Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Annual Scrapbooking Weekend . . .

Well it's about time! You've been home for almost three weeks--the least you could do is talk about the weekend!


Okay, okay. I'm sorry. What can I say . . . I've been busy.


How about I share some pictures?


Here's my little spot . . .



And here's the rest of the workroom. Ain't it cute! 








yes that IS facebook up on my screen. But hey . . . I need a break from time to time!




 And here's the basket that Susan won when one of us drew her name.  Darn it! I wanted to win. Once, when I first started coming, they drew my name. It was so cool! All sorts of scrapbooking tools and stuff. . .






 And here are a few of the pages I got done.









We go every year . . . a group of about sixteen of us and we work for four wonderful days, cropping and stamping and glittering and journaling. Sometimes we even take showers and get dressed! But it's not unusual to find us still in our jammies and slippers late into the afternoon. Because, as I said . . . it's all about the work. 

We've used the same location for the last five years, The Red Barn Inn up in Coldspring. Ain't it the cutest little place you ever seen? It's run by the owners who cater to quilters and, of course, scrapbookers but the way they feed us, you'd think we were royalty! 

So I got my son's scout album done while I was there--just in time for his Eagle Court of Honor coming up here on the 4th of February. 

pictures of that will follow   

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Excuse: n. a plea offered in extenuation of a fault or for release from an obligation

I haven’t blogged in a while. You’d think I’d have time. I mean . . .  I don't work outside the home. I’m kind of a lousy housekeeper so there’s not a lot of time spent in that useless, never-ending endeavor, I don’t lounge in front of the soaps in the afternoon—in fact the T.V. is never on during the day. The meals I cook are healthy yet simple so there’s not a lot of planning or prep time.  So yeah . . . you’d think I’d have tons of time to post a blog or two from time to time.  

Oh, but wait . . . I have one of these: a Senior Varsity Football Playing Boy Scout. Yep . . . I've got an SVFPBS. And because I have an SVFPBS, I’ve spent my potential blogging hours in different ways. Like running kolache /doughnut interference for a bunch of sweaty Boy Scouts as they sawed, hammered and screwed boards into frames. See, Ronnie’s Eagle Project was to build three cages for the Texas Wildlife Rehabilitation Coalition. 

Which was a pretty cool project! And while the boys worked, I made sure they were fed and hydrated, found myself schlepping filtered water in and out of the house because basically, I refuse to buy a bunch of plastic bottles . . . they’re the bane of  our current existence. I was also responsible for spraying the boys with the concoction of their choosing,

“Bug spray anyone?”

“How about sunblock?”

Next it was a whole day of installation. I was designated historian, out there in the 100 degree temps taking pictures while the boys delivered and installed the cages they’d built. Each cage took a little over an hour to assemble in the yards of the selected rehabbers.  The pictures will be installed too… into the Scout Scrapbook I’ve been working on . . . as soon as I find time for that!  

I turned my attention away from scouts on Monday and attended a Project Prom meeting, signing up for a couple of fund-raising teams. If you’ve never heard of Project Prom here’s a little bit about it: it was invented by some brilliant parent a long time ago who realized that kids have a tendency to go out after prom and work on perfecting their partying techniques. Teenagers being what they are, this sometimes means drinking. And sometimes driving. And sometimes this night of celebration can turn tragic instead. So Project Prom provides a safe place for them to hang out after prom. The kids get bussed to a large lock-in where they have all night to play all sorts of games, win stuff and have a bunch of fun before being bussed home, tired, happy and best of all, safe. Project Prom is a ton of work and cost a lot of money but . . . hey, we’re saving teenagers! Definitely a worthy cause!

Later in the week, I donned my creative thinking cap and created a JPG file from a picture of Ronnie when he was just a baby, all diapered up and reaching for a football. I added some verbiage to it, cut it to the right size and then grayscaled it for an ad that will display in the program for local varsity games.  

Concurrently, I was rushing to the dollar and craft stores for stuff to use to decorate the Varsity locker room before the first game. I bought a bunch of crepe paper and football themed party stuff. And I spent a bit of time making about 90 cute little magnets for the boy’s lockers.  



Then, on Wednesday night, some of us moms and dads sneaked into the locker room and gussied it up a bit.  First thing we did was to hang about a gazillion of those little scented trees because, well . . . ewwww! I learned that we actually are supposed to do this for every game! Great.


Thursday night we were at the first game of the season which didn’t end until after 10:00. (Our guys kicked butt by the way). It was out for a quick dinner till 11:00 or so, then home, exhausted and having to get up at 5:30.

So that’s my excuse for not blogging . . . it’s all because of my SVFPBS. Even though I’m actually blogging about the fact that he’s the reason I’m not blogging. Hmm . . . sort of nullifies the whole excuse thing, doesn't it? Guess I'll have to come up with something else.  

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Life is like a box of widgets . . .


I attended a website development workshop last Saturday. Turns out it’s a “tad” harder than creating a blog; certainly more technical. But a web site offers greater functionality . . . once you learn your way around that is!

But authors need a presence online. Right? And, once I start selling a gazillion books (subsequent to the publishing thereof), I’ll need a place to talk about them. Right?
   
So there I sat in the back row wondering why I remembered virtually nothing from my career in information technology. In fairness to me though, that was eons ago and I did support global technology and not web design. But still, you think I’d remember something!

It was an interesting class though with some fairly metaphorical conversations going on. Like:

“Oh, no . . . I lost my home! Did I delete it by mistake?”

“No . . . home is still there. You just can’t see it from here.”

I thought it was cute until later in the afternoon when I couldn’t find my home either! And then even later when I couldn’t fix my parent/child relationship!

So I got to thinking how building a website can be a lot like life. There you are, trying to figure it all out, trying to visualize what persona you want to portray. You bumble about, testing out new themes, trying on new appearances. Sort of like a teenager standing in front of the mirror making faces at herself just to see how each will look. Finally, you find an image you want to portray and you start enhancing it. You add one widget after another, discarding those that don’t quite fit. You rename your tags and change your priorities. You drag. And you drop.

Sure you make a few (did I say few?) mistakes along the way. But, of course, you can’t see them. It’s only when you click on a different perspective—one that lets you view things as an outsider. That’s when your missteps glare back at you in full RGB color.

And if you get really, really stuck . . . if you really can’t find your way home, if your parent/child relationship seems hopeless, you can always call in the professionals, those schooled in solving this sort of thing.
   
So it was that I raised my hand in class over and over again, picking up tidbits of wisdom every time I did. And I’ve been trying to hone the site ever since I got home. Even so, I think I’m closer at this point to having a good parent/child relationship with my son than I am at having my web site up. 

Nevertheless, I'm determined to make it happen. So stay tuned! It's gonna be great!