Coming soon: befores and afters!

Stay tuned…I’m going to start posting the “befores” and “afters” that portray the work we’ve done in our home. I’m excited!

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Adventures in Screen Printing: Yudu

Yudu is a home screen printing machine made by Provocraft. It burns the image into the screen and provides a frame for the actual printing process.
I ordered the machine online. It arrived, from Salt Lake City…in a HUGE box.

All set up and ready to burn the screen…

Flooding the design with ink (not the “Go Josh” design, you can’t see it right now). I’ve dragged ink across the empty space in the screen to print the image on the fabric.

A finished product, below.

I personally love the Yudu. It’s HUGE (someone said that it is the size of a printer–no), but it’s great for the home screen printer. It wasn’t much of a learning gap for me to figure out how to use it, and I find the prices of the accessories pretty reasonable.

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Dress Painting

A closeup of the dress painting I had made…**

I’m not sure if you all love Etsy as much as I do, but I love, love, LOVE it. Perhaps I will start a series of things K has bought on Etsy? Anyhow, I ordered this custom painting of my dress and I love it. Interested? Check out Introverted Painting on Etsy! Then stick around and check out all 1 billion other items for hours when you should be sleeping. Or is that just me?
**Photo credit belongs to Introverted Painting’s blablover5.
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Bathroom Remodel: BEFORE

I only have a small piece of the before, and it’s actually during the demolition phase. My medicine cabinet has been ripped out (on the left) and the big bin of “stuff” on the right was formerly located under the sink. Yes, I had a lot of crap. Give me a break. I’m a girl.

Notice how the doors didn’t close? CLASSY.

Oh and the shower had chocolate brown tile. Brown. Yuck.
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Bathroom Remodel: Afters

Because afters are much more exciting:

The theme in this bathroom was to be subtle-y feminine. I used photos of my wedding dress, and a painting I had made of it, as well as my bouquet. I’m very happy to get to look at them every day!

J made a small sink off to the left to use the space more wisely and give me the much-needed counter.
While still small, the amount of storage now enables me to fit everything in here (and I had a lot) with very little on the counter top. The glass shower enclosure and white walls also made the space look a lot bigger. Way to go J!

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Guest Blogger: Music Hour with Dad



Room to Move

Ok, I’m recording from an old album right now to Itunes, I have John Mayall on and it brings back so many memories. For those of you who don’t know him he was the grass roots of british blues and had so many artists that got started in his band, most notably, Eric Claptons start along with musicians, John McVie, Sugar Cane Harris, Johnny Almond, Larry Taylor,Harvey Mandel, Keef Hartley,Mick Taylor (Rolling Stones), Jerry McGee and so many more I can’t remember. Also his band was the back up band for John Lee Hooker on his British tour in 1964.
I do remember one night at the Grande Ballroom [in Detroit] he was playing in the 60’s and before the set was walking around the crowd with a holstered six gun and a cowboy hat just talkin to people (hippies) If you listen to Turning Point and Almonds tenor sax it will blow your mind, also for those of you who like the harmonica (besides me) check out Room To Move. Turning point was an album that he recorded that didn’t use the heavy guitar and drums and moved to acoustic guitar, acoustic base and alto sax, an inovation at the time.

Also notable careers such as Peter Green the original Fleetwood Mac guitarist, along with Jack Bruce from Cream. The list goes on forever and it cronicles the movement of blues in Great Britain and major influences in the British invasion of rock in the 60s, and beyond. Check it out!

John Mayall music on Amazon.

[Okay, dad, looks like you’ll be burning me a cd today…]

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Guest Blogger!


EoEL has an exciting feature coming atcha’ today! A guest blogger. Our guest blogger is a music lover who can spin a good story. He’s done just about everything, seen just about anything you can imagine, and lived to tell the tale. He’s really handsome and…he’s my dad. (Which is quite an accomplishment in itself, wouldn’t you say?)

Stay tuned…
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The Greatest Picture Ever

J and I are pretty crazy dancers. I wouldn’t say we’re good crazy, so much as we are weird.

This is a real picture, from our wedding. We are crazy.
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Homemade Marshmallows

This is a little belated, but I made this marshmallows as Christmas gifts, and they were DELICIOUS (and cute).

I packaged them in cello bags with twist ties and Christmas labels from the $1 bin at Michael’s. Had I been more organized I probably could have done something much cuter and more “Martha,” but did I mention they were delicious? 🙂



My crazy friend DJ told me they look like “crack rocks” but I know, from watching Intervention on A&E, that they do not!
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Love Thyself

My friend Emily sent me this great article and I want to share it:

The following is one of the best pieces I have read on relating to your body healthily. My good friend Christine Mason McCaull wrote it and was kind enough to let me include it in The Tao of Dating for Women. She is a truly remarkable woman: entrepreneur, CEO, yoga teacher, artist, environmentalist, TED organizer, writer, and mother of four amazing children. Many of my readers have found this piece useful, and it’s so eloquent and empowering that I really can’t improve upon it. I hope you find it useful, too.

1. Wherever you are, love your body as it is right now. I mean now, not when it achieves some desired future state or as it was at a reminisced point of peak fitness. I meannow, not when it is ailment-free. It’s a magnificent machine, and does wonders for you everyday.

Maybe it only gets your spirit from the bed to the bathroom, or maybe it allows you to have babies, or peel a banana or walk to the store or dance Swan Lake or hold a handstand. Whether it is fat or tall or small or imbalanced or polished or bearded or wispy or unpredictable — just love it for what it does for you. Appreciate all the elements and miracles that allow you to live — strong legs, ample hips, the crook of the elbow. The fullness of the heart-beating, veins-throbbing, stomach-growling you!

2. Decommoditize yourself. Your body may be valued in the abstract by the culture at large for its sexuality, its reproductive and productive capacity, its creative capacity — or any number of other things. Don’t allow yourself to be commoditized! There is no cookie-cutter beauty, sexuality, age, or attractiveness. These are cultural constructs, and there is no need to accept these constructs or support their ongoing existence. If you were born in a different place and time, the rules would have been different. They are not real!

Plus, realize that a lot of people make money by trying to convince you that you should be different. They take your resources and power by trying to trick you into thinking you will have more resources and power or love by investing in a stereotype of beauty. Imagine what would happen if the scores of hours and all the emotional and intellectual energy that went into counting calories or self-berating actually went into living! Take a cue from artist Stefan Sagmeister, who says: “Trying to look good limits my life.” Derive your value from being most fully alive, from the times when you are intimate, compassionate, caring, creative, engaged — not from the outward projection.

3. Decommoditize others. Stop praising other people for the values of the commodity-body culture, and start calling out those qualities that make them most themselves, approachable, reachable, human! Begin to notice and compliment people when they embody values that are more to the point: for their humor, intelligence, flair, originality, intensity, focus. Tell them “I love it when you smile — you light up the room!” Even better, take the time to pause and look into people’s eyes and lift the veil that separates you. Check your own judgment at the door and try to see the person behind the body.

4. Get real. Look around you at real people and real bodies of all ages. How does skin age? Joints age? What’s genetic? What’s diet and habit? What is the range of appearance? How many people do you see that look like the magazines? This is the range and magnificence of humanity and there is no shame in it. Those who would judge have not yet seen this truth. In this context you are but one in six billion — and probably not that different from most.

Want to get really real? Go somewhere and be naked, in a non-sexual way. There are hundreds of places where hippies, free spirits, and those that want to be free go and take their clothes off and lay in the sunshine or ride a bike or swim or just enjoy what Benjamin Franklin called “the air bath”– his recommended practice of laying naked in the open air for an hour a day. See people — scrawny, broad, dimpled, pimpled, beautiful people from eight to 108 being naked just because and not judging each other at all. Feel the sun on your breasts and give yourself a love bath. Walk among others similarly attired and 99.8 percent won’t have a thing to say — you are just a body among bodies, free with no shame.

5. Heal old traumas in the body. All of the violent messages, imagery, dysmorphia, lack of relevant and meaningful comparison points, abuse, injury — let it fall away. Develop a practice of appreciation, gratitude and genuine feeling of being in your body — how the breath moves, how the limbs move, and become free. Any combination of awareness, yogic exercise and breathwork will help you let go of those things which don’t serve you.

6. Show your body love through action. When you love someone or something, you start caring for it, you bring it nice things, you polish it, nurture it, do nice things for it. Take it out to play! Let your love for your body come out naturally — not as a compulsive desire to fix something or get somewhere, but lovingly and kindly from a place of joy. Change through effort stemming from joy, not from a desire to get somewhere for any other reason.

7. Show your love through kind words and appreciation. The same goes for praise and appreciation. Whenever you hear the old tape in your head saying something like “I am so fat!” counteract it with three positive mantras: “This body serves me well, and lets me paint. It lets me climb on the roof, and I am damn happy in the sack.” Practice self-massage, giving gratitude for all the parts from toe to crown.

Your body is a plaything for the spirit. Even in saying “I am working on myself,” you acknowledge the duality of the spirit, the I, the self, as separate from the body. In moments of peak meditation or tantric experience, you can catch a glimpse behind the veil of the body, seeing to the bottomless depths of another person’s soul. Your senses allow experience. Imagine your body as a hula hoop swirling around the soul. Enjoy it, marvel at what it can do, how it works; engage it with the world around you in every possible way.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-ali-binazir/7-ways-to-love-your-body_b_481001.html

I am always looking for ways to love and appreciate myself, and those around me, more. Let’s make that a goal today!

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