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Showing posts with label Be Creative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Be Creative. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Learn to Knit Cables on Looms

Knitting has always been a craft that I was not good at.  For some reason my hands and brain would never connect to make the stitch correctly and I always have to count and count and count to make sure I wasn't skipping a stitch.  About a month ago I discovered knitting looms which makes knitting so easy!

Learn to Knit Cables and Looms by Isela Phelps contains 9 patterns that can be made on a knitting loom.  Patterns range from a baby sweater to a backpack and a throw.  My two favorite are the slipper socks and the hand warmers.

Each pattern comes with a color picture and easy to follow instructions.  There is also a skill level gauge for each pattern, although each pattern seemed to be at a more advanced level.  If you are just a beginner other books might be able to help you more. I also watched videos on YouTube which was helpful.

If you are curious about knitting but don't know where to start check out the loom knitting books at the library.

Friday, September 14, 2012

The Bust DIY Guide to Life by Laurie Henzel and Debbie Stoller

Reading Level: Adult Non-Fiction
(4 out of 5)

This guide has a little bit of everything.  Recipes, how to make clothes, makeup tips, how to make items for the home, it even has how to brew beer.  It really is a cool book for women.

On pg 139 find out how to turn cassettes into a coin purse.  Pretty neat! 

On pg 50 they made a lamp out of books.  It looks really cool but a part of me cringes knowing those books will never be read.  I hope they were old and grungy!

Jewelry Upcycled! by Sherri Haab and Michelle Haab



Reading Level: Adult Non-Fiction
(5 out of 5)

For those of you out there that like to make jewelry and like to be green, this is the book for you.  This book shows you how to make jewelry out of plastic bottles, cell phones, gift cards/credit cards, bubble wrap, cassette tapes,  leather, found objects, glass, and much more. The end products are so cool!

I haven't tried anything yet but I want to.  It's just finding the time.




Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Lovely Things to Make for Girls of Slender Means by Eithne Farry

This is a fun book.  It has projects on how to make fun hair accessories to making your own clothes.  I liked how to make your own fabric flowers and did indeed make myself some.  I actually made one like on the cover.  I do want to try making the ping-pong ball necklace.

But there are instructions for making bags, earrings, bows, skirts, shorts, shirts, and much more.  If you like to sew and get crafty and are of slender means then check out this book.  Even if you aren't check it out anyway!

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Mod Podge Rocks! by Amy Anderson

I have used Mod Podge a few times to for paper crafts.  When I saw the book Mod Podge Rocks! by Amy Anderson at the library I decided to check it out expecting to find some more ideas for crafts using different paper.  What I found was a whole bunch of different things that you use mod podge for.

Mod Podge Rocks! has instructions for 41 projects.  The project ideas are split into three groups: wearables (who knew you could decoupage cowboy boots!), home decor, and holiday.  Every page is filled with colorful step by step pictures and a picture of the final project.  The list of items you need for the craft are available with every one and instructions are easy to follow.

Since I have just used mod podge a few times I didn't realize how many different types were available.  There's matte and glossy, outdoor and fabric mod podge-basically there is an mod podge for everything you may want to decoupage.  I'll definitely be trying the sparkle mod podge soon which makes everything look glittery.  Being only used to decoupaging with paper, I was surprised to see many of the craft ideas using fabric.  For example, the book gives instructions on how to decoupage a bike helmet using any fabric scraps you may have around (page 30) and also tells you how to decoupage an suitcase (page 86).  Holiday themed crafts included gift tags (page 112) and gift bags (page 114).

One of my favorite craft projects is the retro floral outdoor chair (page 82). Using outdoor mod podge and fabric an old chair can be made to look like new. The bright floral fabric makes the chair really pop.

Anderson also writes the blog Mod Podge Rocks (http://www.modpodgerocksblog.com/) which contains much more craft ideas.

Decoupage is an easy craft to do with all ages.  If you never done it before or do it all the time check out this book filled of ideas.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Eco-Craft: Recycle, Recraft, Restyle by Susan Wasinger

Reading Level: Adult non-fiction
(5 out of 5)

If you are into being green, this is the craft book for you. There are craft ideas in here that uses aluminum pop cans, glass bottles, plastic bags, take out containers, and much more. One neat one that caught my eye are sweater rugs. Hmm is that a rug made out of sweaters you ask? Yes! You use 4 to 12 wool (or mostly wool) sweaters. Quoting the book it says, "This is quite possibly the fuzziest, thickest, squishest, plushest, most huggable rug you will ever set foot on... and you make it yourself in a matter of hours." You use knitting needles. I don't really know how to knit but I think it might be time that I learned.

Another clever idea is making bags using coffee bags and duct tape. You get a functional bag that probably smells good too.

Make lunch bags using plastic shopping bags.

Cool light fixtures out of milk jugs.

The one I cringe at a little bit is using books to make angels and trees. Yes they look really cool but I mourn a little bit for the books. An alternative to books would be magazines. I have seen magazine trees before.

All in all I want to make almost every craft in here. And I'll be helping save the planet while I do it! :)

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Claude and Camille by Stephanie Cowell

CLAUDE & CAMILLE, A NOVEL OF MONET

By Stephanie Cowell

Rated 4

If you are curious about the 19th century life of famous artists of Impressionism, you will enjoy this book about Claude Monet and his friendships with Renoir and Manet. This historical fiction book begins with Claude Monet and his early life in the seaport town of LeHavre, France. Against his father’s will, and with nothing but a dream and passion to create a new style of art, he set off for Paris. When he met Camille (who was from an upper-class Paris family) she became his inspiration and his future wife who stood by him as they lived in horrible conditions and moved frequently from place to place due to financial problems of artists. Monet’s love of Camille, gardens, and water lilies are evident in his paintings. In the latter part of his life, Monet lived at the now famous Giverny Gardens outside of Paris. I enjoyed the journey of Monet’s life and hope you will too.


“What can be said about a man who is interested in nothing but his painting?”

Claude Monet


Submitted by Helen

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The Farm Chicks in the Kitchen by Teri Edwards and Serena Thompson

Teri and Serena liked to look for treasure and one day they thought why not hold a sale. The Farm Chicks Antique Show was started in the fall of 2002. They started out in a barn and eventually grew into covering two parks and the community center and its grounds. Then Country Living called and did a spread on them in their magazine. And then they did this cookbook. This book is really fun to look at. Not only are there some really good recipes but they have fun craft and organization ideas as well.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Mozart's Ghost by Julia Cameron


“Mozart’s Ghost”, by Julia Cameron is a supernatural romance novel set in New York City. It was published in 2008. The main character is a woman named Anna who lives, in a New York City apartment building, upstairs from a man named Edward. Edward is a professional pianist studying a number of composer’s works for an important upcoming competition. Among those composers works is that of Mozart. Edward practices night and day for the competition, which irritates Anna. She is a professional medium (also a substitute teacher by day) who meets with her clients in the building. Because of Edward’s practicing, she is having a difficult time hearing what those who have passed to the other side have to say. Then, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart begins contacting her. His strong, larger-than-life, personality and sudden appearances at awkward moments grates on her. He encourages her to go for a relationship with Edward. Also, he loves Edward’s music, saying that Edward plays Mozart’s music the way he himself would play it. He wants to give Edward a few suggestions that will help him win the competition, and wants Anna to relay them to Edward. This request creates a big problem for Anna. She feels that most people think mediums are strange. Also, she has lost a few boyfriends when they found out she was a medium. Because she and Edward have realized an attraction to one another, it is difficult for her to tell Edward about Mozart’s message. She feels the cost could be her relationship with Edward. Meanwhile, she has been practicing appearing normal so that Edward will not even suspect she is a medium.
There are some other interesting characters in the book such as Anna’s twin brother, Alex, who befriends Edward. Anna also has a few friends, a homosexual male friend named Harold who is the principal of a school Anna is subbing at, a bi-sexual guy friend who is interested in Anna, and a female friend who has sort of a disastrous dating life.
I’m glad I read this novel. Overall, I enjoyed reading it. It turned out to be interesting, even though I didn’t care for the beginning. At first, the writing didn’t seem to flow well, and I thought the letters Edward wrote to the couple who is financing his career seemed like something a child would do. I was thinking, you’ve got to be kidding. I wasn’t sure I wanted to go on reading. Then suddenly, the writing got a lot better and I wanted to read the book, though I’m not sure I ever loved the letter part of it. I think Cameron portrayed the work of a medium very well. Something, however, that really bothered me in the novel was how the town of Ann Arbor, Michigan was described as being conservative and not open to mediums. This is not true. Ann Arbor is known for being a metaphysically progressive town. If Cameron had selected almost any other town in Michigan, that would have perhaps made sense, but this does not. Also, the other thing I wondered about is why Edward would be interested in Anna. She does not seem very likable. I am also wondering if the character of Anna is based upon a real life friend of the author, Sonia Choquette. Choquette, who lives in Chicago, is a medium and a bestselling author. In her autobiography, “Floor Sample: A Creative Memoir”, Cameron says that she befriended Choquette, helping her with her writing. The physical description of Anna seems to match that of Choquette. I wouldn’t be surprised if the character of Anna wasn’t loosely based on her.
Some people describe “Mozart’s Ghost” as a predictable but enjoyable “light romance”. I think this is true. I also agree with others that it would make a good film, though I would hope that if “Mozart’s Ghost” does get made into a film, that Ann Arbor gets a truer-to-life description of the forward-thinking town that it really is.


Review written by Karin Olsen

Friday, April 24, 2009

Floor Sample: A Creative Memoir by Julia Cameron

Reading Level: Adult Non-Fiction


Julia Cameron’s autobiography, “Floor Sample: A Creative Memoir” was published in 2005. Cameron, born March 4, 1948, is an award-winning poet, playwright, and filmmaker. She has also written many non-fiction titles, is a journalist, novelist, screenplay writer, songwriter and composer, and a strong advocate for and teacher of creativity. She has written thirty books. Among them is “The Artist’s Way”, “The Vein of Gold”, “Walking in this World”, “The Right To Write”, and “The Sound of Paper”. Cameron is most known for The Artist’s Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity, c1992, a twelve-week program she created for artists and others to unblock their creativity. She believes in everyone becoming unblocked creatively whether you are an artist, a writer, or a business person. She based her program upon the twelve-step Alcoholics Anonymous programs.“Floor Sample: A Creative Memoir” is a fascinating book that I read quickly. Cameron’s writing is amazingly honest and I love her depictions of her daily life as an artist. They were quite inspiring. She speaks about her first marriage to the famous film director, Martin Scorcese, her struggle with overcoming alcoholism, and in later years, dealing with a mental imbalance which had to be treated with medication, her upper-class upbringing in Libertyville, Illinois, complete with horses, her daughter by Martin Scorcese, Domenica Cameron-Scorcese who is an actress, writer, and director, her second marriage to author Mark Bryan whom she met in Chicago and who collaborated with her on “The Artist’s Way”. She also talks about her writing life, her beloved parents and siblings, the creative artists and metaphysical people she has met in the places she has lived and worked – Los Angeles and Venice Beach, California, Chicago, New York City, London, and Taos, New Mexico, how she went from writing for “The Rolling Stones” Magazine in New York City when she met Scorcese to screenplay writing in Hollywood, to being a film critic in Chicago, etc. She has mastered a number of forms of creative writing and journalism as well as in her later years, successfully working with music. Julia emphasizes that she had always desired to be a writer. This has been her life’s dream. In “Floor Sample” she speaks about the difficulty of being accepted by the “in” people, surviving financially, finding people who believe in you, “hearing” the work, becoming creatively unblocked, and persevering as an artist. She also speaks of the disappointments when she finished her Hollywood screenplays but they were not made into films. She says it felt like they had been “aborted”. A lot of the book also speaks about her work travelling the country with Mark Bryan and other teachers, teaching “The Artist’s Way”. I have known about “The Artist’s Way” since somewhere in the 1990’s when I lived on Maui and took “freewriting classes” from my writing teacher, Lollie Groth. She used freewriting and “The Artist’s Way” to unblock writers. A decade earlier, in my twenties, I had lived in Chicago and been a member of an organization called “Women in Film”. I was lucky enough to hear Cameron speak as part of a panel discussion about filmmaking. At that time, she left an impact on me and I never forgot about her. Little did I know that years later, I would be using the tools of her yet-to-be written book “The Artist’s Way”. Cameron recommends three basic tools for getting creatively unblocked. The first tool is what she has termed “the morning pages” which are three one-sided 8 ½ x 11” pages of straight writing, getting the junk of your life down, and writing whatever comes to mind. The second artist’s way tool is holding a weekly artist’s date with oneself, where you take yourself somewhere that will inspire you. It could be a bookstore, a café, or a boutique. It is a way of honoring yourself as an artist. The last creative tool she talks about is taking walks. Longer walks are better but shorter walks will do. She says that walking unblocks your creativity, giving you ideas. I have heard other writers also speak of that.
Upon reading “Floor Sample”, I decided to look at the books by Cameron that I had not previously looked at. I checked a bunch out at the library. They are excellent - truly well-written. She says that “The Vein of Gold” may be hard to get through but the people that worked through it ended up having good results with it. I also ended up reading a novel she wrote that was published in 2008. It is called “Mozart’s Ghost”. I really enjoyed it. Sometimes people who speak and write about writing are not good at fiction writing. Fortunately, this is not the case with Cameron. I would highly recommend “Floor Sample: A Creative Memoir”, particularly if you are interested in the creative life. It totally left a strong impression on me. I would also recommend “The Artist’s Way” and Cameron’s other books. They literally have the power to change your life.
Review written by Karin Olsen