Monday, April 30, 2012

Look Who's One!

The Smartest Baby in the World* is one years old today! He had a big party Saturday afternoon to celebrate.  There were cupcakes:
 
There were so! many! colors! on the gift bags:

And there was the toy piano to try out: 

It's incredible to think that in 36 weeks you can grow a brand new human, and that in 52 more you can go from this: 



To this (yes, he's walking):

Happy birthday, Skyler!



*Totally un-biased auntie opinion.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Friday Unrelated Information

1. This weekend, I have tickets to the Utah Symphony for the first time in a couple of years. (I used to be there nearly every week back in the days of student tickets.) I hear good things about the orchestra under the new music director.

2. I also have Skyler's first birthday party to attend on Saturday afternoon. I bought him a toy piano, since aunties get to force their interests on their nephews.
 
My brother is going to love hearing "PLINK PLONK PLINKPLINK" all day, every day. 

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Just Once

Just once in my life, I'd like to be able to tell off a client and hold out for my idea the way Don Draper does in this clip that isn't allowing me to embed it. 

That is all.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Goose On The Roof

Toby saw something on the roof the other morning, and I assumed it was one of the pigeons that help themselves to the seed in the flat feeder and drive him bonkers. 


No, it was a goose, just hanging out on the roof, driving Toby extra bonkers. He'd never seen such a big bird!

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Tuesday Project Roundup: There Are No Sewing Machines In Campgrounds

Way back before the extravaganza that is April (Regular Easter! Greek Easter! Mom's birthday! Camping! And Skyler's birthday coming up!), I decided on my next project. I even got the pattern ready and did a quick test sew of the body to check the fit before I cut into my fancy Liberty fabric. 


Nothing has happened since then, though. But something could happen Saturday morning before Skyler's party. I'll let you know.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Camping!

For the weekend, I went and slept in a tent for the first time in about five years. The trip was to Capitol Reef, where I'd never been, and that is some lovely country.

There were pictures taken from passenger windows: 


There were pictures taken from the back:


There were side canyons:

There were views to admire:


There were trails that turned out much longer than we thought they'd be: 


There were miles to go before we slept: 


There was golden desert light:

Needless to say, it was a good weekend for my inner hippie.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Friday Unrelated Information

1. This Married to the Sea post has inspired a catchphrase between me and my friend: "Don't be the lefterly cow".
(click image to enlarge)

2. And the last line of this entry in the "Shit Certain Social Groups Say" video meme has become
my new catchphrase:

NAMASTE!


Thursday, April 19, 2012

Today's Thought

I guess this is five thoughts, really:


Via Pinterest.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Grammar Wednesday #5

This one was another request (which makes me so happy): How can you tell when to use drink, drank, or drunk? Or sink, sank, or sunk?

Drink and sink are pretty easy, since they're in the present tense. (I'm pretty sure nobody gets confused about saying "Drink up!") But drank and drunk and sank and sunk are both past tense verbs, so how can you tell which one to use?

Drank and sank are simple past tense verbs: "The ship sank." "I drank too much last night." But drunk and sunk are a past participle, so they need a helping verb--no, don't tune out yet, that just means drunk and sunk always appear with a form of "have": "They have drunk my potion!" "The submarine has been sunk by the spies."

So here's my trick: Drunk and sunk have a U in them. Have has a V in it. U and V come right next to each other in the alphabet. S0 use that trick to remember that drunk and sunk should always appear with have.




Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Tuesday Project Roundup: Accessories

I made my mom a scarf for her birthday. She's really hard to buy for and making her something requires that she like it (it's a Mom Law), so it seemed like a good idea. Besides, accessories are a pretty flexible gift.

I used two-thirds of the Liberty prints from last week and followed this tutorial, just making the square a little smaller. There was a lot of hand sewing to finish but it went pretty quickly.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Weekend Report

Look who came to my house on Sunday to celebrate his grandma's birthday! This was the first time I'd hosted a family event in the new place.

"Reading" the card he "signed."

Party table!

Other notable weekend events: Going to Brooks Brothers and attending my first Greek Easter celebration. There was drinking. There was dancing. There was an entire lamb on a spit, head and all. (At the Greek Easter celebration, that is; not at Brooks Brothers.)

Friday, April 13, 2012

Friday Unrelated Information

1. My mom will be 64 this Sunday, so pre-emptive happy birthday! I know I posted this same video a few years ago for her, but it's extra-appropriate now that she is 64 and has a "grandchild on her knee":




2. I don't like eels, not one bit. But eel puns are almost OK:


Thursday, April 12, 2012

Incredible

Here's a rough trailer for an upcoming documentary Alive Inside, about music and how it helps "awaken" people with memory loss. (Bonus Oliver Sacks!) Like my dog rescue video last week, this one starts off sad, but at least watch from about 3:00 - 4:00.



Incredible. If I ever decide I want to use my powers for good, maybe I should go into music therapy.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Happy Birthday Mark Strand

I still like your poem in the Gallivan Center downtown the best:

Visions of the end may secretly seduce
our thoughts like water sinking
into water, air drifting into air;
clouds may form, when least expected,
darkening the glass of self,
canceling resemblances to what we are.

Even here, while summer sunlight
falling through the golden
folds of afternoon
brightens up the air, we mark
our progress by how much
we leave behind. And yet,
this vanishing is burnished
by a slow, melodious light,
as if our passage here
were beautiful because
no turning back is possible.

It is our knowledge of the end
that speaks for us, that has us weave,
as slowly as we can, an elegy
to all our walks. It is our way
of bending to the world's will
and giving thanks.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Tuesday Project Roundup: "It Never Goes Bad."

My old roommate used to stockpile things like soap and laundry detergent and use the rationale of "it doesn't expire!". Similarly, I use that line to justify stockpiling fabric, even when I'm too busy to really sew.

Yes, this is more Liberty of London. It never goes bad!

Monday, April 09, 2012

Something To Ponder


(Via Pinterest. In my head, I hear this being read by Master Yoda.)

Friday, April 06, 2012

Friday Unrelated Information

1. Here's a fiesty (and profane) piece about the benefits of working in advertising if you're creative. The writer makes some good points:
You can try to make it with your band or be a novelist in your free time. But during the day, you may as well learn about how to work creatively with other people, and how to accept rejection and outright failure, even if you still think that Verizon catalog copy you wrote was a masterpiece.

2. Being Easter weekend, it's time for my annual religious experience: listening to Bach's St Matthew Passion.

3. It's also this guy's first Easter (and nearly his first birthday)! I had to resist buying him the bunny ears costume I saw at Target.

Because obviously he doesn't need ANY clothes to be cute!

Thursday, April 05, 2012

Mary Frances On Going To Restaurants

From "D is for Dining Out," in An Alphabet for Gourmets, by my BFF Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher:

I had a happy beginning in [the] neglected art and much abused privilege [of dining out], one that has sheathed it in unfading pleasure for me when it is done well. When I was no more than five or so my father and mother would begin to prepare my spirits for Easter, or Christmas, or a birthday, and when the festival rolled around, there I would be, waiting to greet it...on the pink velvet seat of the region's best restaurant.

I admit I am prejudiced about it. I seldom dine out, and because of my early conditioning to the sweet illusion of permanent celebration, of "party" and festivity on every such occasion, I feel automatically that any invitation means sure excitement, that it will be an event, whether it brings me a rained-on hamburger in a drive-in or Chicken Jerusalem at Perino's. The trouble is, I'm afraid, that I expect people I dine with to feel the same muted but omnipresent delight that I feel.

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Worthy Of Dr. Sagan


You guys. Phil Plait at the Bad Astronomy blog has outdone himself. He's describing a massive, massive infrared survey of the sky--over 150 billion pixels, showing a billion stars--and he does it really, really well (click through to see how he gives an idea of scale). But it's at the end of the post that he gets really Sagan-esque:

Think on this: there are a billion stars in that image alone, but that’s less than 1% of the total number of stars in our galaxy! As deep and broad as this amazing picture is, it’s a tiny slice of our local Universe.

And once again, we’ve reached the point where I’m out of words. Our puny brains, evolved to count the number of our fingers and toes, to grasp only what’s within reach, to picture only what we can immediately see — balk at these images.

But… we took them. Human beings looked up and wondered, looked around and observed, looked out and discovered. In our quest to seek ever more knowledge, we built the tools needed to make these pictures: the telescopes, the detectors, the computers. And all along, the power behind that magnificent work was our squishy pink brains.

A billion stars in one shot, thanks to a fleshy mass of collected neurons weighing a kilogram or so. The Universe is amazing, but so are we.




Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Tuesday Project Roundup: What I'm Knitting

Um, not this:

This was going to be a pair of striped legwarmers that used two different variegated yarns to created the effect of many colored stripes, something like this:
(Image from Google; knitters, you recognize this, right?)

But the colors were just not working. I pride myself on my sense of color and I'm usually really confident in it--but when I get it wrong, it is pretty spectacularly wrong.

Ah well, by the time I finished it wouldn't be legwarmer season anyway.

Monday, April 02, 2012

A Belated Toby-versary

I knew I was coming up on 4 years with the love of my life, but I'm ashamed to say that last night I realized I had missed the actual date (March 23rd). I can't feel too bad, though, because the love of my life also missed it (unless one of his highly varied and operatic "MEOW!!"s was meant to be a reminder).

Dates aside, happy anniversary to my friend, my "something to love," my entertainment. He meows, he chirps, he sings, he knows many, many words and phrases, he knows our routines, he lets me know when those routines are different ("MEOOOOOW!!"), and he pulls an endless variety of faces:

Wise.


Crazy.


Unconvinced, with a side of disapproval.


Wondering.


Helpful.


Approving, yet tired.


Darling.