Sunday, April 12, 2009
Friday, April 10, 2009
Good Friday Artwork
This first work, a print of an original woodcut made by Sister Mary Grace Thul, (Caterina Benincasa Dominican Monastery, Dominican Nuns) shows Jesus washing a disciple's feet the night of the Last Supper. A print can be purchased at this site.

This stained glass picture came from Church Year. It shows the grief of Mary while placing Jesus' body in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea.
Frederick Buechner talks about the symbol of Easter being the empty tomb. Please listen to Buechner speaking his 3 minute essay at 30 Good Minutes.
Windmill Ministries says:
The gospels mention that after the crucifixion Jesus was buried in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea. On Easter morning that tomb was found empty. Finding an empty tomb by itself does not prove a resurrection, however it is an essential confirmation that the resurrection really happened.

This stained glass artwork was found at The Road Least Taken.
Good Friday is the Friday within Holy Week, and is traditionally a time of fasting and penance, commemorating the anniversary of Christ's crucifixion and death. For Christians, Good Friday commemorates not just a historical event, but the sacrificial death of Christ, which with the resurrection, comprises the heart of the Christian faith.Have a blessed Good Friday.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Mud Time: Robert Frost
The sun was warm but the wind was chill.
You know how it is with an April day.
When the sun is out and the wind is still,
You're one month on in the middle of May.
But if you so much as dare to speak,
a cloud come over the sunlit arch,
And wind comes off a frozen peak,
And you're two months back in the middle of March.
- Robert Frost, Two Tramps in Mud Time, 1926
This is just the middle portion of Frost's poem that can be read in its completion here. It seems appropriate for this first week of a cool and wet Colorado April.
Frost's entire work of Two Tramps in Mud Time can be downloaded for your listening pleasure here.

Daffodils, crocuses and grape hyacinths are coming up in our garden patch. It snowed in the mountains just 45 minutes from our town over the past two days, but spring really is in the air.

Monday, April 6, 2009
Easter Craft - Edible Decorations
Start by making Rice Krispie Treats, modified with using chow mein noodles instead of cereal. The recipe can then be used to make little bird nests, a perennial spring time favorite and especially appropriate for Easter.
Use the standard marshmallow recipe, but substitute the cereal with chow mein noodles, and create a unique, sweet treat that looks like a small bird nest. Add a few jellybeans or chocolate eggs, and even the birds might go for it!
This idea came from Kendra, who has an insane amount of cool crafting ideas at this website.
From The Old Stand-By Rice Krispies Treat Recipe:
3 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 package (10 oz., about 40) regular marshmallows
6 cups Rice Krispies®
1. In large saucepan melt butter over low heat. Add marshmallows and stir until completely melted. Remove from heat.
2. Add KELLOGG'S RICE KRISPIES cereal. Stir until well coated.
3. Using buttered spatula or wax paper, evenly press mixture into 13 x 9 x 2-inch pan coated with cooking spray. Cool. Cut into 2 inch squares.
While the mixture is still malleable, you can form it into the desired shape. Don't worry about breaking up the noodles; remember that birds must tweak their long twigs into workable pieces to finish up their habitats.

Lauren Whitney, local morning television anchor at Grand Junction's KKCO TV (see her blog page here), will talk about this project on air April 9, 2009 during the 6 AM News.
Have fun making these edible treats!
Friday, April 3, 2009
Easter Craft eBook Source
While blog hopping this morning, a thoroughly referenced eBook (FREE!) crossed my computer screen. It was too good not to share, and was found at this website hosted by Jamie.This is a great resource for Easter Craft Ideas, including:
* 130 Pages of Craft Ideas for Easter
* 12 Easter Egg Decorating Projects
* 20 Easter Table Ideas: Centerpieces, Napkin Rings & More
* 10 Easter Chick Craft Projects
* 20 Easter Bunny Craft Projects
* 10 Easter Recipes
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Beading Knitting Markers and Copper Wire
The only minor glitch in knitting the project is that it requires many, many marker rings for clear delineation of repeat designs.
And I had only a few (maybe 15) rings on hand that I had made last year. The photo below shows those rings already in place in another project.
If you are interested in making some of these markers, hop back to the post a year ago (using jump rings and directions for making them explained there) .
So now it was time for more markers and a new technique. The finished markers were made with beads and 20 gauge copper wire, shown below.

Supplies: a small roll of 20 gauge copper wire from any craft store, beads, crimper beads, wire cutters, a round nose pair of jewelry pliers
Directions: I doubled up on the wire, making the strands stronger, then twisted the wires together, added beads, and closed up the ends with crimper beads. This is an easy, quick project (several pink ribbon markers are going to knitting friends). Be sure to crimp the wire together closely so that the ends will not nick into the yarn fiber while knitting.
If you make some of these beading markers with wire, please show me your designs (or just email me) and give hints on improving them.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Organizing a Closet (aka Just Throw it Away)
The chore of cleaning out my closet is an ongoing battle. The DH has a
Yesterday, I had several empty shoe boxes, a couple pairs of shoes and a few articles of clothing separated out from the closet. These items were innocently placed in the adjacent bathroom ready for the next step of closet organization: sorting into piles of "throw away" or "give away", or "take to the resell shop". (Granted, the stuff had been there all day.) In steps DH with a snarky question about how long this pile would make its home on the bathtub rim. I told him this minor delay in organization was just part of the process of "staging" in the closet cleaning process.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Cooking in An Economic Depression
Then there is this post from a fellow from Texas who said:
His post talks about buying food at a DollarStore, among other things, and is worth a read.Never been to a DollarStore ? I have, and not just because I've been down on my luck financially. Dollar stores often are just where you need to go when your regular stores are closed or out of stock on a standard household item.They offer one-stop shopping, convenience and basic value in a crunch.
Another site you might like to visit is this: Menus for Moms Cooking in Hard Economic Times. This article puts things into a realistic perspective.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Blog Material: Blog Hunt
So after considerable thought and intense snooping, my listing of blogs meeting the criteria is below. Be sure to stop by each one and see for yourself what incredible writing there is to be read in cyberspace.

In My Humble Opionion (Peggy Hill's favorite saying on King of the Hill), links to a blogger who:
has an online shop: Sweet William
has flawless taste: Keep it classyhas admirable qualities: Too Jazzed To Sleep and Throws like a Girl (both inspirational)
has awesome links to other blogs: Tip Junkie
is an artist: dianes mixed art
is intriguing: michelle perkett
is a daily read: country pleasures
is an old favorite: cast-on
is creative: a year from oak cottage
is a designer: sew liberated
is wildly prolific: daily danny
features fabulous layouts: grimitives
features loveliness: cates back porch
features fantasticness: Indie Collective
lives far away: Craft n Cook (India!)
lives pretty close: living the grand life (in the next room)
takes fantastic photographs: robin's woods
tells great stories: Gaston Studio
crafts up a storm: knitted gems
writes about life: a second cup
gives fabulous recipes: the pioneer woman
gives fabulous tips: tip junkie
makes me want to be her best friend: Heather at Craftlit
makes me believe in the goodness of people: Proverbs 31 Living
makes me laugh: What I Should Have Said
Check out these blogs; play along, and feel free to copy this neat idea for your blog.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Tea Party in Grand Junction - Wear Tea Bag Protest Jewelry
From the local Grand Junction Sentinel:
The theme is similar to the Boston Tea Party, in which colonial Americans protested British taxes on tea by dressing as Indians and dumping tea overboard from ships anchored in Boston Harbor. The events have sprung up in the wake of the economic stimulus package and President Obama’s budget proposal.You can dress up and attend your local Tea Party with a pair of newly minted GENUINE TEA PARTY EARRINGS like these beauties below.

Make your own protest earrings: buy a package of silver wires, open a tea bag from your kitchen cabinet and remove the outer packaging, tie the paper string onto the earwire, perhaps add your personalized slogan to the outside of the teabag.
You will surely want to wear a pair of these bold symbols of your conviction that you want to be heard and that you protest the slogan of CHANGE CHAINS WE CAN BELIEVE IN to your local Tea Party held next month. Make a few extra and hand them out. Sporting these aromatic earrings will show your protest over the national stimulus package that will cost you hard-earned dollars.
Maybe the national press will get hold of this idea to bring extra attention to the several trillion dollar stimulus package.
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Knitting Terminology is Sometimes Confusing
Now, I knew what the terminology meant in terms of language, but the actual execution of the technique was open to interpretation. Remember the book Eats - Shoots - Leaves (Zero Tolerance for Punctuation)? ... the true meanings of words can be construed in several ways, as explained by the author of that classic little book.
These terms were driving me crazy! I knit it one way, then another, but which was the right way - the way the author intended?
So here comes my friend Google to the rescue: Respondent Fran said:
For the sl 2 tog kw, that means slip 2 together knitwise. To do this take your right needle and insert the point into the next 2 stitches on the left needle as if you were going to knit them. Slip them to the right needle.Yea! The above archived response from four years ago popped up in the search engine that some nice person named Fran answered. (That same question was asked by someone else several years back which put her in a similar quandary. )
For p2sso, that means pass 2 slipped stitches over. So, first your sl 2 tog kw, then knit 1 stitch. Then take the two stitches that you just slipped previously and pull both of them over the stitch you just knitted. As for visual aids, none found. Fran
Happy as a clam, I'm tooling along on my "beginner/easy" shawl (a misnomer), executing those Sl 2 tog and p2 sso terms with a bit more confidence.

