Monday, August 20, 2012

Janis’s Bunting Installed :)

Yay! The alphabet bunting that I was hoping to give Janis for her March baby shower has finally been delivered and installed in her nursery.

yay! the bunting is installed in Janis's nursery

I love how everything looks together! I love her espresso and white décor and how the bunting ties in perfectly with her awesome yellow lamp!

I will be posting more about the trials and tribulations of this huge project (and what took me so long!), but for now, I am so happy to stare at this great picture of everything put together. :)  I am so happy to have contributed more to Lincoln’s nursery.

I’ve mentioned this huge bunting project here and here.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Happy Birthday, Janis!

Happy birthday to my friend, Janis! I hope the day is gorgeous for you and you get to spend it with your amazing family. :)

Saturday, August 11, 2012

A Few Photos from the Fair

I dragged my mom and aunt out for a mid-morning trip to the fair yesterday and took a few photos.

the Midway, mid-morning

entering the fair

Starship, Area 51

I tweaked them a bit in Picasa, and posted them here. :)

Like these photos? See them bigger on Flickr.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Sigh and Satisfaction

Janis! I have finally finished the bunting for your baby’s room!

DSC_0704-001

It was not in time for your shower in March, it was not in time for your baby’s birth in May, but it will hopefully be at your house in time for your own birthday. :)

I just have to write a nice long note to go along with it, then I can ship it off to you! :)

(Once Janis has received her gift, I’ll post about the trials and process of making this huge, full-alphabet bunting!)

What a sigh of satisfaction to have a big project done and as cute as I hoped it would be!

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Lake County Fair Results!

Not to shabby for me this year, at the Lake County Fair!

Two firsts and a second!

I won a first place ribbon for Ashley’s wedding dress, a first place ribbon for my pink bridesmaid’s dress, and a third place for my blue bridesmaid’s dress.

I also entered the christening dresses I made for my twin nieces and won second place…

Second place in christening dresses

…which is pretty respectable, considering that the first place christening dress also won Best in Show. :)

Just for fun, here are the dresses in action:

ashleybridalparty

At Ashley’s wedding, with her bridal party.

Jax wedding

At my friend, Jacqueline’s wedding. I made the wedding dress, too! :)
(Sorry this one’s not great quality…I’m working on getting the bride to send me higher quality pictures!) :)

207-001

At the twins’ christening.

So if you’re in Northwest Indiana, head over to the fair for some cotton candy and fun, and thanks for letting me share the results!

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Things I Love Thursday: Cute Dry Erase Boards!

I was doing errands at Target the other day when I saw these cute dry erase boards in the $1 bins.

$1 dry erase boards at Target

I love that they look like paper! They’re supposed to be for kids to practice their handwriting, but I think they’ll be so cute for lists all over the house! For $1 each. You can’t beat that.

I love that these dry erase boards look like paper!

For grocery lists:

dry erase board for grocery list

For to-do lists:

dry erase board for to-do list

I really bought quite a few ;) and I will be putting them in various places all over the house. :)

And then, I was so inspired by cute dry erase boards to keep things organized, that I took the photo dividers that always come in photo storage boxes, laminated them, and put them in my pantry to label what’s supposed to be behind each door.

making dry erase labels

No excuses for not putting things away in their proper places :)

list in the pantry

An organized pantry makes for a happy lady.

list in the pantry

Kind of cute, right?

So, go to Target and get some cute paper-like dry erase boards!

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Book Report: At Home by Bill Bryson

So my friend, Ashley, gave me this book as a bridesmaid’s gift.  I am a nerd and I love audiobooks, so it was ridiculously perfect.

DSC_0517

(Here’s Ashley and me at her wedding.)

Ashley and me at her wedding! I made both of our dresses! :)

(I made both of our dresses!)

The book’s called At Home: A Short History of Private Life by Bill Bryson.

Here’s what’s funny about the English language. I thought the book was called At Home: A Short History of a Private Life.

That would have been a very different book. I read the back of the packaging, which started out, “Bill Bryson and his family live in a Victorian parsonage in a part of England where nothing of any great significance has happened since the Romans decamped.” I sort of stopped reading there and began listening…so I was expecting a book about his life.

Then it was turning out to be a book about history.

And I re-read the title. And all of the back of the packaging. And said “Ohhhh” to myself.  A short history of private life.

Once I understood what the book was going to be about, it became one of the best books I’ve ever read/listened to. There was so much information in it that I listened to it twice. I told Brandon he should listen to it and he listened to it twice, too.

At Home by Bill Bryson

So here’s what really happens in the book: Author Bill Bryson takes a closer look at the rooms and objects in his English country house to tell the history of the past 150 years (and before) and how all that history shows itself in our homes. In short, At Home gives the who and the why to almost everything you experience in your daily life.

From why our homes look the way they do, in terms of building materials, paint colors, and lighting fixtures; to Alexander Graham Bell’s father-in-law defending his patents in court, thus securing the future of AT&T; to why many English homes have bricked up windows or no windows at all; to Thomas Edison’s plan for all-concrete houses; to how corn is not self-sowing, therefore could not and would not exist without man; to how different ancient cultures all invented the wheel at separate times independently, and each had completely different uses for it; to how most of the food we eat originated in the stone age; to why the Eiffel Tower was built; to how modern steel was invented by an amateur because no qualified individual would attempt the procedure for fear of it exploding; to how turning cotton into fabric was so difficult yet desirable that creating and inventing the processes to accomplish it became known as the Industrial Revolution.

It’s a book you wouldn’t expect to be cool, but it’s one of the coolest book you’ll ever read.  Bill Bryson’s writing and subtle sense of humor turn what could be boring history into amazing trivia, conversation starters, and interesting tidbits to impress your friends.

You’d never guess that salt and pepper were so interesting.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...