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Less Is More: Watercolour

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It's not often that I publish two posts on the same day, but today is the last day of Less Is More's Watercolour challenge, and I have two cards I'd like to share. They were both made with the stamps from the Simon Says June Card Kit, "Favorite Flowers." One is a birthday card for a blogging friend across the Big Pond, and the other for a friend who is facing some very hard times right now. 

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I stamped and white embossed the whimsical flowers on Tim Holtz's watercolor paper, then watercolored them with my Peerless watercolors. They are quickly becoming my favorite watercolors. After cutting out the flowers and leaves, I partially inked the grid stamp (A Stamp in the Hand) on Neenah white cardstock, and stamped the sentiments.

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I chose Plum Pudding paper and inks for this one (Papertrey Ink), and stamped a sentiment from Papertrey's "Birthday Style."  Then I arranged the flowers and the Pretty Pink Posh sequins.

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The cardstock for this card came from my stash, but is most likely Bazzill. The sentiment is from a relatively new Simon Says set called "Friendship Messages." I love the font. One requirement for the Less is More challenge is to leave plenty of white space. I think the subtle grid pattern qualifies for white space. 

I'm also linking these up to the Simon Says Work It Wednesday blog.

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Summer Scavenger Hunt: Part 2

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When I traveled to Detroit last weekend, I had my traveling companions on the lookout for the scavenger hunt items I needed. We found a few, and they had a great idea for one of the items I thought would be the hardest. One of the things I love about this project is how easily my friends and traveling companions jump into the project helping me find just the right photo.

#16 on the list is "a sign in a language other than English. The first one we encountered was in Canada at a rest stop.

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But then when traveling on the People Mover in Detroit one evening on our way to the Fort St. Presbyterian Church,we found even better signs side by side.

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I thought #10, a photo bomb (someone found lurking in the background of a photo) would be another difficult find. But Betsy's niece popped her head into a photo I was taking of Matt and Tracy on Father's Day. I think Nadia was surprised to find out I was HAPPY to see her in the photo!

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I knew I'd have another entry for #2:  a garden gnome, since my mother-in-law discovered her neighbor's garden gnomes. Now I have some in a garden setting. (And they're a lot cuter than the ones I found at Wegmans.)

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I took some photos with my iPhone (the signs were also taken with my phone) of a public garden (#19) a few blocks from our house. I have them in my SmugMug album, but I'm sharing the beautiful public gardens at The George Eastman House here.

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And one of my favorites from the evening, taken as I walked back into the galleries. 

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You can find more information about Rinda's Summer Scavenger Hunt right here. It's never too late to join in. The hunt continues until the last day of summer. I've finally added Rinda's graphic to my sidebar with a link to all my Summer Scavenger Hunt photos in my Smug Mug album.

 

One Photo & Twenty Words

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I love Abi's meme "One Photo & Twenty Words" and have a fun photo for it. I'll try to get this linked up when I'm away, but I may not be able to manage it until I get home on Sunday.

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Just three months apart, but separated by 620 miles,
these two-year olds enjoy every minute of their time together.

 

 

 

Zoom In, Zoom Out

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It's been quite a few years since I've colored Easter eggs, but Caleb, Sarah, Tracy, and I had a fine time coloring eggs before we left Chicago. It was the perfect opportunity for this week's Zoom In, Zoom Out, Helena's fine meme. We'll start with the Zoom Out, and get closer and closer. Caleb was clearly pleased with the project.

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Tomorrow we'll get a chance to watch Skylar hunt for her Easter eggs. It's supposed to be a glorious warm and sunny Easter here. I hope the weather man is not wrong!

 

Zoom In, Zoom Out: Week 11

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March is typically a very fickle month, weather-wise, in western New York, and this year is no exception. On Tuesday it was near 60°, and we were finally able to get a nice long walk outside. Yesterday this is what happened.

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Here's my Zoom In, Zoom Out for Week 11:

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We had 18-20" of snow. You can see that it comes up over my knees.

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Really, I've had enough! It was only 15° today, and although it's supposed to be warmer tomorrow it will be another week or more before the sidewalks are clear enough to walk outside again. The roads today were still terrible. Matt has a new job with a wonderful landscape company. They plow during the winter, and Matt was out from 11 o'clock Wednesday morning until 8 o'clock Thursday morning with just a couple of breaks. Spring officially begins on March 20th, just a week away. Let's hope it looks a lot more like spring by then!

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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

February 2014 PTI Blog Hop: Take 1

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It's the 25th of February already and time for the monthly blog hop at Papertrey Ink. My goodies arrived early in the week, and I was anxious to put some of them to use.

Here's the challenge inspiration piece, and the charge was to create a springtime card–with spring-like images or colors. 

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I chose colors primarily and used a pad of lovely papers I picked up over the Christmas holiday–"Colorwash" by Pink Paislee. It's a good antidote to the cold, gray weather we continue to endure in western New York. We got a few hours of much needed sunshine yesterday, but there's not much in the forecast for the rest of the week.

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The Spring Moss cardstock was a good match for the colors of the two patterned papers I chose. I've seen a lot of patterned papers used in layers set at an angle and thought I'd give it a try. I originally had the tag at an angle as well, but carefully took it off and replaced it after I saw it in the photograph. Every now and then, the photograph shows a design flaw that simply must be fixed. The Tag Sale #9 die is a new purchase, but the stamp set used for the sentiment and flower is one of my old favorites, "Daydreamer." This will be perfect for one of my friend's spring birthday.

Happiest of Holidays

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May your holidays be Merry & Bright! Merry Christmas from snowy Rochester!

Inlaid Designs

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After making a card with an inlaid die cut here, I thought it would be fun to try it with a couple Christmas designs. These are too intricate to mass produce, but I'm quite happy with how they turned out.

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Both cards were then stamped and gold embossed with the sentiments. 

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I think both cards fit the Curtain Call Challenge this week which is a Christmas-inspired photograph.

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I'm off to see what I can purge from our basement. I'm quite sure 50% of what is stored there can go, but that will take more than just one or two days. For now I'm interested in just clearing out holiday decorations, gift wrap, and all the piles on my wrapping table. The holidays are in view, and I'd like to be a bit more organized.

Card Recipe:
Cardstock: Paper Source
Dies: "Wonderland Tree" & "Breezy Wreath" (Memory Box)
Stamps: "Stylish Sentiments: Holiday" (PTI)

CAS(e) This Sketch: Happy Birthday

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At the end of last week, I was trying to get all the November birthday and anniversary cards ready to mail. I realized I needed a birthday card for my nephew in Portland. I keep a document with all the current challenge images on it and found the new CAS(e) This Sketch inspiration. It seemed perfect for a "guy card." I stuck right to the sketch this time.

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Here's my take:

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Back to one of my favorite color schemes: black, red, and white—and the Simon Says woodgrain paper. The Spellbinder's "Label Two" die is a pretty close replica of the label on the sketch, and I used one of the tag images from Papertrey's "2012 Birthday Tags" set.

I embellished the inside of this one as well:

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Now all the November cards are in their envelopes waiting for the appropriate date to go in the mail. 

Card Recipe:
Cardstock: Woodgrain (Simon Says), True Black, Pure Poppy (PTI)
Washi Tape: My Mind's Eye
Dies: Labels Two (Spellbinders) and two circle punches
Stamps: 2012 Birthday Tags (PTI)
Stars: Jeni Bowlin

Summer Card Camp: Week 2

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Week 2 of Summer Card Camp brought three new sketches and a new color combination. I was able to use one of the sketches and the color combo to create a new baby card for a friend of ours.
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I used Spellbinders Circle Nestabilities to create the card and the mats. The patterned paper turned out to be a great find—the right colors and perfect phrase for the sentiment. I selectively inked and white-embossed a message from Papertrey's Baby Button Bits to get the rest of the sentiment. The bow is tied with Papertrey's New Leaf twine. and the little brown matted, glittered star is left from an old sticker sheet. 
Another thanks for your thoughts and prayers for our friend, Mike. He has gotten through the last of the surgeries, and now they are trying to find the right level of pain medication so he can awaken, but not be in severe pain. All looks good, but no one can say how long the next step in the process might take. We did find out yesterday that only 1% of patients who suffer this kind of cardiac arrest survive. He's truly the mircle man, thanks to all the prayers and the incredible expertise of the doctors and nurses at Strong Memorial.

A Road Trip

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Last week I received an email from Tamron with quite a nice rebate available on their highly rated 18-270 lens. I've been debating and debating about what lenses to take with me on our trip next week, and decided to investigate. The folks at my local camera shop (who are very reliable) rated this one highly, and so I splurged and bought it. I'm quite sure I'll sell my older zoom lens when we return. It's been a wonderful lens but it is a bit larger, quite a bit heavier, and does not include such a nice wide angle. My "friend" at the camera shop suggested I try it out and be sure it was working properly before I cut off the UPC code for the rebate. I didn't have to ask Tracy twice if he'd be willing to go on a road trip to see what the lens could do. But I did treat him to breakfast out before we took off.

We headed toward the Finger Lakes. Tracy know all the odd roads to wander down so I got some nice shots before we got to Canandaigua Lake. The first stop was at the Erie Canal park in Pittsford. There's a lovely pond as well as the canal.

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And a shot of the canal because it was so pretty.

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Tracy spotted the great light on these silos. I took several shots at different focal lengths, but this is my favorite.

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By chance we happened upon a place called Upland Blog. 

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I was pleased to discover that by zooming in with the lens I could get a very shallow depth of field as well.

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Another favorite shot from the trip is this one of the Canandice Methodist Church Bell Tower.

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Our destination was Canandaigua Lake. These shots were all taken from about the same spot.

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This lens has gotten a lot of testimonials about being a great all-around lens, especially for travel. I think it will do just fine. I'll take my 50mm lens as well, as I never travel with just one lens in case something goes wrong. But now I won't need to take my wide-angle as well. We're packing light–just a carry-on suitcase and a tote/messager bag for each of us for a two week trip, so I'm glad to have one less thing to add to my bag! 

Happy Birthday Betsy!

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This week was Betsy's birthday, and her main gift was a gift certificate. I used one of the Fancy Pants envelopes in the April Simon Says kit to create a card for her. This turned out to be one of my favorite cards created with the kit. 

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Using the patterned papers from the kit, I die cut the flower with Papertrey Ink's "Beautiful Blooms 1" and the leaves with "Tender Leaves" by Memory Box. I love the way the leaves are embossed at the same time they are die cut. The button from MME "Follow My Heart" wasn't in the kit, but was just the perfect center for the flower and I threaded it with a thin black ribbon. The border was another of the patterned papers and a bit of black cardstock. The sentiment came from "Birthday Basics" by Papertrey Ink.

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I'm linking this up to Simon Says "Anything Goes" and to CASual Friday's Birthday Bash challenge. (That challenge couldn't have come at a better time for me!)

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52/50 and Elderberry Pond

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The weeks are flying by, and I'm not feeling nearly as productive as I'd like despite the fact that I feel like I'm busy all day. As I type this, it's snowing/sleeting outside and the wind is howling. We had several warm days last week and there are beginning to be some signs of spring, but then after a couple of days we're back to winter again. Frankly, I've had enough; I want real, sustained spring! I've been admiring beautiful floral photography from other parts of the world, and want to get out and take some photos of spring myself.

But not quite yet for western New York. Here are the photos for 52/50 this week.

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I took this out my studio window one night and was surprised at how well it turned out.

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Aside from a few daffodils, all I could find in our yard this week (beside the Helleborus) were these few violets.

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I had one of my old cameras out for another project and decided to play around a bit with angles and perspective. This was my favorite.

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Although there's not a lot of difference, I thought I see what it looked like in black and white. I'd be curious to know which you prefer.

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I decided to choose this photo from yesterday's road trip to Elderberry Pond to post on Kent Weakley's P52.  Tracy and I needed to go to the outlet mall in Waterloo yesterday. I'd seen ads for Elderberry Pond in the Edible Fingerlakes magazine, and was curious to see what it was like. This shot is of the pond looking toward their Country Store which won't open until June. Elderberry Pond specializes in local foods and produce. In the summer, much of the food comes from their farm, and you can purchase some here. I'm hoping to get back this summer to check it out.

It's wasn't a particularly beautiful day, but we had a lovely lunch. The food is first-rate, we had a charming waitress, and it's a beautiful setting. We'll definitely return, although it turned out to be a bit more of a trek than we expected

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We ate in the sunroom.

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This is the main dining room. There's also a patio that's open in the summer.

We made two other stops on our trip. One to Normal Bread in Geneva. We've been there twice before and the bread is fabulous.

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And to Sauder's Amish Market in Seneca Falls. The meat, cheese, and home canned goods are wonderful here, and the prices are exceptional. I love their tiny pickled beets in a salad.

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Last night we had dinner with friends, tonight there's an engagement party for Tracy's best friend's son, and tomorrow the Walker clan will celebrate a belated Easter dinner since most of us were traveling on Easter Sunday. I'm looking forward to church tomorrow as well since the chancel choir is performing a Bluegrass Mass. I'm hoping to get lots of crafting done today since the number of birthdays and anniversaries in the next month is quite something. Hope your weekend is filled with good things.

Pick Your Precious: Chapter 4

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Sian (From High in The Sky) hosts a Storytelling Sunday each month. This year she's chose a theme-"Pick Your Precious" and it's given me a chance to think about some of the things I have that mean a lot to me. I'm guessing my children don't know much about them, so I'm hopeful it's meaningful to them as well. 

I grew up in my Great-Aunt Edith's house.  We moved in with her when I was in third grade and lived there until we moved to New York when I was a junior. (Aunt Edith moved with us. She was 93 and had lived in the same town all her life and the same house for over 60 years.)  She never married and lived with her sister, Aunt Lily, until
Lily passed away the year before we moved in with her.

When she and Lily inherited
their parents’ estates they decided to invest some of the money in some fine china. It was kept in a glass-fronted china cabinet, and she always promised me I would inherit it some day.

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They had two sets of Haviland china. One of them was quite ornate, and when I
inherited the china, many of the serving pieces had been broken. The other, a delicate floral
pattern was still nearly complete. There are place settings for twelve with both tea cups and coffee cups. They seemed to
have purchased every size of platter, soup tureen, and serving dish that was available.
Tracy had to add a shelf to our dry sink (another precious item—also from my great-
aunts’ home) in order to be able to store all of it.

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In addition to the china, there are quite a few single dishes and serving pieces that don't match the other sets. This is one of my favorites.

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I love these delicate dessert plates, too.

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I don’t use it too often—it must be hand
washed, and our entertaining style is a bit more casual than this lovely china, but I
treasure it. I wish my kids would be interested in it some day, but I doubt it. They’re even
more casual than we are!