Marge is a small yarn shop in Kamakura. (Kamakura is an old capital of Japan back in 12th century, just 1.5 hour away from Tokyo.) My friend took me to the mind-blowing place.
It’s a tiny tiny shop. One large rack on one side, one small rack in the middle, and a shop owner sitting at the back, making his own yarn (!) and knitting samples. The shop owner, a middle aged guy, totally masculine and athletic (and buff and tanned), was the sole creator of all the yarns sold in this shop. (My friend was trying hard not to laugh at the mismatch :D)
After a lot of going back and forth, I picked these 2 yarns. Everything is one of a kind, so I really don’t know the yardage and what the fibers are. I just can’t wait to knit with them!


It’s summer, although it doesn’t quite like it, what with rains and clouds every day. I am not a beach kind of girl – I go to northern countries and mountain retreats than to the seaside. But I have a feeling that this beach is my new found love.
The cloudy weather was perfect for me. Breezy and comfortable evening was what I needed.
I realized that the beach culture is so different from the city and the mountain ones. The people are different. Time flows at a different pace.
Afterward, we went to an italian place on the water front. Behind the fence, there’s a water surface. A beautiful blue moment.
The other day, my friend gave me a tour around her favorite places around Kamakura. I met this plate at an artisan pottery shop (Utsuwa-Shoken) and fell in love. It’s a work by a young potter Naotsugu Yoshida, one of his black and white series.
It wasn’t cheap, but I couldn’t resist. A simple, flat plate – I use it every morning for breakfast.
Love this book. It answers to all kinds of your pricing-related questions, such as “does ‘name your own price’ really works?” or “when should we enter the discount competition and when should we avoid it?” Compared to other pricing-related books that I have ever encountered, this one is definitely the most interesting to read.
A fantastic book! This is a dialogue between Japanese Chess master (called Shogi in Japan), Yoshiharu Habu, and a world-class brain scientist, Mogi Kenichiro. A quick read, though there are lots of findings and interesting insights. Totally recommended (but unfortunately only in Japanese).
This is my new Kindle cover!!!!
I confess, I have been eye-ing this cover for more than a year. It’s Kate Spade’s literature series, they’ve got the Great Gatsby, the Great Expectations, the Importance of Being Honest, etc. The Great Gatsby is my favorite of all time, so my heart was set right from the beginning.
Right when I decided to click the “Add to Cart” & “Check Out” buttons, I found out that they had some issues with the design, and the cover somehow was interfering with the equipment. So I gave up.
But they redesigned it and relaunched the cover!
The inside is black and white striped with 2 pockets. It’s light weighted. And it’s absolutely cute. Thus, I am so motivated to read.
I have been ridiculed by my friends (except for one) and family members about my reading the series (repeatedly), using its German and French versions for studying the languages, and watching movies on the opening days, for more than 10 years, that I stopped caring what other people would think.
(I rather feel sorry for those who never enjoyed great fantasy and adventure novels, whether growing up or after becoming adults. Most people I know have never read Lord of the Rings series, Arsene Lupin, the Eight, nor Earth’s Children series… not to mention HP.)
I indeed went to the theater on the opening day, and the final and the last installment of the HP series was truly fantastic.
From my perspective, HP1 was really one of the very first movie that the motion picture version didn’t disappoint the fans of the original fantasy/SF books. Despite a lot of things and people appear in the story are totally fictional and no one has ever seen them in real, the movie producers and designers somehow managed to come up with the image that everyone agrees upon.
This is really ground-breaking, I think.
And this is the reason all the fans of the book rush to the theaters everytime a new installment comes out – NOT because the movies are as interesting as the books.
Even for the very last movie, story-wise, I was disappointed that the movie left out all the details and character depths of Snape and Dumbledore. The parts that make readers wonder if the HP series is really for children.
If you have not watched the movie nor read the book yet, and think about reading it sometime in the future, I would recommend:
(1) Read the books rather than movies
(2) Try to endure the first 2 books, even though they are rather childish, because all the stories are inter-connected
(3) If you are a Japanese, DON’T EVER READ THE JAPANESE TRANSLATION. I am sorry for the translator, but she is not that good.
Anyway, this may be the last time I would write about HP, and thank you for bearing with me one last time.
Somehow, at the end of the Space Discovery era, at the end of the HP series, and what with the earthquake and radiation and all, it feels like this is the end of our dreams.
The dream that science can create a better future.
The dream that there are still wonderful world out there, waiting to be discovered.
The dream that future will be better than now.
The idea that we can invest in somethings we don’t understand but seem to have potential.
This is why I feel so sad these days. That it feels like people only believe in what they can see by their eyes (even though their brains may be tricking them).
Back from my vacation!
Now I am totally devastated and am thinking about quitting my job. Seriously. How can I live in such a hot and humid place? I am a winter person!
Anyway, this black cardigan was completed on the 2nd day of the vacation, and has been pretty useful during the trip.
Pattern: Empire Waist Cardigan by Pam Allen (from CEY New Harbor book)
Yarn: Pierrot Tsubaki Cotton DK in Black, 8.5 skeins (approx. 765 yards)
Needles: US 6 (4mm) circular needles
Raveled here – modification details
Since I didn’t have enough yarn, I decided to make the sleeves slightly shorter and the skirt part less flared. In the original design, the skirt part looked a bit too heavy. I am very happy about the results so far.
The pattern is from this book, and it’s actually the second time I knitted from this book. There are still a few other designs I want to try, so the thin booklet is definitely a keeper.