Marie’s Necklace

Not long ago, Marie and Rob went off to Vancouver on an amazing new adventure. Naturally they had to pack light to move across the country. Marie was kind enough to give me a bunch of her jewelry making stuff, and I thought what better than to have all her friends choose the beads that would form a friendship necklace we could send to her. Cheesy? yes. But everyone else thought it was a good idea too! About a dozen of her friends chose from the photos I took of the beads, and I created a necklace from them and sent it to her. She loved it! Success!

marie's necklace

Quentin’s First Stocking

A friend of mine asked me to make a stocking for her nephew’s first Christmas. Quentin really loves their cat, so Bogey made a special appearance on his stocking!

Quentin's first stocking

Hallowe’en Pumpkin 2009

The pumpkin I carved for Hallowe’en 2009.
I used wood working tools and based it off the illustration below it from veer.com
Total time: approx 6 hours

Hallowe'en Pumpkin 2009

Laptop = Back Pain = Massage = Resistance Bands

A couple of months ago I bought a laptop, which has been really great. I’ve been using it as a way of changing my environment while I work, but I haven’t been careful enough when it comes to where I’m sitting. I’ve been sitting on the couch with my laptop on the coffee table, or on my lap. Bad.

I developed some pretty bad back pain, and couldn’t get rid of it. I was lucky to have an amazing massage therapist (Alison Tunley) in my rolodex, and told her to show me no mercy, and just fix it. She asked me to show her how I’d been sitting during the day, and just shook her head and gave me the “tsk tsk” I was expecting. She did a great job relieving the awful pain between my shoulder blades, and gave me some tips on how to stretch and strengthen my back.

I realize it’s not possible to go to the gym every single day, there are tons of excuses not to go, most of which are usually valid… I decided the best thing for me to do would be pick up a set of resistance bands, and do two sets of 10 minute back exercises during the day, in the morning and in the afternoon.

Learned a few things that I already knew, but didn’t actually put into practice until I had to:
1. Get a massage at least a few times a year. It is absolutely essential and worth every cent.
2. Take breaks from the computer. If you work from home, spend a few minutes tidying up, check the mail, stretch. If you’re in an office, get up grab some water, stretch, water the plants – anything.
3. Don’t ignore exercising because you “don’t have time”. Make time. It doesn’t have to be an hour at the gym, pick up some free weights or resistance bands and make sure to at least do some exercise every day. Attend yoga weekly for added benefits.

Fruit Foam Art

These are the fruit shapes I’ve been making lately with my morning mocha.
It’s an art… and a fluke. But for the record, it’s all in how you pour it!

Foam Art Apple

Foam Art Pear

New project, new learning opportunity.

A great way to keep yourself learning is to try to find a new technique to add to each new project. Even if it’s something small, it’s still a new skill to add to your toolbox!

Back to the grind, but this time, it’s more structured.

The past month and a half I’ve been working contract full time, and it’s time to get back to my freelance life at home.

While I was working full time, I read a great article about how to structure your week to make sure you don’t put off the “less than fun” tasks that come along with owning your own business.

Marketing Mondays & 6 Other Days of Fun has really helped me to break down my week.

Marketing Monday, Billing Tuesday, Website/Blog Wednesday, Networking Thursday and Learning Friday is now in full swing, and I love it. I tweaked Lauren Roberts’ article to suit my needs and I’ve never been more organized and on top of things.

I spend the first half hour of my day reading emails and whatever RSS has come through Google Reader, and then I’m ready to tackle that day’s “theme” for an hour or two in the morning, and move onto client work.

Give it a shot, you won’t be disappointed, or disorganized!

Storm rolling over Liberty Village

It looked like the end of the world.. but it wasn’t!

Cellicious indeed!

I recently got to cross off something from my “life list” that I didn’t really even realize was on it! I had the privilege of recoding on Organical’s new album.

I’d played cello from grade 3 til grade 13, and rented one a couple summers ago to see if I could still play, and it’s a lot like riding a bike.. your muscles remember what to do. It’s really neat. I was a bit nervous being recorded since it’d been so long since I’d really played. I pestered Darren to put notes on paper for me (what can I say, once classically trained, always classically trained.. even if it is for a rock/metal album!), and set out to practice the music, and listen to the track to get a feel for what they were looking for.

The recording session was great, it was two hours of laughing at the ice cream truck that decided parking outside of Ed’s house was a great place to blast ice cream truck “music”, and figuring out what was going to work best for me to record. Metronome in one ear was all I wanted (to all the guys’ disbelief).. but I think I could get used to the way they do it (all the tracks playing in both ears, including what you’re playing, and you play along with it), but it would take practice. After a few days I got the feeling back in my fingertips too (didn’t have the calluses I did when I used to play all the time)!

I’m so so excited to hear the final track, and what a cool experience to be the FIRST musical guest on an Organical album (according to Darren’s post)! And of course, the first classically trained! That’s me… classin‘ up the album!

Thanks so much guys for the awesome experience and I look forward to the CD release!

Cheers!

Going to get ice cream… but then .. disaster.

Went to get my bike, and.. I have a flat tire.

I’ve been riding bikes my whole life, and I’ve had to pump the tires after a winter or whatever, but never a truly, truly flat tire. It was extra disappointing since I wanted to ride to Film Buff to get some amazing ice cream.

So I have this new bike I got just a couple months ago, it’s super light, awesome 80s teal colour, and finally the right size for me (deemed necessary after a particularly bad wipe-out last Sept on my old heavy huge bike which left me with glass in my knee, huge cuts, bruises and damaged pride). We’ve started to get to know each other better over the past few rides, and it’s been really awesome. This bike is so light, it barely takes any effort to fly down the street.

I must have run over something on our last outing, so.. Dear Bike, I’m sorry.

So I gotta fix up my awesome bike for it to continue in its awesomeness. I’ve never changed a tire, and yes I’m going to pay for someone else to fix it. I started to call around and decided that I should make this a blog to save anyone else from calling around should they stumble upon this.

Keep in mind these prices are just what I found today (July 2, 2009) and could change at any moment’s notice, but these are the places I called (that picked up) in order of cheapest to most $:

MEC: tube replacement: $3+ (depending on brand), install: $5, total: $8+
Set Me Free: tube replacement: $5, install: $9, total: $14
West Side Cycle: tube replacement: $5+, install: $10, total: $15+
Cycle Shoppe: tube replacement: $6, install: $12, total: $18
Bikes on Wheels: tube replacement: $?, install: $?, total: $20

MEC, you’re awesome. You never let me down, and you get the honour of fixing my bike!