Tuesday, May 31, 2016

A Little Knitting Dictionary

In the group thread "Trikadovortoj esperante" at Ravelry, user "kvarko" posted a link to the PDF version of the second edition of the book "Kudra kaj Trika Terminaro" ("A Collection of Sewing and Knitting Terms", by M. and V. Verda. Using this, I made a little dictionary of knitting-related words. I added some words, which I've marked in orange. If you know of or want to propose other words, please comment!

[ Eo - En ]

English Esperanto
abbreviation mallongigo
alpaca alpako
ball (of yarn or thread) bulo
ball of yarn, yarn ball lanbulo
to ball (yarn) buligi
to bind off detriki
to block formigi
cable kablo
to cable kabli
cake of yarn, yarn cake lankuko
to cake (yarn) kukigi
cashmire kaŝmiro
to cast on surtriki
circular needles trikiloj cirklaj
cotton kotono
Double Knit (DK) worsted wool (weight of yarn) duobla lanfadeno
fabric ŝtofo
fingering weight fingrumopeza
garter stitch krurzona trikaĵo
gauge (stitch count) gaŭĝo
gauge (size of needle) kalibro
gauge tool (for determining needle size) kalibrilo
to graft (invisible stitch) grefti
k rek
kapok kapoko
knit rekta (rek)
knit together kuntriku rekte (kr)
knit two together (k2tog) kuntriku rekte 2 (kr2)
knitting needles trikiloj
ktog kt
k2tog kr2
lace punto
laceweight puntopeza
m (make/add a stitch) ald
m1r ald1a
m1fb ald1akm
m1l ald1m
make (add a stitch) aldonu (ald)
make one front and back aldonu unu antaŭe kaj malantaŭe (ald1akm)
make one left aldonu unu malantaŭen (ald1m)
make one right aldonu unu antaŭen (ald1a)
make one through right shoulder (of previous row's stitch) aldonu unu en dekstran ŝultron (ald1ds)
make one through left shoulder (of previous row's stitch) aldonu unu en maldekstran ŝultron (ald1ms)
materials bezonaĵoj
mohair mohajro
nylon nilono
p inv
pattern modelo
pattern specimena recepto
p2tog ki2
-ply -fadena
ptog kti
purl inversa (inv)
purl two together (p2tog) kuntriku inverse 2 (ki2)
purl together kuntriku inverse (ki)
ribbing, knit one purl one (k1p1) kolonoj, unumaŝaj
ribbing, knit two purl two (k2p2) kolonoj, dumaŝaj
ribbing, rib stitches kolonoj
round rondo
row linio
seed stitch sema trikaĵo
silk silko
skein fasko
skein of yarn lanfasko
skein of yarn lanringo
stitch (st) maŝo (mŝ)
sl gl
sl1wyif gl1kla
sl1wyib gl1klm
slip glitu
slip with yarn in front (slwyif) glitu kun lanfado antaŭe (glkla)
slip with yarn in back (slwyib) glitu kun lanfado malantaŭe (glklm)
stitch (st) maŝo (mŝ)
stockinette stitch ŝtrumpeta trikaĵo

to thread
tredi
Triple Knit (Aran) worsted wool triobla lanfadeno
wool lano
worsted wool, yarn lanfadeno
yarn over ĉirkaŭturnu (ct)
yarn over twice ĉirkaŭturnu 2 (ct2)
yo ĉt
yo2 ĉt2


Also, please feel free to take this list of words and translate them to your own national (if you're not an Esperanto speaker from birth) language!

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Mystery Knit-a-Long

[ In Esperanto ]

For those of you active in the knitting world, you probably know all about the Mystery Knit-a-Long.  It's the companion to the standard knit-a-long, which is a project or pattern shared online that people in different locations knit over a shared span of time, sharing their progress with one another as they go.  There are online fabric arts stores (such as Jimmy Beans Wool) that cater to this, setting up project kits for sale that are usually linked to some master project page, often at Ravelry (an online fabric arts community).

The Mystery Knit-a-Long is a special breed of KAL (of course there is an acronym) in which the pattern is released in parts ("clues") over a period of time.

Lots and lots of spoilers
I just completed my first KAL, which happened to be an MKAL, yesterday.  It's called "Queen of Thorns" and is a Game of Thrones-themed MKAL paying homage to that prickly old lady, Olenna Tyrell of the House of Highgarden.

Being a big Game of Thrones fan, that's what caught my attention (sucker!), so I ponied up the $42 bucks for the yarn set, bought the $3.50 pattern introduction, and jumped right in.

As mentioned before, I'm an intermediate knitter (but a beginner when it comes to lace), so parts of the project were challenging to me.  But it was lots of fun nonetheless, and also frustrating when I'd make mistakes and have to rip back to a known spot to start over.  Knitting this sort of thing is a duel-edged sword: it's really good for my mental health in that I don't dare concentrate on anything else while I'm doing it or I'll mess up (keeps me from thinking about work) but is really bad for being around the family because they want attention and I can't provide it if I'm knitting.  So I have to learn to balance.

Anyway, I've learned some things from the MKAL that I think are worth mentioning, both from the perspective of a participant and as advice to a designer from a newbie's point of view:


  • QoT Color Block
    Picking colors is challenging, because the whole point of the MKAL is to be an M - that is, you don't know exactly what you are doing or how it's going to turn out.  For this project, I went with the designer's choice.  I think in retrospect that had I known what the final pattern was going to be, I would have adjusted colors (in particular, I would have picked a pale grey or white color for the "rosebuds" section of the shawl).  For the designer, I'd recommend putting a color block into the pattern.  This allows the prospective knitter to get a rough sense of the color progression & proportion, without giving away the actual pattern, and will help those of us who want to a) choose another of your suggested color sets or b) go entirely off the rails and do our own thing.
  • You need blocking wires for lace.  Blocking is a process in which you soak your project and dry it until it's lightly wet or damp, then pin or wire it into the final intended shape; when it's dry, it holds that shape.  Or is supposed to: I'm still, as of this writing, struggling with the picot edging and making it thorny like I see the other (much more skilled) participants doing.  Having wires, especially flexible wires, would be helpful, especially for that (or any lacy) edging and I'd like to see that as a suggested item.
  • Non-standard instructions make the pattern fun.  There were actually parts of the pattern that were (sorry, Marinade) a little boring -- there was a whole section of garter stitch, for example.  It got interesting when the designer included instructions for something she termed "Make Cluster", which was unusual and new and interesting.  But it was particularly challenging because the instructions were all written -- it became clear, fairly quickly, that a lot of the participants were having problems with this, so a number of descriptions were posted, but not all of them were actually what the designer intended, so she ended up making a video of the technique herself.  I had actually watched one of those other people's videos, so my rosebuds aren't what she intended, but I was too far along in the process by the time I realized this, so I just kept doing what I was doing (and it turned out all right).  Two lessons learned from this:
    • For me: read, and follow, the "knitting help" forum thread for the clue, before actually starting.  Even if I think I know what I'm doing.
    • For the designer: pictures, pictures, pictures.  Any time you do something non-standard (i.e., not a stitch that's available on any of the standard knitting help sites, such as Lion's Brand Yarn), show pictures.  It's not too hard to manipulate a photo so that it will print nicely, and I will help any MKAL designer with that stuff -- though you have to be patient with me, because I am busy "IRL" and it cuts down on my free time.  But if you don't have a photo-editor of your own or aren't that conversant in it, hit me up.


Block me!
So, with all that said, I highly encourage you to get involved in one of these.  It can be pricey, but it is fun, and always interesting when you're waiting around for that next clue, and you get something nice that you've hand-made at the end of it.  How cool is that?

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Wolf Headdress - Finished!

The Headdress
[In Esperanto]

Well, it's done.   I'm going to increase my estimation of its difficulty to "intermediate - challenging" or perhaps "expert" based on how hard it was to piece together.

Then again, it could simply have been because I just really, really, really wanted to get it done and didn't take the time to be very careful when doing the final construction.

One ear is pretty mangled - that's the one I burned.  I think I put it on with a slight twist; also, I don't think that I filled them enough.  Recommendation on the ears: fill them very full.

Eyes: I went with sew-in plastic eyes.  If I could do it again, I'd make the eyes entirely out of felt.  It'd safer for smaller children, and these eyes came out of the wolf's head three times after I'd sewn everything up.  I ended up sewing them directly to the white felt backing, which isn't as secure as I'd have liked.  If they come out again, I'm going to rip them out and embroider on fully felt eyes.

One other thing I did differently: the plaits.  Instead of braiding three 12" strands and then sewing them into the bottom of the falls, I ran two 24" strands through the bottom of the falls and then did a four-strand braid (link to T.J. Potter's site, which is how I learned how to do it).  It takes more yarn, but I had a lot left over (the falls only took one skein of boucle).

The hardest part was the fact that the head is not a standard stuffed animal head.  No, it's sitting on a hat, which is convex inside the wolf's head.  I didn't have a form with which to work; instead, I put it on the impatient girl-child and worked as quickly as I could.  Recommendation: have a head form to which you can pin this thing when you're doing the final stuffing and construction.  I didn't use pins to hold it together -- I tried, but because it was a floppy bunch of cloth, the pins didn't work very well.  With a head form, I could have pinned it without too much trouble.

So, I'm thinking that I would like to do another one of these -- a Yinepu (Anubis) head out of black yarn, with Hawai'ian eyelash lei yarn for the insides of the ears (so they're fuzzy), or a Set head out of shades of red.  But I won't contemplate it without a head form!

Monday, April 11, 2016

Louise Walker's Wolf Headdress

Louise Walker's Wolf Headdress
link: Ravelry page
[ In Esperanto ]

At the request of the Next Generation, I've been working on this project from Louise Walker's book, Faux Taxidermy Knits.

Assumptions
You've got the book in hand.

BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front)
The work is rated "intermediate", and I think that between the Fair Isle multi-color knitting and the final construction, that's about right.

Typos
The book contains some typos, or what I think are probably typos:
  1. Materials list: calls for a set of US 11 (8mm) straight needles.  In the "Boucle Falls" section, the instructions call for you to knit using US 10 (7mm) needles.  I did it with the US 10 needles and that's what I'd recommend.
  2. "Top Wolf Piece", row 56: it should be "p20b, k5b, p24a, k5b, p20b."
  3. "Boucle Falls": after you've obtained 6.5 inches of knitting, you're instructed to knit 22 stitches and put the remaining 23 on a stitch holder.  This is the new row 1, but then you're given instructions for rows 2, 4, and 5.  There is no row 3.  I recommend that you simply knit all stitches for row 3.
  4. Then, in the next section of "Boucle Falls", it tells you to knit the other section, referencing rows 1 through 4.  Then it tells you to repeat rows 4 and 5.  Repeat rows 3 and 4 instead.  Knit until the entire piece measures 16" (not 8" as instructed) -- in essence, so that the second fall is the same length as the first.
  5. "Front Ears", row 4: it should be "p7a, p4c, p7a".
Hat Base / Bottom of Snout
In the "hat base" section, round 4 tells you to "place 20 sts onto scrap yarn, k1, p1 across the remaining 6 sts."  Then on the next row, you're supposed to "[knit] over the scrap yarn."  This part confused me greatly.  I think that it would be a lot easier if you did it like this.

First, don't place 20 stitches onto scrap yarn.  Knit 20 stitches using the scrap yarn and make sure it's a contrasting color and texture.  Leave a long tail and don't tie it.  On the next row, k1, p1 using the original yarn all the way through.  Finish the hat base pattern.
Knitting using scrap yarn

Knitting over the scrap yarn
Now for the "Bottom of Snout" part, what you're going to do is pick up the stitches on either side of the scrap yarn.  Louise recommends using US 6 needles to do this, because it's easier, and I'd recommend it too.  You'll end up with 20 stitches on either needle, and they'll be slightly offset: if you've got the top of the hat facing away from you, the top needle will have the left-hand-most stitch (look at the picture on page 46 to see what I'm talking about).
Stiches picked up
So now you can pull out the scrap yarn and you'll have a big hole in the hat as per the picture on page 46. 

The gap
Turn the piece around so that the top of it is facing you and follow the instructions (put the right-hand-most stitch that's on what is now the bottom needle onto the top needle and then purl it and the next stitch on the top needle together).  You'll end up with this:

Gap purled together
And you can continue with the rest of the pattern as indicated.

Lessons Learned
The biggest issue for me (as a high-level beginner) besides the hat base/bottom-of-snout situation was the Fair Isle knitting.  I used the yarns for which the pattern called, which were Rowen yarns - mostly an Alpaca cotton mix, but also a Boucle yarn that was British sheep wool.  Side note: the Alpaca yarn is amazing.  Soooooo soft.  I don't usually work with high-end yarns like this.  It was expensive, but worth it.

At any rate, the yarn likes to cling to itself.  So the primary thing I learned was that when it came time to twist the yarns behind the work, that I needed to stretch out the work flat on the working needle and make sure I twisted very loosely.  The first piece I made was the hat/underjaw, and because I didn't twist loosely, the jaw ended up being puckered.  I was able to smooth it out with blocking, as I did with the ear that ended up being smaller than the other ear (but be careful with that iron: I ended up burning the one ear a little).

I haven't made up the final headdress, including the stuffing, yet.  I'll finish up this adventure with another blog post, provided that it turns out to be educational, which I am absolutely sure it will, because I've only ever knitted one other stuffed item (a bear) and it was terrible. Onward!




Sunday, April 10, 2016

Knitting

Whew!

Okay, so it's been a while again.  The problem with blog posts is that they take a long time to do properly, and I just don't have the time.  But I've got a little while on a day off to talk about something I don't think I've talked about here: knitting.

It's fun.  It's not too terribly hard and yet is complex enough (depending on what you do) that you're always learning something.  And a lot of the time, it requires intense concentration.

I like this, because when I'm intensely concentrating on something, it means that I am not thinking about work.

In Esperanto green, of course!
If you hadn't heard about it, there was a terrific campaign, "25 000 Tuques", to knit hats for Syrian refugees who arrived in Canada in winter.  I can only imagine what it would be like coming from Syria and stepping off of the plane in Quebec in winter.  What a shock!

Generally speaking, this campaign was organized around local groups who'd knit and then take hats to drop-off points, but as you can imagine, there were a lot of international knitters, so there was an address to which people (like me) or groups not in Quebec could mail hats.  It got crazy; the lady in charge, Danielle Létourneau, had to go to the post office every day to clear out all of the boxes.  I sent eleven hats.  It would have been twelve, but the Next Generation wanted one of them, which will come in handy if we ever leave Hawai'i.

The campaign's closed out now for the season (the first group of refugees finished arriving in March), but if you're interested, check out the website above (or the Facebook page).

Cable-knitted Easter Egg
Next project: Easter.  I saw a Facebook link about Arne and Carlos, who are two fantastic textile designers in Scandinavia. They posted a blog post (complete with embedded YouTube tutorial) on how to knit easter eggs.  I love this idea: I (and eventually we) could knit one or two each year and eventually have a basket full.  Instead of a standard row-by-row description of what to do, they posted a chart, which I liked a lot.  It involves Fair Isle knitting, which requires some gentleness, so my first egg turned out pretty puckered (in short, you're switching between colors, and to keep the yarn from drooping or catching in the back, you occasionally twist the yarns together, but if you do it too tightly, it puckers the cloth.  I knitted a couple of those, then thought, "hey, I just did a cabled hat for 25000 Tuques, what if I did a cabled egg?" and ended up adapting their chart to make a pattern to knit a cabled egg for my husband as an Easter gift.

Well, next up: I bought Louise Walker's book Faux Taxidermy Knits because, of course, how could I resist a book with "taxidermy" and "knit" in the titled?  As expected, the Next Generation paged through the book and immediately requested a wolf headdress, which is one of the intermediate patterns.  "Well," thought I.  "I'm probably an intermediate knitter by now."  Well, I'm not, but I'll blog about that separately, because Ravelry doesn't have a blog function, and I've got a lot to write about this pattern and what I've learned from it.  Onward!

Sunday, January 20, 2013

This is a test post, as I haven't posted here in a while and weird things are going on.

Sunday, August 09, 2009

Photo of the Day - 09 Aug 09

Flat Stanley and the Fu Lion 
Flat Stanley and the Fu Lion
 
Shrine Guardians

 

An online acquaintance asked me to help out with his son's "Flat Stanley" project. For those of you unfamiliar with "Flat Stanley", it is a book about a boy named Stanley who is accidentally flattened and then is able to visit his friends by mailing himself to them. It's been used as the core of a letter-writing and cultural exchange program called The Flat Stanley Project, in which kids send photocopies of a "flat stanley" to people around the world and ask them to document the adventures of their "flat stanleys".

I completely missed that little Hunter's project involved documenting food around the world, which is a real shame on my part because Japan certainly has some pretty interesting food. However, Stanley visited some places around Misawa, Japan, including a trip to see one of the local Shinto shrines. Here, Stanley has a photo taken with one of the shrine's stone guardian lions.

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Photo of the Day - 05 Aug 09

Luck and Protection Geocoin 
Luck and Protection Geocoin
 
A Mystery SQUEEEE!

 

A little background for those who might not be in the know: geocoins are tokens, usually coin-like (but sometimes marvelously not) that are used in the game/sport/activity known as geocaching. Geocoins typically have a serial number engraved on them which can be registered (and tracked) using the tracking website.

 

Technically, the coin you see here is not actually a geocoin -- or, rather, it's not a trackable geocoin. The number you see there is a serial number, yes, but it is not a tracking number (as sold by, say, geocaching.com).

 

This coin is a mystery coin. There's a very active community of people who make, sell, buy, collect, activate, and/or release geocoins at the Geocaching.com Forums (message boards). Some of these people will, for some reason or another, occasionally mint coins that they then send, anonymously, to other addicts coin aficionados out of the goodness of their hearts (or because perhaps they really enjoy seeing the explosions of rapture on the message boards).

 

I went to the post office and found a parcel. I regularly order coins so this was not too terribly surprising. Still, I didn't recall ordering anything from the location indicated by the postmark and stamps (which I will not reveal here). What could it be? I ripped open the packet and lo and behold, out fell this coin!

 

I am particularly tickled because I have visited China (in 2000, before I joined the Navy). Note the "Great Wall" border. I have walked on that wall. I love the fu-dogs and am delighted that the coiner got this right: fu-dogs always come in pairs, one male and one female. The male has a globe under his paw, and the female has a baby fu-dog under hers. On the obverse are two beautifully-done dragons (I wonder if they, too, are male and female?).

 

I scored coin #78. Squeee! I've been carrying this around with me in my overshirt -- it goes everywhere with me, now. Thank you, oh Doubly-Lucky and Doubly-Protected mystery coin giver!

Saturday, August 01, 2009

Photo of the Day - 01 Aug 09

Dubai - Bank Entrance 
Dubai, UAE - Bank Entrance
 
Bank - Glass-fronted Entrance

Here's another photo from my visit to Dubai in 2004; it is the front door of a bank in downtown Dubai. The use of this kind of glass is very common in Dubai -- entire buildings are covered in beautiful cobalt and dragonfly-green glass, with gold-colored ornamental metal tracery. It's a gorgeous city, a clutch of jewels laid out in the middle of the desert.


Contrasting with the absolutely stunning buildings such as this one are places like (not pictured) "T.G.I. Thursdays". To quote Dave Barry, I am not making this up. It makes sense, though, since Friday is the start of the weekend in Dubai. Some officers from the ship went there and I gathered from their stories that the place doubled as a brothel. I'm glad I was not there.


Instead, I was wandering throughout the city with friends and a camera, exploring the spice souk, the City Center Mall, and other interesting places. I didn't visit very many places in the Middle East, I'm afraid; Dubai really is the only one I'd be interested in visiting again.


Don't you think that the design on the bank's entranceway would make a great geocoin?

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Photo of the day - 30 July 09

Dubai - at the Spice Souk 
Dubai, UAE - at the Spice Souk
 
Spices, Spices, Four Bags Full

During my (one and only, so far) deployment to the Middle East in USS McFAUL (DDG-74), we visited the United Arab Emirates. Dubai is an amazingly beautiful city. I and my buddies checked out the spice souk (bazaar). There were beautiful bags of spices -- and minerals, too -- everywhere.


One guy pulled us (women) into his store and tried to sell us breast-enlargement cream. Oy, weh! Still, Dubai was my absolute favorite of the various Middle Eastern places we went.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Photo of the Day - 28 July 09

Summer & Patrick at Hachinohe Park 
Summer & Pat explore Hachinohe Park
 
Summer & Dad at Hachinohe Park

 

All weekend long, the Air Force weathercasters teased us with the notion that Monday would be clear. Since that was my (single) day off this week, we planned to go check out the Hachinohe Park & Children's Land. Of course, come the day itself, it was definitely threatening to rain. But we went anyway.

 

One of the things about driving using an atlas is that the atlas simply marks where the streets & roads are. It tells you nothing about the character of where you'll be driving -- and the map that I have is decidedly uninformative about the width of the road, too. So we drove through some highly entertaining portions of Hachinohe, including along what appeared to be Hachinohe's main city street. We'll definitely try to go back there before we leave; the street featured several interesting bronze statues of which I'd like to go back and get photos.

 

We arrived at the Hachinohe Park & Children's Land and, lo, it was closed (closed on Mondays). But we still got a chance to wander around before the rain really started coming down. Not pictured: the extensive small-scale amusement park (complete with ferris wheel, merry-go-round, and other fun stuff for children), the petting zoo, or the botanical gardens. That'll have to wait for a sunnier non-Monday-or-Tuesday-after-National-Holiday.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Photo of the Day - 26 July 09


USAF Museum Tour - View of an Engine 
View of an Engine
 
This is a photo taken while working on one of my favorite geocaches, "USAF Museum Tour. I am afraid that I forget what in which aircraft (plural) this engine was the prime mover, but the engine itself was absolutely fascinating and beautiful. This geocache is called a "multi-cache" (tho I think it could more properly be called a Mystery cache) and requires you to tour the entire museum, collecting clues, in order to figure out the coordinates to the actual cache. It was one of the best days caching I've ever had!

Thursday, November 06, 2008

The Train Wreck that is Sylvia Browne

You just can't stop reading about Sylvia Browne -- it's unbelievable, like trying to look away from a train wreck, isn't it?
Sylvia Browne: Sightings - Ghost of Brookdale Lodge (2)Sylvia Browne: Sylvia Browne Transcript
Sylvia Browne: Terrence Farrell ReadingSylvia Browne: Browne’s Trump Taj Mahal Engagements
Sylvia Browne: TVTalkShows.com - A Report on My Session and Dealings with Sylvia BrowneSylvia Browne: TVTalkShows.com - Disappointed in Sylvia Browne “Trance Reading"
Sylvia Browne: Email - My Reading With Sylvia’s Son Chris
But it's over. Until Robert's back at his keyboard!

Ye Gods, I am So Sick of Sylvia Browne!

Are you sure you want to keep reading about Sylvia Browne?
Sylvia Browne: Browne Says She Never Charges for Missing Person and Homicide Cases...Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - A Matter of Control
Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - An Aramaic Prayer?Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - An Aramaic Prayer (2)
Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - An Aramaic Prayer (3)Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - A Prelate Responds
Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - Canada Breaks AwaySylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - Delaware Breaks Away
Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - Delaware Breaks Away ()Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - Jewelry Quality Issue
Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - Jewelry Quality Issue (2)Sylvia Browne: Novus Spiritus - “These Freaks Only Come Out at Night"
Sylvia Browne: Open Letter to MontelSylvia Browne: Open Letter to Sylvia Browne
Sylvia Browne: People Vs. BrownSylvia Browne: People Vs. Brown - Documents
Sylvia Browne: Annual Predictions - 1996Sylvia Browne: Response to an Attempt to Silence
Sylvia Browne: Richard Kneebone ReadingSylvia Browne: Sightings - Ghost of Brookdale Lodge

Can't Stop Posting these Great Articles by Robert

If you aren't sick of Sylvia Browne by now, here's some more reading material to turn your stomach:
Sylvia Browne: Larry BeckSylvia Browne: Louise Hay
Sylvia Browne: Montel Response to Open LetterSylvia Browne: Montel Show Cancelled
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Amanda Berry ReadingSylvia Browne: Montel - Anthony Urciuoli, Jr.
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Christopher ReeveSylvia Browne: Montel - Civil War Energy Implant
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Dana Chyleen Satterfield ReadingSylvia Browne: Montel - Dark/Light Skin
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Eve Brown ReadingSylvia Browne: Montel - Explaining the Levels
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Holly Krewson ReadingSylvia Browne: Montel - Jamie Barker Reading
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Johnia Berry ReadingSylvia Browne: Montel - Lynda McClelland Reading
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Outburst in SavannahSylvia Browne: Will Her Parents Be Around Her?
Sylvia Browne: Psychic Show Participation ReleaseSylvia Browne: Montel - Requin/Nelson/Desvergnes Reading
Sylvia Browne: Montel - Ryan Katcher ReadingSylvia Browne: Montel - Shawn Hornbeck (2)

Part Three in the List of Great Articles by Robert Lancaster

But wait! There's more to read about Sylvia Browne!
Sylvia Browne: Email - Lied To By BrowneSylvia Browne: Email - Linda Rossi
Sylvia Browne: Email - More Ex-Browne-FansSylvia Browne: Email - My Early 70s Experiences With Sylvia Browne
Sylvia Browne: Email - My Sister Margaret and MeSylvia Browne: Email - My Thoughts
Sylvia Browne: Email - Not a Good WomanSylvia Browne: Email - Psychic Baiting Browne
Sylvia Browne: Email - Request for RefundSylvia Browne: Email - Rosanna Montage
Sylvia Browne: Email - Sara’s StorySylvia Browne: Email - Shameless
Sylvia Browne: Email - Sylvia Browne Show - June 22Sylvia Browne: Email - Thank You From a Soccer Mom
Sylvia Browne: Email - Their Blatant Disdain for OthersSylvia Browne: Email - What Sylvia Told My Granma
Sylvia Browne: Go Sylvia BrowneSylvia Browne: UK Guardian - Is He for Real?
Sylvia Browne: Interview - Gary and Ree DuFresnesSylvia Browne: I Speak with Browne (2)
Sylvia Browne: Janet McDonaldSylvia Browne: Larry King - Caller from Japan

More Good Stuff from StopSylvia.com

More articles from the most excellent Robert concerning Sylvia Browne":
Sylvia Browne: Email - Ask MontelSylvia Browne: Email - A Story From 1984
Sylvia Browne: Email - Browne and a 9/11 WidowSylvia Browne: Email - Browne and the Campus Massacre
Sylvia Browne: Email - Clutched by The ClawsSylvia Browne: Email - “Doofrane"
Sylvia Browne: Email - DupedSylvia Browne: Email - East/West
Sylvia Browne: Email - ExMinister’s Reading by ChristopherSylvia Browne: Email - Face-to-Face
Sylvia Browne: Email - former Browne FansSylvia Browne: Email - From a Disgusted Ex-Believer
Sylvia Browne: Email - He Will Live a Long LifeSylvia Browne: Email - Jewelry Question
Sylvia Browne: Email - Jewelry Question2Sylvia Browne: Email - Las Vegas at the Sylvia Browne Show

More Good Stuff from StopSylvia.com

Okay, thanks to krelnik (keeper of the terrific anti-pseudoscience/pseudomedicine site "What's the Harm.net"), check out this following list of great articles that Robert has written about Sylvia Browne:
Sylvia Browne: Affidavit Regarding Sylvia BrowneSylvia Browne: Browne and 9/11
Sylvia Browne: Browne and BorrowingSylvia Browne: Browne and Christianity
Sylvia Browne: Browne and the MentalizerSylvia Browne: Browne and the Pomeroy Bridge
Sylvia Browne: Browne - an Attempt to SilenceSylvia Browne: Coast-to-Coast - Noory on Browne
Sylvia Browne: Coast-to-Coast - SagoSylvia Browne: Chris DuFresne
Sylvia Browne: Contradiction - Jesus’ Age at DeathSylvia Browne: Contradiction - Meeting Francine
Sylvia Browne: Contradiction - Panther TotemSylvia Browne: Did Browne Save Reagan?

Monday, November 03, 2008

Favorite Articles about Sylvia Browne by Robert

Some of my favorite articles that Robert Lancaster has written about Sylvia Browne; this is an excerpt from a thread I started on the topic of favorite www.stopsylvia.com articles over at the James Randi Educational Forum:

I Speak With Sylvia Browne - Robert actually attended one of Sylvia Browne's lecture-shows, and ended up speaking with her. This article just really highlights what a class act Robert is. With all of the hoopla about the takeover of the old domain name, it's a real struggle for me to remember to try to keep calm -- to describe, for example, Kreiman's actions as those of a scumbag, without saying "Boris Kreiman, you scumbag". It doesn't seem that Robert would have this problem; it seems like Robert just comes naturally to fairness, or that he doesn't have to work as hard at it as I do. He's just amazing, and Sylvia Browne is -- oops, almost lost myself. She behaves despicably.

AC360: Sylvia Browne's Best Evidence? - Saw the show. It's just so telling. Robert takes a look at the individual claims made by Linda Rossi on behalf of Browne. It's not a complete transcript, though. I think my favorite part of the interview was when Randi leveled some criticism against Browne and Rossi's response was that Randi's an atheist. Kudos to Anderson for pointing out this very basic (and invalid) debate tactic.

Montel: Shawn Hornbeck Reading - If you know nothing about this, you really just need to read it.

Stop Sylvia Browne - The Story of a Domain Move

I know it's been a dog's age since I've posted last. My Jackalgirl website is also woefully out-of-date.

But I have to tell a story here.

I have posted before about Robert Lancaster, who runs a site called Stop Kaz. It's a site he researched and designed to post about the claims of one "Dr. Kaz deMille-Jacobsen", who claims to have been at Ground Zero during the 9/11 attacks and who claims that God saved her (for, of course, a very special mission to spread the word and love of God in exchange for handfuls of money).

Anyway, he turned his sites to another psychic con-artist (though I use the word "artist" lightly), Sylvia Browne. He has been researching her claims, following up to look for consistency and evidence that the various claims actually are factual. So far, she's failed on all counts.

He has done a great job, and is an extremely thorough and fair researcher. I say "and fair" because he's better than most people with serious beefs about other people (in this case, completely justified, IMO) would probably be -- he is always very willing to post the opposing side's view, and has an open offer to post any evidence that proves any of her claims (that he has not been able to find himself). So far, no evidence has been forthcoming.

This summer, though, he had a serious stroke. As of this writing, he has been moved to a physical therapy-intensive facility and is learning how to operate his body again.

While he was recovering from his stroke, the domain name for his site critical of Browne lapsed. A person by the name of "Boris Kreiman" snapped it up and replaced the content with a website of his own creation which, on its face, almost looks like it might be critical of Sylvia Browne, but then in its articles comes to the conclusion that she's the real deal. He appears to be attempting to use this site to increase the traffic on his own psychic-crap website, "LifePsychic.com".

In the meantime, this "Boris Kreiman" has offered to sell the domain name back to supporters of Robert -- for a mere $20,000 -- and has complained, apparently, that people should not speak out in an uncomplimentary fashion about him because he is, as he puts it, "one of the best chess players in USA".

As if being good at anything shields you from being lambasted when you are behaving in a thoroughly scummy fashion.

While all this was going on (that is, while he was offering the domain for private sale), "Boris" put the site up for sale on eBay, Marketplace, and SitePoint. If I am not mistaken, these listings have been removed by the associated administrators -- it's a serious breach of the rules to offer something up for auction in multiple places (and then to offer it for sale privately). One could easily accuse him of wanting to rip off the winners of the multiple auctions (and the private buyer), but it's just as equally likely that he's simply ignorant of how online auctions work. Chess skill does not translate into auction site saavy.

As mentioned above, he's commented in links that he didn't know that Robert had had a stroke. Okay, so here's his chance to prove he's not the scumwad everyone's accusing him of being: sell the domain back to the Lancasters for the price he paid for it (probably in the neighborhood of $19.95) -- that would be the right thing to do.

But it doesn't look like he's interested in doing the right thing; he posted a comment to one of the Randi.org articles about the domain takeover":
Hi My name is GM Boris Kreiman and I did buy domain Stopsylviabrowne.com. I dont know why you people writing this bs. I offered to sell it to the owner and his friends. There is NOTHING WRONG with buying GOOD DOMAINS. I am not pro or against Sylvia Browne. I tried to put up objective content but got many insults in the email. Please stop this harassment because I dont want to file any law suits. I hope we can call it as misunderstand and you guys put your money where your mouth is and BUY STOPSYLVIABROWNE.com

My response:
Boris --

The decent thing to do would be to offer the domain back to the Lancasters at the cost you paid for it. Were you to still insist on $20,000 -- after having found out about Robert's stroke, about which you claimed you knew nothing -- you would be acting like a scumbag. So are you a decent man or are you a scumbag? I'm waiting for your actions to show me which.


I'm not holding my breath. Especially since he's called JREF and threatened to sue (see Randi's comment, which is the one immediately preceding Kreiman's in the Randi.org article). Check it out.

Updated at 0915 Local: Kreiman snapped up "www.stopsylvia.net" and "www.stopsylvia.org". Yup, all the hallmarks of a scumbag, all right.