Birthday Table

I snapped this just before we sat down to Miss Moira's birthday dinner last week.  I really do enjoy a nicely set table and while we don't eat like this every night we do set things up regularly.  

There is nothing precious here. It has all been gleaned from flea market boxes and discount stores for a dollar or so a piece. Somehow it comes together, though it has taken years to gather enough for our family. It's been thrifty, but it has not been quick nor easy and probably is pretty old fashioned by today's standards. But at that moment after I lit the candles I felt so very blessed to be able to dine graciously with this crazy bunch of people I love. 

table

 Between you and I, the candlesticks were wedding presents and one of them has since been superglued together.  We folded the napkins by directions found here and now are experimenting with more folds for future dinners.  I am terrible with flower arranging, so much so that I was afraid to take the little bargain bouquet out of the market wrapping.  In the end I didn't!  I just trimmed the stems and set the whole thing into an old glass bowl.  

For those of you who weren't in on this conversation in the past – our table has a 1/4inch plexi-glass topper on it. I got the idea from another big family many years ago.  You can spill and wipe and bang forks with wild abandon. It's indestructible.  At the moment we have our runner underneath it.  It never gets dirty <g> And, while some days that plastic top drives me batty, the tabletop underneath looks exactly as it did when we bought it a decade ago. Probably right up there with clear vinyl slipcovers…. ; D 

Montessori at Home – Braid Board

braid board

Braid boards can be made fairly easily.  This one is a 1 x 4 with a narrow hole drilled at the top, through which are pulled three shoelaces.  If I was closer to a craft store I would probably redo it with 3 different colored cords.  If the drill wasn't an option you could hot glue or staple the strings to the top just as easily. 

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From braiding practice you eventually graduate to other knotwork projects like beginner friendship bracelets.   Or, doing your sister's hair. : ) 

Jan 2012 braid board close web

 

Tiny Worlds

Our theme at Snapshots Around the World this week is Reflection.  It's actually been a personal theme of mine for a few weeks now.   An article I read recently made the point that if you take the obvious shot, chances are it's been taken countless times already.  Now, if you are traveling, you are going to want the obvious shots anyway for memory keeping's sake.  Still, it's a good visual exercise to also look for less obvious perspectives.  

A good for instance was this pipe we passed while wandering around waiting for my husband's race to finish.  It was a rainy day and I just caught this pipe out of the corner of my eye.  It stuck straight out of the ground and was full of rain water. 

Dec 2011 tree pipe reflection web

Looking closer I realized it also contained a perfect teeny tiny image of the very large tree it sat under. 

Dec 2011 tree pipe reflections close web

We'd love to see what you notice this week.  Come play along! 

The Gift

"There was given to me a thorn…

thorns

Three times I pleaded with the Lord about this, that it should leave me.  And He said to me,

'My grace is sufficient for thee:

for my power is made perfect in weakness.'"

2 Cor 12:7-9

 

And therein lies the paradox of the cross, both for Him and for us. 


Weekend Photography Tips – starting with what you’ve got

Increasingly, the letters and comments coming in here ask about photography.  What gear do you recommend?  What books should I read?  How do you….?   If you frequent the blogosphere you have probably run across some stunning images on many inspiring sites.  You may have dreamed over capturing your home and family in similarly breathtaking vignettes.  So you start surfing, start experimenting, and often hit a wall.  

I am a linker more than a writer and I don't like to reinvent the wheel. So if I can point someone to available info I do.  But I noticed that most of the tutorials out there focused on manual photography and presumed a lot more background knowledge than most people just opening the box on their camera possess. There are workshops available, but those often run several hundred dollars and fill up quickly.  And those workshops also require a dslr camera, often with a prime lens.

Many moms writing with questions don't have fancy cameras nor the time nor money to learn to use one. Most people are pointing and shooting.  And that is ok!  There is good news and bad news for wanna-be momtographers.  Let's get the bad news over with first. 

The pro-mom-tographers online are by and large shooting with some pretty amazing gear.  Most pro photogra-bloggers have fullframe digital cameras, the two most popular being the Canon 5d mark II and less often, the Nikon d700.  Some, like Pioneer Women step it up even further with the likes of a Nikon D3X.  Some of the most popular lenses used by photographers I know are the Canon 50mm 1.2 and the Nikon 70-200, just for general reference.  Are the dollar signs adding up? they have been for me over the past several years.  But wait.  That's not all. 

Most of those images are edited with software like Photoshop CS5 and Lightroom 3.  (That changes annually.  The photography community is abuzz with discussion of the new Lightroom 4 upgrade.) Often those images are also processed with photographic actions and textures which can run $30-130 per set.  In order to ensure everyone is seeing the same colors the camera/monitor/printers are calibrated using software running a couple hundred more. Those gorgeous photography flash blog templates run $100-300+.  Someone needs to install and personalize them.  The list goes on.

There is an old saying that it's not the camera, it's the photographer.  This is true.  And false.  A master photographer can totally rock out a point and shoot shot, largely because he/she knows the principles of exposure and can use light, angles, and the compact camera's tools to their highest potential.  However, there is no getting around the fact that good glass (and all the rest) does make a difference.  Pro's aren't investing $1200+ per lens for kicks. The technology is improving all the time and today's equipment can produce images only dreamed of years ago. So, assuming you know how to use it, yes, better gear can mean better images.

Does that mean you need to break the bank to capture beautiful pictures of your life?  Nuh uh.  

A periodical I read as a young woman used to run a column called What is in Your Hand?  It challenged us to look creatively at what God had already blessed us with.  Are we using all our current resources to their fullest potential?  Do we know our gear inside out?  Are we tapping into all the tools available on free or near-free online editors? Very often a friend will complain about her pictures and a quick look reveals a simple fix. 

Advanced imaging gear may or may not be in your future but you can probably be taking better pictures with whatever you have right now.  Case in point, my son's friend who sold black and white images taken on a disposable camera. 

So first things first.  Get out the manual your camera came with. You don't even need to read it all right now. Start with a few basics.  Check your file size and quality.  Are you set to Large for size and Fine for quality?  Start there.  Anything else is not going to look great when you print.   We had a string of bad pictures from the point and shoot on trip once and realized it had been set to email attachment image size. 

If you have ever played around with settings, or have children who may have,  be sure you know how to return to the camera's factory default settings.  Again we had an instance when I first started to learn manual photography where I went a long stretch with underexposed images.  After much desperate surfing I realized that I had hit the exposure compensation button and it never resets by itself. I hadn't yet memorized the icons on my LED screen and had no idea it was even on anymore.   My manual told me how to reset the camera and we were in business again.  So go ahead and experiment!  But know how to start fresh again. 

More to follow.  Come visit next weekend. : ) 

Perfect Pancakes

We flip a lot of pancakes around here.  There is a bit of a battle going on between Alannah and I when the griddle heats up.  I think the IHOP Pancake recipe is hands down the best.  She maintains the Pioneer Woman takes the (pan)cake. What say you?  

pancake

IHOP Pancake recipe (from CopyKat)
1 1/4 C. Flour
1 1/2 tsp. Baking Powder
2 1/2 tsp. Sugar
1/2 tsp. Salt
1/2 tsp. Baking Soda
1/8 C. Vegetable Oil
1 Egg ( slightly beaten )
1 1/2 C. Buttermilk 

No special instructions – just mix it all up.  My favorite. : D  They come out with a bit of a spongey texture.  

 

Pioneer Woman Pancakes

  • 3 cups Plus 2 Tablespoons Cake Flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon Salt
  • 3 Tablespoons Baking Powder
  • 2 Tablespoons Sugar
  • 2 cups Milk
  • 2 whole Large Eggs
  • 3 teaspoons Vanilla
  • 4 Tablespoons Butter
  • Extra Butter
  • Maple Or Pancake Syrup

Preparation Instructions

Mix together dry ingredients in large bowl.

Mix together milk, eggs, and vanilla in a separate bowl.

Add wet ingredients to dry ingredients, stirring very gently until just combined.

Melt butter and add it to the batter, stirring gently to combine.

Special instructions.  Follow the link.

Very good though ours seemed to be more biscuit-y than her pictures look.  Either recipe turns out much better when Alannah makes them though.  She is way more attentive to the pan than I am.  (which is why I should've photographed HER pancakes…)

You'd think after all these years I would learn you really can't do anything else while making pancakes.  Yet, each and every time, I think I am going to beat the clock and go check mail or bring my book and a stool to the stove.  Gram always said they weren't ready to flip until they were covered with bubbles all the way to the edges. Honestly though, watching bubbles form on every one of the five zillion pancakes we make per sitting is alot like watching the grass grow. <g>

 

Yarn Along – ribbed scarf

I learned to bind off this week which finished the ribbed scarf I began shortly before Christmas.  This is the first knitting project I have actually completed so I am pretty stoked. The first third of the effort was complicated by incomplete stitches and a nerve wracking needle pull by a certain 6yo.

Those bumps have been smoothed out and the challenge for the rest of the scarf was to pay attention.  There are a number of little knobby errors where I purled when I should have knit.  I have no idea how moms of many manage complicated patterns requiring careful counts!  I guess I would have to have a better attention span or knit when they are asleep.  But that is when I edit <g>

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My reading time is still spent meandering through The Coming of the Monster.  I read slowly – rather on purpose.  Especially with the final book of the series I am dragging my feet to make it last.  What will I do when the Masterful Monk is gone from my days?  Of course good characters are never really completely gone from our thoughts, are they? 

In other reads, Aidan picked up HG Wells' War of the Worlds.  I picked it up for a few pages and wistfully considered reading that too, much like I pulled Jane Eyre off the shelf, which caught Alannah's eye.  She still has it. 

I am rereading The Book of Kindness in small chunks as a devotional. It is a convicting read which really deserves annual consideration. Oh to embody those ideals….

 

more great yarns at Ginny's

Day(in the life)book

One day last fall I kept the iphone with me as we moved from one thing to another.  I had great plans for Instagram after seeing Rebecca's work but mine was less than inspiring and my connection is so poor it took forEVER to move images.  Still, it made for a virtual time capsule of our life right then.  Life hit and I never did publish it but when we transferred alllllllll our images to an external drive this weekend they surfaced again.

It was a very full day, with Allen and Alannah in the States. I hit the ground running and kept it up til bedtime.  We had a few weeks like this before I was flattened by the hospitalization (totally unrelated) and let me tell you, I wished for nothing more than to be back at it again. 

The day started, like many days, with Abbie climbing into the bed at the crack of dawn. Perennial light sleeper, that one.  Note to self, clear the side table….

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I think we had chocolate chip pancakes, though we had never had them before nor since.  They were amazed lol. We try to do something fun and out of the ordinary when Dad is traveling. 

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'course there are still dishes, pretty ordinary, but more fun when your mom peeks out of the dishwasher maybe <g>

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treadmill time

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The neighbor girls came over and if I remember right that was the day we emptied the utensil drawer and canned food shelves and they stocked the play kitchen for an hour. 

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Lunch and prep for extra-curric's

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piano

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Mailbox run

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Library

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Football practice – yes, next to the baseball diamond.  But none of ours have ever played baseball.  True story.  Ok, one season of T-ball for one of the older boys in like 1992 which didn't end well when he ran the wrong way around the diamond. ; ) 

and yes, we had a wardrobe change at some pt.  I think it had to do with the Minnie Mouse sippy cup and falling asleep in the car.  The dress didn't make it through the day but it looks like Minnie did…

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Movies aka "reward for being really good when Dad is gone"

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Back home, with the Audio Bible.  Got the New Testament 'read' last year. 

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walk the dogs

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dinner

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"Bed-night" stories. 

There you have it.  A very ordinary day in the life. 

Little People Lately

We have settled back into relative calm this week.  There have been a string of days full of just regular everyday-ness for the little people.  They are unwinding and slipping back into their groove.  

 game board

Since I have had some catching up to do to get back into my groove, they have been playing together and generally keeping busy. This is only mostly productive for me because I am easily distracted by the sun falling across little faces or a hearty belly laugh.  I want to bottle this. : ) 

cards

 pieces

 wii

 wii

We woke to sun today so Allen packed up the boys (ours and some neighbor kids as well) and went for run/bike.  He runs, they ride.  Then he came back and exchanged them for the little girls who ran errands and went for ice cream cones while we finished packing up the Christmas stuff.  

 dollhouse
My house doesn't look quite as tidy as their house does, but it's closer than it was this morning.  I am rewarding myself by sitting down to bind off the scarf I finished this week.  Probably after a few more chapters of The Matchlock Gun. They are dying to know if the French make it into the valley. <g> 

I hope your weekend is warm and bright.