Sunday, December 23, 2012

12/12 Challenge




I recently caught up with Suzette aka Desert Daisies on Flickr and was captivated by her lovely Texan winter captures....quite different from all the bare trees here up north. check out her story on her blog that accompanies her collage!




12.12.12

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Falling Glory

autumn fantasy Untitled snset chair Just thought i'd share some of my latest fall pictures....miss my blog!!!

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Monday, March 12, 2012

A Spring Tease



A little spring breeze came thru my window today!!



A little spring breeze came in my window today!!




my wishlist at anthropologie!! from my pinterest





Monday, January 16, 2012

How to Organize Everything in Your Home

If there's something I hate to do its spring cleaning! Why an I writing about this today! Because I was thinking of the best way to make use of winter hibernation other than sleeping and catching up on all the movies I missed last year! Why waste the spring months when all those beautiful blooms are giving us more than we can photograph when I can have my spring cleaning done and all that's left to do is open the windows for that wonderful soft breeze! Read the following of you're interested!!

How to Organize Everything in Your Home
Whitney Hopler
Live It

You’d like to enjoy a beautiful, peaceful home that’s completely organized. But that goal seems out of reach when you consider how easily your home gets messed up in the stress of daily living, plus how overwhelmed you feel at the thought of organizing everything in it.

While it’s unrealistic to expect that you can organize your whole home immediately, it’s definitely possible for you to get your entire home in order one area at a time. Uncluttering your living space frees you to focus on what matters most, like your relationships with God and your family and friends.

Here’s how you can create a completely organized home:

Begin with prayer. Don’t let the large task of organizing our entire home overwhelm you. Ask God to empower you to organize your home and encourage you throughout the process. Pray also for a vision of your home already organized so you can imagine your home’s potential. Rely on the strength God gives you to begin your work and trust that you complete and maintain your home’s organization.

Set measurable goals. Plan to break down your work into specific goals that each describe how much of the task you hope to complete by a certain time. For example, you could write a goal that states: “I plan to organize my refrigerator and freezer by (set date), organize my pantry by (set date), and complete the kitchen organization by (set date).”

Recruit everyone in your household to help. Call a family meeting to discuss the need to organize your home and assign each person who shares your home to help with specific tasks as part of a team. Meet regularly throughout the process of organizing your home to discuss what’s working and what isn’t working; make changes accordingly. Celebrate milestones together after you reach them.

Get rid of clutter in every area. Keep in mind as you work in each room of your home that you need to put away, throw away, or give away every item that you come across.

Invite order into your home starting with the entrance. Sweep the walkway leading to your home, as well as your porch or stoop. Clip overgrown plants and replace any unhealthy ones outside your door. Clear out clutter in your foyer, such as by getting a rack for shoes that people take off soon after your home.

Create peaceful bedrooms. Remove phones, TVs, books, papers, and other items that may disturb your family’s ability to relax and sleep well in their bedrooms. Organize the bedroom closets by removing clothing that doesn’t fit or hasn’t been worn in at least one year, placing like items together and color coding them, and installing shelves and racks to more easily find items you use regularly.

Clean up your bathrooms. Clear clutter by getting rid of health and beauty products that are more than one year old and getting items off of the floor and sink (such as by installing wall hooks on which to hang towels, using a basket to collect small items such as soaps and barrettes, and adding a corner tension to shower stalls to hold shelves for storage).

Establish a system for dealing with your children’s belongings. If you let all of the stuff that your children bring into your home accumulate too much, it’ll create a huge mess. Develop a system for dealing with their school papers and home artwork, saving only what’s most important after you look at them initially. Regularly give away toys, clothing, and books that your children have outgrown. Use large containers to store toys, and designate that last hour before bedtime each night as time for your children to put away their toys. Keep your children’s clothes in easily accessible places, such as dressers with low drawers. Hang a mesh bag on each child’s bedroom door to collect their dirty socks to be washed together so you don’t lose or mix up their socks in the laundry.

Designate a particular homework spot for your children. Your children can focus best on their homework if you choose one place in your home for them to do their work. Set up a comfortable desk and chairs near a computer that’s in full view so you can monitor what they’re doing online. Have your children keep their school backpacks nearby so they can immediately place their completed homework into their backpacks to take to school the next day.

Create an orderly kitchen. When your kitchen is organized well, you’ll be able to cook your family’s meals efficiently and enjoy eating them in a peaceful environment. Keep like items together (such as all of your pots and pans in one designated place) and keep items that use regularly close at hand (such as utensils that you often cook with in a special crock on the counter). Clear out any items from your kitchen counter or table that don’t relate to cooking (such as bills to be paid). Clean out your refrigerator, freezer, and pantry regularly, throwing away all expired food and noting which items you need to stock up on for when you next go grocery shopping. Label leftovers and food you’ve cooked in advance with the meal description and date to avoid confusion later.

Tame the paper piles in your home office. Schedule 15 to 30-minute blocks of time to go through your existing paper piles, and purge whatever you can. Be careful not to waste time re-reading the papers any more than necessary to determine whether or not you should keep them. Immediately throw out paper that you don’t want or need to save (such as junk mail). Shred documents with personal information before discarding them. Set up a filing system to categorize papers that you do plan to save (such as bank statements, insurance policies, and tax records). Whenever possible, try to handle each new piece of paper that enters your home just once rather than throwing it into a pile to deal with again later. Place your most important papers in a secure location, such as a safe.

Use your home’s vertical spaces. If you’ve gotten rid of unnecessary items throughout your home but are still having trouble finding enough space for everything you need to keep, add shelves, racks, and hooks on walls in different rooms to display or store items.


Friday, January 13, 2012

Grunge effect



I found this tutorial on google doing a search for pse tutorials...unfortunately i don't have the original link to the page. It goes great with jeans lol!

from where i stand


Make a new layer

select Enhance>Unsharp Mask and set the Amount and Radius to 200 and the Threshold to 0
Click on the foreground color to set the color. Then, within the Color Picker, set the # value (the hex value) to 7c766e and press OK.
select Layer>New Adjustment Layer>Hue/Saturation… and press OK. Then, select the Colorize option in the Hue/Saturation panel and adjust the opacity of the Hue/Saturation layer to 50%.
select Layer>New Adjustment Layer>Gradient Map… and press OK. From the Gradient Map drop-down, be sure to select the Black, White option.
set the opacity of this layer to 50% and set the blending mode to Overlay.
Merge layers
Select the Burn Tool (O) and from the brush presets (upper left corner on the tool menu), select the Soft Round 300 Pixel brush and adjust the size up or down to suit your image and preferences.
Brush along the outside edges of the image to burn in a vignette — do this repeatedly and as much as you like to achieve the desired look.

The top photo which was posted on flickr i added a solid layer in white set at 20% opacity just to soften and lighten the image.

from where i'm standing original grunge tutorial

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Ah....time to enjoy the New Year!!!


Well the kids are back in school...and i finally have a moment to catch up on the piles of laundry and clean up the house....no wonder i never  blog...i don't have anything else to write about lol!! oh well, I'm excited for the New Year though...some new projects I want to get going and hoping to actually find some time to do them.

These little snaps are taken from my new iphone...which i've anticipated for a very long time!



it was sooooo cold these past 2 days...she didn't think she
was going to survive the 5 minutes we had to wait for the bus!