Wedding noodles

First the good news. The very good news. I’m getting married next summer to my perfect match, the one I knew was The One the minute I met him. And I don’t even believe in those kinds of instant, instinctual kinds of things.

But yes, it’s true. And in spite of Newsweek’s notorious, backlash warnings 20 years ago (when I was an impressionable 18-year-old) about educated women nearing forty, terrorists, and marriage (I know you know what I’m talking about), I am getting married just a few months after my 39th birthday. Of course, lately Newsweek has said, “Gee, you know, huh, huh, we were wrong about those statistics that said that you had a less than 5% chance of getting married,” but talk about a retraction that comes way too late to do any good! The information has been out there for 20 years, warping women’s lives. Thanks to them, I actually started grad school thinking, “Well this should make me completely unmarriageable, but I accept my fate.”

All I have to say now is, “Go to hell, Newsweek.”

I am happy. I am a statistical anomaly.

My friend Emily has been kind enough to volunteer to go bridal gown shopping with me. Bless her. I find the choices overwhelming and yet, after a while, they all look strangely *alike*. Okay, not entirely fair. There are five types of bridal gown that I have identifed thusfar:

1) Streamlined and sophisticated
2) Giant meringue
3) Could be your Crazy Aunt Erma’s sofa covering
4) Could be Louis XIV’s sofa covering
5) Hootchie-mama

For example, the dress chosen by the latest Mrs. Trump, that $100,000 horror, was an remarkable example of the worst excesses of Bridal Gown Category 3 & 4. It looked like she was a sofa. And here she was, a beautiful woman with all the resources in the world at her command! A terrible pity, really.

Another example: the late Mrs. JFK, Jr. picked a gown squarely in Bridal Gown Category 1. Good work, Caroline, may you rest in peace.

For the bride, like me, who is, as the Russian novelists would delicately put it, “not in her first youth,” (people, I just have to say–I love that phrase) there is really nothing for it but a gown from Category 1. Were I 23, I would seriously consider the Giant Meringue, but a woman not in her first youth in a Giant Meringue is not beautiful, but merely pitiable.

How does this affect my knitting life, though? That is the real question. Well, since our wedding is no longer completely hypothetical, I thought I should start working on my wedding shawl, which you may recognize as River.
IMG_0543.JPG

If anyone out there doubted the magic of blocking, doubt no more. Like all lace, this piece (unblocked and still on the needles, of course) looks like a pile of noodles. Not exactly inspiring.

The truth is, I hate working with mohair and I am agnostic on knitting lace. But the problem is, I always forget this when I see a nice pattern for a shawl in lace-weight mohair. It seems like such a *good* idea at the time. In reality, I’d always rather knit something like Rogue, preferably in an oily, water-repellent aran weight yarn that enables you to stand by the Irish Sea for hours on end, looking brooding and mysterious. And possibly deeply wronged and dangerous. Not that I am brooding, mysterious, deeply wronged, or dangerous, heaven knows, but I like the idea of a version of myself who is like that.

Knit not for who you are, but for who you want to be!

P.S. As a limited, non-spinner, what are English five-pitch combs? I’ll have to ask my sister.

7 Responses to “Wedding noodles”

  1. Sarah Says:

    Well, it probably won’t be too encouraging to you to know that just within the past few months I have frogged two shawls that were more than half finished. (This is not counting other shawls I have frogged at other times.) I seem to suffer from a terminal lack of shawl commitment. They always seem like a good idea when I start out….

  2. Librarian Girl Says:

    Great blog!

    Category 1 dresses run the risk of sameness, but I agree there is no alternative, unless you want to look like your wedding cake. Perhaps you should just knit yourself an entire dress. Shoes, veil, everything. Carry knitting needles instead of a bouquet. Go crazy!

  3. Ellen Says:

    L.G., I love that idea!

    Actually our Great Aunt Frances, who was a wildly talented knitter, knitted her own wedding dress back in the 1920s. No kidding! We still have it in the family and I have seen it with my own eyes. Aunt Frances’s knitted dress even had a knitted train.

    But did she carry a bouquet of knitting needles? I’m afraid that detail is lost to time…

  4. Sherlock T. Wellerstein Says:

    What a wonderful blog. I’d love to learn knitting if only I had thumbs. I do know a place to get the raw materials however. Let me know and I will put a good word in for you at “the barking lot.”
    S

  5. Jayne Says:

    OK. I’ve been browsing your blog, love both dogs, and the summer sweater (I came by way of AK) but now I have to ask if we can see a picture of Great Aunt Frances’s wedding dress…with TRAIN? My Gram knit her own suits in the 30’s – awesome.

  6. Dianne Says:

    I just (re)married last year and I feel your pain. Not only was I a 47-year-old bride but this is my second marriage to my DH’s first – so, we had to do it up in style. I fould a lovely sleek, ample dress with a simple lace coat. What a find!!!

    Ditto the request to see you Aunt’s dress.

    Be well and be joyous!!!

  7. Lorelei Says:

    I’m looking for someone who is knitting their own wedding dress, or even having a knit-themed wedding. If that’s you or you know someone who is, please let me know! Thank you,
    LPlotczyk@sdetv.com