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Posts Tagged ‘creating misericordia’

I’m quite late in blogging about this commission, which dates back to the middle of January, but better late than never!  Katy of Creating Misericordia got in touch because she was in search of a wedding planning book and had taken a shine to the cover of this small notebook in my shop.

Now, a lot of the time I only have one or two sheets of any given cover paper – which I think is a good thing as it means most of my books are one-of-a-kind, but occasionally a customer will ask me to replicate something and then it becomes frustrating because usually by the time I need another sheet of something they’re no longer available to buy.  Happily in this instance I was able to get another two sheets of that paper!  Phew!

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The book is enormous: it’s just shy of A4, contains 48 pages (96 sides) of 220gsm cartridge paper, has grey Murano endpapers, and weighs in at a whopping 760g!  It looks great, which is a relief because sometimes scaling books up in size doesn’t work aesthetically, there’s always a chance they’ll look a little too bulky, or comically big – but the bold design on this paper works brilliantly in a larger size.

Many thanks to Katy for the commission, and I hope her friends liked their book!

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Taking inspiration from Sally, who tagged me, I picked space because it’s a word with multiple meanings, and I thought it would be interesting to see what interpretations everyone came up with.  Of course, sod’s law being what it is, I then couldn’t think what to make of it myself!

So I’m afraid it’s a bit of a dull one from me.  My studio is quite small, and because I insist on cramming so much stuff in there space is at a premium and every so often (particularly when I’ve been accumulating tat faster than I can use it up) I have to stop, evaluate everything, and then have a tidy.

It’s been more crowded than usual lately thanks to my quilting escapades.  There really isn’t room for a sewing machine and our giant sewing box down there full-time, although I do think that if I can clear enough stuff out then I can probably find room to squeeze in the sewing machine – but the sewing box will have to go back up into the house.  So I thought I should try and tidy up and streamline things a bit more.  I made a start earlier this week (I need to carry on today actually!) and had a moment of ephiphany, swiftly followed by the thought “why the hell didn’t I do this before?”

Exhibit A, above, is a random pack of Tim Holtz keyholes.  I have a lot of Tim Holtz stuff including keyholes, keys, box feet, box corners, door knobs and taps… and almost all of it comes in that hard plastic packaging, which takes up SO much room.  So I thought I’d streamline them…

Where possible I’ve removed the components from their packaging and popped them into tiny ziplock bags, keeping the little fasteners for each item together.  They’ve all since been shoved into a glass jar with some other hardware.

I’ve not been able to do it for all the hardware I’ve got (some things are just too big to fit into the jar), and other things were left in their packaging as they didn’t take up much room in the pigeonhole where they live.  I have freed up a lot of space in that pigeonhole though, and will carry on tidying today to see if I can re-jig things to free up more space.  This tidying has the extra benefit of reminding me what I’ve actually got stashed away, so hopefully I’ll find some inspiration while I’m at it!

Thanks for visiting, and please do go and see what our other Weekworders have got for us this week.  I’m tagging Carmen over at Tails of  a Biomouse to choose the next word, pop over to her blog on Monday to see what she’s picked.

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My life has been very fragrant of late, as the flowers in my garden are in full bloom.  Roses, pinks, jasmine, honeysuckle and sweetpea all vying for my attention.  At work this week I’ve had all of those as well as philadelphus (Mock Orange), so my sense of smell has been working overtime enjoying itself.

Sadly no one has yet invented a scratch-and-sniff computer screen, so you’ll just have to make do with photos of the flowers instead ;)

Now take a trip over and see what Katy and Jenna have put together for this week’s word.  Oh, and at the last minute we’ve been joined by Margot over at Tulsi Crafts and Sally at Sow & Sew too!

I’m tagging Katy over at Creating Misericordia to choose the next word, so pop along to her blog on Monday and see what she comes up with.

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I’m not really much of a chocolate lover: I’ll eat it if it’s there, but really I much prefer savoury treats.  So I was very surprised to fall in love with a chocolate cake earlier this year.

I got my mum the Hummingbird Bakery Cake Days book and she’s been working her way through what seems like every recipe in there.  I’m getting pretty tired of cakes but there is one recipe that, for me, stands out a mile: Chocolate Guiness Cake.  Seriously, the first time she made this I stood there in the kitchen and ate the best part of a whole cake.  That’s something I never do.

The cake isn’t overly sweet, it’s not rich, but it is moist and crumbly and has an indescribably delicious flavour.  The frosting isn’t too sweet either and complements the cake nicely.

So I thought I’d share the recipe, and I do recommend you try it.

Ingredients

Serves 12­-14

  • 250ml (9fl oz) Guinness
  • 250g (9oz) unsalted butter
  • 80g (3oz) cocoa powder
  • 400g (14oz) caster sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 tsp vanilla essence
  • 140ml (5fl oz) buttermilk
  • 280g (10oz) plain flour
  • 2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • 50g (1¾oz) unsalted butter, softened
  • 300g (10½oz) icing sugar
  • 125g (4½oz) full-fat cream cheese (such as Philadelphia)
  • Cocoa powder, for dusting (optional)
  • one 23cm (9in) diameter spring-form cake tin

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 170°C (325°F)/gas mark 3, then line the base of the tin with baking parchment.

2. Pour the Guinness into a saucepan, add the butter and gently heat until it has melted. Remove the pan from the heat and stir the cocoa powder and sugar into the warm liquid. Mix together the eggs, vanilla essence and buttermilk by hand in a jug or bowl, and then add this to the mixture in the pan.

3. Sift together the remaining sponge ingredients into a large bowl or into the bowl of a freestanding electric mixer. Using the mixer with the paddle attachment or a hand-held electric whisk, set on a low speed, pour in the contents of the pan. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and continue to mix thoroughly until all the ingredients are incorporated.

4. Pour the batter into the prepared cake tin and bake for approximately 45 minutes or until the sponge bounces back when lightly pressed and a skewer inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean. Set aside to cool, and then remove from the tin on to a wire rack, making sure the cake is cold to the touch before you frost it.

5. Using the electric whisk or the freestanding mixer with paddle attachment, mix the butter and icing sugar together until there are no large lumps of butter and it is fully combined with the sugar in a sandy mixture. Add the cream cheese and mix in a low speed, then increase the speed to medium and beat until the frosting is light and fluffy.

6. Place the cooled cake on to a plate or cake card and top generously with the cream cheese frosting. The cake can be decorated with a light dusting of cocoa powder.

I got my mother to make some more of this last week, but this time she was sensible and made the recipe into cupcakes rather than one large cake.  Easier to control how much of it I eat!

Thanks for visiting, and please visit the other Weekword participants to see what they’ve posted this week :)

I’m tagging Sally at Diario to choose the next word, so please visit her blog on Monday to find out what it is!

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Katy over at Creating Misericordia chose this week’s word, order.  I’m a bit last minute with this but here’s my ramble on the word!

I am, by nature, a fairly disorganised person.  I think it stems from my rather short attention span.  I’m constantly trying to impose order onto chaos in my little world and it’s a bit of a neverending battle!

Why do I strive to create order?  I generally say that it’s to help make life easier.  Instead of having ribbons and buttons scattered throughout the house in various drawers and boxes I’ve moved all the ribbons into one bag and all the buttons into one jar: it’s easier to find things when I need them.  Books and DVDs are also arranged neatly (although not, as yet, alphabetically…) for the same reason.  But is that really the reason?

Perhaps it’s because keeping the little things in order is just a way of creating the illusion that I’m in control.  Life moves rapidly and doesn’t always go to plan, and even the most well-ordered life is subject to external forces which change things and move the goal posts.  Imposing order in my home and studio is a way to feel in control and, for me, it works.  Despite my natural tendency towards chaos I do like having a place for everything and everything in its place, because it really does help me feel better when the bigger things get out of hand.  A bit like a consolation prize really, but it works!

That’s it for me and the word order.  Pop along to Katy’s blog and see who else was brave enough to play this week!

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Due to being a busy bee at work this week I’m a bit behind with blogging, and so despite the best of intentions my Weekword post is going to be a very short one!

Of all the journeys I’ve taken, probably the most fun has been had riding in a bajaj while in Indonesia.  They’re little three-wheeled vehicles which are very rickety, and very noisy.  They’re great for getting around Jakarta because they’re small and the drivers can nip in and out of little spaces in the traffic, but it does rather feel as though you’re taking your life in your hands!  If you’d like to see what a bajaj ride is like, click here to view a little video clip I filmed while we were out there.

 

Like I said, I left this to the last minute so my first job this morning was to grab a dip pen, some ink and a brush and try to whip up a wee sketch of a bajaj.  Job done, and that my friends is my very hasty journey Weekword!

Thanks for visiting, and please visit the other Weekword participants to see what they’ve posted this week :)

I’m tagging Jen at Timballoo to choose the next word, so please visit her blog on Monday to find out what it is!

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Wednesday Wishlist #1

Bit of a new feature here but I hope it will become a regular one.  I’m sure most people have a wishlist of some sort, I’ve got one which is a mile long (thanks to Amazon now letting me add things from other shops to it) but the trouble is that I keep adding things, and eventually the list gets longer and longer and there are things on there from way back when that I don’t really want any more.  I should keep the list up to date but let’s face it, I’m lazy.

So Wednesday wishlist is going to be a bit different, it’ll be like the proverbial three wishes you’re granted by a genie or fairy godmother.  Three things, material or theoretical, that I want this week.  If you’d like to join in with Wednesday Wishlist then let me know and I’ll add a link to your blog.

This week I’m wishing for…

More colour in the garden.  It’s still so dull at this time of year, the bulbs are up but not flowering, and despite some flowers which are still clinging on (my summer pelargoniums and my winter cyclamen) there’s just not much to look at.  I’ve got some winter-flowering plants but they’re still quite dull.  I can’t wait for my bulbs to flower!

Cheese moments.  I haven’t had these in absolutely ages and have been craving them for a while now.  Rarely spotted in convenience stores, generally only found in pubs.  Dammit I want some!

The third thing I would really like this week is more hours in the day (or, possibly, to just make better use of the time I have).  I had a whole week at home last week and it feels as though I barely did anything; now I’m back on a gardening week and I seem to have so many ideas and no time to do anything with them!

That’s it for this Wednesday, but check back next week and if you’d like to play along then let me know and I’ll link to your blog post (please note that I’ll be away next week and posting from afar, so if you do want to play then please let me know and I’ll have to add your link when I get back to London).

Update:  Katy over at Creating Misericordia has added her own Wednesday Wishlist!  Pop along and visit her blog to take a look :)

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This week’s word was chosen by Katy over at Creating Misericordia – pop along to her blog to see who else is playing along.  Stumbled here by accident and wondering what Weekword is all about?  Click here to find out.

An epiphany is “the sudden realization or comprehension of the (larger) essence or meaning of something” (from Wikipedia), and the first thing that comes to mind when I hear the word epiphany is a lightbulb switching on (complete with ‘bing!’ sound effect).  So I decided to have a hunt on Etsy and showcase some of the lightbulb themed items that took my fancy.

This lightbulb terrarium by StarRedesigns is a lovely idea

Concrete lightbulbs.  Yup, you heard that right.  I’ve had my eye on these wall hooks by Whamodyne for a while, just loving their quirky nature.

These Bright as a Button hanging ornaments (by DaveHallettDesign) are so colourful and I really want one!

And finally we have this fabulous Project Lightbulb card by Jennifer over at Architette.

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This week’s Weekword is box, and it was chosen by Katy over at Creating Misericordia.  If you go and visit her blog you’ll be able to see what she’s written, as well as a list of the other participants.

Boxes, and tins, are one of my major weaknesses.  I’m a complete sucker for a pretty box, which leads to arguments in my own head when I see one…. “It’s gorgeous, I want it… I don’t need it… but it’s so pretty!… what on earth will I do with all the stuff in it?… use it, or give it away… then I’m paying a ridiculous amount for just a box… but it’s so pretty!…”

You get the picture.

Sometimes I manage to justify the purchase of a new box (and, to be fair, I do use them all … even if I have to invent uses for them…), and sometimes I don’t.  I’m justifying them more and more these days, even though I’m running out of room to put them, because there’s nothing worse than thinking “I’ll get it next time” only to find that it’s gone when you go back to the shop.  Anyway, enough waffling, I’ll get on with it and show you some of my favourite boxes.

This lovely tin was the deciding factor in my purchase of notecards from Architette.  I’d been ogling her work for quite some time, especially this particular set with the red tin/box (and it has to be said that as beautiful as the cards are, the tin was a major attraction for me).  In the end it was the fact that she was down to her last red box that made me snap and buy it.

I have a rather large collection of hatboxes from Lush which I’ve acquired over the years.  Thankfully I managed to pick most of them up in the sales (they used to do the most amazing post-Christmas sale where if you spent £15 you could choose any gift that had been made prior to December that year for free), thus saving myself an absolute fortune (I spent £45 one year, on staples like shampoo and shower gel, and got three fabulous hatboxes stuffed full of bath bombs and other luxuries as my free gifts).

Yup, that’s a lot of hatboxes (and it doesn’t include all of them either…)!  They’re great for storage though and are variously home to socks, yarn, scraps of leather, gloves/hats, and pretty much anything else that’ll fit inside them.

Next up is this lovely wooden box.  Technically it’s a toy chest (and quite a large one at that), but let’s not be too picky eh?  I picked this up for just £5 from the bric-a-brac stall at a school fete.  Bargain!

I do like unusual boxes, and here are some of my favourites.

Two beautiful wooden safes made by Marian of Ustabee.  I love the vintage post office doors, and these boxes add a classic yet quirky feel to my mantlepiece.

I think my dad got this when he worked for a shop that sold bookbinding supplies.  It’s gorgeous, and I store posh stamps (presentation packs) in it.

This one came from a car boot sale many years ago, my mum came home with it and I confiscated it from her and haven’t given it back since!

That’s a taster of my box collection, and I hope you’ve enjoyed it!

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A list of all this week’s participants is given at the end of this post

I must admit that I’ve rather overstretched myself this week (turns out that blogging regularly is almost a full-time occupation, who knew?!) and thus come to Weekword a little lacking in inspiration.  Which, thankfully, made me think.

“Never judge a book by its cover” – that’s what we’re told, and it’s damn good advice because if I judged books by their covers I’d never have read some of my favourite novels.

Take this one, for instance.  Thornyhold by Mary Stewart.  At first glance it looks like just another run of the mill, insipid romance novel.  Chocolate box cover art, totally uninspiring.  There is romance in this book, but it’s interwoven very skillfully with a tale of magical realism.  It’s actually rather fab, and although I can’t think what sort of cover art would do it justice, it’s certain that the current cover falls short.

One of my other favourites is The Spellkey Trilogy by Ann Downer (I actually have two copies of this, one copy of the original first part, and a copy of the complete trilogy).

I adore The Spellkey, but the cover art is dreadful and does the book(s) no favours whatsoever.  These books have been a source of inspiration for years (so much so that I ended up with a commission from the author!), and it’s a tragedy that the covers don’t reflect the genius within.

So there we go.  Two of my favourite novels, and a very rambling post!

Thanks for taking the time to visit my blog for this week’s Weekword.  Don’t forget to pop by and see all the other participants too!

I’m nominating Sally at Sow & Sew to pick the next word (sorry Sally!), so please visit her blog on Monday to find out what the next word is.

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