Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Charming Altered Container for LESSology


I was digging through my closet of items to alter the other day and came across this document tube that was looking pretty sad. Then I happened upon LESSology's Charming Challenge and a project was born!


The paper modged podged onto the tube was previously a very old catalog, the Eiffel Tower was an earring and the old necklace I used to outline the clear rose charm came out of the metal scrap bin! 

Here is a side view of the charms. I liked this photo, it looked like the lady is holding a lantern, but it is really just the sun shining in!


And one more photo of the charm itself. I'm holding it so you can see that it is see through. I taped a clear plastic piece behind my German Rose sticker and then covered the top with some Modge Podge Dimensional Magic. Also threw in a pearl and some glitter! Love making these!


Happy Tuesday!

Monday, February 4, 2013

A Sunny Day Scrapbook Layout for The Studio


































I did something absolutely terrible the other day. I let my husband use my heat gun. It is a real tool so useful for thawing things. Anyhow, when he went to put the heat gun back in my cupboard, he moved something and I found a couple of kits from this summer I had not used up yet. Eeek! Then I was mad at myself for losing paper!

I really try to use up a kit each month because eventually I'm a) either sick of the paper or b) it gets stashed and never pulled back out. So, anyhow, in this case it was like SUMMER in a bag, although it was mostly just scraps.

So, a page was born.

Typically I scrap the kids mostly when I am making pages from events.

In this case, I found this picture of Joe who was supervising THE MAN and the kids who were target shooting behind our house hence the skunk target laying by his chair.





























Might be able to see it a bit better in this shot I took looking across the page.

And how do you like that coffee filter flower? I was dying the little flags to use up top (they were also left over from the summer) and the filter had some nice color, so decided to use it up too!

I think it's funny you can see the snow in the background there near the photo of the nice green grass! I snuck out for some photos between snow flurries.


























And a quick view of my journaling & some of the cork board shapes I added and doodled on.

Based this page off a sketch from The Studio that I liked! It really worked well for the pile of scraps I had to work with!


Happy Monday! Hope your team won for the Superbowl, mine did not, but I based it off which team I thought looked best in their tight pants...so I guess I'm not all that sad! ;-)

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Tongue Tied by Bruce H. Mero for Story Telling Sunday


linking this up to Story Telling Sunday over at Sian's...we are pretty sure this hasn't been linked up to her blog before, but may have been published on my blog way back in 2011. Sorry to bring you a bit of snow Australia, but we're in the midst of it here! Perhaps it will cool you down a bit! It doesn't quite match her theme, but perhaps we can go with childhood and memories of a Grandpa as being precious. 

Tongue Tied

by Bruce H. Mero


          It had snowed heavily overnight. As I ate breakfast, I could hear the sounds of Grandpa Curt's Willies Jeep, plowing snow out of the driveway. 

          Before my Cheerios were finished, Grandpa came through the back door, stamped his feet, unbuckled his galoshes and took off his overcoat. 

          “There’s a lot of snow on the ground,” he said. “The City plows have not been here yet and the street is still full of drifts. I’d be surprised you kids had school today.”

          My sister and I looked at each other, wide-eyed, and then gazed at our Mom.

          "I hate to give you the bad news,” she said, “But there is nothing on the radio about school being cancelled, so you’d better get ready to go.”

          Minutes later, we were out the door. Seneca Street School was about one half mile from our house. We walked there and back every day, sister Caryl to the fourth grade and me to the sixth. As soon as we had left the part of the driveway Grandpa Curt had plowed, we plunged into knee deep snow and some waist-deep drifts. Neither street or sidewalk plow had made it to our street. We had nearly reached the second house down from ours when Mrs. Woodhouse stuck her head out of her front door and told us that she had just heard on the radio that school was cancelled for the day. 

          We ran back home and burst into the kitchen with the news. Grandpa was still eating his breakfast. 

          He looked over his coffee cup and said, "You can help me this morning, boy. It might keep you out of your mother’s hair.” 

          I quickly changed out of my school clothes and got ready to go with Grandpa Curt. The telephone rang. It was my classmate and closest friend, Ramsey. He wanted to know if I’d heard the news about school being cancelled and did I want to go sledding? With an air of importance, I told him that I had to help my Grandpa this morning, but when I was finished work, I could go sledding with him. I said that I’d come to his house later.

          Helping Grandpa Curt mainly consisted of riding shotgun in the Jeep while he plowed out all of the neighbors. All the neighbors, that is, except Mr. Mazzullo. Grandpa Curt was mad at Mr. Mazzullo because his dog had once barked late into the night and kept Grandpa awake. He had called Mr. Mazzullo at two-thirty in the morning to tell him that his dog was barking and keeping him awake and that Mr. Mazzullo might as well be awake too. Mr. Mazzullo had said something nasty to Grandpa that Grandpa didn’t like and then he hung up. The dog barked until morning. Mr. Mazzullo's driveway didn’t get plowed.

          Riding in the Jeep was great at first. In order to get to the neighbor's driveways, Grandpa had to plow the street. That Jeep would go anywhere, even the deepest drifts were no deterrent. Grandpa would gun the engine and would plow into the snow so fast that waves of snow crested over the cab of the Jeep. It was great fun, but soon I was bored. Grandpa Curt let me run the controls for the plow once in a while, but that got old too. Sensing this, Grandpa finished his last driveway in the neighborhood, then headed for downtown. Lower Sayles Street was still clogged with snow, but the Jeep had no trouble busting through the drifts. Lenox Avenue had been plowed, as had the main streets downtown. We stopped at a diner Grandpa called Trigger’s. Coffee at Trigger’s was part of Grandpa’s morning routine. He had introduced me as his assistant to the people in Trigger's when we arrived. I drank hot cocoa and ate a sugar donut while he chatted with several of his friends. From Trigger’s we went to Mr. Boucher’s cigar store on Madison Street, where Grandpa bought a couple of fat cigars and a box of White Owls. He gave me two nickels to buy penny candy.

          “Don't spend it all on yourself, get something for your sister too,” he instructed.

          After plowing out the parking lot at the Presbyterian Church, we headed back home. He drove into the yard and backed the Jeep in its usual spot, thanked me for all of my help and then he went into his shop. It was almost nine o'clock and Grandpa always opened his shop for business at nine o'clock sharp. I knew that I was done helping Grandpa and that I had been dismissed, however I followed him inside and asked if I could get my sled out of his cellar. 

          "You know where it is," he said.

          Grandpa Curt’s cellar was a spooky place, a labyrinth of chambers under his shop. There he stored stacks of lumber, all kinds of steel pieces, barrels of nails and bolts and nuts and washers, spools of wire, hardware, tools, welding tanks, boxes of stuff and a whole lot more. Single light bulbs barely lit each room and shadows darkened the corners. I hurried and found my sled and dragged it up the stairs into the shop. Grandpa Curt was talking on the telephone at the top of the stairs and wouldn’t let me pass until he was finished talking. He then took my sled, put on his glasses and looked it over.

           “The runners are rusty, boy,” he noted.  “Let me clean some of that stuff off.” 

          He took the sled to the grinder before I could protest and sparks started flying. He was done in two minutes, and handed me back the sled. All of the old paint and rust had been removed from the two runners. They were shiny and the edges were sharp. 

          “Be careful with this,” he said. “Now go.” He pointed to the door.  “Remember, don’t put your tongue on cold steel, you’ll stick to it.” 

          I smiled at this last warning. I knew what he meant. He had told me that previously, though once or twice I had tried it out and found the painful truth of that lesson.

          I learned early in life that Grandpa Curt had a short attention span with kids. His second dismissal of me signaled he had other things to do that morning and he wanted to get on with it. I left the shop after thanking him for the Jeep ride and the hot cocoa and the donut and the nickels at Mr. Boucher's store. I gave my sister her candy, told my Mom that I was going sledding and headed up the street toward Ramsey’s house.

          The City plow still had not been on Sayles Street, so the walk up the hill was slow. My sled was heavy. It really didn’t work well in deep snow. Runner sleds were best on packed snow and ice.  With the deep snow and the burden of the sled, it took longer than it should have to reach the State Highway at the top of Sayles Street. Once there, the walk was quick. Route 5 had been plowed and sanded. The walking was easy now with the sled almost weightless as the shiny runners glided upon on the hard snow on the shoulder of the road.

          Ramsey was ready to go as soon as I arrived. His plan was to go to the Oneida Country Club and sled on the hills. He thought that the snow was probably too deep for our runner sleds, so we each took aluminum saucers to use also. The golf course was down hill from Ramsey’s house, so we rode our sleds along the shoulder of the road, saucers clattering behind. My sled was fast, really fast. I was a quarter mile in front of Ramsey when I reached the entrance road to the Country Club, a point noted by my friend when he finally caught up with me. 

          The golf course was swarming with kids sliding on the hills.  Last night’s snowfall may have caused the cancellation of school, but it was no deterrence to the dozens of kids who had come here to enjoy the day off. I pushed off with my sled and sped down, then up the newly plowed entrance road to the main parking lot. My sled carried me to the parking lot on the momentum I’d made coming off the highway. Ramsey had to walk and drag his sled the last little way to the top.

          Our runner sleds were of little use in the deep snow, so we slid on the saucers and, later, on a borrowed toboggan until we were exhausted. By mid-afternoon the clouds had cleared, the air was chilled by a stiff wind from the north. We were wet and cold and about to quit sledding and go back to Ramsey’s place when we noticed kids coming up a service road from the back side of the golf course dragging runner sleds. We met the group and asked where they had been sledding. They said that the road was plowed up to the edge of a ravine. There, the road then dropped into the valley, very steeply, through the woods. In the summer, golf carts and mowers used the road to access the back part of the golf course, but it was unused in the winter. These kids had walked down into the ravine and used the lower part of the service road to slide with runner sleds. According to them, the road was glare ice and only a little snow had fallen on the ice because of the trees overhead. This sounded perfect, and we rode our sleds down the service road to a great mound of snow where the snowplow had stopped.

          “Holy cow,” said Ramsey.  He was looking down the road into the ravine in amazement.  “No way I’m sledding down that, we’ll get killed.”

          The road plunged precipitously from where we were standing. Straight down, so it seemed, for a hundred yard straightaway, then it disappeared with a sharp right hand turn. The side of the ravine climbed sharply upwards on the right and dropped perilously on the left. Tall evergreens hugged the road on both sides. There was very little new snow, only white ice and a slight powder. Prudence dictated we check things out, so we walked our sleds down the very edge of the road to the right curve.  After the sharp curve the road straightened for another hundred yards, just as steep, then turned left. Through the trees we could see a bridge where the road crossed the creek at the bottom of the ravine. We walked down further, toward the left curve. About half way through the last curve we started to see runner sled tracks on the ice. This is where the kids we had talked to had started to sled. We did the same. It was fantastic. It was fast. My sled flew on the ice, grabbed the curve, skidded sideways slightly, then shot down the straightaway to the bridge like a rocket. The opposite side of the creek was deep with snow and I raced into the fresh snow and disappeared with a poof. I looked back to see Ramsey slide around the curve, cross the bridge and disappear into the snow. He had gone about as far as the other sledders had gone, judging by the tracks. I’d slid a whole lot further. Slick runners, I thought. Energized, we did the slide another half-dozen times, each time gaining confidence and each time sliding farther into the new snow. 

          Our next run down the hill was from mid-way up the middle straightaway and it was lightning fast. I plunged a hundred feet deeper than before into the new snow at the bottom and jumped up with a shriek of exhilaration, just in time to see Ramsey spin out on the curve and slide off his sled. He and the sled parted and Ramsey slid on his backside almost to the bridge. He also jumped up with a yell and watched his sled crash into the creek.    

          “Let’s try it from the top,” Ramsey yelled. 

          “Yeah!” was my enthusiastic response.
         
          We climbed to the place at the top where Ramsey had first said that we’d be killed if we tried to slide down the road, the place the snowplow had stopped. Our confidence had peaked with the last few slides from mid-way up the road, consequently our earlier fears had dissipated, along with any common sense we might have had developed in our short lives.

          “I'm first,” exclaimed Ramsey.

          He ran a couple of paces, slammed his runners onto the ice and lay down on his sled. In a flash he was speeding along the ice. His old sled bounced along, skidding side to side toward the first turn. In a second he was out of sight around the turn. I could still hear the clattering of his sled runners on the ice. Several more seconds passed, then a scream and the sound of his sled hitting something, then silence. Several more seconds passed then the sounds of laughing from beyond the curve. Ramsey had crashed.    

           He yelled "I'm alright!"

          “Get out of the way,” I yelped and I ran as fast as I could and leapt onto my sled. 

          Instantly I was rocketing down the road, trees were a blur out of the corners of my eyes. I angled my sled for the inside of the first curve and hit it perfectly. The sharpened runners of my sled grabbed the ice as though they were ice skates and I skidded only a little around the turn. I accelerated and exited the curve in the center of the road. I picked up more speed as I bounced along the middle straightaway. I looked down at the front of my sled fondly, as though it were a part of me. It was beautiful. My hands fit the steering handle as though it was custom designed. This was wonderful. I’d never felt so good. Never before had I been moving so fast on a sled. Skittering across the ice, time seemed to stand still. I looked to the next turn and thought that I was steering toward a perfect entry into the curve. This was great. What a ride! What a fine job Grandpa Curt had done with my sled. Then, inexplicably, I put my face close to the sled and I put my tongue on the large metal rivet in the center of the steering handle. Instantly, of course, it stuck. My tongue was frozen solidly to my sled. I pulled, it hurt and stayed stuck. I looked up with my eyes and saw Ramsey standing along the side of the road looking at me in astonishment, knowing what I’d just done. Whoosh, Ramsey was behind me in a flash. I looked forward again and saw that the next curve was only seconds away. I tried to slow the sled by dragging my toes on the ice but this just made me wobble and miss my planned entry point into the curve. I hit the turn in the middle, not the left side as planned and the sled started skidding to the right. I dragged my feet again to help steer and at the same moment hit a bump. My body left the sled, most of it anyway. My tongue stayed attached. I came back down but only a part of me was still on the sled. My hands were still on the steering handle and my chest was partly on the sled. The rest of me was sliding on the ice. My body was pivoting by my stuck tongue. Another bounce and the sled hit the gravel on the side of the road. Sparks flew as the runners slid over rocks in the dirt. With another bounce, I again left the sled, except again for my stuck tongue. I crashed back onto the sled almost perfectly and seemed to gain some control of the speeding missile. I looked up to see that my exit from the curve placed me on a course that would miss the bridge over the creek entirely, but this I could not change in the few seconds I had before I hit the creek bank in a blizzard of snow. The sled and I went airborne and parted company. Each cleared the creek, crashing in a great avalanche of fresh snow on the opposite side. Neither was hurt. Well, the sled was fine. I, however, lost a huge chunk off the tip of my tongue when the sled and I parted. That piece of my tongue was still stuck to the sled. I was bleeding profusely.

          Ramsey came running over and said "That was the greatest sled ride I've ever seen!"

           He had watched the whole thing and was so excited he’d forgotten the large gash he put in his left ear when he flew off the road and he and sled and a pine tree collided. The sled was broken onto bits and he'd left it in the woods. Ramsey had rolled off the sled just before the collision and was mostly unhurt, except for his ear. He gave me a piece of ice from the creek to suck on to stop the bleeding in my mouth. He held a piece on his ear.

          Triumphantly, we ascended the hill and headed for home. I dragged my sled. Ramsey dragged the saucers. We were both bloody, cold, wet and tired, but so pleased. We had dared to and conquered the ride into the ravine.

          Ramsey and I said good-by where the golf course road met the State Highway. I rode my sled all of the way down Sayles Street, which had been plowed finally by the City. It was such a fast ride that I slid right passed my house. Of course, I needed to return my sled to Grandpa's cellar upon my return and he asked how it went when I went into the shop. I couldn't hide my excitement and told him about the fast ride into the valley at the golf course, most of it, that is. He surmised the part I left out from the blood on my face and the still-stuck tip of my tongue on the steering rivet of my sled. He slowly shock his head as he returned to his work.


          

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Know This, Keep This, Read This page for Another Freaking Scrappy


































Earlier this week I made a couple of pages based off a sketch that Heather had given us. And although I did not really use her sketch for this page, I was working on them all together and I feel as if there is a sisterly resemblance to them.

Our latest challenge is up at Another Freaking Scrappy and it's about you! Well, most of our challenges are designed to bring YOU into your pages so people reading your journaling years from now will know what you are working on, thinking about, doing!

This one is all about Passion and what you are passionate about. I had a hard time picking. I have a lot of things I'm into aside from what I even blog about. I just listed a few and left off my lesser known favorites like sparkly glittery high heals and orange roses.

Snuck my journaling in sideways by that cool chippy tag.



And in case you are wondering about the terrific crop job on my page above, sometimes it's hard to get a good photo in the winter outside. See slippers peeking in my photo and YES, it's on snow. I have a special foam board I use that dries! How do do you like the dog tracks...


























Here is a side shot so you can see some of the dimension.


























Yes that is me feeding an Alpaca or Llama or something that really wanted the alfalfa in Peru!



I'm leaving you with one last photo of Irini's great flower! I almost have worked my way through my stash and I will have to place another flower order!

Happy Saturday! Tomorrow is Story Telling Sunday so see you soon!




Friday, February 1, 2013

Me Right Now Today

because it's Friday and although I want to post my newest page, I feel the urge to write instead..so you get this follow up to Helen's post . ;-)

I would try to fight that urge and post anyhow, but it's been a long week with weird shrieking winds that blow you sideways and a dishwasher spitting water all over the kitchen floor. Oh right, life! 

Swooning Over:  Peacock Feathers, Glittery things, masks

Planning:  Spring Projects like new steps into the house, shutters, and more gardening while it's bitter cold and the snow flurries fly

Eating:  Molasses cookies made with real ground ginger and oatmeal with coconut

Discovering:  Just because the beginning part of the week sucks, does not mean the rest of it will, although you never do know. 

Looking at:  repurposing things


Looking in particular for these kinds of trays although my spices are surely not in pretty little bottles like this. Wish I could find the original post for this but stole this off Lisa's Pinterest and I'm not clever enough today to figure that out. 

Wearing - Under Amour Tank, Vicky Secret Shirt, Jeans from Tractor Supply, ratty green well loved sweatshirt from Aeropostale that I stole from kid and slippers that I stole from the same kid...again, repurposing things...

Cooking - Jambalaya for supper in honor of Super Bowl being held in New Orleans although I really do not watch football I watch strong men in tight pants....the rest of it really is lost on me. 

Wondering - If fabric embellishment dropped into a wine glass and carefully dried off will still smell like wine...

Trying Out:  The idea of short feet on this cabinet which will also have glass doors. I have this bad boy in my sights for repainting and storing scrappy stuff. It will be quite the labor of love as THE MAN claims the woodstove would be a better place than our house. As if!



Happy Friday! 

Thursday, January 31, 2013

I ❤ YOU 2 & Valentine pages for Miracles Momma Designs


































In a fit of crazy, I convinced my two kids to take a quick photo outside during our bitter cold.

Might be why they appear to be wincing..needed photos for my Valentine's Day Cards though!

Thought I would use them on a page because I really liked the colors!

Anyhow wanted to share the latest sketch up at Miracles Momma Designs.


I've made two pages using this sketch, both of them with Valentine's Day in mind. It was great to use up some stash and also send a page to my next door neighbor who had the cutest Facebook profile photo from her recent visit with her granddaughter.


On my first layout, I lucked out and had these cute little hexagons left over and they matched the sketch perfectly! In fact, that is one of my favorite parts of my page! Of course those flowers also make me happy! Thanks Irini!


























My second page that I made for Shirley also has some cool elements, some digital images sold by Nicecrane Designs.

See them tucked in there?



























They are from Ignacio's Be My Valentine Collection! Love them!


If you get a chance, check out Heather's layouts! Let me know if you play along with her sketch!

Happy Day before the Weekend! Whhoooot!

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

First Scrap Page EVER for ScrapFriends


































Goodness gracious why don't I just show you my underwear drawer....

Oh since everyone else is, I guess I'll post this for the latest challenge over at Scrap Friends.

Since we are talking about underwear, let me explain why I made this page. I was lactating.

First baby, first important job, all that jazz.

I worked for a wonderful Fortune 500 Company and was blessed with a state of the art lactation room. I used to hang out there and read and pump carefully positioning the pumps up against the counter so I could hold a book. It was peaceful I tell you.

New baby was no picnic. She is now 12. She looks innocent in those photos but sleep and peace was at a premium....

Most women taped up photos of whom they were lactating for.

Not me, I've always been an overachiever when it comes to photos and crafty. I made a page of photos and taped up the page protector.

Anyone recognize THE MAN in there? He looks like quite the baby. Of course, my 12 year old barely fits on our laps these days. She eats like a horse even to this day.

Oh the memories! Come on, show us yours! I showed you mine. ;-)

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Further to Fly Page for Frosted Designs

Playing along with a Frosted Design Challenge which requires the use of "music on your cards, layouts, or OTP" items. I thought it was a top notch idea and used music in several ways on my page. 

Can you see my vintage sheet music peeking in there? And my title is from a Paul Simon Song:

There may come a time
When you'll be tired 

As tired as a dream that wants to die 
And further to fly 


And here is a little shot of this amazing Irini flower and my title. 


And, let me explain the thought process behind this page. We had just hit our first set of ruins in Peru, which also meant our first set of steps with the altitude change and the sun that was doing it's best to make us super hot. The whole thing was amazing, but was a great taste of what was to come! Steps, more steps, more sun, more heavy breathing...

But it was amazing!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Shaker Top Vintage Valentine's Day Ornament for LESSology Challenge


I wish I could say that I came up with this idea on my own. I spotted it AGES ago and pinned it and have been looking for salt and pepper shakers ever since. Check out the one Katalina made here. I am still on the hunt for smaller ones. May the Vintage Goddess of the Second Hand Stores shine down on me favorably in 2013. ;-)

Even though I have been extremely unlucky on finding nice & cheap salt & pepper shakers, I did find larger sized (also cheap) shakers with glass bottoms. Mine is certainly not a necklace like the one she made. It's much larger, so makes a nice ornament.

Let me show you the pile of pieces I started with.


























You should be able to see that I also used a cardboard tube for my center, not a wooden dowel.

It's a great recycling project as I was also to reuse a large brass washer I had left over from a lamp, an old necklace, an Eiffel Tower earring, some vintage sheet music and a scrap of paper.

The only new stuff was that wooden frame, a Tim Holtz finding, and some flowers.


I am linking this up with the LESSology Challenge #21:  You are my Sweetheart which requires one upcycled item and also to use hearts.

I have several hearts incorporated into this project, one of which being a piece of heart ribbon, and the second being that lovely little flower & heart you see that I got from Irini and her fabulous shop


Here is another view where you can see the heart stick pins I included as well. 

And I'll leave you with one more side view so you can see where I added that necklace. 


Happy Sunday! Ours is bright and cold, so who knows what we'll come up with. Maybe we'll hit a second hand store and I'll finally get lucky!

Thursday, January 24, 2013

13 Stitches, 1 Rollo, & Guilt Scrapbook Page for Scrap Fit Color Challenge


This was a great color challenge from ScrapFit. First off, I had the perfect photo to use, secondly I had to pull out a piece of Tim Holtz paper I had been hoarding, and third, a small person asked me when I was going to tell this story on my blog, so three birds with one stone!


Do you not love their colors!?

And I love my title, as difficult as it may be to admit to still feeling guilty over this! But it also gives you a close up of the paper I used, which reminds of bringing Luke home some chocolate rolos to make up for hurting him. 


See, we were out back exploring and trying to cross our creek. At all goes back to having a new THUMB. Ok, I'll explain. ;-)

We purchased the thumb for the tractor. That is the metal piece at the back part of the scoop.


























See it there? It basically makes picking up rocks EASY PEASY. I know! I have eighteen new rock gardens planned. Lets just not tell THE MAN until spring.

So anyhow, this THUMB also picks up brush and we were in the process of making a nice brush pile for a little winter bonfire when THE MAN had to run back to the garage and get a torch.

So, while we were waiting, Luke and I decided to cross our creek over a fallen log covered with ice. We were using a really sharp stick to wack the ice off. Finally mostly clear, Chicken Momma (that is me) crosses carefully with the same stick. Half way over I say LUKE I'm scared. And he says, Oh keep going it's no big deal.

So, I do carefully because I am an old lady. I yell, I'm throwing the stick back and heave it.

Now, I cannot hit the broad side of the barn on a good day.

My son being much smaller than a barn, I could not believe I hit my son in the face right above his eye.

I could tell it hurt real bad from the other side of the creek from his cry. I then levitated over the same icy log, stuffed his winter hat in the huge bleeding crater and half carried him the half mile back to the house.

Met up with THE MAN who was like, really, stitches? LET ME SEE and don't be a baby.

Five minutes later we were on our way to emergency where I had to explain to everyone how I broke my own son.

He looks nearly perfect now, not all sad like this photo below. See how I slipped in his hospital bracelet behind the photo and near the Rolos?


I have been assured by many men that women think scars look sexy. Being that I am a woman, you would think I would have came up with that on my own...

So, taking a poll on that subject, are they sexy or not?

Happy Thursday...and go head, leave me some funny comments on breaking my son, I can handle them now...a month ago when this happened, you would have made me cry! ;-)

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Lovey Dovely Cards with Nicecrane Image

























I have gotten out all the Valentine's Paper I own and am making a futile attempt to make a dent in it. See Valentine's Day is one of my favorite holidays of all time and I hoard paper.

I am in love with the Victorian images, hearts, roses and who doesn't like chocolate. ;-)

Plus, got married one really cold Valentine's Day almost 15 years ago.

I tend to get excited about making Valentine's Day cards and I like to send them too. It's kinda like my way of celebrating the holiday and our anniversary, sending out love in the mail!

Ignacio over at Nicecrane Designs had this great image for me to use.



Here is a photo of my pile of goodies right before I got started gluing down flowers and the images. I am not a huge card maker so I make them all the same. 


Here is are the cards stand-alone. 

I did have a fun simple little sketch to use from Get Creative that I rotated. I did add the banners, what a better way to use up thousands of little tiny cool smidges of paper!


And, here is another shot of the cheese box I fancied up for my SIL. 


Yes it is really a cheese box. I added shimmer modge podge and tissue paper with some black spritz and this is the end result. See, there it is all laid out ready to be made beautiful! ;-) Hope she likes it, I'm adding something yummy inside!

Happppppy Hump Day!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

GROW: Whatever the Season & Graphic


like it how it sounds good either way...

Whatever The Season:  GROW

Yesterday I blogged about something I think is really important.

At times we get bogged down in the day to day. I know I do. Where just simply making it though the day is a chore. I call that living in the rut of life! And it's cool because sometimes life is just that, getting through.

We got offered a chance to move to Northern NY a while ago. Two and a half years ago. THE MAN and I work as project managers. Meaning we project planned the whole thing. It went extremely well. New carpets throughout the whole house, the furnace had maintenance, fuel oil delivered, all walls painted, new appliances installed, etc. And for the most part, we did all the work ourselves. Kids showed up to completely painted and unpacked rooms and life was good.

Then various things happened you could not project plan for. A dog died and two people moped because they left behind people and places they missed. Plus, one person moped because she missed her big stores and talking to coworkers who didn't bark.

However, in the span of two and a half years a few things happened. We got over ourselves and our losses and saw new opportunities.

I lost 12 lbs, started blogging, learned how to shovel, got an Amazon Prime Account, and gained the ability to work anywhere. I grew. Kinda like the moss I was talking about yesterday.

I think what we did was a bit extreme, but I don't want to change back into the old me. I like the new me that is smaller and smarter.

If you are inspired to work on something in 2013, I am going to share this graphic & link with you. I set very generic goals myself. This year I want to ENGAGE and it means quite a few things to me. I think setting
one little word and perhaps making something to remind yourself like a scrapbook page or piece of Art is the same as writing down your goal. It may be perhaps even stronger than simply writing it down as you have poured your art from your soul into something and then added glitter....

href="http://www.onlineeducation.net/2013/01/07/setting-goals">Setting Goals Infographic

Let me know how it goes for you! I think also I will post about how I lost 12 lbs at some point. It took forever and was so slow and gradual I really did not notice until one day I had to go buy new jeans that would stay up. Just like setting a goal for a year. Enjoy your journey!