Friday, November 30, 2012

A Bookworm's Dream Come True

That's right folks.  I have a library.

Well, a library nook...with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and a comfy chair.

Take a look at the building process and the finished product:

David and Dad, measuring twice and cutting once.

Staining

Assembling




My dad can't resist pulling a goofy face.

Time to bring all the books down from upstairs.

And finally, the shelves with books on them.  Now I have an excuse to buy more books!
 Since I took these pictures, we have filled in some of the empty spots with knickknacks and board games, and we finished putting up crown molding around the room and the top of the shelves.  I smile every time I look at them!

Monday, November 12, 2012

A Wedding and a Party


This post is a chronicle of celebrations of late: my friend Justine's wedding and David's and my Halloween party.  Enjoy!

Justine's Wedding

Justine and Jake got married at the Gonzaga Student Chapel at the end of September.  I was lucky enough to be a bridesmaid.



 


The day before the wedding, of course, was the rehearsal.  This is a picture of the bride with her ribbon boquet, made by yours truly.
All the girls in the wedding party had a slumber party out at the Northern Quest Resort.  In the morning, Justine had her hair done in the Resort's spa.  Isn't it lovely?
 
 Just kidding...this is how it looked when it was done.  Gorgeous.  Also, notice Ashley in the background enjoying a mimosa.
 
We all got dressed in one of the classrooms in the building.  Here's Justine putting on her garters with the help of her mom.
 
I forgot to tell David to take pictures of the ceremony, so we're going to have to fast forward to the reception.  I apologize that some of the pictures are dark.  My camera's flash does funny things in romantic lighting.  The reception was a whole bunch of fun!  I managed to drag my hubby out on the dance floor a couple of times, my dad got schnockered, and my sister caught the bouquet.  Take a look...
Justine and Jake, cutting the cake...
...and dancing their first dance.
Boquet toss
Rachel caught it! Jake's best man caught the garter.
Meanwhile, at our table...
Yep. Dad's drunk.
Everyone had a great time, and we continued the party well into the night.
 
One month later, David and I hosted a Halloween party, and the newlyweds were there to help us celebrate.  They were dressed as a 60's mod girl and Jake from State Farm.


 
David was Paul Bunyan.  He even painted Seamus with blue hairspray to be his blue ox, but we forgot to take a picture.  And I was a witch.  We're a little rosy-cheeked in this picture.  It was a good party.
 
Christy and KC were also there dressed as a member of the GU crew team and Professor X.  KC won best costume...he shaved his head and had a wheelchair.  If that's not dedication, I don't know what is.
Whit and Britany were a sports fan and an elephant.  I want that hat!
And Rachel and Brian were a German beer maid and a 50s dude.
It was the most successful party we've thrown yet.  Everyone had a good time.  Before I sign off, I have to inundate y'all with some dog pictures.  Seamus helped us with the party decorations, i.e. pumpkin carving.
 
How cute is he...
 
 
 



Thursday, October 25, 2012

Chair Crazy

Oh man. I'm way behind on my blogging again.  Bear with me over the next week or so as I try to catch up!


Recently, several people have approached me about doing chair-related projects for them.  Up until August, I had never ventured outside of clothing and quilts with my sewing, but now I'm proud to say that I can fashion a slip cover and reupholster!

It all started with my family friend/hairdresser Cyndi.  Over the summer, Cyndi and her husband fixed up an old house right across the street from their house and converted it into a hair salon.  I had been giving their daughter sewing lessons, so when Cyndi found an antique couch for the salon, she asked me to make a slip cover for it.  Of course I said yes.  Though I had never made a slip cover before, I figured it couldn't be any more difficult than it was to make my wedding dress.

Here's a picture of the couch without its cover on:


After consulting the Internet for directions on how to make a slip cover, I decided I had to be as methodical as possible about it.  I started by draping, cutting, and pinning a couple of old sheets to the couch to make myself a pattern.
It looked a little goofy with 2 different colors of sheets on it.
Then, too intimidated to start on the body of the couch right away, I made the covers for the cushions and pillows.
Next, I cut out all the body pieces and pinned them back onto the couch where the seams would go.  After that, it was just a matter of unpinning, sewing, and repinning, one piece at a time.
 
 
Finally, the finished product!
 
 
While Cyndi and I had been initially discussing the couch, she asked if I knew anybody who did reupholstery.  I didn't, but said I could give it a go as long as she didn't mind me testing out my upholstery chops on her chairs.  I'm so glad she trusted me because I had a lot of fun on these chairs we did together.

There were three chairs total, two matching ones and one loner.
First, I had to strip the chairs down to just the frame and stuffing.  I forgot to get a good "before" picture of the lone chair before I stripped it down, but here's a picture of the frame:
Sorry, it's kind of difficult to see.

 
Then, Cyndi sanded and spray painted the frames: white for the matching chairs, black for the other one.
 
 
While she painted the chairs, I worked on making the fabric-covered buttons for the inside back cushions and assembling them.

 
Then it was time to attach the newly-tufted cushion to the back of the chair.
 
 
After that, it was back to the sewing machine to make the seat cushions and welting.
 
I used the old fabric from the chairs as a pattern for the new fabric pieces.  This picture shows the pink fabric that used to be on the lone chair.  It was in definite need of improvement!
 
After putting David's air-powered staple gun to good use, I finished the three chairs.
 
 
She was one happy customer :-)
The last chair project I did for my friend Christy.  She bought her husband an Adirondack chair, and they intended to keep it outside, but they didn't want it to suffer from the elements or get pooped on.  I made her an outdoor cover for the chair, which was really an oversized slipcover.
 
This is the chair without its cover...much too easy for a bird to target.
And here's the chair with its nifty new outdoor cover.  Easy to hose off.

 
 

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

In the Olympic Peninsula with Margee


As summer winds to a close (school started today!), I'm happy with how productive it has been and I have been.  I seriously thought that not having to work this summer would give me some time off!  Even with all the weddings, baking, sewing, bridal showers, and bachelorette parties, I managed to take a few days for myself and have a girls' trip to the Olympic Peninsula.

As I mentioned in my last post, my friend Jamie had her wedding at a beach house in Olympia and her reception a week later here in Eastern Washington.  While on the west side, I stayed with my in-laws, and after the wedding, I stayed a few more days to hang out with the best mother-in-law a girl could ask for.  Here's what we were up to...

Day 1:
 I don't really have any pictures of day 1, but let me tell you, we got some serious shopping done.  I visited a lovely little store called Charmin' Charlie's, a jewelry/accessory store which is a lot like a Claire's for adults.  The mall had also just opened up a Torrid, so I did all my back-to-school shopping a little early to take advantage of their grand opening sale.

Day 2:
Day 2 was the beginning of the actual trip up the peninsula.  We left the house with our mini-vacation largely unplanned, knowing only that we wanted to spend the night in Forks, perhaps see some vampires, and visit Second Beach.  Other than that, it was just wherever the wind took us.

The drive from Margee's house to Forks is about 4 hours total.  After about 2 hours, we had to pee and decided to stop in Sequim, WA, to use the facilities, check out the visitors' center for sight-seeing advice, and see Dungeness Spit.  The man at the visitors' center was very helpful.  He suggested we definitely see the spit and see Hurricane Ridge, a place I had never seen and Margee hadn't seen since she was a kid.  Off to the spit we went.

On the way, we saw the first of many sightings of way too tame deer.  These particular fellows were crossing the road without a care in the world. 
Dungeness Spit is a long, thin strip of beach with a lighthouse at the end.  It's really cool because on one side, you have a somewhat rocky beach with waves, and on the other side you have still water with more sand and clams and stuff.  This picture below is taken higher up from the trail down to the water.
 
This picture may not look like much, but if you look closely, there's a mountain in the background (I don't remember which mountain the park ranger told us it was), and the tiny white speck is the lighthouse at the end of the spit.  After hearing that it was supposed to be a 5-6 hour, 11-mile trek, we opted not to hike out the lighthouse and just built rock stacks on the driftwood instead.
 
We didn't spend too much time at the spit because we still wanted to see Hurricane Ridge and, on the suggestion of another park ranger, Sol Duc Falls.  This park ranger was the same one who made Margee put back the rock she wanted to take from the beach, but we didn't hold it against him.
 
We stopped at the Hurricane Ridge visitors' center at the base of the mountain to pick up a pass to get into national parks.  Luckily Margee was wearing her Coast Guard shirt, and the kind Polish lady at the counter asked if she was military.  Did you know that anyone with a military ID can get a national park pass (including parking) for free?  That's an $80 pass for everyone else!
 
The drive to Hurricane Ridge was a steep winding road up the Olympic Mountains that had Margee confessing her fear of accidentally driving off a cliff and pointing out exactly where more guard rails would be appreciated. I was doing my best to be comforting, but it didn't help that there were a bunch more deer in the road, right in the momentarily blinding sunny spots.
 
 
Hurricane Ridge itself was a gorgeous view of the Olympics in front and a peaceful meadow behind. I had to suppress the urge to yodel.
Here's another stupid deer.  Literally 3 feet in front of me.
It was late afternoon by the time we were done with Hurricane Ridge, so we decided to squeeze in Sol Duc Falls before sundown, then spend the night in Forks where we'd nerd out on vampires in the morning.

Sol Duc Falls is in the middle of the Hoh Rainforest, one of the prettiest places on the planet.  Everything is lush and mossy and smells good.
Not quite the falls yet, but still fun
 
After a .8 mile hike, we arrived.
From one of the overlooks, you can look back and see the original bridge you crossed over.  This is my 'king of the world' picture.
After we had seen enough of the falls, we hiked back to the car, and just as we were driving out of the park, the sun set.
 
It was night by the time we made it to Forks.  One of the park rangers at the spit had recommended one of the inns to us, but it was full, as was every other inn and motel we passed in town.  Eventually we drove past a motel that had their vacancy sign lit, and we rented their last room from them.  Apparently they had only had their sign lit for a little while because they had had a cancellation earlier.  We dragged our bags up to the room, then dragged our tired behinds to the local watering hole for some much needed drinks, dinner, and friendly gossip about the Twilight craze. 
 
Day 3:
We didn't see any vampires, but we did hit up all the gift shops and the visitors' center.
 
 
Tall, handsome lumber man.
Once we were done poking around Forks, we went through La Push to Second Beach. Cue werewolf nerdiness...
 
 
Second Beach was a hell of a hike, but it was so worth it.
 
I'm under a tree!

This part of the forest was so cool!  Trees were growing out of other trees, and they all had crazy root systems.  We even saw several trees that had ferns growing out of crooks in the branches 30 feet up!
Once we broke through the trees, this is what we saw.  We just had to navigate through all that driftwood, then we took off our shoes for a stroll through the sand.
A couple more beach pictures:
 
 
 

We decided after Second Beach to go see one more beach, then meander our way home.  What we didn't realize was that there were 10 miles of construction on the way to that beach, but once we found that out, we turned around (much to the chagrin of the construction workers) and figured we'd find something else to see on the way back home. A couple funny pictures from the road:













One of the buildings in Port Angeles had a sweet brass elephant on the roof, and I was determined to take a picture out the window as we drove by.  I clicked at the exact wrong time, so all I got was elephant butt and a reader board missing an 's.'








Still at a loss for our last sight to see, we decided at the last minute to go see the Olympic Game Farm.  I had never been and Margee hadn't been since she was a kid, but she explained to me that it started out as a home for all the retired animals from the old Disney movies with talking/performing animals.  Now, it's just kind of a refuge for exotic animals that don't have a home.
Either way, it was probably the best thing we saw on the whole trip.
There were about a million peacocks roaming around strutting their stuff.
Zebra!
 
A Tibetan yak was giving me the stink eye.
Bears!  During most of our hiking, Margee kept talking about how she wanted to see a bear.  I'm glad the ones we finally did see were in enclosures.
 
This guy was the chubbiest, and therefore the cutest.  He looks so snuggly!
 
 
Next up, jungle cats!
Go Tigers!
I'm kind of sad my camera focused on the chain link and not the lion.  He had just been fed and was chewing on this gnarly looking bone.  We could hear him snuffling and the bone cracking.
Another kind of disappointing picture...These two timber wolves were chasing each other back and forth, but they were too fast for me to get a good shot, so here's a picture of the back half of a wolf.
Elk
 
White deer.  This guy has a more specific name as to what kind of deer he is, but I don't remember what it is.  At about this time we were almost out of the park, and my camera battery was dying fast.
I managed to get one last picture of the sign on the way out before my camera died completely.  Luckily, we had seen everything we wanted to see and made our way back home dog-tired but really happy.