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With Sympathy

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One of my dearest friends passed away late last week. She was just 58 years old, and lost a two-year battle with a brain tumor. Although she and her husband had lived here for over 20 years, her funeral and burial was in New Jersey where all of her family lives. Five of us drove down for the calling hours on Sunday, and back home on Monday following the service. I was so glad I was able to go. She has three wonderful siblings, including an identical twin. Yesterday I had a chance to make some cards to send to each of them and her husband.

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The first two were made using a technique (Inlaid Die Cuts) featured on Day One of the Online Card Class: One Layer Cards. It's a technique I've used before, but like always, I learned some good tricks which made them much easier. 

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I used Simon Say's woodgrain card stock for the tree ("Arbosecllo Tree" by Memory Box) and inlaid it on Papertrey's Select White cardstock. The sentiment is from Papertrey's "Birds of a Feather."

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The next card uses a die I've had for awhile, but never used. I love how it came out.

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I die cut the Morning Glory Vine by Memory Box with Memory Box's Parsley cardstock and inlaid it on a Paper Source embossed flat card. The inlaid lavender paper and the lighter green for the leaves came from my scrap folder.  The sentiment is from Papertrey's "Sending You" set.

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I had die cuts left over and decided to use them to make another card. It's identical except it's not inlaid, and the greens are reversed.

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Marie was a gardener and a plant lover so these die cuts would appeal to her. On this card I used the white tree I cut from the Select White on Card #1. It ended up being one of my favorites.

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I love the white tree against the Soft Stone cardstock by Papertrey Ink. The sentiment is the same one I used for the first card. I'm entering this card to the current CASEology challenge: Roots.

Week 86 - Roots

I ended up with one extra sympathy card. This one uses another die I've had for awhile but never used. It's the "Leaf Column Outline" by Simon Says, and the sentiment comes from "With Sympathy" by Papertrey Ink.

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I didn't do any stamping on the inside because I'll be writing notes to each person. As Tracy pointed out, this is the first of our friends our age (actually younger) who has passed away. We are grateful that she didn't suffer, and was never in any significant pain, but it still feels unbelieveable.

 

One Photo & Twenty Words

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Abi at Creating Dreams has been hosting a monthly meme for a while, challenging you to find a photo and tell about it in twenty words. I loved this photo of Skylar from Matt's birthday and thought I'd play along this month.

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Project Life 2014 & OLW Wrap-up for February

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My Project Life album was started last August, so this is the first yearly title page I’ve created. It was inspired by this page, but there was not a lot of similarity by the time I finished.

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All by two of the cards for this layout were created with Bazzill Orange Peel cardstock. I started with the Live Simply quote which I downloaded from the “Sunny Vegan” blog, and that determined the color scheme. The top left card includes a Papertrey Ink Stitched Heart die, patterned paper by Basic Grey, and a flair from a Cocoa Daisy kit that Tracy gave me for Christmas. “Life is good” was created with a Kara Dudley digital brush and two wood veneer hearts, also from a Cocoa Daisy kit. The photo was taken by Tracy’s mom when we were in Florida, and the Evalicious tag seemed perfect.

 The second row includes a Midnight Edition card with a wood veneer arrow, my favorite typewriter die by Savvy, some cool Washi tape and a wood veneer camera, and the last card is a letter press card from a Cocoa Daisy kit.

 The card documenting my One Little Word for 2014 was inspired by cards I pinned here and here. The watercolor “paper” was cut down from a Cocoa Daisy 4X3 card. I’m not sure where the vellum arrow came from, and the “Happiness is Where You Find It” flair has been in my stash for a long time. I like the clean look of this page, and would like to figure out how to recreate it on a regular basis. 

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This notebook turned out to be a good purchase. I’ve been writing down intentions for every month, and keeping notes on how I do. I’ve used it to take notes from my online class “A Simple Year,” and have added quotes, and pasted in some inspiration pieces. The notebook title is proving to be true: write it down, and it’s more likely to happen.

Planner

I also bought this cute planner at Target, and use it to jot down the activities of the day. Since I’m always working on my Project Life a month behind, it’s a good reference.

In February, I purged and organized our guest room. That included a three section bookcase with cupboards that yielded another three bags for the craft consignment shop, and some more books for the library book store. Another bag of clothes went off to Goodwill after cleaning the closet.

Monuments

My goal was to read four books each month. I only managed three this month. Our book group book, The Monuments Men, took much longer than I anticipated. All the members of our book group (four couples) agreed the book was interesting, but would have been better as a long New Yorker profile instead of a book. Much of it seemed repetitive and there isn’t a lot of action.  The book group went to see the movie as well, and we all enjoyed it. The movie very different from the book, so much so that none of the characters even have the same names. Although the book dragged in parts, I was very glad I’d read it before seeing the movie because I knew so much of the back story that wasn’t told.

Murder

I also finished Louise Penney’s A Rule Against Murder, the fourth in a series of Armand Gamache mysteries. I absolutely love these mysteries, and am amazed that I’m not any further along in the series. Number five is on my list for March.

Humans

Humans of New York was the last book I read. It’s a book of street photography taken in New York City. It’s been on the best seller list for weeks, and I finally snagged a copy from the library. The portraits are wonderful, but it’s the captions full of humor and pathos that make the book worth perusing.

It’s been so wintery here that it’s absolutely unsafe to walk outside. The sidewalks are covered with ice and snow, and the city can barely keep up with keeping the roads clear, let alone the sidewalks. I hate the treadmill, but I wrote down a goal of walking 20 miles this month, and managed to get in 21.5. If I hadn’t written it down, I’m quite sure I would have found a variety of excuses not to go to the gym.

I hoped to finish both the December and January Project Life pages, but only December was completed. I did get 19 cards created and sent most of them to friends and family. There was lots of entertaining in February, the unexpected trip to Florida, and the usual volunteer commitments as well as the annual Church Leadership Development Day. All in all, it felt like a productive month.

Zoom In, Zoom Out: Week 10

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More flowers for this week's ZIZO, Helene's wonderful meme, but this time it's tulips from the grocery store. We did a lot of entertaining over the weeken; we hosted both our book group and our duplicate bridge group. Tracy did a last minute grocery shopping for me, and I asked him to pick up some spring flowers. He brought home this beautiful red and yellow tulips. Today was sunny, and nearly 40°, but over the weekend it was near zero. The tulips were a breath of fresh air, and of course, we've continued to enjoy them all week.

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I used the red shade in the middle window in the kitchen as a backdrop. The shades in the side windows were pulled up all the way so there was enough light. I'm hoping to soon find some outside venues for Zoom In, Zoom Out!

Two Cards, Two Challenges

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The Hero Arts blog is having a big birthday celebration with a five category challenge for birthday cards. I recently purchased the Hero Arts "Five Line" Background stamp and made two masculine birthday cards from one piece of paper embossed in gold. I'm entering both into the "metallic birthday card" challenge.

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The first is a simple card made by punching two tags from the Tag Sale #5 one in chocolate brown and one from the stamped piece embossed in gold. I added some American Craft Thickers for the sentiment and a simple gold brad to connect the tags. I'm also linking this to the new Simon Says Wednesday Challenge: Tag It!

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For the second card, I cut a strip of the stamped piece and adhered it to a Hero Arts kraft card. I embossed a tag from Papertrey's 2012 Birthday Tags in gold for the sentiment. Here's a closer look:

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My brother-in-law and my niece's husband both celebrate their birthdays this month, so now I'm all set for both occasions.

Welcome, Baby!

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It's not often I have reason to create a baby card, and even less frequent that it corresponds with a current card challenge. But this week's challenge at Addicted to CAS is "BABY," and the daughter of a good friend of ours has just had a darling baby boy.

Baby

I used a premade Archivers square card for the base. The paper-pieced elephant and sentiment are from "Bitty Baby Blessing" by Papertrey Ink, and the balloons and die from "Heart2Heart: 2," also by Papertrey. Clean and simple, for sure.

Zoom In, Zoom Out: Week 9

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George Eastman loved flowers and filled his mansion with them every winter. He kept wonderful records of the bulbs he ordered, and each winter the George Eastman House and Museum fills the conservatory with flowering bulbs. There are actually about 10 times as many flowers in the conservatory now as there were at any one time during George Eastman's day. He had fewer flowers at a time, but over a much longer time period. No wonder, since winter seems to last forever here! 

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These flowers are actually in a hallway that overlooks the gardens and connects the current museum with the George Eastman House.

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The conservatory (Eastman also enjoyed hunting and brought this elephant head back from a safari.)

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The organ has recently been refurbished, and there are Sunday organ concerts on a regular basis; free with your museum ticket.

But the flowers that attracted me the most were the clivias. I was unfamiliar with them, but there bright orange color is simply gorgeous.

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I'm linking this to Helena's Zoom In, Zoom Out meme which I have enjoyed each and every week this year. 

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