Archive: December, 2012

Every few weeks, Critical Mass will feature one Philly Love Note in its collaboration with blogger Emma Fried-Cassorla of phillylovenotes.com.
LOVE NOTE RECIPIENT: Loop Yarn
I AM: Susanne Johnson, a native Philadelphian, a nurse in West Philadelphia, a blogger and a storyteller with a fierce love for all things homemade — be they knit, sewn or preserved.
MY LOVE NOTE:
Dear Loop,
Do you know how much I love you? I don’t think I’ve ever really said it out loud. I’ve quite possibly said it on Yelp or to friends or even to a passerby, but I think it’s time I let you know directly.
In the grand scale of life, my knitting habit is a drop in the bucket compared to those to whom it has
been a lifelong hobby. This January, when I turn 28, will mark 10 whole years for me as a knitter. It was a hobby that I picked up on a whim after so many years of passing a particular yarn shop as a child. “Look at all of those pretty colors! That looks like fun,” I thought from the other side of the window. I was 18 and about to embark on a whole new life as a student at Barnard College in New York City. Knitting seemed like a good distraction from all of the “newness.”
I’ve knitted my way through boring classes, subway rides, three boyfriends, a semester abroad in South Africa, a horrendous roommate and the realization that I hated pre-med classes. I almost wrote my senior anthropology thesis on the cultural significance of knitting, but abandoned the idea when I decided the field research would be a bit tricky.
In almost 10 years of knitting, I’ve visited quite a few yarn shops both at home and abroad. I’ve learned that people can make just about anything seem pretentious, even yarn. I’ve learned that what passes for yarn for some people is my idea of wearing burlap sackcloth. More importantly, I’ve learned that every knitter needs a community — a hub, a resource, a home.
We first met, five years ago, during my senior year at Barnard College. I was home from New York City for a brief spell and was in need of a fiber fix. Driving down South Street with my mother, I spotted the shop’s sign. “Pull over, pull over! That’s the store I read about in the newspaper!” Loop had recently been profiled as one of the few yarn shops owned by men. Loop was — and is — pleasantly chic and modern without any trace of the “granny’s den” vibe that some other stores give off. Clean white lines, square cubbies filled with neatly stacked jewel-toned yarn, colorful skeins artfully hung on the walls and inspiring displays in the large picture windows — Loop is a feast for eyes weary of the grey and black and concrete of the city. The clientele is diverse — young professionals, college kids, young women with burgeoning families, artists, older women looking to outfit grandchildren, men who don’t give a damn who sees them knitting and on and on.
Loop, like knitting itself, is pure comfort. Just thinking about you brings forth a happy sigh from within as I think about how popping into the store can brighten even the dreariest of days. Sometimes, all it takes to feel hopeful again is a soft wool in my favorite color, and the anticipation of stretching my needles with a new pattern.
Whether you know it or not, you have seen me through a lot these last five years — the death of my father, nursing school, my first nursing job and now my master’s studies. Yes, there is a local yarn shop that is much closer to my home, but I really can’t imagine any other shop but Loop as my knitting community. I remember the first time Kathy — a longtime Loop employee — said hello and mentioned me by name when I walked into the shop! Suddenly, I didn’t just feel like a customer, but a member of something bigger than myself. It’s my version of Cheers — where everybody knows my name.
I’m not sure what Loop’s owner, Craig, had in mind when he first opened its doors but I think he’d be happy to know that Loop holds a very special place in the hearts of Philadelphia’s knitters.
Have a favorite spot you'd like to write a love note to? Send it to the author at phillylovenotes@gmail.com or tweet her @phillylovenotes.
On Wednesday, Philly natives the Disco Biscuits performed at the New Year's Run Kick-Off concert at the Best Buy Theater in NYC. The Biscuits' signature style, "Trancefusion" — a crossbreed of jam, prog and electronica — has elevated their status from sonic experimenters to pioneers to figureheads of the jam-band circuit. And, with the mainstream advent of EDM and dubstep finding the band's techno-savvy sound in high demand, it seems they're looking to make this New Year's Run one for the books.
The band returns to Time Square's Best Buy Theater again tonight and Sunday, taking a night off before hitting Madison Square Garden on New Year's Eve with fellow jam giants, Phish.
If this is all jargon to you, the video above from Wednesday's show will give you a taste of the atmosphere. If the intoxicants don't get you, the light show will.
I’m still posting standout tracks/videos every night at midnight because why not. (Click here to see them all so far.) Patty Crash is local. She’s fierce. I cannot wait till she drops a whole album.
Rewards abound at The Institute Bar for those who know their quarter-pounders from their royales with cheese. Twelve bucks gets you dinner (an entrée and a beer), a movie (Reservoir Dogs) and some all-Tarantino quizzo to end the evening. Winners get a $25 gift card to The Institute, a copy of Reservoir Dogs on Blue Ray and two tickets to see Tarantino’s latest film, Django Unchained.
Thu., Dec. 27, 8 p.m., $12, The Institute Bar, 549 12th St., 267-318-7772, institutebar.com.
Saw some of these tucked into City Paper boxes around Old City. Rodney Anonymous of course is one of the Dead Milkmen and a columnist for this newspaper. I'm guessing he did not like our Top 21 issue.
I’m still posting standout tracks/videos every night at midnight because why not. (Click here to see them all so far.) This is the title track off Aimee Mann’s 2012 album Charmer and I think the song is lovely and the video is great. But the same could be said for “Labrador.” It was a total coinflip. By the way, both videos were directed by Tom Scharpling, legendary host of The Best Show on WFMU.
I’m still posting standout tracks/videos every night at midnight because why not. (Click here to see them all so far.) This year’s Transcendental Youth came in ninth in our Top 21. I’ve never heard a Mountain Goats album I didn’t love.
I’m still posting standout tracks/videos every night at midnight because why not. (Click here to see them all so far.) I’m not a huge fan of this video, but I think “Apocryphon” the song is one of the best things I heard all year. It’s Sabbathious, heavy and kinda nerdy.
I’m still posting standout tracks/videos every night at midnight because why not. (Click here to see them all so far.) A couple year, New Jersey flag-fliers Titus Andronicus stormed through our Top 21 with The Monitor. This year’s Local Business was more of a slow burn, something you need to spend some time with.
I’m still posting standout tracks/videos every night at midnight because why not. (Click here to see them all so far.) I’m not endorsing coke or yoga, but i recommend you get hooked on Philly rapper Ethel Cee.
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