Garden of Angels



11 September 2007
A day that changed so many lives and so many industries, forever. Flags flew at half-mast, prayers were said and songs were sung through the United States on this anniversary of a terrible thing. I chose as my subject for today the cemetary I drive by every day, The Garden of Angels. I've photographed it before, many times. But, I like this one a lot.
Garden of Angels...again
The people are gone, but their legacies, their families and memories of them remain. I'm not one to stand on ceremony, and I certainly don't wish to be placed in a box under 6 feet of dirt when I'm gone; but the amount of love and care that goes into keeping this little Garden clean and fresh is amazing. This dedication to the memories of those who have gone before is peaceful and happy. May those happy memories never fade.
Cheers.

~KR (11 September 2007)

Listening to:
Hallelujah by Jeff Buckley
on Grace

Camera: Canon PowerShot S1 IS
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 58 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire

I post with WriteToMyBlog




Peanuts



10 September 2007
When I left for work on Monday morning, I'd been away from Marita Beth for 3 weeks, and she'd been out of town for 11 weeks. When I got home Monday evening, there she was. Home. Safe, sound & beautiful. Did I take a photo to commemorate that? No. I suck, I'm sorry. Instead, as we were preparing for bed, I took this photo:
peanuts(10th)
I'd recently placed a restock order for East Wind Games and this was the packing material in the box. It harkens back to the Texture assignment rather than the Soft, Purple or Black & White assignments I currently have, but I like it anyway.
Cheers.

~KR (10 Septmber 2007)

Listening to:
Limbo Rock by the Champs
on Land of 1000 Dances

Camera:
Canon PowerShot S1 IS
Exposure: 0.4 sec (2/5)
Aperture: f/2.8
Focal Length: 5.8 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire

I post with WriteToMyBlog




Boxes of Shoes



Boxes of Shoes

13 September 2007

For three days, I’ve been trying to get out of the house and get some errands done, now that I’m back in town.  And for three days, I’ve been so busy moving back into my house, that I never leave the driveway!  But, the truck is finally un-hitched from the trailer, and Friday is the day of errands.

In the process of re-integrating my summer clothes and shoes back into our tiny little closet, I was forced to look closely at my stuff, and justify keeping all of it.  I even did some online research about uncluttering, and organizing.  Some of the sites out there actually have some very good, helpful suggestions.  They like to tell you you don’t really need the bigger house you wish for—that all you need to do is make more space in the one you have.  That’s good news for me, and I want to believe it.  But, I’m pretty skeptical.

I vowed to eliminate some items and make more space for what I really care about.  I tried on every top in my closet—I got rid of six.  In June, just before I left, I tried on every pair of shoes.  That was more successful—I got rid of over a dozen pair.  (And I labelled all my boxes!) Before that, as I moved summer clothes into the closet and winter ones into the storage closet,  I tried on all my pants and skirts.  I got rid of a bunch of stuff then, too.   But, still there’s not really enough space.  What the experts in uncluttering and organizing seem not to understand is the joy of having just the right outfit for whatever the occasion.  And the perfect shoes, scarf, belt, jewelry—to go with that outfit.

And it’s not just about bedroom closets.  One article I read suggested that one set of dishes is plenty!  It subscribed to the theory that we ought to use our beautiful dishes all the time, and enjoy them, rather than keep them for special occasions only.  I agree with that.  A few years ago, Kyle and I acquired a beautiful set of pottery dishes handmade by an artist friend.  They are our everyday dishes, and I’m proud to use them on a fancy table, as well.  But, what about the holiday china?  Or the wine and cheese-themed plates?  And, what about all the stuff I use only once or twice a year when I host a big party? 

One writer suggested that if you have a huge collection of board games (which we do, of course!) that you should take all the pieces out of the boxes and put them in labelled zippy bags!  Just label the fold of the game boards and stack them together.  Keep everything in alphabetical order and voila!  It’s the boxes that waste your space, he wrote.  Well, duh!  But, I find the thought of dissecting the games completely ridiculous!  In fact, many games print their rules on the box lids!  That article was a joke.

I even found one article online about organizing and controlling your “fabric stash!”  I know that we fabriholics often allow our obsession for pretty fabric to take over our common sense, so I thought perhaps this article would have something to teach me.  But, it was full of ridiculous statements and false assumptions about keeping and storing fabric.  I was apalled.  Suggestions like: “keep only the fabric and accessories you need for the projects you’re going to do in the next year.”  Like I have any idea what projects I might be inspired to work on this winter, or next!  Or: “put everything you’ll need for a project into a large zippy bag and label it.”  Yeah, right—what happens when I want to use the same trim on two projects?  Or: “get rid of all your scraps”— now there’s a wasteful statement!  I make scraps count until they’re smaller than a business card!  And the one that really made me mad:  “there will always be new fabrics to buy, so buying now just because you see something you might someday use is a bad idea.”  Grrr.  I cannot believe anyone would actually put that in writing!  Anybody who sews or quilts knows that the availability of fabric changes constantly.  Domestic mills have been closing with lightening speed for over a decade, driving production to far-off, often third-world countries.  The home-sewing industry has been shrinking for years, and with the loss of over a hundred Hancock stores this year, and even the dreaded Wal-mart stores threatening to no longer sell fabric, it gets harder and harder to find what we need.  I have one dear friend who literally had to re-invent her business because the fabrics she relied on became practically impossible to find. (The mills closed, the machinery was sold and disassembled and now sits in some Mexican (?) warehouse where nobody understands the potential demand for the fabric it once created.)

I know that those of us who actually have businesses based on fabrics are a little different than the casual home-sewers, but that doesn’t make the crazy statements more accurate.  If you need help organizing your personal fabric stash, let me know!  I have actual suggestions based on reality! :-)

Anyway, I’ve come to realize that I am pretty darned good at organizing.  The myriads of websites and newsletters on the subject don’t have too much to tell me that I don’t already know and put into practice.  I keep a good home-filing system.  Our home-based businesses are contained in areas unto themselves, with filing systems that work well.  I’m learning to use the GTD system which makes my desktop happier.  I try to put things back where they go after use.  A few years ago, I worked really hard to organize our home so that like items are stored together in logical places.   I firmly believe that there should be “a place for everything, and everything in its place.”   But, I still have too much stuff in an attic I rarely access (although that’s where the holiday stuff resides).  I still have a small business that makes my garage bulge at the seams.   I still have a thing for cool shoes, cool purses, even cool coats. (Yes, I know I live in Texas,  ;-) but that will change someday!)  Bottom line: I still have a sweet little house that’s just not really big enough. 

I found a quote I really like:  “We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about.” —-Albert Einstein, scientist and philosopher.

My shoes and clothes and holiday dishes and beautiful collections all make me happy!  I’m enthusiastic about them.  So, in a decided twist on the way many people would interpret that quote, perhaps my “comfort” level in a slightly crowded house, is less important than my enthusiasm about all my stuff!

So, today’s photo is of part of my shoe collection.  It reminds me of my three friends who helped me move into this house almost fifteen years ago and who told me they were happy to help, but if I ever moved again, I’d be moving the shoes without their help!

~MB




The Storm Approaches



9 September 2007
I went to see a movie on the 9th. I saw Shoot 'em Up, a ridiculously improbable, but infectiously fun action flick. When I left the theatre, I was confronted with this:
The Storm Approaches
The beginnings of a storm that the next day forced the cancellation of 40% of the flights into and out of DFW. Vicious.
Cheers.

~KR (9 September 2007)

Listening to:
Ain't Gone 'n' Give Up On Love by Eric Clapton
on Tribute To Stevie Ray Vaughan

Camera: Canon PowerShot S1 IS
Exposure: 0.006 sec (1/160)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 5.8 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire




A Goodbye



I received some sad news yesterday, and I’ve been thinking about it today. 

I am about a week late in learning of the death of Madeleine L’Engle.  She was 88.  And she was a genius of a storyteller.  And, although she never knew it, she was instrumental in making me who I am. 

As a child, her A Wrinkle in Time, and its sequels were life-changing, favourite books of mine.  She practically invented the genre of young adult fantasy/sci fi for my generation.  Loving her books opened my mind to the world of fantasy reading and made way for me to love Tolkien and Lewis and Pratchett and Stewart and McAffrey.  And Rowling.

In 1995, when I was trying to find a clever, meaningful name for my new small business, she inspired me again.  My A Wardrobe in Time came from the merger of my intentions to create “clothing through the ages” and the wordplay of C.S. Lewis’ best-known Narnia title and Madeleine L’Engle’s Newberry Award-winning time travel book.

I finally finished reading the last Harry Potter book today.  I know that to thousands of young readers, J.K. Rowling is now, what Madeleine L’Engle was to me in the 1960s.  A talented, imaginative woman writing wonderful stories—as though they were just for me. 

The world is a little more wrinkled this week, the planet a little more tilted, the ring of light—seemingly not so endless.  Madeleine L’Engle will be missed, but what a legacy she leaves us!  What a gift.

Madeleine L’Engle

1918-2007

~MB




Soft Purple



Soft Purple

12 September 2007

Home.  I’m home and loving it. 

I wore these purple velvet tights (made by my dear Ginger of Faire Pair Tights) to the renfaire on Saturday, specifically because Kyle had told me that the photo assignment was “purple.”  I had intended to take a funny shot of my legs . . . but, I forgot.

Now, I know that the other assignment was “soft.”  So, today, as I put the tights in the washing machine, I decided it wasn’t too late to take the photo—it would just be different.  I mean, after all, what is softer and more purple?

~MB




Purple Kleenex Box



8 September 2007
As I've mentioned before I pay attention to the photo "assignments" that come my way via blogs & forums I subscribe to. Two of the three assignments I get each week are assigned on Friday while the third comes to me on Monday. This week's Friday assignments were Purple & Soft. It is the Wednesday after those two assignments came out, but I'm posting for that Saturday photo. This is Purple.
Purple Kleenex Box
I was driving through a parking lot in South Arlington and my eyes were drawn to the purple newspaper box and the purple lightposts just outside the Taco Bell. But, I wasn't overwhelmed with the composition opportunities. Then, but 30 feet way, someone had dropped an empty Kleenex box next to an abandoned Mexican restaurant. Aha. So, now we have a Purple Kleenex box as fulfillment for Assignment number one. I'm sure that I gathered many a look as I crawled around in the filthy parking lot looking for a good angle to shoot my Purple. I think I got it with this one. I like the overall arrangement and exectuion of the image, even though it is a photo of someone's refuse.
I threw the box in the trash. Couldn't have someone else taking a photo of a Purple Kleenex box, could I?
Cheers.

~KR (8 September 2007)

Listening to:
Lady Luck by Tesla
on The Great Radio Controversy

Camera: Canon PowerShot S1 IS
Exposure: 0.001 sec (1/1000)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 23.7 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire

 I post with WriteToMyBlog




Figs



7 September 2007
It's amazing to me how I can be in a new place and still not take a photo. Much of it is, I'm sure, down to the fact that I keep my camera in my backpack and it's not always easily accessible. It's just large enough that I can't carry it in my pockets. And, although I really do like my camera, I think perhaps I need something a little less space-hogging for my travelogues. For day-to-day use at home it's fine and I won't abandon it, but supplement it I think I must. Friday, and again, no photos taken but this one:
figs(7th)
This is a photo of the Figs metal meets window logo in Laguardia Airport. We arrived early enough that the exceptionally non-existent security line left us with time to kill. If there's one thing I know how to do well, it's kill time in an Airport (except XNA which closes at some ridiculously early hour). Thus, the Figs.
Cheers.

~KR (7 September 2007)

Listening to:
Johnny Jump Up by Amadan
on The Swallowtail

Camera: Canon PowerShot S1 IS
Exposure: 0.006 sec (1/160)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 24.8 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire

 I post with WriteToMyBlog




Coloured Lights



6 September 2007
What a day. What a very, very long – yet fulfilling – day. The four of us, Lou, Terrill, Eric & myself spent the entire day in work, debug, work some more mode. It was quite fulfilling and proved the validity of the trip. However, by the end of the day, I was completely knackered. Lou took us to a place called Carasello for fairly decent, if expensive, Italian food. Then it was back to the hotel for some late night comeraderie and expensive drinks. Then it was to bed for another early morning the next day. And nary a photo in the entire proceedings. So, we have this lovely photo of the parking lot lights through a filthy (!!) window.
street_light_flares(6th)
Hooray.
Cheers.

~KR (6 September 2007)

Listening to:
Winner Take All by Styx
on Come Sail Away: The Styx Anthology

Camera: Canon PowerShot S1 IS
Exposure: 0.167 sec (1/6)
Aperture: f/2.8
Focal Length: 5.8 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire




New Feather Pens



New Feather Pens

11 September 2007

September 11, 2001 —- Never Forget

It sure is good to be home!

One of my errands at the Kansas City Renaissance Festival was to purchase new feather pens for use in the booth at TRF.  My friend, Susan of Fancy Things makes beautiful feather fans and pens are a small sideline—but she’s one of the few folks that do such things at all.  So, I bought four—that ought to last me a while.

This photo is a close up of those feathers as they are now sitting in my dining room.  I love the texture of photographing feathers!

And did I mention it’s good to be home?!

~MB