Thursday, 27 December 2012

holiday crafting bonanza!

Decorations, food, wrappings, gifts, gifts, gifts.  With the holidays come and (almost) gone, I've been faced with a realization that I don't spend enough time on hobbies.  I went into the fall with that goal in mind, and haven't really followed through, but with the arrival of winter I found plenty of opportunities to stretch my creative wings.

Many of my friends participate in the yearly NaNoWriMo endeavour, and I'm always envious at those who've had the time and patience to reach the goal and complete their novels in time.  I've not attempted a novel since my first attempt at the challenge a few years ago (I still haven't completed that work, one intended as an expansion of a short story I wrote in high school), but occasionally I start a short story instead.  Friends hosted a writing night during the challenge month, and not wanting to be excluded, I went with netbook in hand and came up with a concept for a new short story.  It's been a month since then, and my story remains incomplete, but I'm hoping to find the inspiration to finish it sooner rather than later (perhaps this should be a goal for my next blog post...).

Since summer I've had a drawer full of beads and findings staring me off and on in the face... since occasionally I will pull out that drawer and stare it down for a little while, waiting to see if I'll be inspired to create something.  Happily, I found some inspiration when I learned my grandmother wanted clip-on earrings of a certain length.

Now, when I intend to start a beading project, I seldom go in with a specific pattern in hand, preferring more often than not to go in with a vague idea of what I want to do.  I'll then spend an hour or more standing in front of the walls of beads, staring at them all.  Picking up a hank or two, trying to imagine what I could do with them.  Would these work well with those?  Maybe not in this context, but I could see them together like this, but that's not what I'm really trying to do...  I'll go back and forth several times, starting with one colour scheme and set of findings and eventually leaving the store with completely different ones.  (I'll confess here that I'm still a novice with beading, so I do not have all the terminology.  Maybe someday I'll learn it, but for now, as a hobby, I at least know what I'm talking about, even if no one else does.)

For my grandmother's earrings I took inspiration from a bracelet I found in the store, and chose one with faceted beads, clear and pale blue and lavender, along with round silver ones.  I took apart the bracelet and threaded some of the beads onto a head pin.  From there I decided to make a necklace to go with it, attaching some beads in a cluster with jump rings to a length of chain finished with a toggle clasp.  I picked up a second bracelet to make it a complete set.

With 2 pairs of clip-on earrings in the package, I decided to make another pair of earrings for her, from aqua beads I found in my drawer, and while I was still on a roll, I made a pair of the same with earhooks for myself.  Unfortunately, I did not have the presence of mind at the time to photograph the faceted bead projects, but I have taken a picture of the aqua earrings I made for myself:
I'm happy to say that Gramma loved her gifts!

Then I got my Mom's Xmas wishlist, which included a request for a necklace in metallic and earthy colours.  I set to work again, staring at the wall of beads, talking to myself, picking up and putting back several hanks of beads, and finally leaving the store (with a bag full of beads) after an hour.

The starting point I chose was a wood & metal pendant featuring a leafy tree design, which I'd seen before and knew I wanted to make something with it.  From there I chose small round metallic beads in copper, aged gold, and hematite colours.  Finally, I felt I needed accent beads to give the piece more character, and chose tiger's-eye stones to use as spacers between single- and double-strand sections.  I chose aged gold crimps and a lobster clasp to finish.  I took cues from the arrangement of the metallic beads on the strands to figure out an order as I was stringing them.  Copper, gold, copper, gold, silver, gold, copper, gold, copper... and so on.  I held it up my own neck as I went to determine when I'd gotten to the halfway point, then added the pendant, and continued along, mirroring the previous order to the end.  (Though I did run out of copper beads to make it perfectly mirrored.  Maybe one day I'll choose my bead quantities more intently.)  I finished it with crimps (which are neat - they're soft metal beads that you can squish with pliers to hold strands in place; I'd never used them before).

The finished piece, held up in natural light, and on my beading tray with overhead light and camera flash:

Another hit!  Mom loved it.

With my discovery of crimps, I expressed my thoughts on a piece I'd made for her birthday this past year, for which I'd used silk thread finished with a simple knot inside a magnetic clasp.  This piece is randomly strung agate & jade stone and metallic beads, making it fairly weighty.  I learned (from one of my nifty beading books, also where I learned about crimps!) that a necklace that weight will strain the silk, so I offered to restring it with wire and finish it with crimps.  I'm glad I did, since the thread had already stretched out an inch.

The restrung piece, in soft light on my living room chair:
Mom was pleased to have it back so soon, and to have it feel more sturdy.

It wasn't all beadwork this holiday.  I also did some baking!  Vegan chocolate peppermint cookies (recipe) topped with crushed candy cane bits:
These cookies were a bit more challenging than my usual attempts at cookies.  There's the added step of dipping them in melted chocolate after they've cooled.  I tasted the uncoated cookie and found them quite bitter - the recipe doesn't call for any sugar!  Otherwise, honestly, I might have skipped coating them.  I used 71% dark chocolate chips, so they still aren't overly sweet, but very chocolaty.  When dipping them, I kept accidentally dropping or breaking the cookies into the chocolate!  (The recipe says use a fork.)  I found it worked better to drop the cookie into the chocolate, flat with the topside down, then lift it out by sliding the fork under it and flipping it onto a second fork to place it right-side-up on the cookie sheet.  The dipping process went much faster once I started doing that!  I sprinkled crushed candy cane bits over top and placed the tray in the fridge to set.

The nutritionist side of me enjoys that there's not too much sugar, along with wheat-free coconut oil & chia goodness (I used rice milk & chia seed instead of applesauce & flax), while the chocoholic side of me rejoices at the combination of, well, chocolate, rich and dark, with peppermint.

I also had lots of melted chocolate leftover, so I lined a container with plastic wrap and poured the chocolate into it.  Now I have a big round bar of peppermint-flavoured dark chocolate in my fridge, waiting to be nibbled away.  I love mint and chocolate.

Now, my husband, on the other hand, doesn't like chocolate much, and the combination of chocolate and peppermint, he likes even less.  I met his request for oatmeal cookies, but put a holiday-inspired twist on my usual recipe (adapted from Simple Oatmeal Cookies recipe in "La Dolce Vegan" by Sarah Kramer), by adding gingerbread spices - cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, & cloves - and organic dried cranberries and eggnog-flavoured almond milk.  The result was Xmas in a crumbly not-too-sweet oatmeal cookie:
I also baked a vegan chocolate-chocolate-chip cake, which was delicious, but so fluffy I made a ruin of it just by cutting into it and attempting to lift a piece out of the pan.  Oh well.

So the holidays are over, but I'm hoping that this pull toward my much-neglected hobbies will not decline or fade until next year.  I hope, in fact, that as business starts to pick up (focus on positive outcomes!), I'll still carve out time to spend on these hobbies and other things.  I'm welcoming 2013 with hopes for a happy year of being closest to my own "me"-ness as I've ever been.

Happy New Year! :)

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

taking the good with the bad

It's been a month and a half since I launched this blog.  I meant to post more often.

Things got busy, and roller-coaster rough.

Business for a piano teacher during the summer is always a little slow, but we've got new expenses that make it a little more difficult.

I've used the time to get most of my stuff together for my nutrition practice.  I've started writing nutrition articles, for no one in particular, but with the hope that someone somewhere will learn something from them.  It's getting me to write, anyhow.

My husband is recovering from a brush with a serious illness - thankfully, he's doing very well and it looks like it's all behind us now.

But just when we received this good news, we were hit with a personal loss.  Our little cat, Roenus, so carefree, happy, playful and friendly, passed away suddenly on Monday, September 10.  Adopted from a colony of feral cats sheltered at my in-laws' country home, Roenus had been diagnosed as a kitten with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) at his first check-up.  We always knew that would make him more susceptible to contracting an illness or suffering an injury that could potentially claim his life; but we always thought we'd have more time with him.  He was 2 years and 3 months old.  We only hope that his short life with us was a happy one.

One of my favourite pictures of Roenus - naptime with a teddy.

What I hope to take from these experiences - what I've learned from Roenus' perpetual purring calm - is to do things that make me happy.  No matter how busy or hard things get, finding time for things you enjoy should never be pushed aside for later.

I've collected the materials for several craft projects over the summer, that are currently sitting in my hobby room waiting to take shape.  In the wake of Roenus' passing I bought even more supplies.  I have beads and findings and tools and a project book, ready to start making beadworks.  I have a wooden key wall-hanging to be transformed into a functional piece as a decorative keyholder.  Lastly, I have a pack of 3 shadowboxes to be made into memorial plaques with pictures and collars for Roenus and Kato, the first of our adopted cats, who also passed away too soon (Roenus was adopted, ironically, in the hopes of soothing Reese's grief at losing Kato, but she never fully warmed to the new addition).



Kato - Jan 2006-June 30 2010
Reese - July 2007-
 
Roenus - June 2010-Sept 10 2012

I don't intend to put these projects off much longer.

Through all of this, I've found that yoga and BodyCombat have been great outlets for the stress, frustration, and, most recently, grief.  Becoming stronger physically is also helping me be stronger emotionally; and through yoga, and practicing yoga as part of an event to help people around the world, I've felt more connected not just to myself, but to others around me.  The instructor of the BodyCombat class I attend each week has been putting up inspiring quotes on the wall before class.  This week's quote hit home, and I'll be keeping it in mind:

"Tough times don't last, but tough people do."

~S.

Friday, 27 July 2012

Welcome!

Welcome to my life!

Here I hope to share my adventures as I balance my budding practice as a holistic nutritionist with my artistic side.

I've been spending my summer setting up a private nutrition consulting practice in Ottawa West, little by little.

Before becoming a nutritionist, I graduated university with a B. Mus. degree in piano, and also teach private lessons part-time.

I intend to post on healthy food, recipes, supplements, yoga, and health books, as well as my undertakings of various artsy hobbies and projects.  My new house even has a hobby room, where I hope to revive some long-neglected pastimes.

Thanks for joining me in this experiment!

-SG