PoMo Golightly

March 2011

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

Darling, Take Me

Project 333


Fit Golightly


  • I did 101 pushups on 2/9/2009.

Golightly Joins

Good Reads

  • Golightly Reads
    Widget_logo

Categories

  • 100 Days
  • A Real, Live Book
  • Cleaning Slate for 2008
  • Crafty Golightly
  • Don't you just love Tiffany's?
  • Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Golightly
  • Golightly 365
  • Golightly Art
  • Golightly Dogs
  • Golightly Dyes
  • Golightly Gardens
  • Golightly Kitting, Not Knitting
  • Golightly Living
  • Golightly Memes
  • Golightly Meta Blogs
  • Golightly Oddities
  • Golightly Sews
  • Golightly Spins
  • Golightly Stashing
  • Golightly Studies
  • Golightly Swaps
  • Golightly Teaches
  • Golightly Weaves
  • Golightly Weds
  • I may be knitting a ranch house
  • I must protest
  • I've never been to Brazil
  • If I Could Find a Real Live Place...
  • Local Goodness
  • Lucky typewriter ribbon
  • NaBloPoMo
  • ORW
  • Project 333
  • Project Spectrum
  • Reverb10
  • Socktoberfest
  • Ten on Tuesday
  • Thankful Thursday
  • The Mean Reds
  • TVSnB
  • Wedding Shawl Project

Some Stuff I Like

DSC_0008
Cross-country skiing is something I like.  Until the icy junk hit on Tuesday, we had some of the best snow in recent memory.  I was starting to feel like I knew what I was doing out there in the woods, but the ice has changed that! 

Here are some other things I've been liking lately:

Moop Letter bag: I purchased this during Phase 1 of Project 333 when I realized that the leather tote I'd been burdening was not holding up under the strain.  While I prefer open outside pockets (the flap covers two front pockets), the bag feels great on my shoulder and holds a LOT! The quality of the bag is fantastic, and the customer service is amazing.

Delias Thompson Eternity Secret Message Necklace: The way the secret message circle slips gracefully along the necklace's chain is far more pleasing than I could have anticipated.  Delias is charming and delightful to work with, and I am thrilled with the elegant playfulness of my new necklace.  It's a great way to keep your own mantra for 2011 close to your heart. 

Rosebud Salve: this stuff is perfect for winter lips and cuticles.  

Brooklyn Tweed's Shelter Yarn: Have you knit or crocheted with this stuff yet?  As his prize for my recent contest, Drew asked me to knit a hat for his wife.  I'm making this pattern, and every stitch is pure, squishy goodness.

Roasted Chickpeas: I saw these on Pinterest (are you using Pinterest yet?  Why not?) and promptly made them.  They are delish on a salad.  Much healthier than croutons, they give that same crunch and pop of flavor.

What have you been liking lately?

January 23, 2011 in Don't you just love Tiffany's? | Permalink | Comments (5)

Ten on Tuesday, Game Edition

This week, Carole asked us to think back to childhood and share a list of games we played.  

Beverly with doll
 
1.  Dolls.  There are no rules to this game, but I loved playing with my dolls.  Paper dolls, soft dolls, anything dolls, and I was in.

2.  TV shows.  The four or five youngest of us in my neighborhood liked to re-inact our favorite tv shows.  Land of the Lost was a big favorite, as was Charlie's Angels.

3.  Spit.  My oldest sister and I played this by the hour, and I still love a good game of spit.

4.  Reading catalogs.  Is that a game?  Well, even if not, I certainly spent many, many hours poring over the Enchanted Dollhouse catalog.

5.  Hide and Go Seek.  I loved that thrill of hiding out.  I was not so keen on being the seeker.

6.  Field.  Again, not really a game, but a big part of my childhood.  We had a huge field across the stream behind our house that developers had started to dig up, but then stopped.  We played endlessly on the huge mounds of dirt and explored the area for hours on end.  As a young teenager, I borrowed my older sister's skis and learned to cross-country ski there.

7.  Monopoly.  As the youngest of five kids, I often had to beg for siblings to play with me.  This was one of my faves.

Beverly with hat
  8.  Dress up.  I had a rich fantasy life, even as a child.  I liked to listen to my records and tapes of fairy tales and dress up and dream.  On the back of this picture, my mom wrote that my gram had made the hat, and I wouldn't take it off for anything~not even bath time!

9.  Tree climbing.  Well, there was only tree I really liked to climb, and I was pretty adept at doing so with a book in tow.  I felt so free and secure on my favorite branch.  

10.  Monkey bars.  We just called the contraption, which would probably never be sold today, "the bars".  It was red.  It folded in half.  It could easily tumble down or pinch a kid's fingers.  But, man, did my sisters and I spend hours flipping around that thing, playing at being gymnasts.

It seems like there were a hundred other games and things I loved to do to occupy my time as a kid.  How about you?  What was your favorite game as a child?

January 18, 2011 in Ten on Tuesday | Permalink | Comments (11)

Technorati Tags: ten on tuesday

Ten on Tuesday, Organized Edition

Over the last few years, my life has changed a lot.  While some of my usual organizational methods have remained useful, others no longer suit, leaving me in the process of finding the Goldilocks system.  There are some things I think Help me to be More Organized, the subject of this week's Ten on Tuesday.

1.  Saving documents.  I am consistent in how I save my work.  Letters are always saved "x name date".  X=letter, name=recipient, date=when written.  I save writing by "title, draft, version, date" (commas not allowed, of course).  Classroom documents are saved by semester, class, doc title, date.  These little consistencies make it easy for me to track my work, returning to earlier versions with little hassle.

2.  Computer desktop folders.  I get a little chill of fear when I see a desktop absolutely littered with documents.  Creating a folder by project, activity, whatever makes sense, and placing all the documents in that folder help me to stay organized.  And to avoid feeling overwhelmed when I turn on my computer.

3.  Routines. The best routine I've ever started was to put my keys in the same place.  Always.  Every time.  I impose that on Neal, and he laughs at me, but if he drops the keys on the counter, as soon as I see them, I pop them into the key basket.  I never want to be that person searching for keys.  They go in the same place in my purse, too.

4. Real folders.  The trick is to make sure you use a system that makes sense to you.  I have big subjects (Dogs, Warranties, etc.), and I also have folders for each of my short stories/articles. I keep folders for inspiring magazine images, too, though I'm using Pinterest far more than I'm ripping magazines apart. 

5.  Separate things by use.  Spices that I use predominately for baking are on a different shelf than those I use for cooking.  

6.  Pretend to be a librarian.  If like me you have lots of books (or cds or any other physical media), don't lump them all together.  I have fiction and non-fiction on different bookshelves, and the non-fiction is further broken down.  Short story collections are separate from fiction.  Craft books have their own shelf, as do poetry and Classical literature.  Shakespeare also has his own shelf--I have collected works, many of the Arden editions of individual plays, and critical books.  Stop judging; I wrote my MA thesis about his work and can't let go of the texts I labored with for so long!

7.  Sort the mail immediately.  I don't linger with mail.  If I'm going to read a magazine or catalog, it goes on the coffee table.  Neal's mail is placed on his desk.  Anything to which I need to respond goes on my desk.  Recycling goes out the door to its new home, the blue bin.  Piles of mail give me anxiety, so I deal with it right away.

8.  Plan the week's menu.  I was amused to recently see that another blogger has posted a menu-planning worksheet.  It seems a bit overkill to me, but if you don't already have a system, I suppose it is useful.  I try to grocery shop on Sundays during the semester.  While I'm having my morning coffee, I go through recipes and write up dinner menus for the week bearing in mind late days (I won't want to cook much) or evenings out (Neal fends for himself, usually with something on the grill).  It makes grocery shopping easier and probably less expensive, and I don't have to think to hard about food for the rest of the week.

9.  Don't trust your memory.  Have a secure place for important documents.  My ex-husband's filing system before we got married involved his record collection.  I'm not even kidding.  I would never trust myself to remember that my birth certificate was filed in Abbey Road because the Beatles started working on it not long after I was born.

10.  Purge.  Project 333 has been amazing for many reasons, and topmost is the purging of ill-fitting, worn-out, or simply not my style clothes that I have done.  I am far more organized when I get dressed now, and I'm much more organized about what pieces I would like in order to make my wardrobe work even better. This weekend I purged a lot of fiber from my spinning stash, and the yarn stash is slated for the next big purge!

For all I have to say about organization, I'm still struggling with finding a way to merge my home calendar, work calendar, paper calendar, and electronic calendars in a way that will be most effective and efficient for me.  If I figure it out, you'll be the first to know!

Meanwhile, what helps you to be more organized?

 

January 11, 2011 in Ten on Tuesday | Permalink | Comments (5)

Technorati Tags: ten on tuesday

A Recipe: Lentil Stew

DSC_0003
As a vegetarian, I mistakenly thought that the crockpot's use for me was limited to yogurt and fruit butter making.  Oh, how wrong I have been!  

Wednesday morning I used the crockpot to make the lentil stew recipe I've been making for years on the stove.  I felt smug all day knowing that dinner was already made, and after simmering away for eight hours, the stew had that delicious second-day-flavor-melding goodness that makes soupy leftovers so wonderful.

Why the Cholula?  It's my topping of choice for this recipe.  I might just make the stew as an excuse to go crazy with the hot sauce.

Want to make some Cholula Vehicle Lentil Stew? Here's the recipe, from Woman's Day's February 16, 1999 issue:

1.5 cups dried lentils

3 cups water (I sub veggie broth when I have it in the house)

3 cups (ish) of 1" cubed butternut squash (I use frozen when I'm feeling lazy)

2 cups marinara sauce (your own if you have it on hand, or jarred if you don't mind it)

8 oz. green beans trimmed and cut in half 

1 medium red bell pepper cut in 1" chunks

1 large potato cut in 1" chunks

3/4 cup onion, chopped (I mince half an onion and don't measure)

1 tsp garlic, minced (I don't measure; I just add a few minced cloves)

1 Tbsp olive oil

1.  Mix lentils and water in crockpot.  In a large bowl, mix remaining ingredients except olive oil, and place on lentils.

2.  Cover and cook on low 8-10 hours or until veggies and lentils are tender.  Stir in the oil.

My addition: slather with Cholula.

I debated posting the recipe and finally eased my mind by researching copyright protection for recipes.  

If it is snowy where you are, try this out.  It really sticks to your ribs!  I'd love to hear what you think if you make it!    

January 07, 2011 in Golightly Living | Permalink | Comments (5)

Technorati Tags: lentil stew, recipe

Project 333, Phase 2

DSC_0005

On Project 333

Three months.  Thirty-three items. 

Project 333 was a fantastic experience for me.  I was able to pare down my wardrobe significantly.  I learned that I could style the heck out of 33 items, rarely feeling bored.  I committed to quality and fit. I began the journey to dressing authentically. 

Phase two has commenced, and after thinking hard about what I wanted to gain from this round, after chatting with Drew and Cheryl about the rules I was planning to break (Cheryl decided to break some of the very same rules! Great minds and all that.), I decided that the best approach for this round for me is to lump some categories together.  

Phase 2 List

  1. Gray print jersey dress
  2. Pink and black print jersey dress (new item from those I'd boxed)
  3. U.P. LBD dress (we’ll see how it fits post letting-down-the-hem)
  4. Orange pullover
  5. Gray cardigan 
  6. Mint green cardigan
  7. Black fair isle cardigan (new! Christmas gift from Neal & so cozy)
  8. White blouse
  9. Gray turtleneck
  10. Black cap-sleeved knit shirt
  11. Black long-sleeved shirt (might replace as I really prefer a v-neck)
  12. Jeans (replaced the "casual" pair with a darker wash I had boxed up)
  13. Jeans (dark jeans from last round)
  14. Khakis
  15. Black slacks
  16. Gray slacks (Need to be hemmed.  Great for work or dressy casual situations)
  17. Gray a-line skirt (it's big now, but I love it so & next size down is not available currently)
  18. Blue a-line skirt (Christmas gift from Neal)
  19. Slim skirt (newly added from items I boxed up for Phase 1)
  20. Chinoa boots
  21. BBC boots
  22. Pearl Harts
  23. Malibrans
  24. Danskos
  25. Uggs (newly added from items boxed up for Phase 1)
  26. Yellow shoes
  27. Moop bag (testing out as replacement for black leather tote.  Phase 1 was rough on tote!)
  28. Orange bag
  29. Small black leather bag
  30. Alpaca wrap
  31. Belts
  32. Outerwear
  33. Jewelry

I'm not making many adjustments to the last round; I have added more accessories, perhaps over doing it with the shoes.  In Phase 1, I learned that I did not like being limited to one handbag, especially a large one.  There are times when a smaller bag is better.  

Now for my reasoning in deciding to break a few rules.

Jewelry: I got used to wearing very little, but I missed my jewelry.  I've culled out a huge pile of costume jewelry I know I don't want to hang on to, and I'm boxing up all but the most sentimental of pieces: my bracelets, which I like to stack; a few necklaces; a pair of thick silver hoops bought to celebrate my undergraduate graduation; my mother/daughter ring, my turquoise ring, and my 13 ring.

Belts: I'm also lumping together the two belts I like to wear.  Would one do the trick? Of course, but I am unwilling to part with either, again for sentimental and style reasons.  I have no plans to donate or sell either, and rather than having them (wastefully) languishing in a box in the basement, I'll use them to hold up the jeans that are a little loose.

Outerwear: Like many parts of the country, New England's weather is fickle.  I know from Phase 1 that I would get a lot of use out of a 3/4 season raincoat or trench, so I'm keeping an eye out for one with a removable lining.  I have two vests and two winter coats.  Depending on Mother Nature's mood, any one of these items might be the most appropriate.  I hope by the end of this phase to see which I get the most use from and donate the rest.

Handknits: I am not a prolific knitter, but I have a couple of sweaters on the needles. If I don't even have a chance at wearing them this season, they won't get finished.  I know myself.  I have a few lace shawls that I like to wear, and let's face it: Clapotis could use some company! 

I eliminated a t-shirt this round, as well as the ill-fitting jean skirt (I found another, better fitting skirt among the boxed up items, but I'll save it for spring), and the floral blouse.  I think I'll miss the option of a second blouse, but it didn't fit, and I don't have another I like enough to put into my closet.  Since at least two months of Phase 2 are bound to be chilly, I will depend more on sweaters.

On Minimalism

I would venture to say that everyone participating in Project 333 has his or her own reasons for embarking on dressing with less, and the project is wildly celebrated among minimalist bloggers.  In the last three months, I've learned that minimalism is a blog topic that is almost as popular as knitting.  

I am not a minimalist.

I applaud those striving for a minimalist lifestyle, for whatever reason, but I do not identify myself as a minimalist. Life's circumstances have at times required minimalism and simplicity from me.  I do not like clutter. I do not like waste.  I do not like owning too much.  Sometimes I get caught up in excitement of new projects, new possibilities, and I have clutter; I am wasteful; I own too much.

I want to have exactly what I need and no more.  If that makes me a minimalist in the eyes of some, so it goes.  More important to me, though, is that I reach an understanding about the things in my life: how they make my life better, how they nurture my creativity, how they fit, how they are part of the complete picture of me.  

That said, what is one thing you own that speaks to the "complete" you?

 

January 05, 2011 in Project 333 | Permalink | Comments (7)

Technorati Tags: clothes, fashion, minimalism, Project 333

Ten on Tuesday, Don't Make Me Live Without These Edition

DSC_0003 *

Carole's directive for this week is "Ten Things I Wouldn't Want to Live Without".  I'm glad I re-read it. First time around, I had "couldn't do without" in my head, and that is a different thing entirely.  After spending most of Monday morning discussing what I couldn't do without with Neal, I realized shelter was the only thing.  Maybe running water, but I suppose I could make do if I had to, at least for a while.

Anyway, Wouldn't Want to Live Without is so much more fun.  So, here goes:

1.  My computer.  Rupert and I work and play a lot together.  I believe that a person should have her own computer, unshared by others who might eff up settings, put fingerprints on a screen, or any number of other unsavory insults.  I would not want to live without Rupert all to myself.

2.  Yarn.  What would keep my hands busy if I couldn't knit or crochet?  Oh, I know, I know.  There are plenty of other hobbies, but yarn is the supply I would not want to live without.

3.  Kindle.  Shannenabler as I like to call her convinced me two years ago that the Kindle was nothing short of necessary to an avid reader.  As she always is, she was right.  I don't use it to the exclusion of books, which some people seem to think is the future. Instead, I prefer it to carrying several books around in my bag when I'm traveling, and it is also much easier to schlep around in my handbag.  I would not want to live without my Kindle, or some sort of e-reader.

4.  Fluevog Chinoas.  These boots take a few minutes to lace and buckle, but if I need to feel like a badass, these are my shoes of choice.  I would not want to live without shoes that make me walk a little taller. 

5.  Compact OED. I may not consult it often, and I suppose I can access the OED online now, but I would not want to live without this dictionary on my bookshelf.

6.  A car.  Well, technically, I would like to live without a car, but that would mean relocating to a place I know N. would not like.  Since I live in the woods, sans a bus or train line that would put me near my campus, I would not want to live without a car.   

7.  Trixie Trek, my bike.  I love to ride my bike.  I would not want to live without the freedom and strength I feel when I ride her.

8.  Saag paneer.  A world without my favorite Indian dish would be a sadder world.  I would not want to live without food that makes me as happy as saag paneer does.

9. Addi Clicks.  #2 would do me little good sans needles, and the Clicks are my main choice. N. was super generous to me this Christmas and spoiled me with a second set, lace Clicks.  Oh, I do love a sharp point!  Don't get me wrong, I'm also a fan of the Signature needles, but since I own the Clicks I know I would not want to live without them. 

10. Paper.  I'm a paper junky.  I like handmade paper, handcrafted journals, stationery, composition books.  I wouldn't want to live without paper, no matter how much I prefer to write on Rupert.

So you don't think I'm a big meany who would be happy to live without her husband or friends, remember Carole's words:  people (and dogs!) are not things!

What things would you not want to live without?

*If I added an 11th, it would have to be my new washer/dryer set.  After months without a dryer, I know I prefer not to live without one!

January 04, 2011 in Ten on Tuesday | Permalink | Comments (12)

Technorati Tags: Ten on Tuesday

Happy New Year and Project 333, Phase 1

DSC_0026
Today I returned to an annual event that I have loved since the early 1990s and missed since 2004: the New Year's Day hike.  Early in my time in New York, my pal Cheryl invited me to join a group that did the hike for years and years.  I think it was well over 20 years by the time they stopped doing it.  When I moved away, I stopped going on the hike, and I never found a satisfactory replacement for New Year's Day.  There really is no better way to start off a freshly-baked year than to find a place with a view, gather some friends and some tasty treats and have at.  For the first time in far too long, the hike was back.  Do I look just a little excited about it?

Yesterday marked not only the end of 2010, a year that treated me well enough, but also the end of Phase 1 of Project 333.  I'm participating in Phase 2, but I don't think I'll snap the daily pictures again.  Tomorrow I'll share my new list and my final thoughts on Phase 1.  For now, though, you can take a look at 92 days of me and my clothes!

Happy 2011!!

January 01, 2011 in Project 333 | Permalink | Comments (6)

Technorati Tags: project333

Ten on Tuesday, Intentions Edition

DSC_0005
Today's list is Ten Intentions for 2011.  I am glad Carole didn't use the word "resolutions".  When I resolve to do or not do things, I fail.  A lot.  I'm going to take up her word "intention" and have a more mindful attitude about the changes I want to make.

1. Revamp my project organization.  Not my knitting projects, silly.  That's what Ravelry is for.  I had a few bursts of creative thinking over the last few months, which have led me to several ideas worth exploring.  I want to be able to keep things straight and give ample time to each project.  This week I'm exploring different organizational methods (beyond my usual to-do list tool): Things, Getting Things Done, and the Action Method.  They are all fairly similar.  My task is to figure out which one makes the most sense to me.

2. Perfect cooking rice.  I don't want to buy a rice cooker (though I know Penny loves hers), and I got a slew of advice via Twitter yesterday.  It's time for me to stop effing up the rice.  I want to feel, deep in my soul, what Amy assured me: it is no harder than cooking pasta.  Please don't judge me on this shortcoming.

3. Take longer bike rides.  In 2010, I got on my bike more frequently.  In 2011, I want to continue that frequent riding (once the weather is warm again!) and build up mileage.  I dream of riding my bike across the country one summer, and building mileage is one way to help me to achieve that dream.

4.  Rekindle my daily writing practice.  Last semester kicked my butt.  My good writing habits went by the wayside.  It is time to get them back, get the never-ending novel finished and move on!

5.  Participate in Christina's Project Define 365.  I'm hoping that I can learn to take better pictures, enjoy connecting words and images, and explore my life all at the same time!

6.  Improve my gardening.  We've roped off a sunnier spot in the front yard for the 2011 garden, and I am going to be much more thoughtful about what I plant.  I tend to lose my head when it comes to buying seeds and plants, and I end up with produce I don't eat (peppers!) and have to find uses for or dump on my neighbors.  This year we're going to implement tactics from Gaia's Garden.

7. Finish some of the knits languishing about.  There are so many projects I want to start, but I must have some discipline.  I must.

8.  Go on a yarn fast.  All of the office cleaning I've been doing in preparation for a big design revamp has made it clear to me that I do not need another skein of yarn.  Sure, I might want it, but for 2011, I'm going to set up some guidelines. 

9.  Participate in another 365 project inspired by Noah Scalin.  I'm hammering out the idea still, but I'm close.  I'm close.

10.  Pare down my clothes.  Project 333 has been fruitful, and I want to build on it.  I plan to participate in the next round, with some modifications to make the project suit me better.  I don't want to go back to a crammed closet, though.  

How about you?  What are some of your intentions for 2011?

December 28, 2010 in Ten on Tuesday | Permalink | Comments (13)

Technorati Tags: Ten on Tuesday

Thank You!

First ski 10-11
Thanks to your generous support, Catherine and her class are closing in on raising the necessary funds to help them to build a classroom in Nicaragua.  You are the best, dear readers!  Thank you! Thank you!

I used a random generator to pick a number...and the winner is... lucky number six: Drew!

***

Whether you celebrate Christmas or not, I hope you had a great weekend.  We had an adult Christmas (no little kids.  Boo hoo!), and while it was quiet, it was certainly restful.  The big snowstorm yesterday made it easy to relax on Sunday, and since Neal had a furlough day today (who says the state workers don't give back?), we were able to get out for the first cross-country ski adventure of the season.  Neal took this picture of the brook that wends through the woods across the street from our house.  I felt strong skiing, and my spirits were lifted by the beauty around me. 

Did you get snow?  What are you doing to enjoy it? 

December 27, 2010 in Don't you just love Tiffany's? | Permalink | Comments (3)

Cookies!

Take a little of this...

DSC_0010
Some of that...

DSC_0013
To make these...

DSC_0004
And end up with these:

DSC_0017
I hope you and your family have a wonderful holiday...if you don't celebrate Christmas, enjoy the weekend!  Remember, there is still time to donate to my colleague's project and enter my contest.

Joy to the world!

December 23, 2010 in Golightly Living | Permalink | Comments (2)

Technorati Tags: cookies

« Previous | Next »

About

My Photo

Let Me Show You How

  • Marconi Beach Bookmark pattern
  • Two Babies, Two Skeins, Two Hats pattern
  • A Note about Gauge
  • Dyeing in the Microwave
  • How to Warp a RHL using a Peg

Finished Objects

  • Mrs. Beeton's Mitts
    The things I've made and remembered to photograph. Since 2004.

Golightly Hearts Indie Shops

Golightly Links

Archives

  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010

More...

Blog powered by TypePad
Subscribe to this blog's feed