enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

  • Aprilbooks

    Real Food: What to Eat and Why, Lottery, Born to Run

    It's been awhile since I have shared what I'm reading. Truth be told, I have just been re-reading (and re-reading) a lot of books that I have around here lately. Very boring. But the books above are coming soon to an iPad near me. (Although first I need the iPad. And then I need to confirm they are all available on it.) I'm very excited about each one and will be sure to do a wrap up once they've been devoured read.

    What's on your list? Does anyone use their iPad as an e-reader? Good? Fail?

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    a couple things from Blogland that made me smile the past few days :

    And that card in the photo just made me laugh. It's framed in our kitchen and came from here.

  • Great news! I have returned to the land of the living.

    (Well, if you consider sitting in a t-shirt amidst a pile of tissues and empty Gatorade bottles the land of the living.)

    I have been "under-the-weather" for about two weeks with a cold that Paul picked up. But then Wednesday morning I awoke in a mild state of death. I should mention, that I rarely get sick. I can count on one hand the number of days of school or work that I have missed for actually being sick. I should also mention, that this was my first time being sick without a mom or a dad who could stay home from work to care for me. I have a husband, but he had to go to work to care for other sick people. It's apparently one of those "the cobbler's wife goes unshod" situations.

    So anyway.

    After a sleepless (and sweaty night) I woke up at 5:00am with a fever of 103.3 and an aching throat, but there wasn't much we could do about it. Paul kissed my forehead and I mumbled something incoherent and came up with a plan to get myself to the convenience store down the street when I "felt better" for some Gatorade.

    Fastforward to 9:00am, I still feel terrible but there is no way around this trip to the store.

    I "get dressed" and take the elevator down to the main lobby of our apartment building.

    And this is where it all comes crumbling down.

    Literally.

    Everything started to fade to black as the elevator doors opened. I have never blacked out or fainted before so I didn't know what to do (other than panic, obviously) so I walked into the middle of the lobby and started pathetically calling out "help!" Although my throat hurt so bad that "help!" was coming out as sort of a whisper. I was trying to call 911, but my damn iPhone has no buttons so I didn't know where the buttons were (plus, in retrospect, I would have needed to log in).

    I really couldn't see anything. Paul keeps asking if things were blurry. But there WERE NO THINGS. Just darkness.

    What felt like ages later, but was probably 15 seconds, the sweet maintenance lady came into the lobby. I can only imagine what the scenario looked like. I have no memories after this point and the next thing I know, I'm sitting on the couch with my vision restored.

    I explained to the lady that Paul was at work and I was sick and trying to go get Gatorade. Then I gave her $10 and she went and picked some up for me. I could have kissed that lady, but then she would be sick too, so that would be a lame reward. (I am seriously so grateful for her though. I need to write up a thank you card and bake some cookies stat.)

    So after that, Wednesday continued to suck. Paul determined that with the crazy fever and inability to swallow, I had gotten myself severely dehydrated which resulted in the black out. He diagnosed me with strep throat based on the crazy amount of puss in the back of my mouth.* (Good Times.)

    My fever broke last night (BTW – is there anything so simultaneously awesome and disgusting as waking up in a pool of your own sweat?) and since then, things have been a bit better. I have started antibiotics and Paul made me chug (drinking game style) two 32oz Gatorades.

    And just like that, I'm on the mend. And feeling sort of obsessed with the power of fluids.

    *Really because I have four out of four of the centor criteria.

  • Today I am answering more questions from this post. A general Q&A will follow in the next few weeks.

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    Love seeing how your mini-books come together. Maybe reveal how you go about mixing album elements together.

    I got a few questions on mini books. I'm stepping out of my Blogger Jeans to pull on my Saleswoman Pant-suit to tell you that everything you ever wanted to know about how I make mini books is included in this BIG mini workshop PDF. I put all my knowledge into that class and it's instantly available for $20. I am going to continue to blog mini books as I make them, but the "process" is reserved for workshop students and PDF purchasers. Thanks for your interest!

    Give a how you got started/serious about starting a blog and what are top 5-10 thing you do that have made it successful up to this point!

    I started blogging when I was 20 and a junior in college. I was never serious about it and I blogged because it was fun to put all my ideas out there. I started getting REALLY serious about it in the past year and a half as it became a bigger part of my job.

    Here's the top three things that I think make my blog successful. 1) I have kept it very true to me. It bounces all over the place (from paper to holiday crafts to home decor to sewing) because I bounce all over the place. 2) I make a point to respond quickly to emails and comments and I think readers appreciate that. 3) My blog is a huge part of my life. After almost 5.5 years of nearly daily posting I cannot imagine being without it. You have to LOVE blogging if you want others to LOVE your blog.

    I would like a blog about how you pick your color schemes and the process that you go through to implement that color scheme throughout.

    Great question. I am going to sit on this one and write a full post about how I pick colors for home decor and sewing projects. If you are wondering how I pick colors for minibooks, that is included in the minibook workshop PDF.

    I would love to see how you find ideas to blog about.

    Everything I do is a "can I blog about this?" moment. Seriously. Everything. I have blogged for so long that it's second nature to write posts in my head as things are happening. I am never not thinking about blogging, which sounds overwhelming, but I think it's sort of background noise at this point. 🙂

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    I would like to hear about what happens to all your homemade decorations after the season ends. You seem to have new ideas and new color palates for each holiday. Will you reuse your holiday decorations? Do you toss them so you can make new ones next year? Do you store them in case you want to reuse them?

    I save all the decorations that I make in a big plastic box. At the beginning of the next holiday season, I go through the box and decide which will be displayed again and which I am ready to toss or store for the next year. No drama. Someday we will have a bigger house to fill and little ones that remember the decorations from year to year. Then it will be more important to me to keep the same thing becaue they hold tradition & memories. Right now, I enjoy the process of making the decorations more than I like the decorations.

    I'd be curious to hear more about the blogging aspect of your business. How have blog topics changed as your readership has grown? How do you find the balance between sharing info about your personal life vs. keeping things private and such.

    Great question. The blog fuels my business. It directs readers to my shop and workshops. Because of this, it has become more polished. Less late night posts. Less random posts. Less "these are all my thoughts." It was interesting to hear that people like all that randomness and so I am working on bringing more of me and more of that into the space. As for keeping things private – I don't share a lot of the negatives in my life on the blog. It's not super intentional, but I think I do it because I have a great support system. Between my parents, Paul and email chains, I am able to work through stuff before I feel the need to toss it up here.

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    i am always interested on how different people keep from getting burnt out when they have a range of creative skills and interests, how jumping from a scrapbook to photography to sewing doesn't reach the point of being so 'chaotic,' for lack of a better term, that it becomes un-fulfilling. this is something i struggle with.

    I don't force anything. I think the fastest way to burn out is to make yourself finish a project or to break up your days so you spend a set amount of time on X, Y or Z. I jump from thing to thing in order to avoid burn out and am more than happy to let something else sit on a shelf for a year until I am interested in it again. It's sort of hard with blogging because I think some people are here because they think I am a "scrapbooker" and are looking for scrapbook projects. But, to stay sane, I have to pick what I want to do over what people might want to see. At the moment, creating pages and layouts doesn't appeal to me in the least, so I don't force it which helps me find other creative paths.

    It doesn't get too chaotic because I am pretty organized. Everything has a place, so when I stop one project in the middle I just tuck it away.

    Not sure if this would warrant a post but I've been curious to know whether you were ever caught up on the whole design team thing in the crafting industry (manufacturers, challenge blogs, etc).

    I totally was for awhile. I used to create scrapbook pages specifically for magazine calls (and they never were picked up because you could tell they were forced). However, I was published a few times – (maybe 5?) and it was always very exciting. I was also into message boards and the challenge blogs. But then, I started blogging more seriously and the need subsided a bit. I think twitter/reading blogs has taken the place of message boards – at least for me.

    But, it's also funny you should ask, because I just applied for the Fiskar's design team. I have no idea if I am what they are looking for, but we'll see! If I never mention it again, assume I didn't get picked.

    I'm always having trouble planning out my posts for the week or even the whole month. I'd like to know how you schedule in posts & how far you plan. Your posts are so fun & creative & you don't seem to have weekly features.

    My best piece of advice is to just keep a list. Make a big calendar. Jot down ideas when they come to you. Keep track of other posts on various blogs and use those ideas. Google search for "blog topic ideas".

    As mentioned above, I am always thinking of blog posts. I look at the month as a whole when I start figuring out what I am going to talk about everyday. You are right, I don't have weekly features, but I have monthly features like she & he, 40 loaves, 26 Projects and updates on my 2011 album. Plus I do an around here post once a month and I LOVE posts too. So right there that's at least six posts that I don't have to start from scratch on every month.

    How do you, as someone who makes a living being creative, keep the desire for perfection in check so that it doesn't keep you from being productive? Or, is that not a challenge for you?

    I am not a perfectionist. I missed that piece of DNA. Of course, I have standards for my products and I care very much about how things look, but I'm not a measurer. Or a re-doer. Or a worrier (when it comes to crafts). I usually know a project isn't "me" if I am spending a lot of time fidgeting with it.

    I'd love to know your "creative" background – if you have any formal 'training', any hobbies, etc.

    Let's see : I took a black and white photography class in high school and again in college. I took a few bookbinding workshops while I worked at Paper Source. I took a letterpress class when we lived in Maryland. Nothing super formal. I like the idea of workshops that you crank out on a Saturday afternoon. I would love to take screenprinting and more photography classes. Hopefully while Paul is deployed I will be able to keep myself busy through some of those. Anyone have cool classes in their area?

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    Any crafter organizational tips? It's a big hang up right now, since I have a new space that needs tidying and not a lot of time.

    Make a place for EVERYTHING. Hang a peg board. Go through your supplies at least twice a year and donate things that you haven't touched in a year. If you have materials and you can't think of a project to use them in, chuck 'em. I am ruthless when I clear out my supplies and I think that keeps the excess to a minimum.

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    What are simple ways to stay on top of nurturing your creative side, especially if you go into a different sort of industry (though I realize this whole blog taps into that idea)

    Believe that it's worth it. I think "creative time" gets seen as a luxury and is usually the first thing to cut when you need more time in your day. I understand that but really believe it's necessary. Everyone has creative muscles, but some people work them harder. The more you work them, the stronger they get and the "easier" it all becomes. Don't write off doodling or surfing Pinterest or listening to music or wandering a craft store as a waste of time. It's all fueling your creativity. At least, that's what I think.

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    In early March, I bought a big antique trunk with the hope that it could serve as a coffee table in our living room. When I got it home, I realized it's way too tall for that purpose, but instead is going to work as a new TV console.

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    The old lining was in pretty bad shape. I ripped it all out and vacuumed the inside to get it as clean as possible. Then it sat open for a few weeks as I tried to get the "old" smell out of it.

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    Yesterday, the chartreuse & white striped fabric I ordered to recover the inside arrived and I spent the afternoon figuring out how to cut and hem the fabric correctly so it filled the space. It was a long and boring process, but ended up working out okay. It's certainly not perfect, but it's clean and complete.

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    I used a staple gun and bookbinding glue to hold the whole thing together. It spent the night drying out completely and I am pleased (and surprised) with how well the bookbinding glue held the fabric in place.

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    I am going to be filling up the trunk with a bunch of stuff that got displaced when I reorganized my office closet last week and then it will be our new TV stand – I'll share photos when I get the new living room together. I have big plans for that space in the next few weeks.

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    40loaves

    Bread no. 7 : focaccia bread

    Adjustments : I cut the recipe in half and substituted 1/4 C of white flour with wheat. I also cut the olive oil down a bit.

    Notes : We’ve made this before and were happy to revisit it. The plan was to save some for pesto chicken sandwiches, but it made too good of a snack on its own. I need to make another batch.

    Review : Awesome, but I should have kept the recommended amount of olive oil.

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    We are coming up on our one year anniversary. Which obviously coincides with the one year anniversary of our honeymoon. Which coincides with the one year mark of when we first tried Poisson Cru. The image above is our first dish of it while in Bora Bora.

    We've been trying to think of a good way to celebrate the anniversary and one of the things we considered was attempting to remake our favorite Tahitian dish at home. While on the trip, Paul was convinced we could make it "all the time" when we got back home.

    Obviously, one thing led to another and we started a love affair with pesto instead.

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    But the anniversary idea was moved up when last Wednesday, Paul had a rare day off of work and we went to a fish market to pick up some raw tuna. A google search later we landed on this recipe from a Bora Bora trip advisor forum. (I have to say, searching for Poisson Cru recipes is kind of sad. They all start out with something along the lines of "this is not nearly as good as the real dish made in Tahiti, but if you're desperate, you might as well give it a shot")

    Obviously, we were desperate.

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    In fact, I pulled the above photo up on our TV while we ate and it felt like we were there. (That's a lie, but a pretty good idea for next time.)

    But seriously, this was good food. It was better than I remember. And that white serving dish we received as a wedding gift from Crate & Barrel was a perfect shell looking vessel to hold it.

    We might have stumbled on a new April-pre-anniversary tradition.

  • JUSTSTARTLISTED

    Click here to visit.

    And speaking of starting : MOO.com is currently offering 25% off all printed products through April 11.* I just purchased more business cards, (like on Tuesday) but am considering ordering a few more sets while they are on sale.

    Happy Saturday!

  • hello there.

    My name is Elise Joy Blaha Cripe. I think the internet is one of the greatest inventions of all time. Right after peanut butter on apple slices & happy hour.

    The most important thing I have done to date was get married to my favorite person, Paul. Planing the wedding was almost as awesome as the celebration itself. You can read about our total DIY event here. We currently live in San Diego, California.

    I am a big believer in the go for it. Set a goal. Write it down. Make it work.

    I am beginning to realize a big goal of mine: to make what I love my job. This website is where I share my projects, collaborations and items that I make. Please visit my blog for the day-to-day updates.

    Have a good day. enjoy it. love, elise.

    PS : here is my resume.