enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

  • CHAbound

    I'm super excited to drive to Anaheim bright and early this morning to wander around, meet some blog friends in Real Life and look at craft supplies. I'll be the wide-eyed one – please say "hi" if you see me!! I'll be tweeting and sharing photos all day and then hope to do a big post of the rad stuff I am bound to see later this week.

    And hey! Fun fact : five years ago, I did this exact same thing only I was much more awkward back then. 😉

    fonts above are Kamera Dings, Lobster 1.4 & Ariel Black.

  • Plwk4

    Week four and I still love this project.

    Week4fullspread

    (click to enlarge & it will be a [somewhat] clearer image)

    It's addicting. Over the top addicting. When I look back at the past four weeks I have a happy reminder that even though I am practically pulling my hair out with the waiting for Paul, I am living too. I am staying busy. I am staying creative.

    I have been surprised that my old love of scrapbooking is coming back with this project. I know that the "point" of Project Life is to simplify the scrapbooking process. I think it's awesome that it does that for some people. But for someone like me, who takes a lot of photos and writes a ton, but doesn't really put them all together that often anymore, this project feels like a new creative adventure. The last thing on my mind is simplifying. Instead, it's re-figuring out my style and becoming creative with memory keeping again. It's awesome.

    Wk4right

    The usual suspects are filling this album again this week. I downloaded the Mumford & Sons album and it's been on repeat the past few days. The "awake my soul" script was painted while video chatting with Paul. I learned how to paint thanks to Kal Barteski's script school.

    And the quote is of course from a song of theirs too. I have been getting lots of questions about the quotes. Here's the skinny : I find them. Usually on pinterest. I jot them down and tack them on my bulletin board. Then when one really shouts at me, I type it up in PSE on a 3×4 canvas. I use Bebas font. I leave out one or two of the words and then after printing and cropping, I hand write it in. I am considering making some of these quotes a free download, but they will never be for sale. I don't own these quotes and Bebas is a free non-commercial use font. 

    Wk4left

    The blurred out image is a hilarious email Paul sent to a group of our friends about his homecoming. I copied it into PSE and printed it super tiny so it would fit. It had to be blurred because of dates.

    Plwk4closeup

    I worked on a project this week where I used a lot of those Amy Tangerine chipboard letter stickers. I love how they look together in a full sentence on top of a photo. Oh, and that image looks odd because my printer started to run out of ink in the middle of it. I decided to roll with it anyway.

    Plwk4detail2

    The glitter "E" is c/o Design Editor. I added it to my photo before printing. I am kind of obsessed with these letters and can already tell they will be making lots of appearances in my album this year.

    Plwk4detail

    I ordered miniprints from Printstagram awhile ago and they arrived this week. I purposely chose "generic" non-week specific images so I can use them all sorts of ways. I anticipate more of them will make appearances in this album throughout the year. Above is a photo of some of them. I then wrote on one, cropped it a bit and stapled it to the photo.

    Title

    I also wanted to share what I added to the front of the album this week. (See my full title page here.) The Project Life albums come with a plastic protector thing. I wanted to keep it in the album to protect the pages, but I also wanted it fancied up a bit.

    Calendar

    So when I took down the January page from my big wall calendar, I trimmed around the "2012" section and adhered it right to the plastic. I'll probably do the same thing to the back of it when I take down February.

    Plwk4full

    So yes! That's it. Wonderful adventure, this project. I am headed up to Sacramento this week and will be bringing the whole album plus a paper trimmer and supplies with me. That's a little obsessive, I know. But "Obsessive" is my middle name.

    supplies / Paper Source circle label, Martha Stewart & Avery labels, digital glitter E c/o Design Editor, circle accents c/o Scrapbook Circle, American Crafts patterned paper & letter stickers, Design A page protectors, Clementine core kit, washi tape from SMASH & happytape.com, Bebas quote font. I use a Fiskars corner rounder (it's not amazing, but it's lasted the longest of any corner rounder I've ever had). I am using a Zig Millennium 0.1 pen and Recollections glossy marker throughout this album.

    Confused by Project Life? Start here. See all my Project Life posts here.

  • Yarn-bottles

    I may or may not have done a happy dance yesterday while taking pictures of this project. This is PROJECT TWENTY THREE. And I have absolute set in stone plans for the last three projects. Which means…

    I AM GOING TO FINISH.

    It was a huge deal for me to get these 26 projects completed. I have set birthday goals for the past four years and I have never actually succeed in finishing half of my goals. So hooray. Serious hooray.

    Bottles3

    It seems like 2012 is the year of the black and white. I wonder when and if I am going to get tired of this color combination?

    Bottles2

    I saw yarn bottles pinned (here's the original source and tutorial) at 4:50pm on Wednesday and by 4:51 I was drinking a beer so I could start on this project. At first I made two wrapped beer bottles. But they were too similar and didn't look quite right. So some digging in the recycle bin on Thursday morning provided a wine bottle. The height difference helps, I think.

    The concept is simple enough, but each took about a half hour – 45 minutes to actually wrap. It was tricky stuff getting started and then going around the "shoulders" of the bottle. Lots of patience needed for this one. For the alternating black and white, I just wrapped two strands of yarn around at the same time. That one was actually much easier because there were no ends to deal with.

    Bottles

    Without the green plants sticking out of them, they are quite awkward, so I picked some stuff from my front yard. I should do that more often.

    Fullmantle

    And here's the full mantle. It will be "complete" when there is a driftwood wreath hanging in front of that mirror. That's next.

    other DIY projects shown : copper leaf canvas, string art ampersand. That framed photostrip was just made by adhering the strip to a piece of thick white cardstock. That wooden love is from here. Remember, this cute blog has the full tutorial.

    Dottedline

    26projectslogosmallThis is project 23 of 26.

    I am attempting to tackle 26 personal craft projects before I turn 27 on 02.22.12. You can follow my progress here on the blog or on pinterest.

    See project 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19,  20, 21 & 22.

  • Ejbc

    Right now, I find Sundays to be my most productive work day. I can wrap up and write and photo-edit and clear my inbox like it's my job on Sundays. It sets the tone for the next four days. And then Thursday afternoon I sort of coast into my version of the weekend. This will be changing when Paul gets home. I'll match his schedule so we can enjoy as much time as possible together.

    Right now, I am celebrating living in this new house for eight weeks. I drove up PCH eight Thursdays ago with a smile on my face. It's unreal how simultaneously slow and quick time passes. It makes me feel old.

    Right now, I am finishing up two projects. One custom invitation job for a friend and one mini-album for a fun blog.

    Right now, I have a really great feeling about February. Thanks to a bad habit, I have already flipped all my calendars. It's going to be adventure-filled, for sure. I'll be up in Sacramento for a while and then I have friends coming for a long weekend. There is a parade of birthdays to be celebrated in February, including my own.

    Right now, I love that I can see from my office window when the mailman arrives.

    Right now, I think about Paul coming home and I start to cry. I imagine texting our friends and family while I wait in anxious excitement for him to get off the plane. I imagine seeing him in real life and getting butterflies in my stomach. I remember getting the same butterflies when I worked in Georgetown and knew he was coming to pick me up to go to dinner. I would be in the middle of helping a customer and he'd come in un-noticed. Then I'd catch his eye and my stomach would flip. And that was after we'd spent only nine hours apart.

    Right now, I fall asleep thinking about my morning coffee. I think that might be considered an addiction.

    Right now, I am a fan of Once Upon a Time. It's a pretty rad show. It has similar music to Lost which is kinda freaking me out. I also watched the first episodes of Smash and Alcatraz. Of all of them, Alcatraz seems like the one Paul would be willing to add to our weekly line up. So that's exciting.

    Right now, I look forward to seeing this new documentary, SOMM. Should be amazing. I feel like it will be one of our favorites. And one of those movies (like Bottleshock) that cannot be enjoyed without a few bottles of wine and a plate of cheese.

    Right now, I go to the beach everyday. Sometimes to run. Sometimes to look for driftwood. Sometimes to walk. Sometimes just to stare at the waves. I have purposely never watched a complete sunset. I actually turn my back on them and head to the house if I am ever caught on the beach at the wrong time. I promised Paul that is something we'd do while toasting our new place and our return to normal life together.

    Right now, I am content. But oh man, am I counting the days.

    Dottedline

    ADHERE

    Want to promote your blog or business on my sidebar? I am currently taking sponsors for February. January was awesome traffic-wise and I expect next month to be the same. I've got the 26 projects to wrap up and a lot of good stuff happening. Go here for details and shoot me an email if you're interested.

  • Dress4

    Sometimes I see stuff on Pinterest and I re-pin and sigh, "someday." Other times I pin something and immediately shut my computer and head to the fabric/craft store. This dress (pinned here and original source/tutorial here) was one of the latter.

    But the result was somehow hilarious and I was wildly entertained on Sunday afternoon as I sewed, tried on and tried to take pictures of this dress. Problem #1 is that I used the wrong fabric. I ended up with a polyester blend that I think is a little too thick and absolutely too static-y. If I did this again, I would look for a better quality fabric than my $3/yard score.

    Problem #2 was during the first try-on, I looked like a melting statue of liberty. No joke, I thought to myself, "at least I have my next Halloween costume." Problem #3 was that before I cut the neck v a bit deeper it looked exactly like I was wearing Paul's scrubs.

    How did I miss that this color was the exact color of the statue of liberty and scrubs until I was wearing it?

    Dress

    But a bit of re-trimming, a belt and a gray cardigan ("put a cardigan on it" is the new "put a bird on it.") helped pull it all together. Although even then, I still had to figure out how to photograph it so I could blog about it and it could count for my 26 projects. (Reason #865 why I am excited to have Paul home is to get my reluctant photographer back.)

    Dress3

    Anyway. The photos above are the best I could get. YES, those are the best. Out of I don't want to tell you how many. But the one below is my favorite. Out of focus and awkward, of course, but I was laughing when I took it and I smile when I see it.

    Dress2

    And so, long story, long, another project complete! As mentioned, if I did this again (and I probably will) I would use legit jersey fabric and probably not "ode-to-lady-libery-teal". I followed the tutorial exactly, except I cut my fabric down a bit so instead of it being 30" wide when I sewed it was about 26 inches.

    Dottedline

    26projectslogosmallThis is project 22 of 26.

    I am attempting to tackle 26 personal craft projects before I turn 27 on 02.22.12. You can follow my progress here on the blog or on pinterest.

    See project 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19,  20 & 21.

  • IMG_4750

    Thank you for your workshop ideas last week. I am letting them all percolate a little bit. I think I am on the verge of something good – but who knows? We'll see what comes out if it. One of the comments from that post sent me off on a bit of a mental tangent and I haven't been able to get it out of my head. And so I wrote this post about it.

    Today I want to talk about staying inspired. Especially as a blogger, but also for life in general.

    To start, I am absolutely not always inspired. Some days all I want to do is sit on the couch and watch Parks & Rec. And some days, I do.

    IMG_1634

    I have been keeping this blog for over six years. That means I have written something almost everyday for way too many days. I have had times when my brain was overflowing with good ideas and times when I was sure I was done. Shut it down; it's all been said. The most important thing I have done over the past six years is realize that for me, creativity ebbs and flows. It doesn't mean I need to panic when I'm out of ideas, it just means I need to be patient. (It also means I shouldn't start knocking out two posts a day when things are flowing, but for some reason I always forget that.)

    IMG_3151

    The second thing that I always keep in mind that Blogland is not a zero-sum game. I am in competition with exactly no one. There is no limit to the amount of blogs that someone can read and I don't have to try and make my blog "better" than any other site. I can't worry about how many eyeballs a post will receive or how many retweets or pins or likes or +1s or diggs or anything else. It's a vicious, panic-inducing circle to get caught up in and so I do my best to not.

    And usually that really works. Although it also means that I am all over the place. Sometimes I'm writing about bread or fabric or paper or food or decorating (and sometimes that's all in one week). It's impossible for me to explain what my blog is about to a person I just met. (I normally mumble something confusing and change the subject.) But I stick with the "blog about whatever" concept because it's authentic. After six years, I have realized that this blog struggles when I try to fit into a certain mold or write about a specific thing. So I don't. I just write.

    Inspired

    I have decided to make blogging more than just a hobby and because of that, I work to have a post ready every weekday morning. It's semi-non-negotiable. I don't always have an idea on the tip of my fingers and so often, I have to go looking. These are my few favorite ways to get myself inspired :

    Set a new challenge. Big projects are sort of this blog's (and my personal) lifeline. I work best with goals. In the past (and present) that has been everything from decorating a playing card everyday to baking 40 loaves of bread to completing 26 craft projects before my birthday to running a mile a day. I always think I'll be relieved to finish a project, but in reality, without a challenge hanging over my head, I struggle to find a focus and "a point." So for me, challenges are super inspiring. I am already dreaming up the next few to share this spring.

    Inspired2

    Look back on past work. The Internet is vast. There are a lot of people doing a lot of things and that can be inspiring or paralyzing, depending on how you are motivated. Sometimes, when I am searching for a new idea, I am overwhelmed by what everyone else is doing and find that looking at my own work can be helpful in giving me a springboard to jump off. I check out my own photos on flickr, my own scrapbook albums or my own blog archives. Remembering how I looked at something in the past can inspire me in the present.

    Change location. I have said this before, but none of my good ideas come when I am sitting in front of the computer. In fact, I think they start to slip away the second I sit down. This post was developed in my head while I was driving home from the grocery store. Most, if not all, of my product ideas were created while I was watching TV or taking a shower or in the middle of a run. Sometimes (and this is embarrassing) I write posts in my head about an event while said event is happening. I don't really recommend that, but I can't turn it off.

    IMG_1708

    Create boundaries. This is a bit harder to apply to blogging, but awesome to apply to other creative ventures. It can be hard to know where to start with a big project. I have found that narrowing my choices is actually crazy liberating because it helps me to just start. A great example I saw of this recently was on Cakies blog. Ruby and her husband made Christmas gifts for each other. But before they started they asked another couple to set restrictions on what sort of supplies they could use. They each had the same products available and created two wildly different and awesome projects. I also see this concept at work on Project Runway all the time. When the contestants have "no restrictions" the results are often boring. But when they are challenged with making clothes out of car parts? The results are usually fantastic and certainly more interesting. It's easier to think outside the box when you are in a box. Weird, right?

    Inspired3

    Just make stuff. Sometimes what I make is garbage. Sometimes what I write is garbage. It's the only way to get through the bad ideas to the good ideas. I refuse to consider the time spent on a blog post that will never be published or a craft project that hits the trash as "wasted time." It's all part of the process. Write, write, write. Make, make, make. Don't be afraid to cross-out or delete or start over. The more times you mess up, the closer you are to the good stuff. One of my favorite questions is, "What's the worst that can happen?" That really puts things in perspective for me. If the answer isn't that you or someone else will get hurt or die (and with writing or making it usually isn't) it's probably a good idea to go for it.

    Keeping with this theme, here's a post on motivation and here's a semi-recent blogging & crafting Q&A.

  • IMG_8840
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    IMG_9093 IMG_9086
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    My checkerboard blanket is growing!

    This was the best distraction idea ever. I don't really take on "long-term" projects so something that takes longer than a week feels like forever. But I am loving it. I love how it's coming together. I love that it's perfectly imperfect. I love that I'll remember where I was when I made it. I love that it's turning into the softest and stretchiest blanket we have.

    I have four rows complete. I am planning on making at least seven, maybe eight rows. We'll see. It's big enough now that I can cover up with it while I work on the next row. That's rad. I am using a very simple garter stitch because that is all I know how to do. (My grandma taught me when I was eight.)

    I have been just making rows that alternate boxes of black and white. I forgot to count early on and don't really have the patience to keep track so to be sure the boxes are about the same size, I line them up with the ones they'll be next to in the blanket (see third photo).

    I knit seven boxes as one long row then connect them together with a big needle (see second photo) and the yarn from the end of the strip. I watched a few youtube videos to figure out the best way to connect them, but I think they were for a different type of stitch so it wasn't very helpful. After some trial and error, I just started threading the yarn through alternating edge loops. Some look a bit better than others, but all of them are holding together. I am tying everything off carefully and then tucking the excess thread pieces back in so they don't unravel.

    As mentioned, it's far from perfect, but it's awesome. Black and white is absolutely my new favorite color combination.

  • Plw3

    Week three and I still love this project.

    Fullspread

    (click to enlarge & it will be a [somewhat] clearer image)

    Right now, my plan of attack is to work on it all week long. Almost everyday I print photos and rearrange things. I am sure this will change throughout the year as my schedule becomes busier, but right now I really like it. This week was a strange one and my mood fluctuated quite a bit. I made sure to capture some of that with my (hidden) journaling and some photos. If I'd waited until the end of the week to finish things up, I don't think I would have included the "downtime."

    Plwk3right

    The bottom left pocket has a few self portraits and another hidden text tucked into a Clementine kit folded card, just like last week.

    I also slipped in a business card this week and used an arrow paper clip (from Office Depot) to hold it in place. I plan on leaving that spot alone next week so the back of the card will be visible. I stuck with my "this week" journaling and added some digital text to the bottom right photo just like in week one. I am hoping to use a few of the same "tricks" consistently throughout this album – no sense in re-inventing the wheel. (That cute red and white striped dress in the small pocket is my new favorite and c/o Stylemint.)

    Plw3left

    Pretty simple left side. I took pictures using photobooth on my computer to share my new haircut and printed them in an about 3×4 grid to clip to the patterned paper. I added the business card from the brunch place I went to with my girlfriends on Monday. (That's reason no. 87 I love this project; I finally have a place for all the paper I pick up.) I got a letter from Paul (technically Saturday of the week before, but whose counting?) and I trimmed the envelope and stuck it in there. I'm happy to have his handwriting and I like that now I'll remember what his address was while deployed. That 2012 graphic was from a post last week.

    Plw3insert

    And then, this week I added an insert to the two page spread.

    Plwk3detail

    I don't have any fancy page protectors around the house but I did have some of the cheap 8.5×11 ones from an office supply store. I trimmed it down so it fit an 11×6 paper and then used metallic gold thread and a zig-zag stitch to close off the side. I added an American Crafts file tab marker (c/o Scrapbook Circle) to add extra detail and share the journaling date.

    Plwk3insert3

    The journaling for that page was taken from a post last week. I copied and pasted it into PSE and printed it out onto white cardstock. I added the "perspective shift" by hand. The photos are from the last few weeks and were taken using the instagram app. I printed six of them as a 4×6 photo and then trimmed them into two strips.

    Plwk3insert2

    The backside of the insert was more blog content. I printed the photos from my driftwood post and hand wrote the text on top of them. That black and white strip is old 7gypsies gaffer tape that I've had forever.

    Plwk3detail3

    And that's it! Really, I am adoring this project. Reminder : I print all my photos at home on an HP Photosmart 2575 using Office Depot semi-gloss photo paper because that makes it easy for me to work on this project throughout the week.

    supplies / Paper Source circle label, Martha Stewart & Avery labels, Recollections gold dot paper, black and white letter stickers c/o Scrapbook Circle, American Crafts patterned paper, ribbon & "E" letter sticker, Design A page protectors, Clementine core kit, Bebas quote font. I use a Fiskars corner rounder (it's not amazing, but it's lasted the longest of any corner rounder I've ever had). I am using a Zig Millennium 0.1 pen and Recollections glossy marker throughout this album.

    Confused by Project Life? Start here. See all my Project Life posts here.

  • NEXT

    I would love to teach a new and different online workshop later this spring. I have ran the blog design workshop a few times now (you can still sign up for that here) and after this last round, I am going to be ready for the next thing.

    But I am stumped on what would be the best. Is there anything I blog about that you'd like to learn more about? Are there any classes you'd be interested in seeing from me? I am open to everything. My best workshops have been developed when I had not a clue where to start.

    Feel free to email me (elise.blaha AT gmail.com) or leave a comment below. Thank you, thank you.

    Heads up : I have already taught scrapbooking with non-traditional supplies, art journaling and minibooks in an online format. PDFs for all of these past classes can be purchased here.

  • IMG_8991
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    New40loaves

    Bread no. 33 : x bread

    Adjustments : I substitutes out 1 C white flour for wheat and used a bit less butter. I also brushed a tiny bit of olive oil and salt over the top before baking.

    Notes : I am not sure what to call this bread because on the Pioneer Woman's site it's just called "the bread." I went with "x bread" because of the "x" cut on top before baking. Mine looks so different than hers – but I love the "detail" on top.

    Review : So good. I can no longer keep track of my favorite breads (I'm anxiously waiting to finish this project up so I can go back and write about the best ones), but this must be up there. And yes, in that last photo, you can see the steam (smoke?) rising from it. I had a bite while it was fresh out of the oven and amazing. Perfect crust.