Volcano, what volcano; A Planets adventure

Swiss mountains As I have said before, I am doing a couple of training events for the Planets project. Last week was the final one, in Rome. Lovely place to be in April, great weather, great city, just lovely. But then… The volcano eruption in Iceland that ruined travel for most people in and around Europe was ruining my week too. We (a colleague and I) were supposed to fly to Rome (from Schiphol) on Sunday, but on Friday evening it seemed clear that there would be no flights out of Amsterdam on the Sunday. Other colleagues, travelling from the UK, Schotland, Austria and Germany were having the same problems.

After a lot of calling around, getting permissions, figuring things out, we decided to… drive! My colleague and her husband rented a car, I hopped it, and he drove us to Rome. Crazy, I know. On the Saturday we drove almost all the way to Milan. We wanted to stop in Como, but literally all hotels were full. Nice. We arrived late, had dinner late, and I was just dead tired. The next day, Sunday, we drove to Rome’s airport, where we parked the car at long-stay, and traveled by train into Rome. We got separated because of a slight luggage mishap, so when I arrived in Rome, after two days travel,  I just hopped in a cab which drove me to the hotel.

DSCF2227 The stay in Rome, and the training event, were lovely. Not only the speakers had trouble traveling to Rome, so did the delegates. In the end we had a fluctuating number of delegates between 10 and 15. Not quite the group of 60+ we had in London, but oh well. We did get to enjoy an arranged tour of the city, a lovely dinner, and a look at the archives of the university that was hosting the event.

We left Rome on Thursday, and after another two days in the car (spending the night near Como this time), we arrived back in Holland on Friday evening. A long adventure… but a good one!

Crochet: Hoooked Zpagetti Shoulder Bag

DSCF2093 Ever since I saw Hoooked Zpagetti in the stores here, I had to try it. Zpagetti is thread made from textile waste, think t-shirt fabric strips. On the website a lot of free patterns for bags can be found, but it is really easy to improvise. After a new shipment of Hoooked came into my LYS, I picked two colors and got to work.
I used a size 15 crochet hook. The main body of the bag is all single crochet, with a different color (of different thickness because it is not printed) for the flap. The sides are one piece with the sling. On the sides it is all single crochet, with one row of triple, double, half double and single crochet to create some bulk. The sling was way too long. I can’t estimate how long a row of loops will turn out to be, and the fabric is pretty stretchy. So I doubled up on top and created a sort of shoulder pad.
I picked out some special wooden buttons and used a braid and some left over Zpagetti to create the closure. Inside I threaded one piece of fabric through some loops to create loops to hold my crochet needles.
I am really happy with this bag, which I will use as a project bag when we go visit the parents in the weekends. The fabric works really well, though you have to keep in mind the difference in thickness between different patterns/colors. With a big needle and some left over fabric it is easy to create loops and stitch everything together.