misplacedpom
1,124
And still no sign of stopping. I mean at some point I suppose I'm going to have to but I just don't want to.
The light in my bedroom really isn't conducive to taking photographs, particularly with my kit lens. But until I get a different apartment (not likely) or a super-duper wide angle (even less likely) this will have to do.
This blanket is made entirely from sock yarn scraps donated by my wonderful knitting friends. To say thank you for mailing me their scraps I made a kiva loan for every five people who donated. Originally I made loans to a shoe saleswoman in Peru, a baker in El Salvador, a publican in South Sudan, a crafts woman in Samoa, a teacher in Nicaragua and a group of weavers in Kyrgyzstan. During the course of the knitting, as loans have been re-paid, I have reinvested making loans to a clothing saleswoman in the Philippines, a women's group in Uganda and one in Mexico, a general store owner in Cambodia, a shoe saleswoman in Kyrgyzstan, a maize saleswoman in South Sudan, and lastly today a farrier in San Jose, California. I'm not saying this to pat myself on the back, I just want to let everybody who looks at this picture know how easy it is to take a small act and make a huge difference.
Compare it to the last bed shot, 470 squares ago...
Explored!
1,124
And still no sign of stopping. I mean at some point I suppose I'm going to have to but I just don't want to.
The light in my bedroom really isn't conducive to taking photographs, particularly with my kit lens. But until I get a different apartment (not likely) or a super-duper wide angle (even less likely) this will have to do.
This blanket is made entirely from sock yarn scraps donated by my wonderful knitting friends. To say thank you for mailing me their scraps I made a kiva loan for every five people who donated. Originally I made loans to a shoe saleswoman in Peru, a baker in El Salvador, a publican in South Sudan, a crafts woman in Samoa, a teacher in Nicaragua and a group of weavers in Kyrgyzstan. During the course of the knitting, as loans have been re-paid, I have reinvested making loans to a clothing saleswoman in the Philippines, a women's group in Uganda and one in Mexico, a general store owner in Cambodia, a shoe saleswoman in Kyrgyzstan, a maize saleswoman in South Sudan, and lastly today a farrier in San Jose, California. I'm not saying this to pat myself on the back, I just want to let everybody who looks at this picture know how easy it is to take a small act and make a huge difference.
Compare it to the last bed shot, 470 squares ago...
Explored!