Thinking I was achieving a modicum of expertise with the camera, I snapped about two dozen or so pictures at the April 21 meeting of Brush and Palette with artist Kay Crane kindly providing the demonstration. With humility and regret I report now that, every single one was lost due to my error. During the editing process, I inadvertently erased the entire album from my computer. Alas, even after consulting experts from Google and Picasa, it was confirmed that I did the biggest no-no ever by deleting the album with one wrong key stroke. The April meeting will go down without any visuals saved for posterity. And Kay presented so well. And we had a different venue for the meeting, with colorful backgrounds. It is like telling you I caught a big fish, but he got away. Those pictures were pretty good, really they were.
I was humbled by this faux paux but struggle forward and continue to volunteer my humble photographic efforts. On May 7, about 50 individuals will be receiving their First Eucharist at Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, and a photographer is needed to record their special day. Yep, I will try.
Here is one picture of a baptism I photographed at the Easter Vigil service that has to be tops for sweetness and innocence appeal.
On the daughter front, she is getting along. Tomorrow will be the one year anniversary since her husband's death. You can imagine how that is impacting Julie. She bought flowers this week for Sunday services in their former church in Rock Hill, SC to commemorate that anniversary.
Knitting: Reyna Shawl, about 1/3 completed and linking with Ginny and her Yarn Along:
Click on the Yarn Along Box to see what others are sharing this week on Ginny's blog
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Anticipation
While reading Jean today, she reminded me of a conundrum that I experienced last weekend: the sewing machine electrical cord and foot pedal went missing. And I mean nowhere were they to be found. The last place I remember seeing the clear plastic sack containing those pieces was at the repair shop.
That sack was lying last Friday morning on the repair office counter next to the cash register. Inert, innocently bagged along with my name and phone number in case it was separated from the Pfaff. It was just there. I was trying so hard for it not to be misplaced. But it was lost, or stolen, or taken by someone who had not a clue that it was important.
Two phone calls to the repair place assured me that the parts were not in their possession; intensive questioning of the husband revealed nothing (he carried the repaired machine back to its cabinet). A thorough car and then garage search revealed not a clue to the whereabouts of the missing parts. Had I picked up that sack when paying for the repairs? I just cannot remember. So there was nothing else to do except order the missing parts from an internet source. Sigh. $120 could have been better spent. Nothing to be done now but wait and see if the newly ordered parts show up via USPS.
Today is the first day that Julie will be at our house for a short visit since the first of the year. Her visit will include lunch of fried trout that Gene and I caught last week at Corn Lake. Julie was last here at the house on January 1 when almost immediately she became ill with that blasted virus that hit the manor, quarantining the place for about ten weeks until it had run its course of infecting all those vulnerable residents. From New Years' Day until today, Julie has either been recovering from illnesses and surgeries or otherwise incapacitated to the point she could not leave the manor/hospital for a visit home. That is almost four months, so today will be a real treat. Pray it will be a "successful" visit: i.e., all bags stay in place on her body and she does not need to be returned to the manor for nursing care that I cannot provide.
One of her nurses said yesterday that back in the early winter, Julie would begin throwing up on the mornings when she was to come over to our house because of anxiety that all would not go well. That made me so sad to hear that. I will endeavor to make light of any untoward outward expression of appliance glitches today, because it is likely Julie feeds on my nervousness.
Yesterday, I waited almost an hour at the manor for Julie and her entourage of care givers to finish up with her care before our visit. (I brought tamales for our lunch.) While waiting, I finished this little piece in oils and pen, 5" x 7".
Further dabbling yesterday with pansies and poppies in acrylics turned out nothing worth saving. Tomorrow my friend at the manor who also paints with me on Wednesdays may provide something worth sharing. I'll take a picture of the cardinal she is painting for show and tell.
The weather is truly spring-like, and by that I mean it takes its turn being cold and warm, with last night temps going down to freezing. Here is a photo of a few cosmos seedlings this morning. They have spent the last three nights under a south window in my study.
About half of the seeds germinated, so it must be time to start planting and nurturing a second batch.
Last week a newly ordered kit with yarn dyed by KnitCircus showed up in the mailbox. It is Rainbow Trail by Christina Gihrlanda. Lovely colors! The color is named "Quoth the Raven." It will knit up into a striped sweater like this:
That sack was lying last Friday morning on the repair office counter next to the cash register. Inert, innocently bagged along with my name and phone number in case it was separated from the Pfaff. It was just there. I was trying so hard for it not to be misplaced. But it was lost, or stolen, or taken by someone who had not a clue that it was important.
Two phone calls to the repair place assured me that the parts were not in their possession; intensive questioning of the husband revealed nothing (he carried the repaired machine back to its cabinet). A thorough car and then garage search revealed not a clue to the whereabouts of the missing parts. Had I picked up that sack when paying for the repairs? I just cannot remember. So there was nothing else to do except order the missing parts from an internet source. Sigh. $120 could have been better spent. Nothing to be done now but wait and see if the newly ordered parts show up via USPS.
Today is the first day that Julie will be at our house for a short visit since the first of the year. Her visit will include lunch of fried trout that Gene and I caught last week at Corn Lake. Julie was last here at the house on January 1 when almost immediately she became ill with that blasted virus that hit the manor, quarantining the place for about ten weeks until it had run its course of infecting all those vulnerable residents. From New Years' Day until today, Julie has either been recovering from illnesses and surgeries or otherwise incapacitated to the point she could not leave the manor/hospital for a visit home. That is almost four months, so today will be a real treat. Pray it will be a "successful" visit: i.e., all bags stay in place on her body and she does not need to be returned to the manor for nursing care that I cannot provide.
One of her nurses said yesterday that back in the early winter, Julie would begin throwing up on the mornings when she was to come over to our house because of anxiety that all would not go well. That made me so sad to hear that. I will endeavor to make light of any untoward outward expression of appliance glitches today, because it is likely Julie feeds on my nervousness.
Yesterday, I waited almost an hour at the manor for Julie and her entourage of care givers to finish up with her care before our visit. (I brought tamales for our lunch.) While waiting, I finished this little piece in oils and pen, 5" x 7".
Further dabbling yesterday with pansies and poppies in acrylics turned out nothing worth saving. Tomorrow my friend at the manor who also paints with me on Wednesdays may provide something worth sharing. I'll take a picture of the cardinal she is painting for show and tell.
The weather is truly spring-like, and by that I mean it takes its turn being cold and warm, with last night temps going down to freezing. Here is a photo of a few cosmos seedlings this morning. They have spent the last three nights under a south window in my study.
About half of the seeds germinated, so it must be time to start planting and nurturing a second batch.
Last week a newly ordered kit with yarn dyed by KnitCircus showed up in the mailbox. It is Rainbow Trail by Christina Gihrlanda. Lovely colors! The color is named "Quoth the Raven." It will knit up into a striped sweater like this:
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
What Happened this Week
Best new recipe tried this week: Lemon Ice Box Cake by 12Tomatoes to be served at RCIA tonight
Successes: Julie was in wheelchair and playing cards in the manor activity room with only minor headaches Sunday and yesterday; Pfaff sewing machine taken to be fixed at the repair shop; went fishing today and we caught our limit of trout! Geese were present
Happiness Derived from Material Goods: New Merlot Leather Lazy Boy Recliner delivered yesterday so Gene and I now have Edith and Archie Bunker chairs
144 seeds planted on April : progress of sprouting as of April 14. half are up:
Electronic Update: The Fire was knocked off Julie's bedside table on Sunday night and is broken beyond repair; new phone for Julie is working (but hardly ever charged when I need to call her)
Trying to learn how to use Jack's Camera (macro lens):
Ollie the Owl: still here, seen most often at dawn and then again about 10 AM daily
Reading: Almost finished another Rosamund Pilcher's Winter Solstice, and Pain in the Tuchis
So what is up in your neck of the woods?
Finished Projects: A Line Vintage Dress (modified pattern) and Yard Clean Up ( trees, boxes, rose bush limbs) in time for city-wide trash pick up, likely today
source is our front sidewalk
Frustrations: Julie has been in bed two weeks; sewing machine tension is off, making sewing almost unacceptable; Julie does not keep her new phone chargedSuccesses: Julie was in wheelchair and playing cards in the manor activity room with only minor headaches Sunday and yesterday; Pfaff sewing machine taken to be fixed at the repair shop; went fishing today and we caught our limit of trout! Geese were present
Happiness Derived from Material Goods: New Merlot Leather Lazy Boy Recliner delivered yesterday so Gene and I now have Edith and Archie Bunker chairs
Blooming: Iris in front
144 seeds planted on April : progress of sprouting as of April 14. half are up:
Electronic Update: The Fire was knocked off Julie's bedside table on Sunday night and is broken beyond repair; new phone for Julie is working (but hardly ever charged when I need to call her)
Trying to learn how to use Jack's Camera (macro lens):
actual size: a 50 cent piece
Reading: Almost finished another Rosamund Pilcher's Winter Solstice, and Pain in the Tuchis
So what is up in your neck of the woods?
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