enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

  • TREES

    This idea has been in my head since September and last week I tried it out. I know it's way too early to get out holiday decorations. But it's not too early to make holiday decorations. These were inspired by the awesome woods trees that seem to be everywhere this year including West Elm.

    They are more tedius to put together than I expected. Because the cone is round and the chips have square edges, it takes a bit of manuvering to cover the whole thing. Overall though, I thought they were worth the effort.

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    Gather supplies :

    • a kraft cone
    • foam brushes – one for glue, one for paint.
    • a few colors of craft paint – I'm showing four, but I used two.
    • glitter
    • balsa wood chips – my orignal plan was to cut these out of large sheets, but then I found little bags of pre-cut ones at Michael's. It took almost three bags for two trees. And they are cheaper at Michael's.
    • adhesive – I used PVA glue which is my go to for most projects. It dries fast and clear and is super strong.

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    Paint your balsa wood chips. I did two different shades of gold craft paint and then covered a few in gold glitter by dousing them first in PVA then shaking the glitter on top. Paint more than you think you'll need and then you'll still need more.

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    Smear PVA on the bottom of cone and begin applying wood chips. Work your way up the cone.

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    Keep going and going. Be sure your glue dries clear.

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    When you get near the top, it might help to add some unfinished balsa wood chips to make the cone less round and more squared off. Let them dry for a few seconds and then add painted chips on top.

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    And TA-DA! Trees! At the very end, I went back and added a few more painted wood chips with a hot glue gun to fill in gaps. That helped complete their "tree" shape, but these are perfect because of their imperfections.

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    Back when moving to San Diego was still a dream, I was already making plans for hosting Thanksgiving for our immediate families. As soon as we got the official orders, I spread the word that we would love to have everyone over.

    Trust me, there was no need for invitations.

    But what's the fun of throwing a party without a real invite?

    Plus, I only had to make four.

    These came together quickly. I cut out simple leaf shapes from felt, ran them through my sewing machine and attached them to kraft cardstock with a tape runner. I added the text with a Sharpie.

    Simple simple. But still rad because everyone loves getting mail and I have a ridiculous envelope collection that needs to be put to good use.

  • The headboard is demanding a new quilt.

    The weather in San Diego is laughing at us : "a QUILT, you crazy woman? How about a bag of ice in front of a fan?" It's been about 90* outside this week. I'm not joking. This is fall in Southern California, apparently.

    But eventually we may want something covering us while we sleep. Especially if the Navy decides to send us back to a place that recognizes seasons. And that something should look good with our headboard. (Right now our duvet is navy and navy + black is not fantastic.)

    Enter the quilt mission.

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    I bought this book because it had good reviews and that top left photo is exactly what I want except the wrong colors and slightly wrong pattern.

    It arrived Wednesday, and let me tell you : this book is insane.

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    Usually I buy craft books to get new ideas and see pretty photos. I don't spend too much time actually reading them unless I am confused on how to do something. This book, however, is basically a text book with amazing images. If there was a college class called "Quilting 101" this would be the required reading. And I would skip every class, read this book and then ace the final.

    I absolutely love it. And I now have so much to learn. (I have already learned that you cannot just "wing-it" with quilt making.) I have no idea how long this project is going to take. And if we want to have a baby in the next few years, I should start on her quilt yesterday so I can give it to her when she goes to college.

    But oh man, I'm inspired. If I wasn't so daunted by finding the right fabric I'd be sewing right now.

  • Color

    Like most people, I am motivated by money. For sure. But, also like most people, I have learned that that can't be all there is. I have quit jobs that paid more money than I am making now because they wore me down instead of built me up. I stopped hosting advertisers on this blog because the money they brought in wasn't worth the pressure I felt to blog and worry about their businesses success in addition to mine. I am most motivated by money when I figure out how to make it. When I can plan, produce, sell and collect.

    So I am my own boss. And I have a few tricks I use to stay inspired and motivated while working at home.

    To begin with, I eased into it. For awhile, making stuff and blogging was my side job. Then when I needed more time to work at home, I went down to part time at my out of the house job. When we moved to San Diego, Paul and I decided I would try full time at home until Christmas to see if working for myself could make sense for us. I think it was good that I had some practice and didn't fall into the "all my time is free time and therefore I can't get started" trap.

    I keep a lot of to-do lists. Monthly, daily, weekly, you name it. I have a loose editorial calendar for what I am going to be posting here. These lists help keep me on track. They include mundane tasks (post office) and aspirational tasks (build headboard).

    I take things off my to-do lists frequently. It's one thing to have big ideas and goals. But it's another to keep something on the list you are not accomplishing or even taking steps toward. I have found that continuning to include big projects that I can't get to makes me feel bad about the whole list. They put a damper on the other things I could and should be doing. So without any regret, I cross them off the list. Recent examples : I decided to skip a sewing a new bag that had been on my list for over a month and I completely dropped this "daily art" project.

    Maybe someday I'll get to these projects. Maybe I will not. But as a result of clearing the space mentally in my brain and physically on the list, I have opened room for new ideas and feel better about getting through other tasks and projects.

    I set deadlines. I set them for my personal projects and I share them, either here on the blog or with Paul. I set them with clients on custom projects by emailing a date that they can expect a proof, the final project, a sample, my next email, etc. I shoot for a reasonable deadline I know I can not only meet but usually beat. Knowing the date that I owe something removes the "someday I'll get to it" aspect and helps me stay on track. (And if it's a personal project that I don't accomplish on time, maybe it's time to forget that project for awhile.)

    I change the plan. Sometimes when I don't feel motivated to accomplish something I ask myself what the hold up is. Am I scared it won't sell? Am I bored with the idea? Do I not have enough time? Do I have too much time? What's wrong with the plan? Example : I was having trouble getting photos from our honeymoon scrapbooked. I had planned for months to make a digital album out of them. But when it came down to opening up Photoshop and playing with the photos, I hit a wall. Finally, I asked myself why I couldn't get it together and make the book. And realized that Bora Bora plus the computer didn't mesh or inspire. Just because a digital book was the plan all along didn't make it work. So I switched gears and made a 4×6 paper scrapbook instead. Once I got started, the book came together in less than 24 hours.

    I practice the "one-touch rule" as much as possible. When an email pops up, I immediately (or at the next inbox check) delete it, archive it or respond to it. Sometimes I let something sit in my inbox for a day as I try to figure out my response, but 24 hours is it. Junk mail gets recycled in a bin by our mailbox, it doesn't even make it's way to the apartment. Regular mail gets opened and read, filed, answered, displayed, etc. Keeping the clutter low both digitally and in real life helps me feel on top of things, not behind on them.

    I break up my days. Sometimes this means taking care of stuff around the house in the middle of a "work-day". It also means most days I work on parts of a few different projects instead of one big project. Sectioning helps me stay interested.

    Ultimately though, I love what I do. I am blessed to get to make stuff for a job. I certainly did not always love what I did. But over the past three and a half years, I have made working for myself possible for me. Money, while awesome and necessary, cannot motivate like passion.

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    Here are some books that I have enjoyed on this path to self-employment & staying motivated :

    I have also been super inspired by Kal Barteski and Elsie Flannigan. They make art, work in non-traditional ways and accomplish goals rapid-fire fast. I'm honored to know them through blogland.

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    I'm still adding photos and details to my fall book. October is all wrapped up. It's working well to just keep the pages in order but not bookring-ed in a box under my desk and add to it when I have time. One more month to go and I'll punch holes and call it complete.

    See a few September pages here.

    I have a few kits still for sale here.

    & p.s. thank you for your sweet comments about my "around here" shots yesterday. I am hoping to make workspace images a semi-weekly feature.

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    I tried this new recipe over the weekend. Am a fan.

  • Nov

    I always love the start of a new month.

    October was insanely busy. Paul was on a crazy rotation schedule and I matched it with work hours. Add to that not nearly enough sleep and some pretty intense conversations and things around here felt crazy. I am excited to move forward and hopefully get more rest and feel more in control in November.

    Fingers crossed.

    Lots of goals for the next 30 days. The biggest one : We're hosting Thanksgiving for our families and we're super excited about it. We're still perfecting our menu and I am dreaming up table scape ideas.

    Other than that, I hope to sew my first piece of clothing (I ordered a pattern from here) and sew a new duvet cover to go with our headboard. I also have a lot of custom projects to wrap up and a list of holiday projects I want to share on the blog. And I just ordered supplies for a new shop item that I'm pretty excited about.

    So yeah… November looks busy. But I'm so grateful for work and new ideas.

    Happy, happy November. Let's roll.

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    Randomsale
    Saledeal

    Random items throughout the shop have been marked down 15-30%! Anything marked SALE is helping us celebrate today. Prices will be reduced only through the end of the day and effective only while supplies last.

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    GIVEAWAY WINNERS

    the 2010 holiday book goes to Doris who said "congrats on all of your success! thanks for the chance to win this :)"

    the set of 10 custom cards goes to Christa who said "I love these! Congrats on 2000 orders!"

    If you didn't win, you can still purchase the items! Less exiting, I know, but just as effective.

    Please email me if you won!

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    Thank you for your excitement and support throughout the week. I am so proud to have reached 2000 etsy shop sales and have big plans to continue to expand the shop.

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    And last thing : today is the last chance to sign up for the BIG mini workshop. Class starts bright and early on Monday!

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    When I decided to do the headboard in black and white, I changed my mind about the "art" that I wanted hanging over the bed. Somewhere between wide awake and dreamland, I thought of making simple silhouettes.

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    I picked up unfinished round wood plaques at Michael's

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    & painted them white with what we had on hand : glossy wall paint. It took about three quick coats.

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    I cut profile photos of Paul and I out of black cardstock.

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    I covered the painted wood with a layer of PVA (bookbinding glue) but mod podge would also work great and stuck the image to it.

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    Then coated the whole thing with a thick coat of PVA to add a glossy sheen – it dried clear overnight.

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    Last, I nailed a hanger to the back and hung them on small nails above the bed.

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    Now we just need painted walls so these guys stand out a bit more…

    p.s. that awesome love carving is from this etsy shop.