Three Cards
We've finished all the "must do" items on our list before Sarah and Adam arrive tonight. They fly into Buffalo at 11:10 tonight. I hope they're on time since Tracy and I were wide awade at 5:00 this morning. It's only 8:00 their time so they'll be chipper! 🙂
After exercise class this morning I got to work on three cards that needed to be made. The first is for my BIL & SIL's anniversary tomorrow. Since they'll be here for the family party on Thursday I'll give it to them then. I saw the punched heart technique in a magazine I was browsing through at Barnes & Noble when we were keeping warm there on Saturday night, so I can't give credit for it. The mat on the focal panel is actually green, but came out really dark in this photo.

Card base: Impress; patterned paper: Scenic Route and unknown scrap; sentiment: Saavy Stamps; heart gem: A Muse
The next is a sympathy card; the message is on the inside.

Cardstock: Select White and Sweet Blush Papertrey Ink; embossed cardstock: Creative Imaginations; flower dies: Papertrey Ink; pearls: Michael's; silk ribbon purchased from Ellen Huston
Yesterday I got an early birthday gift from my friend, Mary, when we went out to lunch. It's this beautiful berry bowl. I have nothing like it and navy blue, red, and yellow are my happy colors.

I had lots of fun making this thank you card for her.

Cardstock: Bo-Bunny & PTI New Leaf; patterned paper: Bitty Dots PTI; label and chipboard: Cosmo Cricket "Garden Variety;" alpha stickers: October Afternoon.
Here's the inside of the card:

Patterned paper strip: Cosmo Cricket; alpha stickers: Adorn It.
A question for anyone who has a Typepad account. In my draft, all the images in this post are centered, but none of them are in the published version. Any ideas why?
Three Cheers for Chairs Challenge
Before our power went off yesterday, I got two cards made
for the Moxie Fab "Three Cheers for Chairs" challenge. For the first card, I debossed the chair to create the dotted
pattern and then colored it with Prisma colored pencils. I’ve wanted to try
this ever since I got the stamp nearly a year ago.
Cardstock: Lemon Tart
by PTI; patterned paper: October
Afternoon “Thrift Shop,” button twine: PTI; distress ink: PTI; stamp: Memory Box; ribbon: Paper Source; scalloped
punch: PTI; flower from stash.
The next card is for friends of ours who are celebrating
their anniversary this week. It gave me a chance to use my new “Chair-ished”
stamps from Papertrey that arrived last week.
Cardstock: True Black & Vintage Cream PTI; patterned paper: Lush MME; stamps: Chair-ished PTI; computer-generated sentiment, heart from stash.
Happy Mother’s Day
Happy Mother’s Day from wintery Rochester! Yesterday a cold
front blew through taking with it our power and pulling down limbs and branches
all over the city. We still didn’t have power this morning and the RG&E’s
estimate was maybe by midnight tonight. Last night we ate dinner Buffalo Wild Wings,
and then headed over to Barnes & Noble. We hung out there until 9:30 when
we finally came home. Thanks to our camping lanterns we could read
in bed until we got sleepy.
This morning we woke up to SNOW!!!! I have to admit it put
me in a pretty unhappy mood. I really hate being cold (the house was down to
58° before we left for brunch), and I still have a lot on my “to do” list before Sarah and Adam get
here—all of which requires electricity. Ah, well.
Here's the Mother's Day card I made for my mother-in-law:
Cardstock: Dark Chocolate PTI; patterned papers: Jillibean and October Afternoon; stamps: Just Rite and Papertrey Ink; ribbon: Pure Poppy PTI; Spellbinder's Oval Nestability & Standard Tags
With Tracy's sister, Jill, and her family, we took Ellie & Bill to brunch today. As we were leaving the street, an RG&E man told us it would be tomorrow before we'd be back online. Jill and Tom have a generator, however, and Tom was headed our way with it, when suddenly we had lights—and most importantly, heat! It was an unexpected and great Mother's Day gift. Hope your day has been filled with happiness and family.
Team-up Thursday: Friends
It was a good week for friends. By the end of the week I will have eaten out with eight different friends (not eight times, however!) My photo is on the left, Nancy's on the right.
(Note my friends' dog who looks just like the flag on their porch!)
Garden Update & Two Cards
We're madly trying to finish up some household and major cleaning projects before Sarah and Adam come next Tuesday. Yesterday the plumber was here for three hours and made some much needed (and overdue) repairs to both bathrooms. We couldn't find appropriate fixtures for a 80 year old house in the city, so our plumber recommended a supply store in Livonia. The owner was very knowledgeable and we got the porcelain handles we wanted. On our way home, we stopped at the garden and got a lot of work done there. I cultivated the whole plot while Tracy weeded and mulched the paths around our plot. It still needs work before we can get plants in, but it looks a lot more like a garden than it did. Tracy's working on washing windows, painting the medicine cabinet doors, and I'm in the midst of cleaning.
Thank goodness for our battery-operated Black & Decker cultivator. It would have been a lot harder with a spade!
After working on some projects at home, Nancy and I went to Image City to see a new photography show and out to lunch. When I got back, I had time to make two cards, one for a friend who has just had major foot surgery (artificial joint replacement) and one for a young friend of ours who's birthday is Tuesday.
Stamp: Lockhart Stamps & Papertrey Vintage Picnic Sentiments; patterned paper: A Muse & scraps; Copic markers
Stamps: Paptertrey Ink Enjoy the Ride & A Little Argyle; cardstock from scrap files; buttons: PTI & stash.
This was my first attempt to use both Enjoy the Ride and A Little Argyle. I love both sets, but would have redone some of this if I had had time. It's going to take a bit more practice than I'm used to having to do.
Gardens
I hope you had as much fun as I did on yesterday's international House Party Blog Hop. I loved seeing how themes were chosen and embellishments used; I got a lot of good ideas.
I'm slowly getting the layouts done from our California trip. Here is one about Sarah's garden that we helped her plant while we were there.
All Cosmo Cricket Garden Variety papers and chipboard except for the Basic Grey Ambrosia alpha stickers.
Journaling reads: Sarah asked for an early birthday gift while we were visiting. She wanted to take advantage of her dad's and brother's expertise. She found a fabulous nursery nearby & we spent a morning exploring and buying flowers, vegetables and pots since she can't dig into their rental property. She ended up with a great variety & hopefully, she'll have lots of flowers and veggies to pick on her birthday in August.
And we hope to have a vegetable garden this summer as well. Our yard is heavily shaded and my attempts at growing tomatoes in a pot have been pretty disappointing. When I read that our town's Community Garden was taking applications for new plots, I got my application in right away. We now have a 10×10 plot. Yesterday was a Community Garden Work Day. Tracy and I tied the fencing to the posts around the entire garden and got a start on weeding our little plot. It's going to take some work before it's ready for the plants. Traditionally, it's not safe to plant here until Memorial Day, but it's been so warm this spring we may try to get them in a week or two early.
House Party Blog Hop
Tonight’s the night of the altered house blog hop hosted by Rinda who sent all of us a great little baggie of supplies to make our house. Here’s
mine:
I had a great time creating this. Since a scrapbook album
about all the homes I’ve lived in and owned is soon to be in the works, I
wanted to make a house that I could use on the title page or cover of my
scrapbook. I’ve been collecting papers and embellishments for this project for
a couple of years. I keep all the materials for a project in these project
envelopes.
Since the colors Rinda sent me didn’t really work for this
project, I started with the wooden heart that was in the bag she sent me, and
pulled papers, charms, and other possible embellishments from the project
envelope.
Then I went through my stamp collection and looked for
stamps that might be usable. As soon as I saw the Technique Tuesday quote, I
knew I’d include it on the house. I also knew I wanted a key and a timepiece.
I loved the printed canvas and thought it would be good for
the roof. Then I chose two papers,
one patterned (Graphic 45) and one plain for the house. I stamped a scrap of
patterned paper with a wood grain stamp and then stamped the quote over that
and cut it out. As I put the elements together, the bottom half of the house
seemed “empty” so I stamped the abstract squares and found the two tiny
scalloped stickers in one of the sticker collections in the project envelope. I
cut a piece of chipboard for the door and covered it with patterned paper. I
had a die cut tree I wanted to use, but it just didn’t seem to fit. In my box
of chipboard I found the perfect little tree—just the right size. I covered it
with paper and distressed it with Tim Holtz’s “peeled paint” ink. Almost every
piece has been distressed with one of five different distress inks. After
looking at the house for a while, I decided to add the stamped bird to the
tree. It completed the visual triangle of three red items: the heart, the door,
and the bird. I must say, I’m quite pleased with the final product.
I didn’t want the bag of goodies from Rinda to go to waste
so I used them to make a card. The only thing I added was the darker flower and
the pink cardstocks.
Thanks, Rinda, for hosting this great blog hop! Here's the next stop in the blog hop: Cheri at Nights Dream.
If you get lost on the hop, you can find the complete list at Gallo Organico. Have a great time!
Just How It Should Be & An Invitation
I never gave much thought to retirement before I left my job. I knew it was time, and I knew I had plenty of hobbies and friends to keep me busy. (How busy I really didn't know!) After spending a school year alone at home, I was unsure what to expect when Tracy retired this year. But it couldn't be better. Yesterday was a perfect example of how it should be. We had nothing on the calendar and the weather forecast called for nearly 80°. I suggested a bike ride since we had just had both bikes tuned up for the season.
We threw them in the back of the van and drove to the Finger Lakes. Starting at Keuka Lake we rode the outlet trail to Seneca Lake. It's a great trail—sometimes two bikes wide, sometimes a single tire wide, occasionally paved. Of course we had to stop for photos along the way.
There are the remains of four mills along the trail which used to be a railroad bed.
A view of the trail with the fisheye setting on my Canon digital Elph.
I think this is a trillium. Tracy has an iPod app that identifies birds, now we want one for wildflowers.
Playing with perspective in a field of dandelions.
The town of Penn Yan where the trail starts (or ends). Round trip the trail is about 15 miles.
And for sticking with me through a long photographic post, here's an invitation to a blog party hosted by the fabulous Rinda. It starts tonight at 10 pm Pacific time. It's an international event so come along and party with us. Here's a sneak peek of my project.
Hope to see you there!
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
