Sunday, July 28, 2013

Finally, my summer vacay from school...

... In August, after the 7th.

Hahaha, so sad that I only get three weeks of summer vacation, really. But, such is the life of a student. I also say only knowing that I only get three real weeks of vacation because I am currently unemployed.
Earlier this week I went to the park with a friend and her mostly-new baby, that was fun. The baby mostly just slept outside once she got used to the outside (Squee- so squishy cute, but bah, so... boring. Man, I can't wait till the baby is a little bit older and she can respond to things better).

Yesterday I made bannock,

 to test it out before I go camping with my sisters in August, since I don't want a meal to be gross because I didn't try it out-- it's going to be a side to both chili and stew, on different days. I'm pretty pleased with it, but I feel that adding salt is silly since the baking powder already tastes like salt. Adding jam is really nice though.
I'm pretty stoked about this trip. It'll be me and my three little sisters, who are all young enough and inexperienced enough that I feel like the whole trip will be like teaching central for things like: how to start a fire, how to make chili on a campfire, what to do when you are dirty, how to paddle a canoe (we're totes canoeing), and why the turtle sits in the sun (courtesy of my herpetology class earlier in the summer).
I've been fishing this summer a few times, off the banks of the river here in town. It's no good, all I get are three-and-a-half-inch red eyed rock bass. They're lame. I can't even eat them.
Hopefully we'll catch some fish on the Grand River when we go camping. It will be awesome.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

July... 18, 2013?!

Holy crud, this summer is flying by. Maybe because I have to keep ripping parts of my car off and putting new ones on, maybe because I have no job and therefore am enjoying all of my time too much.
Went to the zoo with the hubs and the MIL. Wooh! Zoo Zoo Zoo. Fun word.

I started keeping my account on calorie counter up to date this week. I have a lot of extra time on my hands, aside from naming and collecting bugs, fixing my car and going to dance, which is now over for the summer. I did a bunch of homework. I seem to be suffering from either really bad eye strain, or really weak conjunctivitis. I can't tell. Either way, I took my contacts out and have been in glasses all day for three days (ugh). I'm considering going back to contacts because the glasses are so irritating and my eyes haven't gotten any better overall (though they do get betterish when I'm not on the computer or playing video games.
While writing this, I decided to call telehealth ontario and they told me it was going to be a 40 minute wait to speak to a nurse! Holy crap, not a good service. I can walk into a walk in clinic in that time. Thanks, I know it's one of two things, I'll just keep waiting until I get eye goo to be sure.
Which is why I'm not sure: my eyes are red and itchy, but they haven't got eye goo, and they get worse when I stare at a computer screen.
So here I am. I made awesome soft pretzels last night from Tammy's Recipes (here) and they are the best soft pretzels that I have had in a long time. I think that they need a kick or something maybe, but they were awesome otherwise.
I identified a species that I caught yesterday, this morning: The Punctured Tiger Beetle (link is to bugguide.net, I highly recommend this site for those bug enthusiasts. Some of the pictures are awesome and a great number of species are up on the site. You can also submit good pictures of species that you cannot identify yourself for others who are pros to ID. I actually ended up using this site to ID it: Tiger Beetles of Ontario since I had been looking at pictures of beetles all morning and the metallic green one looked the closest to my specimen, except that mine wasn't green. I assumed it was a tiger beetle, then searched brown tiger beetle, et voila!  

Cicindela punctulata! (I hope).
Hmm.. I came on here to write something specific, but I can no longer seem to recall what that was. Oh well. More for tomorrow, I guess.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Cheap make your own paper holder/ July 3, 2013


I decided that it was about time to stop piling all of my paper up by my door in my computer room. I am too lazy/cheap to buy special shelves, and my "bookshelf" is so full that I am stacking two layers high and three layers deep, but they're all books that are important to me (like, series and favorites, plus a few textbooks from school).
Anyway, after deliberating what to do with the smaller paper I have for scrapbooking, I finally came across a box from a grocery store box-bin that I thought would fit the 8x11.5 papers perfectly. Sure enough, I cut the box flaps off and put them through slits I made in the side with a boxcutter, and the fit was perfect. It is by no means measured, so there is a slant to the box. Maybe, eventually, I'll paint it or something, but for now I'm looking for utility over aesthetic.

It was so easy, I'm just going to show you pictures of the semi-final stage (not including painting/design on the outside):
I imagine that with a 12x12 top, or a 12x12+ box you could also make one for 12x12 papers.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Sort of... review? or April 29th, 2013

I used some letter stickers today, that I actually found hard enough to use that I thought I might warn people about my experience.
These:





Are Pebbles ABC Stickers in the Seen&Noted Series, called "Black ABC Stickers" and are product number 732126. I really liked the look of them; I love that they're semi-heavy but not super heavy. I love the font. I love how many of each letter you get; there's a lot there.


I don't love how the edges of each letter pops up off of my layout all of the time. I feel like I should have glued them down, which would counteract them coming with glue, which would mean I could have just bought card letter cutouts.


So while I like the shape and size, I don't know if maybe I'm doing something wrong, but they just aren't sticking down.
If it helps, I bought them in a kit from Winner's in my town. Maybe that's it? I'm too cheap to buy them from the company so I'm getting reject glue?

Friday, April 26, 2013

April 26th 2013- or "The fork that fixed the window"

Today I decided that the windows needed to be cleaned as I could no longer see the colour of the sky while looking out them-- the sky was always a nice, pale grey dust colour with some dustwebs thrown in for good measure.
After heading outside and seeing an old screen that I had popped off when our old door lock stopped unlocking, requiring me to break into my balcony window (good thing I'm on the second floor, bad thing that it took me a total of 25 seconds to pop the screen off and climb in, meaning that anybody who is in the terrible shape that I am could climb and break into my house within a minute and a half, like I did).
I continued on with my window-cleaning, and then decided to pop the screen back in when I was done. That took a good 25 minutes of sweating, grunting, pinching, pushing, pulling, swearing, laughing at myself and asking for help from the significant other after he continuously played his new video game while attempting to tell me that I was doing  it wrong.
He didn't get it in either.

Until, until I saw the fork that I had sitting on the windowsill by my planter for some reason (don't ask me why, it's literally been there for three months and just never got picked up. Why it was even there in the first place boggles my mind). And I thought, gee, this will work just fine to slide the screen that's a half-inch too big for that hole right on to the little track for it.

No kidding. That's actually how I think about things.

Long story short, it worked. And so my friends I give you, the fork that fixed the screen in the window:

MORAL OF THE STORY:
Sometimes, the tools that you don't think are for that job are easily the best ones for it.

or, more generally:

Sometimes, you have to use whatever is at hand to get something done.
And sometimes, that's a fork. 

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Sparkles in clear embossing powder! (April 11, 2013)




Hi!
   I've been jazzing around with my scrapbook supplies lately, in particular the supplies that I tend to neglect like my embossing powders. I just don't feel like I play with them enough.
  Today while crazy-embossing I came up with a concept-- will adding sparkles to my clear embossing powder work?

   After spending some time searching around on google and pinterest, I didn't find any answers. So I tried it with a teensy bit of clear embossing powder, Recollections brand, and some Wow! white glitter that I picked up from Winners when it was 3.99.
 
Lo! It worked!
Here's how I did it:
Step 1: Spend a few minutes searching around for some pill bottle or other semi-not-humongous container within which to store it, otherwise face throwing it out (not my can of beans, lads and lasses).
Pour in small amount of clear embossing powder that you have--mine is Detail embossing powder by Recollections from Michaels.

Step 2: Pour in some glitter. During this test, I was using Tulip Fashion Glitter that I got on sale at Value Village after halloween two years ago for less than a dollar. THAT is the time to shop for supplies, I tell you, when the crafty stuff and makeup goes to 75% off.

Step 2/ optional: or use other glitter from other places.

Step 3: Mix it together in your little storage container; mine's in a pill container from the dollarama that I was previously using to remember to take my vitamin D in the morning.

Step 4: Use a stamp and a watermark or resist or versamark or other inkpad; I haven't tested other inks for this but imagine they would work as long as they are okay with embossing powders usually. This stamp is a Studio G stamp which does not seem to have a name, but is from the 1.50 bin at Michaels (I love it).

 Step 5: Heat emboss that jazz.


And BLAMMO! It works!
I will be very clear ( see what I did there? ) and say that I prefer more sparkles than I used for the clear with white sparkles, since the sparkles seem to show better with more of them and the clear was only a tiny, tiny sparkle amount. I put some more in the gold (test 3) and even more in test 4, or the above, purple sparkles picture.
 Furthermore, it did NOT look very good on my scratch or computer paper since the paper was so thin, but I feel that it was as a result of my ink rather than the method itself.

Have a Greater Day!                                          

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

(Mar.20.2013) A splash of chevron insight

Lately I've been busy. Today I decided I would be inventive.

I was looking at scrapbook things online and saw these chevrons on a card that are NOT all bunched together (which I actually like):


And thought "Wow. That's cool, what is that, washi tape?"
But no, it's a stamp. I don't have a chevron stamp. But I do have washi tape from Michaels on clearance!! ($2.50 for two rolls??? Yes, please, considering they're usually $8.49).

Here's how I made these:
 Basically, I laid out my strip on my cutting mat, and then cut these lines:
 Then you pick up the two pieces from the centre:
 
 And stick them together, angled sides in:
The one that I found worked the best was this one, a slightly larger than 1/2 inch width; the smaller one worked okay too (the purple polka dots) the wider one I wasn't cutting with lines and eyeballed it, and the angle of the centre cuts was too small. You need about a 90 degree angle to get the nice, chevron-ny look.  But you could make these all over your card instead!




Saturday, December 8, 2012

Quick little tip for the day

So I've been scrapping a lot lately, and cardmaking to boot; I have only a small 2 by 2" acrylic block and I can't bring myself to pay for a larger one since they're just so darn expensive.
Every once in a while though, I have a larger stamp than can't be sustained by the 2x2 block. I simply haven't used the bigger stamps.
Until this morning, when that brilliant strike beat me with a "duh" stick. Because I couldn't even find my acrylic block on my desk of horrors.

You know those CD cases you use to store your... stamps (because CDs are so 2000 late)?
Yeah. They act as a pretty similar acrylic block also. The only issue I had was that the thickest snowflake sometimes didn't stamp as well on the inside part of the stamp--so I opened up the case and pushed it down better.

Holy beans. Apparently inspiration only strikes when you can't find your acrylic block at 8 in the morning.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Too Soon?

I have been doing things, I swear, just not things that are really awesome to blog about. Okay, also, sometimes I forget why I have a blog because I don't really participate in the blogging community (pinterest=best thing to upgrade to).

But, I found this absolutely hilarious, and I'm not sure if it's just my science background or if it's actually funny, so here you all are.
The card that I made at 5:00 in the morning because it was so funny that it had to be done while I should have been sleeping ( I haven't seen anything like this before, so please, tell me if you have seen it):






Get it? 'Cause the ash is falling, and it's like snow, and stuff?
Okay, I though it was hilarious. I was also torn on the caption: "It was at that moment that Bob realized that it was only June"
and "The Dinosaurs' first-and last-Christmas".
I crack myself up with this stuff sometimes, but I think that I just found my Card-making zone. It's filed between 'Science' and 'One Sentence Jokes'.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

October 17th, 2012

I hate to say it, but I've been bogged down (by "bogged down" I mean actually literally not sleeping) as a result of homework that seems to have suddenly increased this year over all other years of University.
Today, though, I have several thought processes stirred by my Archaeology class (Human Impacts on Ancient Environments) that I figure might require further consideration at a time when I am not "bogged down".
In my time of not quite having the time to develop my thoughts, I shall leave them here for others to consider in my absence:
1.

Net Primary Production:
Total energy fixed – respiration of primary producers= total food resources on earth.
Logically, the energy input HAS to be less than the output. BUT behavioural ecology teaches otherwise, that it in fact does not have to be such that there is a great deal, if other important things jump out at the individuals instead- eg: social upgrading.
So, is this even a useful (if not overly simplistic) concept to touch on? Can this be used to prove non-logical human steps? Can this be used to determine the amount of not-logic that may lead up to a society's collapse? Has it been used for this purpose? Can it be used in biology, for behavioural ecology?

2.

SUNK COST EFFECT aka the CONCORDE EFFECT
Where more effort is put into existing and failing investments (as a result of path dependency) without investing in the exploration of new options which undermines innovation (eg: fossil fuels: Let’s dig from the oil sands instead of finding new technology that could do the same thing).
 I would argue though, that this is adaptation in a nutshell: responding to current events rather than foreseeing events; that it is impossible to move away, once you’re dealing with the emergency because a lack of that continued procedure (eg fuel) would mean the shutting down of all of the systems to move the money to developing new methodologies—which would greatly diminish the current stages of expected fuel and impact the daily living of individuals, which in itself could cause the collapse of societies dependent on the procedure. 
A better option, logically, would be to use existing technology and develop half stuff that didn’t leave society completely lame while increasing the new technology at the same time… fusions>hybrids>electric cars (but, electric cars could cause the same issues, because they will require energy input just the same way). 
So, is there any way for humans to solve these issues? Are we bound to continue simply responding to rather than being ready for, our environment? Would society listen? Would they agree? Would it be plausible to assume that we will never change?

So, fellow individuals who have equally no time and some interest in further studies than what you're already doing: What do you think?
 

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Sept 19, 2012

So, this morning I was up early, driving the DH to school because he goes to school a lot further away than I do-- and doesn't drive.

I, on the other hand, have school at noon.

Of course, I didn't eat before I drove him to school. As long as I can stay in bed in the morning, I will. Three minutes before I had to drive him I got up and not a second earlier than I had to (Ah, the benefits of not caring about makeup or my hair).

But, when I got home I was starving. And reading about Astrobiology. I decided to make myself a smoothie, but I really didn't feel like making a frozen fruit one as the fruits in the freezer don't taste good with the fresh bananas in the fridge. I decided, instead, on making my own peanut butter banana smoothie. And then I added some cocoa on a whim. It was the most amazing thing I've ever drank, in my life. Adding a few chocolate chips to the top would make it Starbucks worthy. It's almost like the morning replacement meals that you spend an arm and a leg buying when you're on a diet, except it is free-er. Who doesn't have cocoa and peanut butter or PB replacement? Here's my recipe:


(Clearly, I couldn't avoid drinking several mouthfuls before I got the picture. It's that good.)


Peanut Butter Banana Cocoa "Smoothie"

1 ripe banana
1 1/2 tbsp peanut butter (or more, if you like PB)
2 tsp cocoa
1 1/2 cup milk ( I use 1%, but a rice juice might be a substitute if you have more PB or banana for thickness)

Add all substances in order to a magic bullet regular jar or a blender. Blend. It might be good to use a spatula or spoon to get the cocoa and PB to mix fully-- mine ends up around the edges of the jar, but I'm okay with using a spoon at the end to eat the spots with cocoa and peanut butter stuck on, after I drank the majority of the "smoothie".
Eat.

Makes 1 "smoothie".

Enjoy. I did.

Monday, September 10, 2012

the weirdest dream ever...



So, I just literally had the most ridiculous dream ever.
 I have to write about it because it is ridiculous and it's ridiculous meter is through the roof. I want to remember it, though.

So, it started out pretty neat. I went to a Brentalfloss convention that lasted an hour, somewhere in the world that was not North America (though, the skin tones of people were white, if that matters these days). We all sat around and talked about game systems like the NES and got some street passes on my 3DS. I then dyed my hair brown, at this convention... For the record, it is already brown. Then, the convention was done, so we got kicked out of the room by ushers, but my fiance had already left the room without me and so I wandered out to the lobby by myself.
The lobby was not too busy. It had the look of an older, but expensive hotel. Dark mahogany colours, red and deep brown carpeting, marginally low lighting in gorgeous sconces, marble here and there, really big staircases, a sweet old elevator which I did not ride... Okay. Maybe a horror hotel, I'm not sure how to classify it. It was beautiful, but aren't most things that are turned into horror? At the time,while I was dreaming, all I thought about it was that it was beautiful inside, and quite rich looking.
 There, I ran into David Bowie, who was very tall, thin, and had blonde hair that was straight, you know, bowie-ish. He was wearing a tan coloured trench coat. He almost reminded me of an anime character. He was doing a photo shoot. Anyway, he looked good, if not bored. I thought that this was cool, but I kept getting into the way of the photographer, who was looking for something reflective for a shot and all she could find was this silver "kitchen utensil" (which looked suspiciously like a bedpan).
 So, then i saw my fiance and his friend (henceforth called "B") wander out the back hallway, behind Bowie, down some stairs into the basement of this establishment where it was clearly not North America. There was a security guard with them. Of course, I went downstairs, where it looked suspiciously like a shorter-ceilinged hotel area. The ceiling, though, was that cheap white stuff that's in businesses; it's a foam, almost, that you can poke holes into. These guys:
 
There, against the wall at the back, lying (because that's how low the ceiling was in that area), was Bowie.


^He was better looking than he is here in this photo, more young but still similar, with very straight, blonde hair.

 I stopped to talk to him, where he made a joke about me being able to sit up in the short little basement (where he proved his point by sitting up straight and hitting the ceiling with his head, and I was still hunching over, but on my feet) because I'm short and I responded that I would trade anytime ( my standard response to short jokes). If we traded though, I said, you probably wouldn't have had as many fans if you were as short as I am. Anyway, I said, I have to find my fiance. He chuckled and asked me to write my phone number and name on these little, round paper disks that he wore on a bracelet on his left wrist. These papers reminded me of the old, paper coasters that I found in my deceased Auntie Eleanor's side tables that I got from her.
There seemed to be lots of numbers on these papers, and not just phone, either. Some were in sets of two, some were just long lines of numbers. Thinking that maybe he collected sets of numbers or something, maybe even a book of phone numbers (This is literally what I thought in my dream), I decided to go ahead and do it.  So, I wrote my name and number down on a wrist bracelet paper, and couldn't for the life of me remember it. He said that the guard had taken then into the next room to take blood. I bid my goodbyes, then hurriedly opened the door that led in to the next room.
In this room, which was brown fake wood coloured, similar to this paneling (but not the ceiling):
There were two tubs immediately in the middle. It looked to be about the same size as the room that I work in (quite small, maybe seven or eight feet squared), and there were things around where there would have been in the room that I work in, though not what would have been (my first thought was that I was somehow at work, in that little room, with carts and stuff around the edges). But, it was different, with shelves instead of carts and the deep brown colour walls with the dark red carpeting. There was a door in the same place as there is at work, though a regular push door rather than the sliding one that we have at work. It was open, to reveal a parking lot with no cars and a dumpster to the left side of the door, and a rather grey day outside.
And there, lying side-by-side, in tubs of ice cubes were my fiance and B, drained and very pale, with clearly hack-job surgery marks.
Let me clarify hack-job: My fiance's arm was removed (poorly, without solid cut marks--almost ripped off instead), and laid at his head. His chest was not really closed and he'd clearly had kidney and brain removal with shoddy bandages added for an awesome, pointless look.
On the plus side, there wasn't a lot of blood around...
Then the guard opened the door from behind me, pushed me inside, and said something akin to "so, we should take your blood too".

That's where I woke up. I wasn't scared, really. Just like, this is ridiculous. I have to write this down.
So, now I've shared it. Silly dreams.

Friday, August 24, 2012

August 23/4 2012--- Also, Poster, Part II.

So, it's in between the 23 and 24th, though technically is the 24th. So, not sure what to put this as; I finished two birthday cards for my mom and dad, whose birthdays will probably pass before I see them again, and (drumroll)
The poster, fricken' finished.
I ended up never finding a paper that was the right size, so that I could just sponge it, and I had to do it all by hand. Not that I was worried about the amount of work, mind you... Just that mine would be very messy. Which, it sort of is. I think it's more endearing, anyway. So, after like, a million bajillion hours of work (An entire Billboard Top 100 List, plus the JLO/Pitbull song Dance Again; Ever After (Album) by Marianas Trench and half of the Nicki Minaj album, to be exact, in just writing and painting tonight)... It's DONE! Yeayea!!
It's cute, I think.But... if you look very closely, it's messy. And I made a lot of mistakes. Please, heavens, let there be no spelling errors. I might cry.
Good night, I am very tired at the moment.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Aug 22, 2012

All of my school is done, the last paper that I did for evolution got an 83 percent, and school begins anew in September. Wooh.
Today, I called Cogeco and cancelled the shoddy, friggen expensive cable that I had for less than a month (cost me 75 dollars, basically what I was paying minus about 10$ for the cable each month because I broke the contract). I had originally wanted to add HBO on as a separate channel (True Blood, you know). Unfortunately, because I live in Canada and we get screwed all of the time, I couldn't add it as one channel (eg: $2.50 a month for the channel as an extra). Instead they expected me to buy the WHOLE MOVIE CHANNEL PACKAGE, an extra twenty dollars. No, thank you. I have the internet, therefore every movie I have ever wanted to see.
Ever.
Including new ones, Japanese sub films, indie films, high school communications classes' films....
Ever.
They offered me the chance to look into some "deals" so that I could get HBO for a better price. I declined.
All in all, cable television has gone downhill since I was a kid and watched television. Now, there are stupid reality shows, like rat b*stards, which I haven't understood the reason for killing the muskrats yet:

Teen Mom, something that no one should have made to be popular, lest we find ALL thirteen year old girls trying to get knocked up, or tattooed, or I don't even know because I wasn't raised like that:

and Jersey Shore, which is so ridiculous that it brooks no explanation, with its idiotic cast catapulted into great fame for... whatever they do...

-- all of which disgust me. Reality is all around me, I do not need it on the television that's supposed to be keeping me avoiding it.
Furthermore, even as I watched things like Criminal Minds- one of the few crime shows that amuses me after CSI started expanding to NY and Miami and Grissom left- the cable would jump, as if it were lagging and had to catch up to the signal, so I would lose four seconds of the show, three or four times in a half hour of programming. That's unacceptable to pay 58$ a month for.
When I said that I would be looking into dropping the internet also, the woman became quite snobby and added "Well, you realize that you'd be breaking your contract as you have a special rate until next June, 2013, so you'll have to pay extra for that as well?"
Keep in mind that my bill is consistently 150$ or more before cable was added to it, and have had it since 2009.
So I dropped the Cable, and paid the money, and decided that as soon as I pay off the entirety of the next Cogeco bill, I am switching to Nexicom, even if I have to pay an extra ten dollars a month for internet.

I also called the Swiffer company to complain about the broken Swiffer that was leaking entire bottles of cleaner on to my floor when I wasn't using it.
     (Here you can kind of see the liquid that has leaked out of the Swiffer all over the floor)
(Small Lake in, under and around the Swiffer pad, you can see the bubbles)

That's the Procter and Gamble company. They were very helpful in dealing with the issue, and I will most likely be happy to deal with them in the future. Furthermore, there's a warranty on the item for a year, so they said that they'd send me a coupon for a new Swiffer Wet Jet that isn't broken within three weeks! If only every company were like Procter and Gamble. We'd have happier customers all around!

Sunday, August 12, 2012

August 12, 2012

Hey!
  So, lately, I've been finishing summer classes (I have to catch up- I've been in University for too long, really), as well as playing around with scrapbooks and sewing.  I just haven't been keeping up with my blog.
Here is what I've done tonight, after work:

 This one above is the same as the one below; the one above is easier to see, the one below is closer to the brightness-- I'm still working on understanding the way that my camera uses and intercepts the flash. I never did like flash in a camera.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Making a Poster Pt.1

I decided that for mother's day I was going to make a cow poster for my mom. Now, she's been complaining lately that everyone always buys her cow stuff, and she doesn't know what to do with it all. Keeping this in mind, she's gotten difficult to shop for (although I do occasionally pick stuff up for her, but not for presents).
So in a stroke of sleepy genius, I determined that a wordy Subway Art poster would be likely to make her happy and stuff.
It's not done yet, but so far:
I created the design using a wide font and GIMP (Gnu Image Processing)(because it's free and photoshop is a ridiculous price).
Then I just played around with it. Eventually, it will be cut out and used as a stencil. Unless I like it otherwise, but then the lettering would have to be a different colour.




Eventually I liked it, and took it to a website called Block Posters (totally free and really easy, although with a low resolution availability), and it cut it into a printable .pdf file for me:
As you may have noticed, there is an entire section (black and white, in the middle there) missing.

Back to the drawing board. Maybe Staples prints 16x20s?

Thursday, May 3, 2012

May 3, 2012

I most definitely bought myself a pair of boots today.

Cute ones.




I love them.

Usually boots aren't my style; in fact, anything "in style" is usually not my style ( I can't bring myself to spend so much on me). But I got my taxes, and I passed all of the courses I did so far (waiting on Arcaeology marks) this year, including BIOL103.
So I figured it would be awesome.

My thing of git 'er done today was chocolate-chip cookies (yay!); yesterday was a load of laundry.
Tomorrow I might make a lacy skirt, if I have time in the morning. I bought lots of lace, now I just have to use it.
And shortly, off to another closing shift.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

April 25, 2012

Today is my first day off, after school 2011-2012 and before summer school 2012; so I shall post my git 'er done *cough*. Won't make up for not posting, but I've seen a few other blogs use the git 'er done idea after I used it, and I couldn't bring myself to not feel ripped off.
Now, though, after I recovered from immense anger by really thinking about it, I don't really care. It's fine by me; I don't think that people really read this one so they couldn't possibly have stolen the idea from me.
Besides. For all I know, I stole it from someone else.
Anyway, here are my got 'er done things for today:

made 6 loaves of bread:



4 are rosemary-mashed potato breads, and 2 loaves are regular, Amish white breads from recipes I found online. This is the first time I've ever made bread before, I hope it turns out alright, I'm writing this in awaiting the hour of rising that needs to be done. The Kitchen-Aid stand mixer (I have an old one from my almost-mother-in-law) made kneading the bread ridiculously easy.

Also, last week, I finally made a shirt I've been meaning to make for literally months. I used a shirt to make the pattern for it. I love the fabric, and it's just a standard cotton. LOVE the colours though. It took me maybe an hour to make, including the sleeves. The sleeves turned out a little like ruffled puffy sleeves (I didn't mean for that to happen, it just did, I think because I always make really large seam allowances and then sew, like, 1/4" seams, so there was a lot extra. Still, the shirt is super colourful!

 : D
Now that I have some more time, I am planning an apron, some more baking, and a few other things like pants for dancing in and parachute pants for my dance recital.
Oh, how I love guilt- free me time.