enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

  • 15weeks

    displaying a small baby bump at 15 weeks.

    so excited to see our little one moving around at my ultrasound yesterday.

    hearing that heartbeat is total magic.

    still reeling from the horrific events in Newtown last week.

    finding this quote relevant this week (and always).

    appreciating this sweet list of simple acts of kindness.

    reading A Short History of Nearly Everything.

    planning to start Dinner: A Love Story next.

    beginning to pack for two weeks in Sacramento.

    eating so many grilled cheese & ham sandwiches.

    drinking so many virgin Bloody Mary's (just tomato juice, ice, fresh squeezed lemon, worchestershire sauce, hot sauce & black pepper).

    lighting our Christmas tree around 4:30 every afternoon & loving the glow.

    listening to the Les Miserables soundtrack everyday when I run.

    making plans to see the movie.

    emailing with our relator about house hunting in San Diego next month. (!!!!)

    prepping projects & posts for the next few weeks.

    looking forward to being up with family starting Sunday.

  • Ejbc

    Every year that I have done this "work for myself thing," I've grown as a business person. My work load and responsibility has increased over the years, but overall, it's gotten a bit easier. I am better at juggling the projects, maintaining the blog and making decisions simply because I have had more practice.

    But this year feels like the first year I can look back and say, "Yes, this thing that I learned will help carry me through my career." I have picked up a few concrete lessons in 2012 and I want to share them here today.

    Say no to say yes. I have learned that I have to be more comfortable saying "No." Yep, it's awkward. Yep, I feel guilty. Yep, I hate writing "thank you but no thank you" in an email. But really, at the end of the day, saying "no" is better than me saying "yes" but not really committing fully to a project because it doesn't grab me or make sense for my life or schedule. Saying no to little opportunities (and some big ones) from 3rd parties and my own ideas, opens me up for other chances to say yes to creative projects and business ventures that truly work with my style, personality and passions.

    Look beyond Plan A. I wrote about this in depth in this post a few months back, but this was a huge one for me in 2012. Thousands of dollars were saved because I pushed past a few plans and routines that were working just fine to find something that made more financial sense and saved time. I tend to get very comfortable with the status quo, so making changes and seeking out better options is not something I am likely to do. Seeing the savings on paper this year was a big reminder to make sure that even if I settle for Plan A in the interim, I don't give up on the potentially better Plan B down the road.

    Pursue "just for fun" projects. These are the projects that at the onset have no monetary value. I decide to do them because I want to – not because I think I'll be able to turn them into an income source. As a freelancer (I hate that word) and as a blogger, these projects could be considered "spinning your wheels." When you're spinning your wheels you are not moving forward which means you're not working towards a profit. Not awesome if you're trying to get paid for this gig and definitely not something that you can do everyday all year long. But I have realized that a few "just for fun" projects are necessary for me to stay creative. The 26 Projects and 27 Materials would be considered exactly this. I get blog content out of them and cool stuff for my house for them, but I am not really making money from creating those items. There is no "future life" or "financial value" there as I am not trying to sell versions of them or teach workshops on how to make them.

    But opposite of the 26 Projects and 27 materials is Project Life, which began for me as a "just for fun" adventure. I started at the beginning of the year because I wanted to do something with my photos. It had been a long time since "scrapbooking" in any form had interested me (yep, even minibooks!) and I was excited about something different. From this came two big opportunities in 2012. Becky asked me to design a kit and I started the stamp shop. I would have never gone the stamp direction if I wasn't consistently playing with paper each week and, of course, I would have never gotten the design job if I hadn't attempted and shared my Project Life spreads.

    Don't get me wrong, I absolutely recognize that this is a crazy situation mixed with a large handful of luck and something that will most likely never happen again in my career. But all of these projects – the birthday ones, Project Life, even covering my desk in colorful tape – are a great reminder of the value in pursuing things that I am excited about for no other reason than I am excited about them.

    +

    I imagine it goes without saying that I enter 2013 more nervous than I was was in 2012. Part of me wonders how I could I make anything like this year this happen again. I can sort of see the next six months clearly, but then, of course, everything gets hazy after the baby's due date. It's impossible to plan for such a life upheaval (even such a joyous one!) and I recognize (and folks love to remind me) that even best intentions will mean nothing when I haven't slept in five days, the baby is crying and I can't find my camera charger. 😉

    But man, I am still excited to see what's next. I can't make it all work (that's impossible), but I can figure out how to make it work for us.

    And one thing is for certain, I get an undeniable high from the beginning of a new business year, a fresh planner & an empty income and expenses spreadsheet. They are crazy inspiring and I am so ready to see what will develop in 2013.

    Other posts you might enjoy:

  • Holiday4

    Quick little holiday book update this week.

    Holiday4a

    Again, keeping things simple and letting the patterned papers be design elements.

    Holiday4detail1

    Obvoiously loved that ampersand stamp from Meredith's pop-up shop. Too cute.

    Holiday4b

    I adhered a 4×6 photo of our fridge getting covered in holiday cards to the back of that tabbed card. I loved that the cards I received yesterday all came with Christmas stamps, so I trimmed them down and covered a page. Love that you can see the post marks too.

    Holiday4c

    Added a small photo of a clay ornament to the backside and used a label on that dot overlay to talk about the ornaments.

    Holiday4d

    And then just a few labels, stamps and a photo of the calendar gift wrap I am using this year. Thanks for following along!

    Supplies used : holiday mixed paper book, Evalicious
    embellishments, Pop-Up shop holiday stamps, American Crafts chipboard frame, Office Depot date
    stamp, Paper Source labels, Martha Stewart & Avery labels, Zig Millennium pen, StazOn ink, Colorbox chalk ink. 

  • Ornaments3

    27MATERIALSclay

    Ornaments5

    This project took much too long. Mostly because I didn't have the right tools but was too stubborn to go buy them and make it happen. I have wanted to make clay tree ornaments for the past two months but was really inspired when I saw these on A Beautiful mess a few weeks ago.

    Ornaments4

    I shaped white clay (from Crayola) into round disks and then popped holes in the top. It was air-dry clay and took a few days to completely harden. Then I used various black pens to "practice" writing on them and see what worked. Nothing did. Instead of doing what I should have – buy a black paint pen – I covered them in a layer of mod podge which gave them a smooth glossy surface that actually looked better and took the Sharpie pen I was working with.

    Oranments

    I am pleased with the gloss but this was probably NOT the idea way to go about this project (buy a paint pen!). I knew from the beginning I wanted to use them to document all the places we have lived together as a couple. I wrote our addresses and the dates of our past apartments (and of course our current townhouse – blurred for privacy) and made up a bunch of extras that I will store with our tree decorations so I can add to the collection as we move.

    Ornamentsblank

    Really, these are so simple, but meaningful to our family. It will it be pretty cool when we settle into our "forever home" (at least 12 years from now) and have a Christmas tree full of memories of homes past.

    Ornaments6

    And at least I know I'll always have a black Sharpie on hand to add more addresses. 🙂

    Dottedline

    This is project 17 of 27. I am
    attempting to complete 27 craft projects using 27 different
    materials before I turn 28 on 02.22.13.
    You can follow my progress here on the blog or on pinterest. Birthday challenges are my favorite. You can see the 26 Projects I completed while 26 here and the 27 materials I have used so far here.

  • Plwk36detail2

    I was going to save this until early next year, but I got a request to share before the start, so here we go! If you are about to embark on Project Life in 2013, WELCOME. I am wrapping up 2012 and so excited to dive into next year's album(s).

    These are my thoughts moving forward on what I want to change and what will stay the same. Feel free to refer to this post from early 2012 about how I tackle Project Life on a weekly basis as well as ask questions in the comments.

    What is going to change :

    Plwk39detail

    I am going to be working primarily from the Seafoam kit. This does not mean that I will not be adding extra embellishments. (I absolutely will.) It does not mean that I will not be adding extra paper scraps. (I will.) It does not mean that I will not use many 3×4 photos. (I will.) But it does mean that I will not really be adding too much additional paper from other manufacturers. I will be working cards from the gender neutral Baby Edition kit in once the little one joins the family. (Yep, sticking with gender neutral, even though we'll obviously know the gender. I love the yellow & gray.)

    3titlepage

    Out with the quote cards. Out with the "this week" arrow cards. I loved the quote cards! They were fun! But they are done! It was enjoyable to put them together for a year, but I want to use that extra pocket a week this year for photos and journaling. And no more "this week" cards because by about August, I was SO BORED of them and I plan on using more journaling cards throughout the weekly spreads to tell relevant stories. Remember, I am offering all the quote cards as a free download. They will be up on Christmas Eve.

    Plweddingright

    I want more photos of people! Taking more "action" shots is a goal for 2013. It's going to be difficult this spring with Paul deploying again, but we'll make up for that in the fall when our little one is growing and grinning and being an animated extra member of our family. I also hope to have Paul take 1-2 photos a week while he is deployed and then email them to me to use in our album. This is a huge request – the man DOES NOT take photos. But his life there is so important to get documented and I really hope it works for his schedule to snap a few photos for me. 🙂

    Plwk20insert

    I'd love to include more of the email correspondence between Paul and I. Email is our main event while he's deployed and though some of our emails are basic and some are more detailed, all are love letters of a sort because we are so far apart and craving that connection. I will most likely not show the specifics, but I'll share how I include the text into our album.

    Plwk36left

    I want it to be BETTER. More cohesive. More thought out. More awesome. This doesn't mean "perfect." I am still going to mess up handwriting, spell things wrong and run out of printer ink halfway through a photo but stick it in the album anyway. I can't even pretend to go for perfection on a project like this that I work on for a whole year. But "better" I can aim for. Clarifilying here because I got a comment about how difficult it will be to improve on my album with a newborn – I do NOT consider "better" to equal "more complicated." I'll be very happy if my album gets more simple, but feels more cohesive, if that makes sense. 🙂

    What is going to stay the same :

    Projectlifepalmsprings

    I am going to use mostly Design A pocket pages again and add in other styles when necessary. I imagine that 2013 will take up three albums just like 2012 did. At this point, I will NOT be doing a seperate album for the baby. Someone brought up the excellent point that if I do it for the first baby, I have to do it for the second baby and that really makes my head spin. This is our family album and will include the whole family (and probably a few less photos of the garden and craft projects). Or maybe it will just include TONS more inserts.

    Plwk27right

    I will continue to use Project Life as my main documentation source. I do not do any traditional scrapbooking and rarely tackle minibooks anymore. It's just a personal preference and style change that I have joyfully embraced. You can only do what works for you. And right now, Project Life, plus a few blurb books thrown in once a year (see one and two from 2012) is more than perfect for me.

    Plwk41

    I plan on working on this album throughout the week again this year. That worked for me in 2012 and we'll see if it works in 2013. Again, I know my life will flip with the baby, so all I can really do is try and stay on top of this project. I am not going to worry one bit if it doesn't work or or I am struggling to find a schedule. THIS PROJECT IS JUST PAPER & PHOTOS. THE BABY IS … a BABY! Perspective is perhaps the most important ingredient in Project Life.

    Plwk37insert

    I plan on printing photos at home again. Yes, it's expensive to buy printer paper and ink. But it's SO EASY and makes so much sense for my schedule and current location. If I had a local photo printer that could knock it out of the park every time, I would switch. But I don't, so for now I print at home. For the record, I have an HP Photosmart 2575 and print on Office Depot semi-gloss paper.

    Plwk34insert2

    I plan on continuing to add inserts (especially long blog posts) just like I did in 2012. Inserts made the process more fun and creative for me and I want to use them again to tell longer stories and share more photos.

    I will continue to share here on the blog on Sundays. I have to be honest – this is my least favorite part of Project Life, by far. It's a hassle and half to take the photos, resize them for the blog, and come up with basic variations on the exact same text every week. But, I have appreciated the feedback that so many of you look forward to the posts and I think the accountability factor of sharing on the blog is the #1 reason I stayed up to date with my album all year.

    Plwk48detail

    Overall – I am excited.

    I am so inspired to start again. My current album will hold two more weeks of 2012. I am going to do 12/16 – 12/22 and then 12/23 – 12/31. I will start 2013's album on Tuesday (1/1) and each week after will begin on Sunday just like last year. I'll be sharing my 2013 title page that first week of January.

    EDIT : I got a few great comments about doing my weeks Monday – Sunday and after some thought decided to go with that. It will also be easier to share on the blog the Sunday of the next week, versus the Sunday immediately following a week which is what I was doing in 2012.

  • Paulbday

    I have known Paul since I was 10 and he was 12. We were quite literally "just kids." (If you are unfamiliar with our "story" you can read it and see some really bad photos here.)

    Over a decade later, in August 2007, I hopped a plane across the country to see if we could make "us" work. I have spent the past five and a half years sharing a life with my favorite person in the world. Paul – you are my favorite. You amaze me. You inspire me. You challenge me. You have become the most fantastic adult, husband and doctor. And you are going to be dad to our little ones! You always told me that you'd be ready for kids at 30. That, to you, 30 sounded like a good age to become a parent.

    Well babe, we're right on schedule.

    I love you. Happy birthday. Here's to the next 30 (and the 30 after that).

    *photo from last May in Palm Springs.

  • HERE
    Here2
    Here3
    IMG_8942
    IMG_8944
    IMG_8961
    Quilt8
    IMG_8938
    14weeks

    I knew December would be nuts (it always is!) but I didn’t anticipate this much news. I feel like I am bursting at the seams with information. I need to go to dinner with my parents and just talk and talk until I am out of stories. But because I can’t do that until we get to Sacramento for the holidays, the blog has just become information overload! Thanks for hanging in there.

    I just finished up the Seafoam sample album that Becky can share on her site to show the kit in action (see other sample kits here). It was incredibly simple to put together. So simple that it made me feel like I’ve been doing something wrong this past year (not really, but kind of). Obviously it made me very excited to get started on 2013. And to take more photos! Way more photos!

    If you signed up for my “I Choose” workshop, this week, thank you!! I have loved seeing tweets and emails from you about the class. Very, very cool. Huge hooray for setting (and reaching!) goals, especially as we approach the new year. If you are planning on buying stamps before the end of the year, please do so today! The shop will be closing up for the holidays tomorrow.

    My Christmas quilts are done. Just need to wrap them up and send them off. I am wrapping presents this year in saved pages from my Stendig Calendar. I get more questions about that calendar than anything else I blog about. I buy mine at Crate & Barrel every December. It’s no longer online, but it is in stores. Grab one. Hang it on your wall and then wrap all your presents with it.

    I can’t believe we’re moving back to San Deigo. I can’t believe I get to decorate a house all over again in just a few months! (Getting to purge all our crap every so often and start over with a blank slate is truly my favorite part of being in the military – no sarcasm.) I can’t believe I’m 14 weeks into this pregnancy and a baby belly is beginning to form. I can’t believe how hard it is to choose the perfect name for a human. I can’t believe how good of a sport Paul is about everything going on in our lives these days. I can’t believe I have mis-spelled “believe” every time I typed it in this paragraph.

    Here we go December. Almost halfway through and inspired to wrap up 2012 with the largest red bow.

  • Quotes4

    In 2012, I found quotes that I loved and included them in my Project Life album. As 2012 wraps up, I am happy to offer these cards as a free download for you to use in your albums or other projects.

    Quotes2

    There are 54 quotes available. Some are going to be a little random because they were super relevant in my life at the time, but I think most are applicable to most situations and for most people. I have provided two sets. One that just has text and one where I digitally wrote in select words, just like how they appeared in my album.

    Below are two links, one for each type of card. When you click the link, you’ll be downloading a zip file. In each file are 27 4×6 .jpgs with 2 quotes on each card. I think the easiest way to get these on to paper would be to upload them to your favorite photo printing website, print at 4x6s and then chop them in half to create 54 3×4 cards. But how you choose to do it is up to you.

    Quotes3

    Download QUOTES


    Quotes5

    Download QUOTES with handwriting

    Please feel free to share a link to this page. Feel free to print as many of the quotes as you’d like. But keep in mind
    these are for personal use only.
    I am giving them away because I didn’t make up these quotes. I just collected them throughout the year and
    turned them into small graphics. They are not my words and certainly are
    not mine to sell.

    Quote

    Thank you for reading this blog and following my projects and adventures. It’s a joy to write here and I’m happy to have something tangible to share as a thank you for stopping by.

    thank you, elise


    //
        

  • Cahome2

    Almost every December, it seems, I get to share details about our next move.

    When Paul was in med school in Maryland, the hopeful plan was that he'd get assigned to the Naval Hospital in San Diego for his residency. In December 2009, we found out he had earned a spot there for internship. In December 2010, we learned he would have to spend two years completing a GMO (General Medical Officer) tour in Port Hueneme (where we are now) before he could move forward to residency.

    Paul left for training in Mississippi in July 2011 and then deployed to Afghanistan in August. I stayed in San Diego until an amazing townhouse rental became available through a college friend and then with the help of military movers, got our stuff up to the new town. Paul came home in late February 2012 and we've had a really fantastic 10 months together living here.

    In early February 2013, Paul will deploy again. Per usual, there are a million things that could change, but most likely, when he returns, I'll have our stuff back in San Diego (and hopefully a great little house to store it in). This time, Paul coming home will not mean gearing up for another deployment in eleven months. It will mean four years in one spot. To be fair, these are going to be four years of radiology residency with plenty of studying and 60 hour weeks at the hospital, but he'll be home. We'll have dinner together and put our kid to bed together almost every night.

    After what will be four moves and two deployments, we are finally making what we talked about seven years ago in the middle of the night outside my parents' house a reality. Residency in San Diego. Four years in our favorite town. Paul, you did it! Hooray, hooray!

  • Seafoamstory

    Read the first installment here and second installment here.

    OH, THE DESIGN PROCESS. I can't for the life of me figure out how to tell this in an orderly fashion, so I am just going to share tid-bits that strike me as interesting. The whole process was a combination of tid-bits and tweaking and progress here and then a bit of progress there so this actually might be the only way to explain it anyway. It was an adventure for sure.

    Cards3

    As mentioned, from day one I knew I wanted this kit to be simple. Something that would "match" itself well, lend itself to plenty of journaling space and not compete with the photos. I was thrilled to have Meredith to work with. She was an llustrator wizard (which was key!) and more importantly, wouldn't be graphically limited (like I would be) by what she could execute. It was important to me that even though I was thinking "SIMPLE. SIMPLE. SIMPLE." in my head that designing and creating anything was possible.

    Folded

    this is a peek at the folded journaling cards. They come with plenty of space for text.

    Even though the total kit involves 3×4 cards, 4×6 title cards, 4×6 folded cards, 12×12 patterned paper, an album and monthly dividers, when I think "Project Life", I think 3×4 journaling cards. The small canvases of the 3x4s made the most sense to start with, so that's where it all began for me and then I was able to build out from there.

    Sketches

    About a month after I had started on the color scheme, Becky sent a very friendly email asking for "design thoughts." Until this point, my "design thoughts" were messy. I went to bed that night and my mind WHIRLED until about 1:30am when I got out of bed to start sketching ideas. I used the plain backs of other kit cards to create dozens upon dozens of pencil drawings of where I could see this kit going.

    Sidetext

    Some ideas were obviously scrapped as soon as I saw them in the light of day. Others from those first sketches are in the kit. I was a big fan of simple phrases down the left side of the card and additional short phrases in small circles in the bottom right.

    Sketches2

    Those were some of the ideas we kept.

    Circles

    Because we were going to be printing all 20 3x4s double sided, I had a lot of flexibility and could play with big "statement" cards in addition to journaling cards. I loved the idea of big circles to correlate with the small circles. I also wanted diagonal text so that made an appearance on various cards.

    12x12s

    The patterns, for the most part, came together quickly. I wanted herringbone from the beginning and that became the pattern that would cover the album. I am (obviously) obsessed with diagonal lines, so those were added in plenty. I love a grid, so of course that went in (and later turned it on an angle for the 12x12s). I loved the idea of thick lines for journaling with thinner white lines in between so we did that in mustard (on a 12×12 and 4×6) and in gray (on a 3×4). I loved a big mess of text in black and white so that got put on a 12×12 and a 4×6. Polka dots were added early. Chevron came a bit later and eventually a honeycomb and pinwheel pattern were dropped in as well to round things out.

    4x6

    The label wraps for each of the 4×6 title cards were a no-brainer. I use wrapped labels ALL THE TIME in my current album and wanted to replicate the look. I also wanted where you added the title or date to be standard even though the designs on the 4x6s would be changing so they could feel unified throughout the album. As you can see in the photo above, the backside of each 4×6 card is printed with the same pattern, turned a vertical direction.

    Pltrue2

    Using sans-serif block fonts was also a no-brainer. I know that some folks will be using the digital version of the kit (and I LOVE that!) but many people go with the paper copy which means for the most part, journaling will be hand-written. I have always loved the combination of handwriting and block fonts, so we stuck with two very clean texts.

    Lined

    I wanted to include a few journaling cards that didn't go overboard with text. Sometimes you just need a space for your story, so I added in a bunch of "frame" cards. The back of these cards are printed with the same design sideways, so if you like to use variations of the pocket pages with horizontal 3×4 pockets you are set. The quotation mark cards were just a fun idea for adding quotes you love or things said by friends and family.

    Fillins

    And from the beginning, I loved the idea of "prompt" cards. So there is a 5 senses card and a 5 W's card. I love the white font on the color and these two turned out to be some of my favorites.

    Earlydays

    (ignore the colors above, my printer acted up this day.)

    Once things started coming together, it just branched out and out until I had 12 paper designs, 10 4×6 card designs, 8 folded journaling card designs, 40 3×4 cards and 12 monthly dividers. (This was about 500 emails.)

    Dividers

    Dividers were last but somehow the easiest. 😉 I can't wait to see these in real life.

    Boards

    And then it was a one loooong email proofing session. I printed version after version after version and there was approval after approval after approval (and of course MANY small and big changes along the way). I had the proofing versions hanging on my bulletin board by my desk and would literally roll my chair away and squint to make sure each color was properly represented and then I'd get really close to make sure the designs all made sense together.

    Kit

    When we finally (and it took about five tries) got the final files sent off, I wish I could say I breathed a huge sigh of relief. I thought for sure I had at the time, but really, I finally let that breath out last week when I opened the kit and saw and felt it in real life. There are tiny things I would change (aren't there always?), but overall it has the look and feel that I really hoped to capture.

    Insane and gigantic THANK YOUS are in order for Meredith for her hard work, friendship & stellar Illustrator skills. And to Becky for her insight and for really trusting me with something that at the time felt out of the box.

    Cards

    It was a pleasure. I cannot wait until its widely available and I can see so many of you using it! Thanks for letting me share bits of the story here.

    UPDATE : The Seafoam core kit is now available on Amazon!