled under London and through midnight into All Hallow’s Eve on my work-weary way home. The carriage was empty save for me and the clicking of my needles as I knit knit knit. I was wide awake and wary. The soft surge of the Knitblast hung behind my eyes and at my fingertips. I felt its covert crackle and it reassured me.

Abandon hope all who alight here

The train arrived at the station and the doors hissed open. I stepped onto the platform. Alone. As the doors slid shut and the tube train thundered away I froze. This was not the my station. It was barely a station at all. It was Aldwych – abandoned station of the terrifying Tubeline Trolls and I was standing on its platform with no way to escape but the yawning darkness of the tunnels behind me.

A low chant began from the platform’s only exit door, a buzzing hum that echoed around the walls and surrounded me “Minnnnndagap! Minnnnndagap! Minnnnndagap!” it droned. I recognised it as their hunting cry. I readied my circular needles in either hand, the cord snapped tight, and turned towards the noise.

And so they came. The terrifying Tubeline Trolls.

Northern Nasty – he's...well, he's nasty

The nefarious Northern Nasty with his glowing blood-red eyes that stare into your soul and pick out the tasty bits for later.

Districircle of Hell – he may take ages to get anywhere but you don't want to be there when he comes around

The dastardly Districircle of Hell, a hulking green-yellow menace with a gaze that will turn your guts to cold custard and your gizzard to lumpy lime jelly.

Vicmetrohammerscity – he has poky bits on his head. That can't be good.

The vile and violent Vicmetrohammerscity, its antlers of atrocity glinting sharply in the gloom, ready to poke out your eyes and serve them in a cocktail like olives or those tiny pickled onions you only ever see at Christmas.

Jubileevil - he will unleash the jazz paws of doom

The jeering Jubileevil, in the guise of a sickly swollen silver mouse he mocked the respectable rodents I owed my life to, like a bag of mouldy brie squelched into a mouse’s skin he oozed and oogled and squeaked and squelched.

Centralzeebub – he won't move down the carriage even if there is space

And lastly, sweating scariness and sorrow, stalked Centralzeebub, his yellow pinholes of eyes beams of damnation and dubious deeds as his gaze met mine across the cold platform concrete.

The five Tubeline Trolls advanced and there was nowhere for me to go. I could smell their underground stench of commuter body odour and stale bits of takeaway dropped down the side of seat cushions.

Centralzeebub cracked his red knuckles and led the advance. They shuffled towards me.

“This commuter terminates…here.” he announced darkly as they advanced to the steady beat of Jubileevil’s unsettling giggle and the scrape of Vicmetrohammerscity’s antlers against the curved ceiling above.

Then suddenly the distant thunder of an approaching tube train stirred the air, prompting the Tubeline Trolls to break into a horrifyingly fast rush towards me.

Troll eyes in the dark. Erk!

Not knowing what else to do I did what any sane London commuter has been warned not to do a thousands times over. As the train swept into the station I stepped across the yellow line, wilfully not minding the gap. Then I unrolled the centre-wind ball of yarn-venom in the Deadly Knitshade part of my soul and I hit the now-baying tribe with a Knitblast that knocked me clear off my feet, just as the beeeeeepbeeeeeeep heralded the carriage doors opening.

I fell backwards into the train and landed with a thump on the carriage floor.

Outside the train the five horrors leapt for the closing doors spitting and swearing and covered in knitblast yarn. They were all claws and eyes and elbows, like rush-hour in the City but with less Blackberries and copies of the Financial Times. The doors drove shut as five bloated Troll bodies lunged for me and five rancid wriggling torsos were caught in the door.

“I said STAND CLEAR OF THE DOORS!” huffed the invisible driver over the intercom. Oblivious to the fact that demon Trolls from beneath the city were scraping and squeezing to get into the train and eat my soul like a post-pub kebab.

The beeeeeepbeeeeeeepbeeeeeep that signalled another attempt at door opening and closing sounded. In moments they would be free and I would be foodstuff. I leapt to my feet and threw myself towards the writhing woolly mass of Troll turmoil. With five swift strokes I pulled my circular needles garrotte-style around each Troll neck, avoiding snapping teeth and slicing claws, and one by one I lopped off their heads and stepped aside as they bounced to the carriage floor.

Where's a tube sanitiser when you need one?

Centralzeebub roared in troll-horror and exhaled a breath of ancient cigarette ends, rat droppings and Evening Standard ink as his head came away from his wriggling body, and the doors slid open and reclosed dropping five headless Troll bodies into the endless gap.

I sat in the carriage covered in troll-blood. Five knitblasted troll heads rolled about me like yarn-covered grapefruits. I picked them up, placed them in my knitting bag and took them home.

The next day, Halloween, I revisited the abandoned station entrance with my Knit the City fellow yarnstormers. Together we yarnstormed a warning to the city. I hung the heads up as a wool-covered warning. Their eyes still shone.

Northern Nasty no more

Districircle of Hell done for

Vicmetrohammerscity vanquished

Jubileevil justly beheaded

Centralzeebub cancelled

There are many more tube lines beneath the city and there is a Tubeline Troll for every one. Under London there lurks an evil that only knitting can save you from.

Don't say we didn't warn you

Learn to stitch. I promise you, when the Tubeline Troll Apocalypse rises up to take over London you will need every stitching skill you can muster to keep you alive…

For the full Knit the City tale see Yarnstorm the Seventh: Gate of Ghouls

01
Sep
09

Flying Fruits of Justice for the Bells of Old Bailey

One very old church + a London nursery rhyme about bells, fruit and debt collecting + some yarn + a handful of beady eyes + a hoard of crafty treasure bits + my brains = The Flying Fruits of Justice.

Knit the City took on the Oranges and Lemons Odyssey with a six-pronged attack. Six London Churches from an old nursery rhyme. Six graffiti knitters. One full day of yarnstorming fun.

For the Deadly Knitshade prong of it I was handed the holy stones of St Sepulchre-without-Newgate for the line:

“When will you pay me?” said the Bells of Old Bailey”

A question in wool and wire

A question in wool and wire

A soaring four-pointed church on the corner of Holborn Viaduct and Giltspur Street, St Sepulchre has been strutting its sacred stuff since 1450. It suffered a bit of scorching in the Great Fire of 1666 but has generally stood up to a whole lot of London history ever since.

It used to stand opposite the City’s nefarious Newgate Prison. From 1606 every night before an execution the bellman of the church would trudge through a dark tunnel between the prison and the church. At the prison he would ring on his handbell 12 times and recite:

“All you that in the condemned hold do lie,
Prepare you, for tomorrow you shall die;
Watch all and pray, the hour is drawing near
That you before the Almighty must appear;
Examine well yourselves, in time repent,
That you may not to eternal flames be sent:
And when St. Sepulchre’s bell tomorrow tolls,
The Lord above have mercy on your souls.
Past twelve o’clock!”

A journey of fruity justice was in order…

Bitter Burglar Lemon and Policeman Peeler Orange

Caught: Bitter Burglar Lemon and Policeman Peeler Orange

Condemned: Barrister Orange and Hangman Lemon

Considered: Beady-eyed Barrister Orange and Heartless Hangman Lemon

Condemned: All-is-Forgiven Angelic Orange and Dastardly Devilled Lemon

Condemned: All-is-Forgiven Angelic Orange and Dastardly Devilled Lemon

The Bells want their money back

The Plaintive: The Bells want their money back

Throw them all together and I formed an unlikely crew. The Flying Fruits of Justice we ready to take to the air. Stand back.

Witness the Flying Fruits of Justice

Witness the Flying Fruits of Justice

The citrus criminals and their chasers took the air in the shadow of St Sepulchre. They bobbed quietly in the London wind and reminded passing Londoners of a little bit of history.

Floating fruity fellows

Floating fruity fellows

A hanging history

A hanging history

Another fine knitblast in honour of my lovely London. I disappeared back into my stitching shadows imagining the ghosts of condemned Newgate prisoners gazing out of the windows of a phantom prison upon a church bedecked with dancing fancy-dress fruit. They probably would have killed for a bit of citrus fruit right then. Which is possibly what got them in there in the first place…

Confession is good for the soul

Confession is good for the soul

03
Aug
09

A Mouse’s Tale or My Part in the Web of Woe

Lately Deadly Knitshade has been dreaming of spiders. Huge hairy ones with fangs and an evil glint in their many eyes. Spiders and I have come to an agreement. If I don’t harm them, then they won’t crawl into my ears at night and lay eggs so their babies can eat my brains. Fair enough.

So when the rest of the Knit the City Yarn Corps and I sat down to bring to life (and all kinds of death) our Web of Woe, I knew very well that sacrifices had to be made to the hungry stitched Spider.

I set about knitting my offerings…

The faintly disturbing Mothra

The faintly disturbing Mothra

A freaked out dragonfly

A freaked out dragonfly

Some Totoro tribute dust sprites

Some Totoro tribute dust sprites

Amongst these offerings I made a mouse. He was a mouse of skinny arms, of beady eyes, of flappy feet and pink ears. He was trusting, he was soft and pudgy, he had no idea what fate awaited him.

A small and unsuspecting mouse

A small and unsuspecting mouse

To make sure there was no escape I tangled them all in woolly web for the big day. They began to suspect something was not right…

A set of sacrifices

A set of sacrifices

The day of Yarnstorm the Fourth arrived. The six members of the Knit the City Yarn Corps gathered. We approached the target. We yarnstormed Waterloo’s Leake Street tunnel with our Web of Woe.

The woolly Web of Woe

The woolly Web of Woe

Mothra bewebbed

Mothra bewebbed

Flightless dragonfly

Flightless dragonfly

The dust sprites find a friend before the end

The dust sprites find a friend before the end

The mouse peered up with his shiny trusting eyes as I drew him from the bag of knitblast. I hardened my heart, tied him in place and I walked away.

Farewell my rodent

Don't leave me!

Walking away from beasts you have nurtured on your needles is akin to stabbing out bits of your heart with a sharpened DPN. Walk away I did though. Leaving my woolly victims to the felt fangs of their captor. Deadly Knitshade is a heartless yarnstormer to be sometimes…

Returning to the scene of our sneaky stitching that evening the Yarn Corps were horrified to catch knit graffiti theives in the act of stealing! They held, in their grubby yarn stealing paws, not only our spider but my horrified and lately abandoned mouse. Indignant I snatched him back from his abductors. The mouse was saved. He trembled quietly in my hand as I ferried him back to the web.

Return to the web

Return to the web

I looked at my mouse. He looked up at me with his beady eyes.

The spider did without his rodent-flavoured pudding. My mouse and I went to the pub. There he recounted his tale and we made amends over beer and a packet of Mini Cheddars. Perhaps the heart of Deadly Knitshade is not so dark after all.

Forgiveness

Forgiveness

The Web of Woe has (I am told) now disappeared from the Leake Street tunnel, not 24 hours after it was weaved.

My mouse, sole survivor of the Web, has been relocated until it is time for his testimony to be heard. He lives under an assumed name. Last I heard he was sailing down the Thames aboard a fine floating vessel.

I wish him all the best.

Read the full Knit the City Web of Woe tale here.

24
Jul
09

Knitblast the Tenth: here be Lions

The Stitch and Bitch London Knit Crawl for Worldwide Knit in Public Day.

Four iconic London sights.

Four chances to knitblast four iconic London sights.

While Nelson isnt looking

While Nelson isn't looking

Stop four. The final stop. Trafalgar Square under the watchful gaze of Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson and his four lions.

South-East Lion: Gawd blimey I wish these bleedin’ tourists would stop clambering about on me ‘ead. I sit ‘ere all day guardin’ the Vice Admiral and what thanks do I get, ay? Day in, day aht bleedin’ tourists drippin’ ice cream on me barnet. ‘ang about! Woss goin’ on over there? Oi, you! Girlie!

Deadly Knitshade: Umm. Me?

*quickly stands in front of knitblast*

South-East Lion: You know very well I mean you, sunshine. What the bloody ‘ell do you think you’re playin’ at with that pink and blue thing?

Deadly Knitshade: It’s knitting. I’m… errrr… decorating.

*steps out of the way and waves hands at knitblast in hopefully enticing manner*

South-East Lion: Decorrrrating, she says! With a bit of knitting? Would you Adam and Eve it? This is Trafalgar Square, young lady. Not your ‘ouse!

Punk purling going underground

Punk purling going underground

Deadly Knitshade: But it’s Worldwide Knit in Public Day…

*looks at feet*

South-East Lion: I don’t care if it’s Worldwide Pull the Wool Over the bloomin’ Queen Muvver (gawd rest ‘er soul) Day. You get that pink and blue two and eight orf there! That’s the Charring Cross tube station entrance, you toerag!

*Deadly Knitshade looks up with a slightly evil glint in eyes*

Deadly Knitshade: Make me.

South-East Lion: You cheeky bugger!

Deadly Knitshade: *blows raspberry*

South-East Lion: If I wasn’t currently covered in over-excited Japanese tourists makin’ peace signs at the camera I’d bite yer ‘ead off!

Deadly Knitshade: Happy Worldwide Knit in Public Day!

*runs away*

South-East Lion: Oi! Get back ‘ere! *sighs* Bloomin’ graffiti knitters. Back in my day knittin’ stayed in the ‘ome. Admiral Nelson’s gonna ‘ave me guts for garters…

Angry background lion

Angry background lion

(A little help for those who don’t speak English English)

22
Jul
09

Knitblast the Ninth: Pink Furry Knitting learns about trust and pigeons

The Stitch and Bitch London Knit Crawl for Worldwide Knit in Public Day.

Four iconic London sights.

Four chances to knitblast four iconic London sights.

The London Eye will look out for you...

The London Eye will look out for you...

Stop Three. The London Eye and the Millenium Bridge.

Pink Furry Knitting: So we’re going sightseeing, eh? Yay! How exciting! In Central London, you say?

Deadly Knitshade: Yup. Central London. I’ll take you to see the London Eye if you like.

Pink Furry Knitting: Really? The London Eye? Wow!

Deadly Knitshade: And Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament. The government lives there, you know.

Pink Furry Knitting: The government! Big Ben! Woo hoo! Maybe I’ll get to hear him chime! Like on the news at New Year.

Deadly Knitshade: You might. And if you’re really good I’ll take you to the Millenium Bridge to look at the River Thames too.

Pink Furry Knitting: Gosh! That’s ever so nice of you.

Deadly Knitshade: Ah, don’t mention it.

Pink Furry Knitting: And…you won’t leave me there will you?

Deadly Knitshade: What do you mean?

Pink Furry Knitting: Well, I sort of noticed that when you’ve taken some of my woolly siblings out. Well…

Deadly Knitshade: Go on…

Pink Furry Knitting: Well, they… *lowers voice* …haven’t come home.

Deadly Knitshade: I told you where they were. Didn’t I?

Pink Furry Knitting: *mumbling* You said they got stolen by pigeons.

Deadly Knitshade: What was that? Speak up. What did I tell you?

Pink Furry Knitting: They got stolen by pigeons.

Deadly Knitshade: Exactly. But you don’t have to worry. I spent hours making you. I wouldn’t just abandon you and let a pigeon steal you. Now would I? Hmm? *tickles knitting under chin* Hmm?

Pink Furry Knitting: *giggling* Hee hee. No. Of course not. Silly, silly me…

Hello? Hello...?

Hello? Hello...?

*sound of pigeon wings flapping and clawed feet landing on the railing of Millenium Bridge*

*darkness*

27
Jun
09

Knitblast the Fifth: I just purled to say…

There are places in the world where no one likes to be. Hospital is one of those places. Hospital smells of disinfectant, overcooked vegetables and fear that you can’t speak of until you get home and blurt it out over a nice cup of tea and a decent slice of had-a-bad-day cake.

St Bartholomew‘s, sitting quietly in London’s Smithfield district, lives in the heart of the City’s square mile, smack bang next to the blood and sawdust of London’s oldest meat market (where many famous people were horribly executed, including Braveheart himself, William Wallace).

In direct contradiction to the slaughtering of many species that went on next door, the hospital has been making people better for more years than you’ve had hot dinners (though I can’t say I recommend the hot dinners at Bart’s. Oh the horror of the ‘meat’ and ‘vegetables’ they serve to patients). It was founded waaaaay back in 1123.

It was here, along a line of needles of the non-knitting kind, lethal cocktails of the cancer-killing flavour, radiation of the less ready-meal variety, and finally a stem-cell transplant regrowing bone marrow that had nothing to do with dog food, that I used all my best immune-system kung fu to fight for my life and win.

London calling

London calling

Outside of Bart’s there is a phone box. It’s a phonebox I have walked past a hundred times with good news or bad news held carefully in my head to pass on to my worried entourage. In an age where everyone’s phonecall home is firmly lodged in a mobile phone about their person, this phone box stands like a sentinel, awaiting the moment a flat battery or sudden credit drought means he’s needed. For as long as that phone box has been there it has inhaled smoke signals home to loved ones and puffed them out into the world at the other end of the phoneline.

Within its four glass and red walls the knitblast grew a healthy green shoot along the telephone cord. The cord that carried hesitant bursts of disappointing outcomes or triumphant victories into wires, then out of wires into ears. Wrapped in a survivor’s stitching I hoped it might help others to hang on, because often in the most unexpected way life blooms and you live to fight and yarnstorm another day.

If not then at least it might make this conversation happen:

“I think someone has knitted a bit of this phone”

(listens)

“No I’m not sure what the side effects of these drugs are but I’m pretty sure someone’s knitted a bit of this phone box.”

(listens)

“No I have not been drinking!”

Or it might inspire the odd card-wielding call girl to put some clothes on.

Well Ive seen the doctor and...

Well I've seen the doctor and...

24
Jun
09

Knitblast the Fourth: Holy knitted lamppost cosy, Batman

Derby – city of the hangovers, heartaches, hidden handholding and half-price promises of my misspent youth. I returned here dragging my feet so reluctantly I may as well have been walking backwards.

A cup of tea, a deep breath, a check of the knitblast utility belt and a trip into my past.

Tea and sneaky stitchery

Tea and sneaky stitchery

Here was the house where I sat on the kitchen worktop and shared reduced-to-clear smoked salmon with three hungry rescue cats.

Here was the club doorway that I stumbled from at 3am in search of chips, cheese and mayonnaise for the cab ride home.

Here was the flat where I awoke in a tequila-reeking headstorm to find someone had filled my shoes with water and placed them in the freezer.

Here was the beer garden where I said “It’s not you, it’s me” to a soundtrack by Jarvis Cocker and Damon Albarn.

Here was the empty shell of the video shop where I slouched behind the counter reading comics and reluctantly doling out Chuck Norris films to people with tattooed knuckles and horrifying teeth.

Here was the pavement where a desperate suitor dripped ‘I love you’ onto the concrete from his bloody nose, in the most stomach-turning bid for my love I will ever be subjected to.

God and the scent of chip cobs

God and the scent of chip cobs

Here was the lecture hall where I, and every other girl in the class, fell slightly in love with a man who stood at the front and talked about Oliver Stone too much.

Here was the office block where I corrected mistakes for free ‘newspapers’ that even the rats at the dump, who lined their nests with them, wouldn’t read.

Here was where my best friend in the world and I discovered red wine, philosophy and Leonardo DiCaprio.

Here was where the first one that got away, got away.

Batman (after Batgirl has come and gone secretly): How does she do it?

Batman (after Batgirl has come and gone secretly): How does she do it?

Faced with a past me that drank pints, broke hearts, and wanted more than anything to grow up to be Batgirl, it was understandable a knitblast was on its way. A shadowy, slight and understandably purple knitblast that swung itself around a lamppost in the sacrosanct shadow of the city’s cathedral.

I still want to grow up to be Batgirl.


02
Jun
09

Knitblast the Second: love and the scent of cat shampoo at Covent Garden

The ebb and flow of bumbagged tourists that is Covent Garden. They stand in their socks and sandals in the rare afternoon sunshine and clink shiny pound coins into the hats of wide-mouthed mimes and Pop-eye armed jugglers. They scurry about the maze of shops that smell like mangoes, or pasties, or lavender. They stumble slightly on the cobbled floors but don’t mind so much because it’s all full of ‘quaint’.

Covent Garden blues

Covent Garden blues

I stand on the corner where two lovers once met for the first time. She was covered in comic books and smelt faintly of cat shampoo. He wore a shirt that said “Welcome to Singapore” in Chinese letters and looked much grumpier than he was. Despite these obstacles they fell for each other as London lovers do. With drinks in quiet smoky (back then) pubs, hand-holding walks on smog-warm evenings, and kisses in the ripples of orange street light bouncing off the Thames.

Sadly, as London love does, things fell apart.

And so I knitblast my lonely Covent Garden corner blue for the ghosts of London lovers that meet there over and over every time I walk by.




Deadly Knitshade is a lone wool-hungry wolf whose knits aren’t content with lurking in the shadows of conventional knitting. Instilled with eerie knitting powers. She is subject to constant unexpected ‘knitblasts’ leaving woolly debris around the city.

She is also a member of London's Knit the City graffiti knitting group.

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Whodunnknit – abandoned Aldwych

Whodunnknit – The Gate of Ghouls and the Halloween sunset

Whodunnknit – Jubileevil Tubeline Trollmouse is watching you

Whodunnknit – gate keepers

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