A few nice links to kick off the new week:
Wolfie and the Sneak are part of the new Poppytalk Handmade market. Come check us out, the prints are linked to shops that have them in stock (hooray for easy shopping!)
Sprout (Dispatches from Three Gardens) follows three gardeners through their plant exploits.
A Seed Company That Helped Presidents And Immigrants Garden Falters: If you haven't ordered a D Landreth Seed Co. seed catalog you're truly missing out. Equal parts drool-worthy seed selection and educational gardening information makes it quite a treat.
I saw a link to this Kickstarter and thought it was a link to this past weekend's music-heavy Prairie Home Companion. It kinda is, but without Garrison Keillor {which might make it even better to many. Oops, sorry Gary.}
Showing posts with label listless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label listless. Show all posts
3.12.2012
8.16.2010
Mabel Monday
We had a low key weekend watching 7 episodes of Nip Tuck, season 1 {okay, so that was just me, not C}, eating junk food {practicing moderation} and fresh, healthy food from the farmers market.

Did a little bit of weeding, fertilizing with kelp tea, and wall-painting in the kitchen. We also added molding in the kitchen {tidying up all those little details we overlooked} and painted a coat of white over all the trim.
I scraped one section of the balcony, part of the prepping process for a coat of bright white to go on at a soon-ish point {probably in the fall}.
More than anything else we played and played and played and played.

C got out his lensbaby and took it on a short walk around town, I did a little bit of creative cooking {and it wasn't a total failure} and we harvested figs that are bigger than M's fist.

It was a good move putting the chicken pen around some of the fig bushes.
And we realized Mabel took her first steps a week or so ago. Don't ask me how such a milestone slipped by, but she'd been taking a step and falling. . . baby steps. They're tiny, practice steps, a little insecure; she flaps her arms around to balance and takes 2 at a time. My mom saw it and asked if we'd seen her walk. "Well yeah," I said, "but they're small. Do those count as her first steps?" Ummm, duh. Of course they do, but I think I'm in denial that she's ready to walk. Can't we just swaddle her up for a little while longer and keep her small and immobile while I catch my breath?
Actually it's exciting, and before you condemn me for wanting to stifle her, it's exciting to watch all these changes and celebrate with her as she grows, explores and learns. It's also getting harder and harder to get pictures of her that are in focus. Rats.

Did a little bit of weeding, fertilizing with kelp tea, and wall-painting in the kitchen. We also added molding in the kitchen {tidying up all those little details we overlooked} and painted a coat of white over all the trim.
I scraped one section of the balcony, part of the prepping process for a coat of bright white to go on at a soon-ish point {probably in the fall}.
More than anything else we played and played and played and played.

C got out his lensbaby and took it on a short walk around town, I did a little bit of creative cooking {and it wasn't a total failure} and we harvested figs that are bigger than M's fist.

It was a good move putting the chicken pen around some of the fig bushes.
And we realized Mabel took her first steps a week or so ago. Don't ask me how such a milestone slipped by, but she'd been taking a step and falling. . . baby steps. They're tiny, practice steps, a little insecure; she flaps her arms around to balance and takes 2 at a time. My mom saw it and asked if we'd seen her walk. "Well yeah," I said, "but they're small. Do those count as her first steps?" Ummm, duh. Of course they do, but I think I'm in denial that she's ready to walk. Can't we just swaddle her up for a little while longer and keep her small and immobile while I catch my breath?
Actually it's exciting, and before you condemn me for wanting to stifle her, it's exciting to watch all these changes and celebrate with her as she grows, explores and learns. It's also getting harder and harder to get pictures of her that are in focus. Rats.
8.09.2010
Listing+Wisting

The weekend involved:
an attic sale/clutter removal technique;
bad movie watching {including Thunderbird Six};
PBS watching {food shows are a
Surprised to see Feist singing about the number four on Sesame Street;
Stared at new garden in bedroom;
Snuggled.
This morning I started my day digging through the archives of Where the Lovely Things Are, and found so many truly lovely things.

Did you have a lovely weekend?
7.07.2010
Summer Camp: Rock 'n Roll Allowed

Take a moment: breathe in {deeply!}, and exhale all the pressure and expectations away. Watch them swirl away in the wind. Don't worry--they'll wait for you right around the corner and come back out to say hi when you're stuck inside for the winter. Let's do it again: breathe in, breathe out---shake off all the last little bits of self-expectations.
Hula Seventy has some great lists up, especially the Things I'd Tell My Seventeen Year Old Self and while I forget to read Hula Seventy as often as I'd like, her Summer List has motivated me to make my own. Mommy Coddle also has one {actually I saw hers first, pointed it out to Jena who pointed me towards the Hula Seventy one}. Mav has one too, though less structured, but it fully captures the spirit of what I'm saying.

Crafts:
- Sew a simple cotton dress for me!
- Make a tent and sleep in it.
- Try out making hypertufa.
- Can. can. can. {learn to use the pressure canner}
- Dry fruits and veggies.
- Make homemade ice cream. . .the real stuff. Close my eyes to savor every last bite since it won't help the 20 lb goal.
- Try new restaurants but mostly eat at home. . . which leads me to:
- Try new recipes.
- Try new foods.
- Finish a few outstanding house projects, but do not add to the project list.
- Read.
- Take time to be still and enjoy the breeze.
- Make friendship bracelets and mail them to friends with handwritten letters.
- Write letters even without the bracelets. Maybe even find a pen pal.
- Ride a bike {hmmm, car free weekends again?}.
- Go to the lake {and maybe even go fishing...i know, gasp!}
- Try water skiing again
- Go to the beach.
- Try surfing. {Ignore how uncoordinated I am.}
- Go to the mountains (since I live in NC all three are just a short drive)
- Try new wines. {What?!? That can be an outdoor activity!}
- Play badminton
- Kickball.
- Bocce ball.
- Scrabble hours away on the porch.
- Go to the pool. A lot.
- Go sailing with the Mr.
- Play records while the sun shines through the windows. Introduce Mabel to Neil Young on vinyl.
- Go to shows and shake my/your booty.
Alright! You ready to pack up the pressure and relax your way through the summer? Let's go!
What kind of summer camp are you ready for?
9.17.2008
lists and things
I always check out who favorites me on etsy, and today I saw that someone named macyd had favorited a couple items. Upon further investigation, (ie clicking on her profile. . .) I found her blog, and it's super fun groupings of cool objects, usually themed for the day. Check it out here: Poesia, but hide your wallet first, 'cause the girl has a great eye for design.
Also, vote for the Craftiest Bastard! (Might I suggest Jaime Zollars? Her work is A.A.A. or Always Above Awesome)
Bored out of your gourd? One Pretty Thing has a list of tutorials that will fill up your to do list faster than you can say "Those are the prettiest thank you letters I've ever seen!"
This weekend I'll be doing 3 days of Habitat Steward Certification; two days in a classroom, one day in the field.
As described on the National Wildlife Federation website, I will be fulfilling these goals:
Also, vote for the Craftiest Bastard! (Might I suggest Jaime Zollars? Her work is A.A.A. or Always Above Awesome)
Bored out of your gourd? One Pretty Thing has a list of tutorials that will fill up your to do list faster than you can say "Those are the prettiest thank you letters I've ever seen!"
This weekend I'll be doing 3 days of Habitat Steward Certification; two days in a classroom, one day in the field.
As described on the National Wildlife Federation website, I will be fulfilling these goals:
Habitat Steward™ Volunteer : Help people in your community to create and restore wildlife habitat. There are two levels of involvement: Steward and Host.
Stewards take the intensive, hands-on training facilitated by the Host. We ask that Stewards make a commitment of providing 30 hours of service to NWF within a year of completing their training. A small sampling of the projects Stewards have accomplished includes:
- Consulting with neighbor about filling habitat needs in their backyard
- Speaking at civic association meetings about the importance of wildlife habitat
- Writing articles for local newspapers
- Distributing habitat information at a local festival
- Helping volunteers at a local school to certify as a Schoolyard Habitats® site
* * *Are you ready for a big drum roll? It almost seems anticlimactic to unveil something so exciting at the end of this post, but I can't keep it secret any longer, so here goes: * * *
But that's not the only super special project I'm working on. For the past several weeks I've been curating a coloring book of magnificent proportions. 25 artists, 25 self portraits, and I'm ready to say they're available for preorder! I'll be unveiling the artists this week, and you will be amazed with the list involved (including the 4 sneak peeks above: Lisa Solomon, Jessica Gonacha, Frances Hawthorne, and Julianna Swaney also known as Oh My Cavalier!).
I have a feeling this will be an ongoing project, I think there are so many artists I'd love to have involved in future volumes.
7.23.2008
Meandering links and a story of fresh rubber

Some other random links I followed this morning:
LOVED the article on succulents on Poppytalk--not because I have a weakness for the easy to care for little buggers, but because it spreads the plant love.
Also because it took me to At Home At Home. She's funny and I can relate to almost all of the posts (with apologies to the one on 90210; one word: Brenda). And she linked to Yvette Roman's Beyond the Lawn. At which point I opened a new tab and excitedly read this article! Well sort of read it because now I have 6 tabs open and I want to read everything all at once. Why is that Newsweek article so exciting? It means I'll get less and less odd looks from neighbors who think the big beds in our back yard are actually in our front yard.

There is a little deal to be had in the WATS etsy shop. Check out Modish later today and find out what this vague little secret is all about.
On to a little learning lesson at Chateau du Sneak, but first here's a nice little quip from Homegrown Evolution:
As the Bicycle Film Festival wraps up here in Los Angeles I'm reminded of how exciting it is to feel a part of a subculture not yet discovered by the masses. Perhaps $4 a gallon gasoline will bring a few more converts, but I'm not holding my breath. The joy of riding a bike is a far greater incentive than economic necessity. I'd rather crest a steep hill with a sense of accomplishment rather than a winded desperation. The bike film fest is a celebration of an everyday physical virtuosity that will become more important as the crack-like cultural high of fossil fuels proves increasingly expensive and destructive.If you take out the words "film fest" in the last sentence the whole thing becomes more relevant to the world beyond LA.
You see, around here we have a lot of cyclers who are very. . .ummmm. . .serious about their sport. Lots of spandex and store-bought gear covered in "sponsorship" logos (or are there that many serious cyclers in this town? I'm completely lost with the culture, so any misrepresentation is purely a result of my own subjective observation.) You don't really see that many people on bikes just trying to get somewhere.
This is why my posts have been lacking in bicycle gab for a while.
Hi-C finished the flatsy, so we were fully prepared to traipse around town and pick up bags of cut grass or do our shopping for the week, but my long-neglected tires were looking worse for the wear. That was June 26. We took the bike to the small, independently owned shop up the road to get new tires. Now mind you my bike is a late 80s Schwinn--nothing fancy, just an all around good little 10 speed that cost me $35 once upon a time. The tires, we were told, had to be special tires that needed to be ordered. Said tires would be in in a few days.
A few days pass, some tires come in, we were called, went to pick up the bike and the tires were the wrong size. Took the bike home, were told the tires would be sent back and new ones would arrive in a couple days. Bike sat there, lonely, and wheeless in the company of Bike2 and Flatsy.
A couple days go by, the tires didn't come in, we were told "tomorrow" "tomorrow" "tomorrow" and "tomorrow", you see, tomorrow is a promise with prohibitive nature--a term that made putting the wheels back on the bike seem useless, since "tomorrow" we'd be taking them back off and replacing the tires and inner tubes. A total of 4 sets of tires came in at various points, all of which were the wrong size and tomorrow the right size would be in.
Trusting the bike shop, we'd never thought to try the 26" tires in the garage, bought for the first set of wheels we had for the Flatsy, which ended up not working. So we waited. A couple more "tommorows" came and went and 3 weeks had passed. "Oh yeah," said a more than perturbed Mr. C, "I have those tires in the garage. They're not special tires, they're $10 tires I bought at Target. I wonder if those $10 unspecial tires will fit the $35 unspecial bike wheels." And amazingly, they did! Once again, Bike had fresh rubber, and Bike2, Flatsy, and Bike were ready for a quick jaunt to the grocery store.
What do you think: Was this bicycle run-around because we weren't the customers who would be back to pay several hundred dollars for a pair of shoes specially made for city street training? Or was it because the distributor kept sending the wrong tires? Certainly if they can outfit a several thousand dollar bicycle they could figure out the right kind of tires, no?
7.10.2008
wonder, amazement, and a whole boatload of random.
This is me then, and me now (-ish--my hair is already chin length again).

This picture usually hangs over the dresser, waiting for Charlie to get a similarly aged photo of himself from his mom. Little me stays on the wall waiting patiently for little C.
I took it down and scanned it in for the Old School show--'cause you know the whole world needs to see another little early 80s bowl cut.
But what I like about it is looking and not really remembering what it was like to be so small. The time that has passed and the changes and experiences I've gone through. They're all important and significant, but the wonder of being able to walk through life so easily, with your parents to bundle you up when it's cold, there's a magic to that, and that's the wonder we refer to when we talk about seeing life through a child's eyes.
That's what I'm trying to get back to. Finding the minuscule bits of magic and revering them.
Poppytalk blogged about some images and ideas from Wish Magazine, and although they're sort of typical of what is going on in the mainstream world, these 2 images are so calm and quiet, they're definitely worthy of a daydream or 2!

Even sand instead of the rocks would be a nice momentary escape from dirty hardwood floors and rugs that need to be vacuumed.
Hmmm, Jess~we might be racing you to building an outdoor shower first!
If you're in Charlotte, Urban Ministry will be unveiling their new rain water cistern this evening. The party starts at 6 PM. Don, the Gardener, is collaborating with us on the Community Grant, which is actually called Rehabitat. As things get rolling a little further along, I'll share some other links with you!
Yes, a whole lot of random things going on, but soon they'll start weaving together and making sense, I think. When it does, though, I think it'll remind me of the magic of seeing the world through innocent eyes.
Speaking of nothing in particular, this poster. Ok, so it's got a dirty word, but friends. . .how perfect is it, really? I think really perfect.
6.24.2008
verbal clutter

I'll be dropping off my work for the Songcatcher show on Wednesday. Clicky clicky the image in the sidebar for more info!
I'm all for this!
Sometime this week (will it be today?) I'll be contributing to a contest over on Modish. So you, dear reader, better get on over there while the gettin' is good, and get in on the action.
Now that Spring is officially over, I'll be my Friday posts will now be themed "Petals and Pedals", and will focus those posts on 3 of my 4 major obsessions--biking, cooking , and gardening.
I think you need to go over to moodswing's shop and purchase a necklace. If you do that, the chances of me snatching one up are slimmer. This would be quite a huge favor to me, since I'm trying to keep my cash.
this is funny to me. especially because of this.
My sister and I have been trying to remember what lunch boxes we had in our early elementary years. Apparently she has a much better memory than I, since I have no clue. What kind of lunch box did you have when you were a kid? Was it metal? Was it plastic? Themed or blank?
6.17.2008

There's not a lot of visible excitement in Sneak-Land.
Some exciting undercurrents include
1) The upcoming Songcatcher Show (with Jess and a whole bunch of other incredible peeps) at Lark and Key,
2) The Handmade Nation fundraiser auction at Poketo (swoon), and
3) Old School at Uppercase.
Then there are the really quiet, virtually invisible moments of excitement, when the strawberries in containers that I forgot to water send up new growth after playing dead. The potatoes and green onions that keep kickin' despite my own ineptitude.
And beautifully magic moments like finding out that grilled apples are even better than they sound. Put just a little feta on top while they're still warm. An indescribable experience.

Tell me what you're doing to enjoy the summer. Where are you finding quiet excitement?
6.09.2008

The AC came on Thursday night before the trip down to Atlanta. It was in the high 90s, and even at midnight I was still seating profusely enough to create "snow angels" on the bed sheets with the sweat dripping from my skin. yuck.
So I caved and turned the AC on, knowing if I didn't, my brain wouldn't function on Friday as I scurried around frantically getting ready for ICE in Atlanta.
I didn't spend much time looking around, instead spent the day following the shade and drinking water to keep from having a heat stroke (11 hours in 96+ weather builds character for sure), but I did get over to the Dulce Vegan booth (YUM), and check out Jess' friend Kurt's work. which. blew. my. mind.


The news was broken to the public sphere: Modishoppe will close at the end of this month. Although I have found a new shop to put my work in, I'm sad to see the shop close, since it gave me great incentive to bug the crap out of shopkeep Jena all the time (hmmm, I hope it's not my fault she's closing!) Be sure to check in and pick up some goodies from the best of the best the internet has to offer, including some of my favorite W&tS pieces available now! (Some of my favorites in Modishoppe include works by: Foundling, Stephanie DosReis, Jenna Rose and MoodSwing Studios.)
And a special thank you to: Creature Comforts, decor8, Design for Mankind and Poppytalk for mentioning Jess' and my collaboration! We're very excited about it, and I loved getting to show it off at ICE this past weekend. The prints are now available in both mine and Jess' etsy shops so check em out!
5.29.2008
rebel rebel

{click here for large version}
{click here for sources}
Several months ago, a couple friends and I applied for a small community grant through the local arts and science council. Word is, we got it! I'll tell you more about it soon, but the pictures above and the links below are some of the things I'm thinking about these days.
Today's resources of inspiration:
Another Limited Rebellion
Homegrown Evolution
Usufruct/Ejido
How to Homestead
Another Limited Rebellion
Homegrown Evolution
Usufruct/Ejido
How to Homestead
4.30.2008
It's a chain reaction . . .

I'll have this practice makes perfect print there, among some other little prints never seen before! Oooo, you don't want to miss that primo opportunity.
On the gardening front, I wrote up a little about getting cheap or free plants on Modish this past Friday. Here's what I have in the yard that needs some thinning:
St John's Wort
Lamb's Ear
Moss Phlox
Vinca
Daffodils (large assortment thanks to my Memaw)
Spider Lilies
The beauty of division is that you already know the plants like what you've done for them (read: ignored, underwatered, forgotten) so they'll do just fine in other places, too (more than likely. Don't let me down kids!!)
Public Radio has a questionnaire in the guise of a game to find out how many planets we'd need if everyone lived like you (or me).
In the hipness of all that is local, Pick Your Own is a great website to (uhhh) locate the local.
And you can feel like Farmer Fred as you pick your own! I'm thinking the early strawberries just might be the thing tide me over til the tomatoes come in. Jam, anyone?
The Make! Do! Manifesto via the Make! Do! blog (via It's all about the small things)
Make Do is:
A Movement.
A Manifesto.
A Way of Life.
A Revolution.
Get by with what you have.
Resist the urge to upgrade.
A "Depression" mentality that isn't depressing.
But also -
Make!
Do!
Limit options and expand your creativity.
I also think "community" is an essential part of the environment, and love how hopeREVO cultivates positive connections, so here are some cards I made for printing and putting in situ, for a stranger to find and find connection with.
Make Do is:
A Movement.
A Manifesto.
A Way of Life.
A Revolution.
Get by with what you have.
Resist the urge to upgrade.
A "Depression" mentality that isn't depressing.
But also -
Make!
Do!
Limit options and expand your creativity.
I also think "community" is an essential part of the environment, and love how hopeREVO cultivates positive connections, so here are some cards I made for printing and putting in situ, for a stranger to find and find connection with.
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