Thursday, July 31, 2008

Thank you and Thrift Thursday

Thank you all SO VERY MUCH for the lovely birthday wishes you left! They truly did make my day even happier. :) I had a great birthday, even though our original plans didn't work out. I enjoyed eating a yummy dinner here with my little family, and Maren even acted like a human child (rather than a young chimpanzee) in the restaurant. We made a quick stop by Whole Foods to ogle the desserts and load up a container with Chicken Korma for tonight's dinner, then home for presents and cake & ice cream.

A few of you commented about the Texas Sheet Cake--Pioneer Woman has a version here (with step-by-step instructions) that is very similar to my recipe. In fact, I may try her recipe next time, just to see how it stacks up against mine. I'm definitely going to try her version of the frosting, because for some reason the measurements on my recipe were off and things went a little wonky. And really, I think it's the frosting that really makes this cake the best, so you want it to be perfect.

Because it's so easy and makes so much, this is a great cake to take to a function where you need to feed a whole lotta folks. Or you can just make it for yourself and eat it for breakfast and dessert and every meal in between every day for a week, like I usually do. :) Seriously, we ate plenty last night I sent two big plates-full to work with the Mister this morning and I still have half a cake left. And I'll have you know that it is taking every ounce of self-control I possess to not be in there scarfing it down straight out of the pan right this very second.

I haven't posted anything for Thrift Thursday in a while, but don't let that fool you into thinking I've quit shopping. Ha! Here's a little something I found more than a month ago, but I just now got around to photographing (albeit poorly. Maybe I should have asked for photography lessons for my birthday. sheesh.)

This cutie pie little chair was a mere $3 at the thrift. Actually, it might even have been $2 now that I think about it. Either way, it was ridiculously cheap for such a perfectly pink, delightfully shabby little chair! I wonder if perhaps it might have been a sewing table chair as it's quite small, but not small enough to be for a child. The top has a big crack so I thought it might be homemade, but I flipped it over and there is the manufacturer's stamp. It has been repainted though, and the cotton-candy colored paint is chipping in the most perfect way! I have not one single place in my house to put this and I had sworn off buying orphaned chairs, but for less than the price of a Happy Meal I simply couldn't pass this up! On the same shopping trip I also found the matching pink vintage tablecloth with a gorgeous gold Greek-style motif. Watch out, Sarah! I'm catching up to you--only about 150 more to go! :)

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Happy Birthday to ME!

Hooray! It's my birthday!! :) Today is my golden birthday--I'm turning 30 on the 30th. The image above is a fab vintage birthday card from my collection--you know I love anything with a vintage space theme! It is a fun card because when you open it up there is a hat that you can cut out and tape together. Looks like one heck of a goofy hat, but whatever. Love the light bulb sticking out of the little astronaut's forehead!

No big plans for the day. Maren and I went to the swimming pool this morning for a while, and now I'm off to clean up the kitchen so I can bake my birthday cake. I'm making Texas Sheet Cake, which is my most favorite cake of all time--and that's saying a lot, because I'm a cake fiend. The Mister and I had hoped to go out tonight for dinner and a movie but we called three different babysitters with no luck, so it looks like we'll have to do something else and see if we can postpone until Friday night instead. Maybe we'll get takeout and go to the park so Maren can run.

Thanks for all of your comments about my sweet ilttle girl yesterday. :) The preschool is held at the local elementary school which is on a year-round schedule, hence the early start date. Maren will go Tuesday and Thursday mornings from 8:10 to 10:45 a.m. which is really just a bit longer than she goes to the church nursery on Sundays. I've heard nothing but rave reviews for her teacher and I think Maren is just going to thrive! I'm so happy for her. I used to think it was crazy to send a three-year-old to preschool, but now that I have one who is MORE than ready to go, I understand! I'm obviously looking forward to a few hours alone each week, although 2.5 hours isn't much, especially when many stores don't open until 10:00. Yesterday I did some computer stuff and ran to JoAnn's. Tomorrow I'm going to go workout and then go grocery shopping--BY MYSELF! Yippee!

And now, my KitchenAid is calling...

Thursday, July 24, 2008

After the rain




Photos just taken out my back window. It's a double rainbow and the color was absolutely brilliant!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

A few weeks ago I blogged about a sweet friend who lent me her absolutely darling curtains to hang in my kitchen. Rachel is a dear person and I wanted to make her a little something fun to thank her. I had just read about these charming rickrack dahlias and since Rachel and I share an obsessive love for rickrack, I tried my hand at making a few.

Rachel loves pink, black and white so I chose those colors from my considerable stash of rickrack. I put pin backs on them so she can pin them to her bag or whatever.

I also made her a little stationery set:


I used a PSX template to make the little folder--I've loved that template and have used it over and over. Before I folded it, I sprayed the cardstock with spray adhesive and lightly pressed a vintage pattern piece to it, intentionally keeping the folds and ripples. The button and hook/eye cards were from my stash, but the spool of thread and the ruler on the side are from a great little K & Company packet I picked up at Michael's. And it's hard to see in the photo, but for the tie I used some cute twill ribbon printed to look like a measuring tape.

Inside are a set of cards made from the images on vintage patterns:

Easy stuff, but I'm happy with how it turned out. Hope she likes it!

Monday, July 21, 2008

Summer Reading

Hello, friends! Last week was crazy busy--three evening events (two of which were held at my house), days spent getting ready for said events, an out-of-town guest, swimming lessons for Maren every morning, and the usual running around--a week that didn't lend itself well to blogging. I'm going to try to be more regular about blogging for a while.

For me, with the warm weather of summer comes the desire to READ READ READ! I think it is a holdover from my youth--from middle school onward through college, summer meant the end of school and long-awaited freedom to finally read whatever I wanted, instead of books assigned by teachers and professors. I'm a long way out of college now, but my desire to devour books in the summertime hasn't disappeared. Here's what has been keeping me busy the past few weeks:


Bringing Home the Birkin, by Michael Tonello. This one caught my eye at the library--I'm not ashamed to admit that I totally judge books by their covers! The clever cover and intriguing title piqued my interest, and by the first chapter in I was sold by the chatty and entertaining prose. It's pretty fluffy--the topic is *the* status symbol bag for the glitterati, after all--but not every book needs to make you contemplate the cosmos, KWIM? A good beach or poolside read for sure.


I'm seriously late to the party for this one (it's been an Oprah book for eight years) but I finally got around to reading The Poisonwood Bible because a friend lent me her copy. It's long and involved but amazingly well-written and the story is very moving. This was one I had a hard time putting down, and I'd like to explore some of Barbara Kingsolver's other works, now that I've gotten a taste of her talent.




Somehow I managed to get through school without ever being assigned to read A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. I have always known about it, but never read it for some reason--I think I always associated it with The Yearling, and didn't want to read a book about a deer. I finally checked it out, so now I can cross that one off the list of Classics everyone should read. I thought it was only okay; I didn't love it. I know that I was very bothered by the fact that people just seemed to be so mean to each other. I read that the story is rather autobiographical, so I wonder if that was an accurate representation of people, or simply how the author remembered it as a child? Anyone want to weigh in?


Tuesday night my book club met to discuss Under the Tuscan Sun, by Frances Mayes. If you're on a diet, this is not the book for you! The author's descriptions of the glorious, fresh, earthy food she found and prepared in Tuscany never failed to leave me ravenous. The book was slow, but its pace seemed to mirror the slower pace of the author's time spent in her Italian home. The book also includes recipes, and for book club we each chose one to make at home and then bring to share. And I've never seen the movie, but from what I understand it's completely different from the book.

I checked out Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression after seeing it mentioned on this blog. There's no particular plot, rather it is a collection of the author's memories about her childhood. It was very interesting to read about life on the farm--how and what they cooked, what they did to have fun, etc. I find it interesting that although this covers the same time period as A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, the whole feeling was much different--there was none of the meanness that I mentioned being bothered by before.


Along the way I also started Lonesome Dove (which has 800 pages so I'm in no hurry) and Pawley's Island, which I've designated my official pool book. Next up for book club is These is My Words, a book I think I'm really going to like even though I haven't opened it yet. I've also checked out Water for Elephants, a book I've seen recommended practically everywhere (what is my obsession with the Depression this summer?).

What are you reading this summer?

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Pikes Peak or Bust!

Saturday was a big day for my little family. DH has been the Company Commander for a Military Intelligence company here in the Colorado Ntl. Guard for two years. He built the company from the ground up and has done an amazing job! He has really won the respect of both his superiors in Colorado and Vermont and the soldiers under him. His time as a commander is over now, so he chose for the change of command ceremony to take place up on Pikes Peak, a nod to his company's status as part of the famed 10th Mountain Division.

It's quite a drive to the top of the mountain. It takes about two hours just to get from here to the base of the mountain, and then the 16-mile drive to where the ceremony was held took nearly another hour. This is not a drive you want to take if you have any fear of heights! One of my passengers did, so she spent the drive looking straight ahead and trying to ignore the sheer dropoffs and dizzying views just outside her window, bless her heart. Very narrow roads (most without guardrails!), hairpin turns galore, and a grade so steep we were in 2nd gear most of the time. Whew!After the ceremony was over we drove three more miles up to the very top of the mountain. The summit of Pikes Peak sits at 14, 110 ft. above sea level. Needless to say, the views are incredible! In fact, those views are what inspired Katherine Lee Bates in 1894 to write the words that later became "America the Beautiful."
At the summit we took in the view,

snapped a few photos,
and sampled the famous Pikes Peak donuts, which have been made with the same recipe for the past 100 years (although they're now fried in oil, as opposed to bear fat!).

This coming weekend is the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, an event that can only have been thought up as a dare. The first race was held in 1916 (it's the 2nd oldest auto race in the U.S.) and racers go up those same twisty, narrow, nerve-wracking, guardrail-free roads that we drove, only they do it at speeds up to 130 mph! Just the thought of that makes me want to wet my pants, I'll tell you. The current record of 10:01 minutes to the top was set last year and there's a $25,000 bonus prize offered to anyone who can break the 10 minute mark this year. I'll be watching for sure!

Thursday, July 10, 2008

It's curtains for you!



Window coverings seem to be the bane of my decorating existence. On HGTV they make it look so simple but for me, finding decent window coverings and actually getting them installed has been a monumental task. A task that is still not complete, even though we're inching up on FOUR years spent living in this house. I don't know if it's just us being home-improvement idiots, but hanging curtain rods always turns into a ridiculous affair replete with curse words, extraneous holes in the wall and stripped drill bits (it would appear that all our doors/windows are framed out in titanium).

Last year we finally hung curtain rods over the kitchen window and the adjacent sliding glass door and ever since then I've been on the hunt for appropriate window fashions. The slider is a problem all its own: it needs full-length curtains because we get the dreaded fish-bowl effect from the house that backs up to ours. I found some plain but serviceable insulated curtains from J.C.Penny, which finally arrived in February and have been sitting in their bag at the base of the window ever since. Ahem.

When we installed the curtain rod last year, we did so ignorant of the important information that curtains are generally sold in specific lengths. So naturally, the height at which we hung the curtain rod (a feat that was only achieved after the aforementioned swearing, etc.) is COMPLETELY wrong, so now the curtains hang about 6" above the ground: the drapery equivalent of high-water pants.


Remedying this problem means we're going to have to reinstall the curtain rods, something I dread so much that I'm very seriously considering hiring a handyman. I may be cheap, but not having to deal with that blankety-blank curtain rod again would be worth the money, plus I can have him install the matching rod over the sofa window at the same time. I ordered matching valances with the curtains, so it's possible that I could actually have real live curtains on not one but three windows in my house! At the same time! A new personal record!

Lucky for me, the kitchen window is already taken care of, thanks to the generosity of a dear friend. My sweet girlfriend Rachel shares my love for vintage design and offered to let me borrow a set of curtains she and her mother made.



They ordered the fabric from Repro Depot and Rachel's mother hand cut and sewed all those adorable scallops at the bottom. The fat red rickrack on the top is the perfect touch. These are the curtains of my dreams! I love them so much that I want to marry them.

Here's another photo of the valance where you can see the vintage repro light fixture we hung over the kitchen sink. It's from a fancy-schmancy place called Rejuvenation and I bought it at a thrift for a buck! It is unfortunately yet another in my litany of home improvement projects that should have been so easy but turned out to be nightmares--if you look close you can see the extraneous holes in the ceiling sticking out from under the silver base. Nice. What's the number for that handyman again?

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Shoes, School and a Swap

The only thing better than new red shoes for me?


New red shoes for Maren! Jen posted about Salt-Water sandals the other day and that reminded me that I wanted a red pair for Maren. Thanks to the wonders of eBay and quick shipping, I had them just a few days later, right in time to wear with her cute Fourth of July dresses.

Our Fourth holiday was good--quiet, but still nice. We grilled hot dogs and ate outside on the patio, then headed to a neighboring town for the fireworks show. We'd actually never been to watch fireworks here in Denver--for two of the previous three years we were in Utah and the one year we stayed here it rained so we stayed home. We've been a bit unsure of the best place to go to see fireworks so took a gamble and drove a few miles south. We ended up with prime seats and with a big bag of fresh kettle corn for Mommy & Daddy (really, they should call that stuff kettle crack) and a brand new tube of glow bracelets for Maren, we sat back and enjoyed what turned out to be a really great show.

This morning Maren and I walked down to the school where she will be attending preschool to meet her new teachers and see her classroom. The school is on a year-round schedule so while three of the tracks begin tomorrow, Maren doesn't start until the end of July. That gives us just enough time to fit in a couple of weeks of swimming lessons, which will start next week. Maren will only go to school two days a week for about three hours in the morning, but that will be enough for her to have some fun and learn new things and for me to have a little break (yay!).

I received the most amazing package from my Parasols, Pink Lemonade and Polka Dots swap partner, the fabulous ArtsyMama! I can tell that Kari took much time in selecting items that I would love--and she was right!

Among the treasures she sent were a lovely blown glass bottle in my favorite turquoise color, a darling vintage hankie and apron, a fun bag with an ice cream cone on the front (perfect for the pool!)

a trio of vintage paper parasols--so perfect for the theme!--a gorgeous vintage hat and a bunch of neat old millinery flowers, the cutest little ice-cream patterned pennant banner, a little pink wagon for Maren, and one of Kari's pieces of original collage artwork, which I have happily displayed in my craft room.

There were lots of other goodies as well, and it was such a treat to pull out treasure after treasure. Kari was a fantastic swap partner! As usual, I forgot to photograph the package I sent to her before I got it all in the box (WHEN will I learn? Sheesh.) so you'll have to check out her blog in a few days when she returns from vacation. Also, if you're a fellow swapper and haven't yet uploaded your photos to the Flickr group, please head over there and do so! I love checking out all the ways that people interpreted the theme. I'm heading over to upload my photos right now!

Friday, July 04, 2008

Happy Fourth of July!


This is my country! Land of my birth!
This is my country! Grandest on earth!
I pledge thee my allegiance, America, the bold,
For this is my country to have and to hold.
What difference if I hail from North or South
Or from the East or West
My heart is full of love for all of these.
I only know I swell with pride and deep within my breast,
I thrill to see old glory paint the breeze!
This is my country! Land of my choice!
This is my country! Hear my proud voice!
I pledge thee my allegiance, America, the bold,
For this is my country to have and to hold.
*lyrics by Don Raye*

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Hurrah for the Red, White and Blue

One of my favorite things to do is to decorate my house for each holiday. I do it with gusto even when the holiday's traditional colors look a bit out of place with the rest of my decor (orange & black with navy & scarlet? Yikes) but I must admit that I take a special pleasure in decorating for Flag Day and the Fourth of July. The walls in my front room are a beautiful shade of red and the walls in my family room are navy with red and patriotic accents I keep out all year round, so my Fourth of July decorations look right at home! I took a few photos of the things I decorated with this year and since there are so many photos, I'm making them small (click on them to enlarge).

One new thing this summer is an idea from the book Celebrating Home by Seasons of Cannon Falls. I've been on the lookout for this book for a while since I read about it on this blog. My library does not have it and I hate to spend money on a book sight-unseen. I was thrilled when I found it used in a booth at the antique mall! This was one of my immediate favorite ideas:


So easy, but perfect! A big glass vase filled with poker chips and flags stuck in the top. How many times have I passed up poker chips while out thrifting? Not any more!

Here's my version:I already had the apothecary jar and the flags which left only the poker chips to find. Be advised, this project takes a whole lot of chips! I found a box at the thrift store, came home and dumped them in the jar and they filled up about two inches. I kept looking and shortly found another larger box of chips, and the addition of those chips made enough to anchor the flags. I did notice one thing--the first box of chips I bought were red, ivory and navy but the second (much larger) box were red, white and royal blue. I like the look of the ivory and navy much better but I didn't notice the difference until I got home with the others, and that thrift store doesn't accept returns. Oh well! It works, but just keep that in mind if ever you want to do something similar.

Next is some great old sheet music that I bought for a song :) at an estate sale a few weeks ago. The "Yankee Doodle Dandy" music was a treat from a sweet friend last year.

I was tickled to find this darling kit from Jenni Bowlin and was lucky enough to buy one before they sold out. It was very easy to put together (a series of large & small chipboard stars, embellished with patterned paper and trinkets) but I LOVE how it turned out! I have mine in an old blue glass jar that is partially filled with rock salt.
Last is my old chippy dresser and mirror. I loved using the fringed red/white/blue striped cloth that I bought in Alamosa earlier this year. The vintage arithmetic flash card in the flags from a local store called Patina (my new favorite place to shop in Denver) and the picture frame was from my neighbor's garage sale back in May. I've since replaced the bucket of lollipops with the jar of Jenni Bowlin stars, which I like better and aren't such a temptation for Maren!

Thanks for checking out my decor! :)

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