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Lefty Loosey, Righty Tighty – Create 365, Day 11

 

Today’s prompt in the Daily Creative Journal was to do something in a medium I’m used to, but use my non-dominant hand. So, that would be my left.

I always sort of considered myself to have pretty decent motor skills with my left hand. I used to play the viola and violin, that’s all about left-handed motor skills. I used to play the piano as well. Same thing there. But writing or drawing in my notebook, something I usually do every day, with my left hand? As you can see it didn’t go so well. All my left hand does nowdays is holding the coffee cup while my right hand is busy creating something and keeping me alive.

My left hand can't even spell?!

So, this little sketch is what I made today, based on the prompt. Not much, but much harder than I thought it would be. I actually felt a bit downhearted by the whole exercise. Then I found this and it made me feel a bit better. Moo. Also, here are some tips for us “righties” on how to train our motor skills.

Right. I’m off to my glitter cave to do something crafty. With my right hand. Bye!

The Breakfast Prompt – Create 365, Day 9

I’m moving on in my project to make something every day for 365 days, and today, day 9, the prompt in Noah Scalin’s diary said: Do something with your breakfast.

Sadly I didn’t have time for breakfast this morning, but it is a Monday, and I was tired, so I treated myself to a wonderful, warm, creamy, frothy, wonderful latte. And then I called it breakfast.

The coffee was indeed so nice and perked me up so much that I felt compelled to write an Espresso Story (as story that should take no longer than an espresso takes to drink, in 25 words or less). This is how it turned out:

The Zombie Apocalypse

by Jennie

Over my dead body, I said. And look at me now…

New day tomorrow. Day 10! Will I last two weeks? I hope so… Maybe I should just keep drinking coffee.

Going to an island and finding a treasure

So, after the long and cold winter we had, me and Tricks took a week off and went to Crete, third largest island in the Mediterranean Sea. We didn’t really know exactly where we were going until one day before departure, and even then we knew very little of the town we were going to: Hersonissos. The whole trip took us a little by surprise; neither of us had ever just gone on a sun trip before. Though relaxing by the pool at the resort was pleasant, we of course got a bit antsy after a while, and went exploring.

The town itself, considered to be one of the most highly developed tourist resorts of Crete, has a harbour mainly filled with restaurants and bars, and seems ideal for people who prefer to party a lot, I suppose (i.e. not me and Tricks, who just wanted to take it easy). There are also a couple of streets with tourist shops, selling all sorts of cheap trinkets, but for some reason there were a lot of shops selling silver- and gold jewellery, at unreasonably high prices. Maybe not a town we would have chosen. But if you look for it, you’ll always find something interesting, wherever you go.

We took the bus down there almost every day; after all, you can only lie on your butt by the pool for so long. We found a quiet restaurant run by a sweet Greek family, and we went there for iced coffee every time we went to the harbour. They always had free tables in the shade, overlooking the sea, always pleasantly cool and windy.

Passing all the tourist shops on the main street we one day saw a sign telling us we could “make our own necklaces with our names on them!”. Typical trinket store, we thought, but we stopped and tried to shade our eyes from the sun and see what was in there, this tiny shop that was no more than a hole in the wall. It was a bit dark in there, but we took a brave step in, prepared to be bombarded by sales people, trying to show you everything and explain what good prices they had.

It was a bead shop. In there sat a quiet lady, making a necklace. The walls were covered in displayed hand-made jewellery, inventive and different and beautiful. Along the walls were tables with beads and pearls and gems, in glass, metal, clay (hand painted clay pearls!), stuff we would not ever find at home. It was like finding a treasure in a cove somewhere.

We came back three days in a row. Everyday staying there for the better part of an hour, bent over the tables, studying everything, looking for more things to pick out. And every day the lady very patiently counted every bead we’d picked out (this took some time). She shyly asked if we had the bits to put it all together, and smiled. On the last day she gave us each a Mati, a glass charm, to protect us from The Evil Eye. Tricks got her address on a little hand written note, hopefully we can keep in touch.

Mati, a traditional Greek "Evil Eye", to protect you from envy and evil by capturing it.

So we came home from our vacation with treasures. And they will last a long time, when we sit and craft and drink tea next winter.

Shrink it

It’s funny how trends catch on in the scrapbooking arena. They seem to pop up almost simultaneously around the world, they travel so fast, even compared to fashion trends. Once in a while an idea pops into your head, and then like on queue other people get the same idea, and suddenly scrappers everywhere are all using bubble wrap or owls or pirates in their projects. It’s fabulous and it’s a sure sign we should all just move in together and just inspire each other. Yarr!

It would be hard to pick a country for us all to live in though. Internet is our Scrapbook Nation!

One of these Suddenly Trendy Things is Shrink Plastic. Me and Tricks tried it out last year during our there’s-gotta-be-a-way-to-make-fun-personal-embellishments-phase. Tricks said one day: “Say Jen, do you remember that material they’d let you use in pre-school, that plastic shrinky thingy”… and we went out and found it and got hooked, naturally. And, around the world, people must have thought the same thing! ‘Cause now I’ve read about it everywhere, it’s becoming a trend (no wonder, it’s easy and fun!).

Tricks made a pair of super cute apple earrings, I have some great photos of that, I have to dig them up! Every time she wears them I can’t help but smile and feel cheerful; they are just so her, and colourful, and she made them with her scrapbook stuff which is awesome.

But so far I’ve only found these pictures of a card I made for a coffee crazy friend, with a miniature coffee cup made from shrink plastic:

jen_card_coffecard1

jen_card_coffecard2

Blade Rubber Stamps has a whole page on using shrink plastic! Check it out!

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