Showing posts with label collections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collections. Show all posts

Monday, April 25, 2016

GOOD. RANDOM. FUN. V.17 {2016}

4.16.16 ~ SHOWER for BABY BEE

BABY SHOWERS are thoughtful, social, & emotional!

SLE's shower was NO exception! While working with my mom, daughter, niece, sister & sister-in-law, it was ALL about thoughtful details. The mother-to-be didn't want a "themed" event, but agreed on greens & yellows. Once the event was in full swing, it was ALL about the social aspect of visiting, eating, playing games, and presents. I hadn't anticipated that I would be so emotional the week following the party!!

SLE told me on the way to LAX (to catch her flight to Washington DC), she "didn't want the party to end!" YEA!!! it was a G.R.E.A.T. success! 
I wish we had taken more pictures of family... urrgh!


Friday, JPE & I met friends for dinner at the Olde Port Inn, Avila Beach. Great conversation, tasty food (although, expensive) & a beautiful evening...
a RANDOM picture of our walk on the pier. We never take for granted that we live in a beautiful community!

Several days before the shower, I scheduled some time to teach Katie to use a sewing machine. She's at that age where she's expanding her creative interests!

Some of the handmade gifts... Katie sewed five burp pads (bottom left)... Nana/Gigi made the baby quilt... Auntie Allie knit the mint green hat & purple headband! the monkey first appeared on this blog a few weeks ago. Auntie Janene (top picture) did all the table decorations for the party! & I know Baby Bee will be getting a handmade gift from Auntie Stacy... Welcome to the FUN club, Katie!!

posting with Tamar at Random-osity

Flying to Washington DC tomorrow!
catch me here, or on Instagram!!


Thursday, March 10, 2016

O' HEART OF MINE...

If you don't follow me on Instagram @Kritty_k you missed this picture of today's photo. 

Needing a bit of N-U-D-G-E in my picture taking, I've been participating in the Photo-a-Day Challenge hosted by Aussie, Chantelle at FAT SLIM MUM. She's an absolute "kick" & has great words to inspire you to pick up your i-pad, tablet or i-phone to take photos. You might consider following along! some days, it is the ONLY photos I take. And, you can always skip a day if your time runs short. 

Sorry for the quality of this photo! it's not exactly clear!

Anyway... today's word was COLLECTION. I gathered a few of my HEARTS and arranged them on this beaded placemat. It's not my entire COLLECTION, but I had decluttering my towel closet on my list of tasks, so these were handy!

The top right GREEN HEART holds my charm bracelet (as well as charms that I haven't attached - perhaps I should bring that out to share it again?). Several of the HEARTS were purchased to remind me of my Mexican/Native American heritage... I think you can figure out which ones those are! My favorite one to hold is the large ROSE HEART that has rose carvings etched into it. 

So what do you collect?


Saturday, February 13, 2016

RED SORT-OF-DAY...

In honor of the upcoming
RED HOLIDAY - VALENTINE'S DAY...
here's a collage of some RED items from my photo archives.

RED wooden airplane - Open House in SLO
RED bowl - White House tour 
(state service selected by Abraham Lincoln)
RED accordion - Winchester, VA
RED buttons - personal button collection

RED
:: is an emotionally intense color ::

RED evokes feelings of passion, desire, love
Brides in Nepal & India wear RED saris.
Japanese women wear RED kimonos for good luck & happiness.


RED is associated with war, energy, danger, power
Stop signs are RED to signify danger.
Countries include RED in their flags to signify power.

and, lastly...
Men love when women wear RED!



Thursday, December 3, 2015

IT'S ON MY LIST!!


I'm TOO LATE!!!
urrghhh! I was looking at my photo archives for the past few Decembers... and I just remembered something I wanted to "attempt" making.
So, my plan is to make a list of supplies to buy
(since many of them are seasonal) & head to Michael's tomorrow! I have a GIFT card from my colleagues (retirement gift from last May) + several coupons that are expiring!

WHAT do I want to make, you ask??

a glittery village of houses with fir trees, snow & Christmas ornamentation! Of course, this would be my "dream house"...

Oh... don't you love these! check out the adorable church!

some more "dreamy houses"
I certainly have my work cut out for me! Am I attempting something too difficult?

perhaps one this size should be my first attempt!
with a sloped roof to prevent the snow from building up!

Wish me LUCK shopping for my supplies tomorrow!

Working on several other projects right now!
so, this will have to wait until a "rainy day" in 2016!


Monday, November 16, 2015

GOOD. RANDOM. FUN. V46

JPE & I celebrated our 11th Anniversary last Thursday. We took a drive to Cambria, CA (a 40 minute drive up Hwy 1). The weather was beautiful... we had a tasty breakfast at Linn's Restaurant... peeked into our favorite stores... and enjoyed a GOOD ole' relaxing day... topped off with massages & Linn's Chicken Pot Pies followed by a sliver of Linn's famous Olallieberry pie with a dollop of ice cream. Ahhhh! we certainly know how to celebrate!!

After Sunday's downpour, I was checking out the tree in our front yard. I've been watching our tree with "eagle-eyes"... A couple of days ago I noticed a leaf that appeared to be falling. When I put on my glasses, I could see the leaf was tangled in a spider's web. RANDOM sighting! even with a half inch of rain & some wind, the web is still hanging onto its leaf. Yeah for Mother Nature!!

Today is National Button Day. I'll bet you a "card of buttons" that you didn't know there was a website dedicated to button collecting. I looked around on the website and found a resource link for new button collectors. As I mentioned in my post yesterday, I collect buttons for the "cute-ness"... my Instagram post gives some tips for using buttons in your elementary classroom!


time to "button my lips"
{sorry for the pun, couldn't help myself}
& link this post to Tamar's blog at Random-osity.

Come back tomorrow for a review of the book I finished this morning!


Sunday, November 15, 2015

BUTTON, BUTTON... WHO'S GOT THE BUTTON?

TOMORROW is National Button Day!

I love the sound of running your hands through a bucket or dish of loose buttons!! if you don't know what I mean, find a fabric or hobby store that sells loose buttons by the scoop. Weave your hands through the bucket of buttons & you'll probably notice it sounds a bit like ocean waves moving shells along the sand.  I saw these buttons in a yarn shop in Cambria... they were organized in containers... and sold individually.
Have you ever washed (or hand-washed) a sweater, only to have it shrink to Barbie size proportions? Of course you have! Have to admit, I have too... but before I recycle the sweater, I cut off the buttons. The round-wheel looking buttons were removed from a green sweater that was much too itchy! (so I don't miss wearing it). And swirly buttons (there are four of them) were cut off a off-white fisherman knit sweater that belonged to my mother-in-law, Lana. I don't know how I ended up with the flat silver buttons, but I love the design on the face of them.
A flood of memories come to mind when I see these buttons. I sewed most of my daughter's clothes during their early years (6 mos-9 years). Allison loved purple! Stephanie liked unusual shapes --- so I sewed the telephones on the pockets of a corduroy jacket. Remember Hello Kitty? both girls had the pink kitty buttons on their blouses. 
Christmas is my favorite holiday! Even though I don't have plans to use these buttons, I bear to get rid of them. One year I sewed an army of gingerbread cookies on the girls bathrobes... Notice the bells! the two red metal ones actually make a noise. Oh... and the little reindeer. They're sweet, but I don't remember why I bought them?? Do you have to have a reason to buy cute-ness?

Of course I could go on & on about the VALUE of a button jar, but I'll leave you with this link to my Instagram post about National Button Day

If you have any buttons that you're ready to get rid of ~ I'm here! ready to take them off your hands.
Don't forget to post your button pictures tomorrow on your blog.


Saturday, January 10, 2015

MEMORIES, DREAMS, REFLECTIONS 2014

For the past few years, I've posted my MEMORIES, DREAMS & REFLECTIONS for the previous year. The picture "prompts" are the same every year! Here are my posts for 2013, 2012 & 2011.

Since this is a reflection, this post is L.O.N.G. but I hope you enjoy visiting TURKEY through our experiences.

This year, JPE & I traveled to TURKEY!!! to document this trip, my photos for MDR 2014 were pulled from our photo archives. 

Trip dates: October 22-November 8, 2014 & here's a map of our travels...
We started our trip by arriving in Istanbul four days before our "Best of Turkey in 13 Days" tour. Our tour guide, Mert Taner, was exceptional! in addition to tour guiding for Rick Steve's, Mert has also worked for Smithsonian, Rhodes Scholars, Tauck Tours & conducts private tours. 

ME - checking an item off my "bucket list"... (ride in a hot air balloon). Initially, we were to take a balloon  (near Mustafapasa) in the Cappadocia area. Our ride was canceled due to rain... but, Mert (our tour guide) arranged for a short trip over the Pamukkale travertine terraces, near Hierapolis.

LOVE YOU! My traveling partner, JPE... celebrating our 10th anniversary! YES, we hiked in the R-A-I-N in the Goreme Open-Air Museum (Cappadocia) when our hot air balloon trip was canceled!

Following a busy day at the Mevlana Museum (Konya), JPE & I decided to "venture on our own" for dinner. After checking several restaurants, we ended up eating chicken sandwiches & fries at a Burger King. Don't know if we should be embarrassed? but, we're definitely STILL LAUGHING about how great the fries tasted. BTW, we don't eat at Burger King in the US... which made this even funnier!
Saturday, November 1st - it felt like WINTER had arrived in Turkey... the skies were filled with angry, gray clouds that sputtered a constant "drizzle" BUT that didn't stop us from taking in the sights. The Musalla Mosque (Camii) in Urgup had slick, shiny domes w/two minarets. The "call to prayer" is broadcast from the balcony of the minarets five times a day! We enjoyed seeing two children swinging outside the mosque fence... oblivious to the chilly rain and "call to prayer"...

TOURING = NEW FRIENDS! Our tour began in Istanbul (Monday, October 27th) with two+ days of walking before meeting our bus driver, Rafet. Skilled at maneuvering the bus on narrow streets & hairpin turns, Rafet was exceptional! Although he was quiet, he was learning some English and hoped to visit his son's family in the US. I had a difficult time mastering Turkish words, so I can imagine Rafet felt the same about practicing his English.

October 29th is Republic Day (a national holiday & sort of a BIRTHDAY) in Turkey. The day is celebrated with bands and parades, the flying of Turkish flags, and public speeches in the larger cities. At Taksim Square (New District, Istanbul) Mert handed out small Turkish flags, so we'd feel like a part of the celebration... 

Near Mustafapasa, our guide took us to the Guray Studio to see a demonstration of ceramic plates, bowls, & teapots from start to finish. I was really INSPIRED BY the process used to hand paint the plates! 

SPRING weather? We were near Antalya (along the southern coast of Turkey)... the weather was a pleasant 70 degrees... perfect for a November afternoon. Cell phones are a critical tool for tour guides. Mert spent a fair amount of time confirming tour, meal and hotel arrangements whenever he had a spare moment. 
TRAVEL is good for my soul! ordering a meal without reading or speaking the language! walking through a town where people look different than you (& look at YOU differently)! seeing buildings & artifacts that are hundreds-to-thousands of years old & wondering how they were built!
The Hagia Sophia ("church of the holy wisdom") is over 1,400 years old... it was first built as a church, changed to a mosque & is now a museum. This structure is enormous!!! The NYC Statue of Liberty could do jumping jacks and NOT hit the ceiling of the dome.

Although every travel day included a "new" adventure... a DAY IN MY LIFE included taking photos (Aphrodisias "wall of faces"), drinking tea, walking (lots of walking) and hand-washing a few clothes (plus keeping our fingers crossed they would dry before our bus took us to our next city)!

We enjoyed SUMMER like weather conditions in Antalya... after a boat ride, a swim in the ocean, we watched two men playing backgammon... a photographer capture pics of a new bride... and walked the cobblestone streets.

In each city or town, our tour would visit a farmer's market to check the local HARVEST! Vegetables were H.U.G.E. (check out the cauliflower - it's almost the size of a human head). As in most foreign countries, people shop every few days - generally because refrigeration is limited or non-existent.

ALL SMILES... Mert joking with our Cappadocia hostess. A SMILING (?) pirate ship carving in Antalya. I don't care for having my picture taken, but JPE snapped this pic of me outside Suleyman, the Magnificent Mosque (with the Istanbul horizon in the background).

Enjoying lunch prepared by our Cappadocia hostess (mid-60's), her 93 year old mother, & daughter (mid-30's, wearing the white sweatshirt). The youngest female in this family was at school. Four generations in one house!!! Farming grapes & working their gardens. An incredible FAMILY! Seated on benches around the parameter of the room, we ate a hearty lunch, listened to the rain & thunder, and asked questions about life in rural Urgup. The two older women cover their heads, while the younger two are more Westernized in their appearance. 

We spent an afternoon in Ankara, the capital of Turkey. As I mentioned before, Republic Day is Turkey's National Holiday, so our group stopped by Ataturk's Mausoleum to witness the CELEBRATION. Children stood outside the Mausoleum singing songs & waving flags. Inside, people left flags in celebration of their favorite leader, Mustafa Kemal, better known as Ataturk (Turkey's first President). 


DO IT AGAIN... we spent an hour visiting with an imam (Muslim prayer leader). He is considered a leader for the community, and is responsible for leading Islamic worship services (five times a day). He recited one of the calls to prayer & Mert translated his response. Another highlight was our visit with carpet weaver(s). I actually took a turn at "tying" several threads on a carpet. The yarn is broken, instead of being cut. The weaving process was similar to following a needlepoint pattern.

In modern cities & rural areas, these crystal blue eyes were prominently displayed at the entrances to stores, restaurants, found in vehicles or being worn. It's the custom to give a blue eye to newborn babies, children and to couples getting married. When Mert's son was born, everyone who visited the baby safety-pinned a small blue eye to the front of his "onsie"... given to offer good luck and protect his baby from any evil spirits. JPE & I bought several gifts & found the store owners often wrapped an eye around the packaging. A pleasant MEMORY of our trip to Turkey.
Watching the Whirling Dervishes was a unique experience. It's believed music & dance produced a meditative state for the dervishes to connect with the earth and relieve them from the stresses & anxiety of everyday living. The mosaics were located in Konya (our hotel lobby) & near the Blue Mosque-Istanbul. BEAUTIFUL!

Being clean shaven is part of getting DRESSED UP... we ran short of time, so JPE missed getting a Turkish shave... but we both had a Turkish bath (in an Antalya hamam). Ninety minutes of heavenly pampering!

Visiting Aphrodisias at the end of the day was incredible! Ancient farmers visited this site believing it had magical powers to ensure prosperous crops. I think I took 150 pics in a two hour period... of course, many were trashed, but I was pretty satisfied with these two MACRO shots.

Doesn't this look festive? We didn't dare come home without some "Turkish Delight" (lokum in Turkish) for gifts! MB & SLE requested pistachio and pomegranate flavored delights! At first taste, JPE said, "it's just gummy candy with powdered sugar"... But, when we tasted the high-end delight, we realized why it's a treat people bring as gifts for the HOLIDAYS!

FAVORITES... turquoise-tiled mosque with Arabic writing (Konya); wooden door with a scalloped mailbox trim (Guray); and beautiful writing (Aphrodisias).

JUST BECAUSE... love the rusty discolored look of the marble carvings & how can you not love the sunlight setting on the stone building? the southern part of Turkey was stunning.
JPE... DON'T EVER CHANGE!... you push me when I need an extra boost! you let me research & keep track of travel details! And, you are always ready to make plans for another trip. Thanks for an A.M.A.Z.I.N.G. anniversary.

Of course my HOPES & DREAMS are to continue to add stamps in our passports. Next trip? Ireland? Scotland? renting a place in Florence, Italy? Russia? ummmm. Lots to consider!

This post took way longer than I wanted to spend on it. Perhaps I should figure out how to read & write HTML. I had several glitches, adding to my writing time. BUT, it's completed & now I can get back to "regular posting". Yeah!

Please come back for a visit!!

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

STAYING HOME...

resting, reading, relaxing, reclining... recuperating
from a 'little surgery"

my male nurse (JPE) is amazing!



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