CreativeExile

"Whatever shall we do in that remote spot? Well, we'll write our memoirs. Work is the scythe of time." --Napoleon Bonaparte, on his way into exile.

Sunday, October 30, 2005

Party Central


PICT3110
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

I was going to get all cute on you, and try to make you guess what our costumes were, with shots of my white rabbit (complete with minature timepiece) and "Drink Me" label on my antique-looking bottle; or perhaps a shot of the "In This Style, 10/6" sign I made for E's Mad Hatter hat, but alas. I kept it simple for you.

Blame it on a party last night (Saturday, kids) and a party tonight (adults only), and the fact we haven't even hit Halloween yet! Gah, I'm almost too tired to get into my Alice in Wonderland costume again tomorrow. Sigh. I'll do it for the kid.

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Actual knitting entry!


POA Scarf
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Shocker! I know. But my Knit In gals can attest, I do (usually) come in every Tuesday and knit away on my Harry Potter scarf, and look how far along I am...on "trapped bar" #10 of 14.

Karen is, I'm sure, still waaay ahead of me, even if I started her on her Slytherin scarf (and got her back into knitting) *after* I started my own Gryffindor scarf. Ah, well, I will take the (lower) Bart Simpson road and say, "Underacheiver and Proud of it." But I WILL have this done before I go see the movie in November. I have to, I bought a new coat to go with it.

They're so cute when they're asleep...


They're so cute when they're asleep...
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Tess in her Pedicare-induced nap state yesterday. We both have mild fall colds, but she was sneezing enough yesterday (all day) that I kept her home from school in the afternoon. Aren't I a nice neighborhood mom? Damn it, where's my medal?!

I had a scratchy enough throat and plenty of general body aches to keep me home from Knit In, too :( But my next entry will prove I have not been a slacker in the knitting arena!

Now, if I could just motivate myself to put together Tess's Pink Fluffy Cloud sweater. You'd think the cold weather would do it...or the fact that she may outgrow it by the time I muster the energy to finish it...bad knitter, bad. Boo.

Monday, October 24, 2005

Photographic Evidence, digitally enhanced...

Jonathan (who stopped by our little knitting group a couple of weeks ago) has digitally enhanced my drunken photo taken through the window of the fairy store at Peaceable Kingdom and voila! Since the wing turned out to be green, Tess is convinced it's Tinkerbell.

I knew it wasn't just the champagne talkin'...

I hate our oven


I promised to make a pecan pie for dessert yesterday (Mom sent home 4 cups of fresh pecans with Tess last week), and nearly forgot until well after noon. My MIL usually has Sunday dinner at 4:30p, depending on how my FIL feels (he is going through chemo right now...last week was not a treatment week, so he was feeling okay). I had to haul to get this pie done, and of COURSE the way I chose to make it take FOREVER.

First, I made a 10-inch single crust for a 9-inch pie dish, because I always seem to run out of pie crust before I get to the edges. This worked out well, because I had a deep pie dish.

However, I forgot the fickleness of my oven. It seems that when you set it to anything over 350 (and I had to bake this for 5 minutes at 375), it gets hotter than it should, yet when you set it below 350, it cools off too much. Thus when I set it down to 325, it went down to 300, and 45 minutes was not enough. The pie filling was still wobbly and I had to bake it another TWENTY FIVE minutes. I did it in increments, holding my breath for the crust as I was afraid it would be blackened before the filling firmed up -- glass pie dish and all.

Still, it turned out good after sitting for a while, so all was well. The center was still a bit liquidy at dessert time, but hey, Pecan Pie! It tasted great. Which is amazing, because I am missing the baking gene. Cooking, yes, love it, baking...I need help. Cakes collapse and cookies burn; however, I seem to manage pies quite well. Mom always requests that I make the pumpkin and mince meat pies at Thanksgiving.

Last piece


Last piece
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Cat-sized hole


PICT3000
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

My in-laws lost their oldest cat, Simba, last week. Since they are not native speakers of English (my in-laws, not the cats, naturally), I'm a bit confused on Simba's symptoms over the years. I think he had a form of feline leukemia (as far as I can understand).

He would get sick every summer, go down to skin and bones. My MIL would feed him with a spoon & pick him up and move him to clean up after him. He would not move, and every year they held their breath to see if he would come back from the abyss. He did. This went on for the last 5 years, except for this summer.

This summer he was the picture of health. That's Simba in the middle, in this painting my FIL did on the back of a huge floor puzzle. Their cats are all sitting around his computer desk, where my FIL plays the same disk game he created, over and over. Until he got an internet connection recently.

When they moved from a mobile home to their ranch a couple of years ago, Simba disappeared that first winter. They figured he was gone for good, hit by a car or just gone to that big litter box in the sky (he'd already been ill two summers running). E and I had just gotten married and they had adopted his cat, Marquis (the black cat), so they had someone to lavish their affection on that winter.

But in the spring E got a call at his office. Seems they found a cat with a microchip in its neck and traced it back to him. Well, E has the same first name as his dad, so it was a wrong number, but the right cat -- Simba. He'd always been an outdoor cat, and the mobile home park had been his kingdom. They figure he spent the winter under his old trailer. The neighbors there had obviously fed him.

So, it seems this time Simba was on his 9th life. Last week he was unable to move, his back legs paralyzed. My in-laws had adopted a third cat, Smartie, from a litter of strays in their backyard, and slowly my MIL has been driven crazy by the cats' in-and-out lifestyle (they tried a cat door, but got rid of it when they found a racoon eating a plate of cookies in the living room one night). When Simba went lame, she took him in to the vet and had him put down. He wasn't in pain but he was obviously in distress at being paralyzed. He's also been spraying all over the house for the last 6 months (that's where I draw the line...or should have, when my male cat ruined a rental home we had before we bought our house. Tried everything. Lesson learned).

At dinner last night, I talked with my MIL about Simba. She says they see him everywhere, inside and out. They had him for so many years. Even I could feel the cat-sized hole in their house. It's pretty big.

Friday, October 21, 2005

Our newest toy


enjoying the fire
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

...our chiminea. Mom brought down firewood last week. My folks have 10 acres, and after 30+ years in a factory, my Dad still has to get up and get to work in the morning. His factory is now a forest. His favorite job is cutting down trees. Keeps him strong.

I'm looking for sewing machine buying-advice. Let me know your thoughts, if you have any. At the very least, my requirements are zigzag stitch and one that doesn't jam up on the tension constantly. I don't need anything fancy like embroidery. Just a good beginner sewing machine. Maybe even one a kid could use someday.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Jenny's Market


Jenny's Market
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

At a new playgroup last week, one I really like because the moms are all my age. Wish I'd met them sooner. We go to storytime at the library with a couple of the kids and one of the moms invited us along to Jenny's.

Oh, and ain't Tess a cutie?

Fairy Socks in Fairy Store


Fairy Socks in Fairy Store
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

I'd like to believe that the shadow in the bottom right of this photo is a vanishing fairy wing...alas, I had been drinking, and this was the best shot I could get under the circumstances.

YOU try and drink champagne, a chocolate martini (with -- oddly enough -- no chocolate! We had a stupid waitress at the Earl last Friday) and a rather large beer, then get down on the floor at Peaceable Kingdom in your stupor and get a decent photo through a teeny, tiny window.

Then again, it looks like a fairy wing, doesn't it?

BTW, those are the socks I knit, hanging on an acorn cap just to the left of the door on the left. Got that?

...makes the heart grow fonder.

I was going to meme on my name as Kim suggested, but several people already beat me to "Denise needs," so I got very repetitive results on that one.

I did come across one interesting link, from the Denise at Absinthe & Cookies: for Absinthe, of course! After seeing the effects (or at least, a creative interpretation of the effects) of drinking absinthe on No Reservations, I'll pass.

Tess is bugging me to make her a tent, so I've gotta run. I'll be back to post some pics (up above) in a moment...

I've been strangely depressed for this early in the fall (especially considering the great weather we've been having). I'm blaming it on the fact that I've given up swimming and given up writing in the past three weeks, but hopefully both of those will change SOON and I will be back on level. Soon.

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Zingers


zingers
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

If you can still see my embroidered lady, you'll see these fabrics are all a bit bright to go with her. Brights are good for a kid's quilt, though. They're what quilters call "zingers." I need some mellow yellows, pale pinks, and a light teal in the mix somehow. But hey, I've got a whole quilt to play with, 35 nine-inch squares to blend colors together.

There's green stars, a purple modern fabric Tess picked out, some dragon fabric I've got a close-up of below, orange dots, and the really funky '60s flower power fabric that started my fat quarter hunt at Saline's new Quilting Season store yesterday.

Dragon fabric


dragon fabric
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Couldn't resist this one...Tess is really into dragons right now.

Monday, October 10, 2005

Pretty lady


Pretty lady
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Cranking along on my first project from Embroidered Treasures for Children. Tess wanted her gal blonde instead of the raven-haired beauty pictured in the book, so it was done. Her only other request was a purple dress, DONE. Now the flowers are all mine, and I picked a few different colors than what was listed in the book. That's what makes embroidery fun, of course.

I've enjoyed going back to embroidery so much, that I ordered some patterns from Sublime Stitching. Now, if I can just keep from going into quilt shops (or being enabled online by my friend Karen, the Slytherin!), I might keep my craft budget for October under control. Dang, and we have a new quilt shop to check out in Saline...

I also ordered some things online from YesAsia -- the Japanese quilting book everybody's raving about, and an embroidery book that I'm hoping is decent. Hard to tell when all you have to go by is the cover, and the description of the book is all in Japanese. But hey, I got free shipping (and saved $6) by ordering a second $20 book...makes sense, right?

Plum brandy update: a few renegade plums made it up through the sugar last night, and by this morning about two-thirds of the mix was purple plumy goodness. Tess was all excited that it turned purple already. Like she's gonna drink it, when she made such a face after smelling the vodka last night.

Sunday, October 09, 2005

Mom's making what?!


Mom's making what?!
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

At our yarn tasting a couple of weeks ago, Kate reminded me that it was nearly prune plum season, and lo and behold, I found some at Whole Paycheck this past week. From Michigan, no less.

So I'm guessing my memory of plum brandy is a little hazy (all those vodka-soaked plums I ate), and Mom did not make this at Thanksgiving for us to drink at Christmas. She must have started it in October.

I remember sneaking tastes of plumy, vodka-y sugar crystals that would ooze out from under the lid as we turned it over each day.

Mmm...

Ingredients


Ingredients
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

3 pound prune plums (pricked with a fork 8 times each), 3 pounds sugar, 1/5 vodka. Place in gallon jar. Turn over every day. Enjoy at the holidays.

Why can't I join them?


Why can't I join them?
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Had to save one of 'em to eat.

Saturday, October 08, 2005

Soviet school photos: 2nd grade


2nd grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Thus begins my little scanning project of the day. It should be noted that most European schooling begins when you are seven years old. Therefore, this is comparable to second grade in the States.

This is the last smile yer gonna get out of him until 9th grade.

3rd grade


3rd grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Grouchy. Get used to it.

4th grade


4th grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

No, really. Stop taking my picture every damn year.

5th grade


5th grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Resigned.

6th grade


6th grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Lookin' a little hopeful...

8th grade


7th grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

E had menegitis and so missed a large part of 7th grade, and never had his picture taken.

Thus, the jump in years.

School Autographs


School Autographs
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

I'm a little sad that there are only autographs on the back of E's 8th grade photo. But, he probably only got them after coming back from a year of illness.

9th grade


8th grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

E laughs because he HAD to have his hair spike up like that. '80s Big Hair hit the U.S.S.R., too, doncha know.

10th or more likely 11th grade


9th grade
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Because nobody changes that much in a year. At least, E doesn't think so.

Another missing year...

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Look what landed in our garden today...


Fairy #1
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Not quite as elaborate as Salley's, but Tess was thrilled. It's the beginner one, anyway.

I've had the Felt Wee Folk book for almost two years now, collecting little things here and there. I picked up a a dozen different wool felt strips when Gathering Basket went out of business. This fall Tess really got into collecting the acorn caps for their hats. We've got enough for a fairy army!

The hardest has been finding decent "silk" flowers for the skirt, and I still haven't located 12mm or 10mm unvarnished wooden beads for the head. Had to go with 16mm, which is okay; smaller might have made me crazy on the first time out.

Hope the Elmer's glue holds.

I picked up this really cute embroidery book the other day. Went to the library this morning after Kindermusik to enlarge some of the patterns. Love the gritty finger puppet-pirates!

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Railroad thrills


Railroad thrills
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

The restored Dexter Depot holds an open house once a month. A local group of model railroaders sponsored the depot restoration and there's a huge model train set-up inside. Unfortunately it's so high up off the ground that little ones can't really appreciate it. And the model railroaders didn't have things going when it opened at 7p tonight. One guy was radiating sheer terror when E asked him some questions about the set-up; E got pissed and we left soon after.

"Honey," I said, "that guy was practically muttering under his breath, 'please don't ask me anything, please don't ask me anything...please...leave me alone with my tiny tracks and boxcars!!'" The poor guy barely squeaked out three coherent words in answer to E's barrage of questions. E was angry that the whole situation just oozed (model railroader) geekiness. Pretty funny coming from an electrical engineer.

Little pitcher doesn't miss a thing. "Why do they usually hide in their basements?" she asked, after I elaborated my Railroader Geek theory to E. "Why, mommy, whywhywhy?"

Play and real tracks


Play and real tracks
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

...out the window, the real thing! An Amtrak train went by just before we went in; that is what I miss the most about working in Chelsea. LOVED to stand outside the clocktower when Amtrak roared by at 80 MPH. You just might find religion after that experience. Or some damn earplugs.

Sign of things to come?


Signs of things to come...?
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

See? I still have my religious funny bone. This sign up on the depot's bulletin board tickled it.

Blimp!


Blimp!
Originally uploaded by CreativeExile.

Heard the familiar drone of a blimp engine while in the backyard today. Dang, it is as hard to convey the sheer size of these things going overhead, as it is to get an accurate picture of the full moon. What's up with that?

I like how it looks like it's about to crash into our chimney. Too bad I didn't hold up my fingers and do an old Kids in the Hall "I'm crushing your head/blimp" routine.

Always feel a little 1938 when one of these goes by. I hear the A2 area is in the flight path to the blimp factory in Akron, OH, so we get a lot of these. Usually around game day at the Big House; weird to see one in the middle of the week.

Didn't make me hungry for Outback Steak House, though. We had Jamaican for dinner tonight instead. Fried plantains, mmmm....