Project Wedding Album | December 2012

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

So back on our anniversary I decided to scrapbook this last year before the wedding. I did pretty well with putting November together, but then got totally sidetracked with the holidays and never got around to the December pages until just recently. Unfortunately, sometime in early January, my computer decided to “fix” some files on my memory card.

Apparently “fix” means delete the entire December folder from the SD card, and do it so well that no recovery program I tried could resurrect it. Bye-bye December photos!

Thankfully I had some photos from my cell phone and the few I’d copied from the card for blog posts, though those aren’t usually the ones I’d scrapbook. Still, we make do, right?

Week 5 of 52

Week 5 of 52

Week 6 of 52

Week 6 of 52

Week 7 of 52

Week 7 of 52

Week 8 of 52

Week 8 of 52

Eight weeks into a year of 52 doesn’t seem like all that much, but then I realize I’m up to Week 18 in my notebook and that feels like quite a ways along.

And yes I’m being much more conscientious about backing up my photos to multiple places on a much more regular basis. And I’ve ditched the one SD card that seemed to be the source of all the issues (this was not the first such incident–I have maybe 4 pictures from our Halloween party when originally there were close to 100… sigh). Learn from my mistake, folks.

At least I know we have PLENTY of pictures to choose from in January 😉

March Hare Digital Stamp Duo by Jennifer "Scraps" Walker

Introducing… Fishie Gallore!

Projects

If you get the Gauche Alchemy newsletter, The Dirt, then you may have already had the pleasure of meeting Ms. Fishie, but if not, why don’t y’all get acquainted.

Catch Me If You Can, mixed media canvas, Copyright 2013 Jennifer "Scraps" Walker

Catch Me If You Can canvas for Gauche Alchemy

This canvas started out as a way to use some postcard images shared by fellow Alchemist Marilyn, but then took a turn towards art therapy when I suffered a creative disappointment (no worries, I’m over it now) and was feeling a little down. I needed a fish image that was basically “giving the fin” to the others, and there was nothing else to do but draw her myself.

Closeup of Fishie Gallore by Jennifer "Scraps" Walker

“Suck it, Fishes!” She’s one sassy piece of tailfin!

I could have stopped there, but I’ve been having fun with the concept of digital stamps, so decided to go through the scanning and cleaning-up she’d require to make her usable by me and others. You can now find Ms. Fish in my etsy store, along with some other digital stamp designs just in time for Easter.

hmd_03_13_fishie_adv

Easter Lily has a bit of an Alice in Wonderland vibe to it.

Easter Lily Digital Stamp by Jennifer "Scraps" Walker

While March Hare and Bottoms Up are much more playful (I can never resist a good pun!).

March Hare Digital Stamp Duo by Jennifer "Scraps" Walker

Bottoms Up Digital Stamp Duo by Jennifer "Scraps" Walker

If you’ve never played with digital stamps before, they’re a bit of a cross between clip art and rubber stamps. They work the same as a rubber stamp in that you can print them out, color them, and use them on cards, scrapbook layouts, tags, and for other personal, decorative items; but since they’re digital you can resize them and flip them around–things I’ve always wished you could easily do with rubber stamps. The files you’ll receive are all hi-res jpeg and png files made from my original drawings that I’ve scanned, that you can open in any word processing or photo software (like Open Office Writer, Word, Photoshop Elements, even Paint).

(Clicking any of the stamp images above should take you right to my etsy page.)

Any questions, just ask!

The 8-Month To-Do List

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

To-Do List graphic

Another month down and a whole new list of things to work on this month in order to stay on track for our November wedding. Now, last month we’d already completed all the suggested to-dos but had plenty of DIY to get done, still. Let’s see how we’re looking for this month:

  • Hire the photographer and videographer (photographer: check! videographer–would be nice, but we’ll have to see how the final numbers shake out)
  • Book entertainment (it’s not that type of a wedding, folks)
  • Meet caterers (they came with the venue and we won’t sit down for a tasting for a few more months)
  • Purchase wedding dress (done!)
  • Reserve a room block for out-of-town guests (there’s on-site lodging at HLP, but it might not hurt to reserve some rooms in-town, too, huh?)
  • Register for gifts (we’re opting out of this one)
  • Create your wedding website (started, not yet complete)

So, not to shabby on the to-do front, only a couple things left to be dealt with for this month: the room block for folks wishing to stay in town as opposed to in the country, and the wedding website.

The above is based on the Ultimate Wedding Planner on RealSimple.com. It’s fabulous and this month so stream-lined that it’s more of a quote than a paraphrase. Other sites also suggest I start my wedding workout routine now (um, hi, have we met? No) and to book a florist. Since we’re not using one of those, we’re good, thanks. They also suggest finalizing the guest list.

See, now this is one of those sticky bits for me. We have a working list, it’s more or less set, but it’s short on family and tall on friends. Frankly, friends have a way of wandering away over time, and 8 months is still plenty of time for someone to piss me off enough to where they’re no longer welcome in my house, much less at my wedding. (It’s already happened once, sad to say–only not really, life is much sweeter without toxic people around, right?) Also, whose to say we don’t meet a fabulous new friend in 4 months? And we’ve got a strict body count to work with for our reception venue, so I’d hate to make one of those instantaneous, we-must-have-known-each-other-in-a-former-life type of friends and not be able to invite them because we’re friendly with but not platonic crushing on is already taking up a spot. So the guest list will likely not be finalized until 2 months before when we start prepping the invitations.

As for the Save the Dates, we’re sending them (because I love the idea of them and the idea I have for them, more on that soon), but only to the definites: family members, long-time friends, select coworkers.

Gosh that sounds mercenary, but considering the hell I go through with who to invite to the house parties we regularly throw, I’m really not wanting to chance it, ya know?

And, yes, I’ll be putting together one of those template-based wedsites that just about every plugged-in bride and groom use and you know why? Because our guests don’t necessarily need to see all this rambling I’ve got going on up in here. It’s just not relevant. Not to mention it’ll spoil what few surprises we might be planning, ya know?! To that end, though, I’ve had one started via theknot.com since last fall (last fall meaning 2011, way before we had anything to put up there other than the date…I liked to look at the countdown). Now we actually have information to fill in the blanks!

Pretty Book and Flower Icon

 

When did you start your wedding website?
Did you use one of the templates through a big wedding site or make your own from the ground up?

Review | SodaStream Fizz

Sips
Our SodaStream Fizz fits right into our home bar setup.

Our SodaStream Fizz fits right into our home bar setup.

I’m not much of a soda drinker (even before going Low-FODMAP removed all high fructose corn syrup from my diet), but Todd’s daily Coke Zero habit would rival any coffee drinker’s. It’s his caffeine of choice and while I would prefer he not drink so much of it, he’s a grown man and it’s his one vice.

At around $6 per case, that’s about a quarter per can and, at his usual rate of 4 cans a day, $1 per day. At least it’s cheaper than a Starbucks addiction, right?

Still, I’d hear about the SodaStream year before last but I wasn’t sure if he’d really use it. Just before Christmas, though, I decided it was worth the gamble and settled on the SodaStream Fizz in black for part of his present this year. Of course I got him a bottle of their Cola Zero syrup, too, just to see how he liked it.

Putting aside the initial investment of the machine, bottles, and a second CO2 tank as a back-up, here’s the way his daily consumption breaks down:

At $4.96 per bottle, each bottle makes 12 liters ($0.41/Liter), and Todd makes 2 a day, so $0.83 a day. The CO2 containers cost 29.99 new, but if you take them to a store that exchanges the used canister, you only pay the difference, about $16.02 at our local Wal-Mart.  Each canister (of the size we buy–they come in different capacities) makes 60L, so $0.27 per fizz and we’re still up to only $1.36 per day. Of course, how many liters you really get out of a canister depends on how fizzy you want your soda. The Fizz has a level indicator that not only tells you when it’s time to change the CO2, but how fizzy you’ve just made your drink: light, medium, and heavy.

Our Fizz with my fresh bottle of Tonic Water

Our Fizz with my fresh bottle of Tonic Water

I think Todd likes his extra-fizzy, so we’re not really saving anything after all.

Where we do save is storage, clutter, and recycling. We have 3 of the 1L bottles that are good for about 3 years, and Todd takes 2 of them to work each day. The third gets used when I want to make something or if he wants some rootbeer or other flavors on the spare evening we’re not drinking water. They take up no more room in the fridge than our water bottles we refill and chill on a regular basis, but we only put out about half the recycling any more. That’s kind of nice in the grand scheme of things.

Other things we like about SodaStream is that there’s no cord to plug it into the wall so it can go anywhere, and there really are plenty of flavor options available–and none of them contain the dreaded high-fructose corn syrup, which means I can have a soda whenever I feel the urge. That’s a nice change of pace.

What I don’t like about the SodaStream is that the syrups do use a bunch of other sugar substitutes that I’m not sure are all that better, nutritionally speaking, than HFCS, but at least they don’t trigger an IBS episode. I’m a smart girl, though, and I figured I might be able to make my own syrups with regular ingredients and sugar–after all, that’s what they used to do at the old fashioned soda fountains, right? And I’ve got a copy of Fix the Pumps with plenty of recipes inside.

Turns out, though, I didn’t quite have to go that far: SodaStream must have been hearing a lot of the above because I’ve noticed they’ve come out with a “sparkling natural” line in limited flavors that does use regular ol’ sugar and other recognizable ingredients. Now I can have ginger ale again with very little hassle! The downside (and this is SUCH a good example of why the food industry uses sugar substitutes and how it is NOT cheaper to eat healthier) is that the bottles of Sparkling Natural hold 25.4 fl oz (compared to the 16.9 fl oz of the other syrups), cost twice as much, but only make half as many liters of soda. This is, quite literally, the price we pay for real food, even in soda form.

The syrup display at our local Wal-Mart.

The syrup display at our local Wal-Mart.

But the ginger ale is tasty, and I plan to pick up some of their Orange Pineapple Sparkling Natural syrup since the sample flavor pack that came with the Fizz included the most awesome Orange soda we’ve tasted. I’ve also tried out there Tonic mix and while I’m not crazy about the sugar-substitute aftertaste, I plan to pick up some .5L bottles for those times when I need a bit of fizz for a cocktail but don’t want to waste (or drink) an entire liter before it goes flat.

Even if Todd opts to go back to canned soda (of course, the way prices keep going up, that may not prove a savings for much longer), the convenience factor and just the fun of the variety make me not regret this purchase at all. And, hey, if you just like your water fizzy instead of still, this is a great way to get it and they even have a pretty glass carafe for just this sort of thing.

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I received no free product in exchange for this review, I’m just a happy customer/gift-giver. The links in this post, though, they’re all Amazon affiliate links. If you should choose to purchase anything by clicking on one of those links or anything else having followed the link and clicked around a bit, I’ll earn a small referral fee (I think it’s around 4%) that will go towards my monthly hosting fees.

37 House Furnishings and Decoration | Pillow Fight!

64 Arts

Anyone can have a sofa. A couch. Maybe even a love seat or a chaise. And the smart decorator selects solid color or neutral pattern so you don’t get locked into just one style for the rest of your sofas life. But nothing says come in a get comfy like a scatter of throw pillows you just can’t not touch.

But with so many options, how do you choose?

Throw Pillow Ideas

I put together these 4 groupings in polyvore just on a quick search of “throw pillows” and they all have a few things in common:

  • A mixture of complimentary colors
  • Different sizes and shapes
  • Contrasting textures and materials
  • An eye for what patterns can work together

I think it’s best to start out with one focal point–either a big pillow with a strong pattern (like the zebra-stripe in the top right corner) or a smaller accent pillow with a stand-out motif (bat-signal anyone?). Then you can branch out by finding colors that work with your first pillow. Choose at least one solid or otherwise monochromatic pillow to keep things from being to confusing, but don’t be afraid to mix a geometric with a natural, like the blue set in the lower right.

And then sometimes it’s just worth it to be fun, like the ruffly yellow pillow in the top left or the giant pear pillow below.

Things don’t have to always be so matchy-matchy, as long as you can find a common thread (hah!) between them. Throw pillows and curtains are one of the quickest ways to change up the look of your room on a whim.

But once you’ve got them, what do you do with them?

Care of Feeding of Your Throw Pillows

First, fluff your throw pillows on a regular basis. Never fluffed a pillow before? It’s quite simple, really. Just squeeze the pillow from the sides a few times–kinda like playing an accordion really fast–then give the pillow a quarter turn and repeat. This breaks up any matting or compression that might be happening as the pillow gets leaned-on, hugged, or otherwise smooshed.

Airing pillows out is also a good idea, just be careful of doing so in direct sun as the colors in the textiles can fade. This can work in your favor, though, if you want to whiten linen or wool pillow covers: the sun will act as a natural bleach without the weakening of fibers.

For keeping them nice and clean, I’m a big believer in the power of Scotch-Gard–especially on fabrics that cannot be easily cleaned at home. I hate paying for dry-cleaning of those few pieces of clothing I bought that can’t go in the washing machine, I’ll be damned if I’m going to pay dry cleaning on throw pillows!

Second best is to make or buy pillow covers that can easily be slipped off and cleaned independently of their stuffing. This also has the added benefit of being easier to change out your pillow-schemes for seasons or occasions on a whim, and less to store in the linen closet.

If deep cleaning is required, there’s a good cleaning guide available at Overstock.com.

One last tip for today: if you’re looking to insure a match between your curtains and your throw pillows, buy another curtain panel (or panels from coordinating lines) and use it to make simple pillow covers. A perfect match every time!

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So I sent my first ever Helper Monkey Network Newsletter out on Sunday. Each month I’ll be highlighting a favorite post from each of my blogs, plus news and other tidbits. If you want to subscribe and make sure you get all the fun newsy bits, find the subscribe link in the sidebar of this and the other sites in the Helper Monkey Network.