Blog
Adventures In Seatbelt Solutions
As with many of my projects, this week’s offering started with a YouTube video. I took inspiration from the video but decided to go about my own construction, which I will share with you now. First of all…what are we making? Well, I don’t really have a good name for it, I’ll just describe the situation it addresses.
Adventures In Rosemary Oil
I mentioned in a previous post that I’ve been enjoying a new applicator that I found on Amazon for distributing hair oil over my scalp. And then my mother pointed out that I hadn’t explained what sort of hair oil I meant. So, for those who haven’t yet experienced the joys of hormonal hair loss, let me tell you that at some point in your life, you might want something to help you retain your hair. The fact that it also makes it grow faster is a side benefit.
Adventures In Dressmaking
I don’t wear dresses (or any kind of fancy clothing, really) with any regularity at all. My lifestyle doesn’t require it. However, even in a casual lifestyle like mine, there are occasional events which call for a dress. For example, my oldest nephew’s recent high school graduation ceremony. I had no dress that fit. I made do with a stretchy long tunic and pretended it was a dress, but it was makeshift at best. I decided I’d quite like to try making a few articles of clothing that properly fit me and looked reasonably nice. To that end, I decided to first try Sewing Inspiration’s Tie Dress.
Adventures In Crisp Delights
Ah, summer…so much variety available in terms of fresh fruit and berries. And my favorite way to eat a fruity dessert is in the form of a crisp. For the uneducated, a crisp is a baked dish where the bottom layer is fruit or berries, sweetened as desired, and the topping is a combination of butter, brown sugar, and oats or nuts.
Adventures In Epic Engineering Failures
I’ve recently finished The Great Courses’ series entitled Epic Engineering Failures and the Lessons They Teach, taught by my favorite instructor, Professor Stephen Ressler. Unlike my previous review of his course on Greek and Roman Technology, I think for this review, I will just summarize a few of my favorite lessons.
Adventures In Henrietta’s Hat
When I finished my recent QAYG quilt, I had bits of the jelly roll strips left over. Enough, I thought (hoped), to make a cover for my new sewing machine (which I have named Henrietta). A hat for Henrietta, if you will. I cut down the remnants of the jelly rolls into 2.5” squares, hoped I had enough, and began.
Adventures In Book Nook Addiction
I am not addicted to building book nooks. I can quit anytime!
Adventures In Cushion Contrivance
I don’t like buying certain things. Clothing. I just hate shopping for (and spending money on) clothes. My mother and I were laughing about this the other day during a phone conversation and we agreed that if it weren’t for her and my dear friend Jane, I wouldn’t have any decent clothes at all. Between the two of them, they have managed to force me to purchase enough pieces of clothing that I don’t go naked. I’m very grateful. Truly, I am, even though I’m a serious pain in the tush when the forced shopping is in progress…Jane, I’m very sorry about biting you.
Adventures In Short Cakes
I love strawberries. Which is why I planted a bunch of them in my deck garden this year: Tristar day-neutral (ever-bearing) strawberries, among the sweetest and most flavorful I’ve ever tasted. And of course it follows that I love the summer dessert, strawberry shortcake.
Adventures In QAYG-Part 1
Okay, I know I said in a recent post that if I never saw another quilt, it would be too soon. Well, I’m allowed to change my mind, right? This is still America, right?
Adventures In Second Blog-iversaries
As of June 17, it’s been two years since I started this blog. Two years of posting a new article every Friday. I’m quite impressed with myself. So for this second blog-iversary, I thought I’d list a few random purchases that I’m quite pleased about recently.
Adventures In Comparative Book Nookery
I mentioned in a recent post that I’d bought myself a book nook off Amazon and assembled it. Prior to this experience, I’ve never really understood the appeal of miniatures. But after putting this miniature library together and installing it in my actual library, I totally get it. I had a blast messing with all these tiny fake books, itty bitty scrolls and paintings, miniature furniture…it was fabulous from start to finish (my assembly mistakes notwithstanding) and now I get to look at it nestled amongst my real books. So of course I bought two more…
Adventures In Patchwork
I believe I might have mentioned once or twice that I watch a lot of YouTube. At the moment, I’ve been watching a lot of quilting videos, which got me to thinking about small projects that use up scraps. Why not coasters? They’re quite small, done quickly, are pretty and useful, and make lovely gifts. Oh, and they’re fun to make. So today, two different methods of doing patchwork and quilting to make a set of four coasters.
Adventures In Quesadillas
“Quesadillas…aren’t those Mexican grilled cheese sandwiches?” Yes. “No, wait, they’re nachos in sandwich form.” Also, yes. More importantly, they are quick and easy to make, delicious, adaptable, and almost universally enjoyed. Do you really need me to tell you how to make a quesadilla? Probably not. Is that going to stop me? Definitely not.
Adventures In Amateur Quilting-Part 2
Part 2 won’t make much sense if you haven’t read Part 1, which you can find here.
Adventures In Amateur Quilting-Part 1
I’ve never made a quilt. I’ve done very small quilting projects (placemats and the like) but never a proper big blanket. But this did not stop me from volunteering my sewing “skills” when my favorite sister-in-law mentioned that she’d been saving up my oldest nephew’s T-shirts and wanted to make him a T-shirt quilt for his high school graduation. How hard could it be? Well…the answer to that is lengthy but the simple version is…harder than I thought.
Adventures In Blankie Bliss
I both knit and crochet. Both crafts use yarn. Both produce cloth of some kind. But beyond that, they are very different.
Adventures In Book Nookery
I keep a list on Amazon. Well, I keep a lot of lists. I keep a list of gift ideas for each of my family members, I keep my own personal wish list of things I’m considering purchasing, I keep a list for each blog project I do which uses a lot of Amazon projects. And I keep a gift list for myself of things that I would like to have but can’t really rationalize purchasing for myself. If someone asks me what I want for my birthday or for Christmas, I can just give them access to the list. It’s handy.
Adventures In Avant Garde-ning
I grew up in a rural area on a single acre of property. My family was not exactly poor, but we did have to watch our money carefully. One of the ways we managed to be frugal was by cultivating a large garden (about 8000 square feet) that the whole family worked to tend: weeding, tilling, planting, harvesting, watering, etc. We had so much food out of that garden that harvesting days were a whole family affair.