How To Be Self-Taught at Anything.

Thank you, everyone, for all the birthday wishes. Nothing like a birthday to make me feel like everybody loves me. On a birthday, I have no enemies. On a birthday, I’m everyone’s favourite person. Updates of the day will be coming next week.

But until then, I’m trying to learn the ever-so-complicated art of Photoshop CS3. [What? They have a CS4 now? Shoot.] It’s not an easy task. Poor Kyle taught me what a layer was and how to use one, and Ree Drummond taught me everything else.

I don’t want to take any classes or any true tutorials, because I would very much like to go around smugly telling people that “I am a self-taught Photoshop extraordinaire.” There’s something about being self-taught [at anything!] that makes me feel really vain.

So far so good. I know I like how this one turned out. What a cute little tongue my nephew has. All the better to exploit him with–that’s what I say.

But when it came to this photo, I couldn’t decide if I liked Option #1 or Option #2 better…

On the one hand, in the above photo (Option #1), Inquisitive Baby’s eyes are bright and crisp, and his face looks soft and fluffy.
But on the other hand, in Option #2, my Inquisitive Baby’s background is dark, and there’s just enough contrast to provide visual stimulation.

Visual stimulation? I don’t even know what an aperture is–how can I possibly talk about visual stimulation and get away with it?

So it’s up to you, e-friends. Should I like #1 or #2 better? The differences are subtle, but I feel like I should have an opinion either way. And you are going to form that opinion for me [please, that is]! You can vote in the poll to the right, or comment on this post if you’d like to expound your reasoning. Also, if there are any amazing photography sites that make your world go round, please let me know of them.

I’m in the market for some inspiration.

Posted in nephew, photos | 15 Comments

It’s my party and I’ll–oh, forget it.

It’s my birthday.
And on this, the 25th of September, I would like to declare that I’m tired of keeping it real.

What I want, for just one day, is a whole lot of fake.

In other words, instead of my [self-made] birthday cake looking like this:



I want it to look like this:

Image from here.

Yeah. Uh…not so much. My birthday cake’s crack is showing.

[At least the cake stand is adorable.]
…And instead of my war-zone post-birthday cake kitchen looking like this:


I want it to look more like this:

Image from here.

Instead of my gallbladder looking like this:

Utterly revolting image from here.

I want it to look like this:

Sunshine and daisies. Photo by Jim-AR.

It’s my birthday, and I’d like some fake, of the Martha Stewart persuasion.

Please and thank you.

Posted in mediocrity, oh brother what next, photos | 22 Comments

He Calls Martha “Martha,” and I Call Him Eddie Ross.

Hello world. Meet my new best friend:

Photo from here.

He looks good in vests. His name is Eddie Ross. Oh, and I’m evidently the last person in the world to become one hundred percent enamoured of him. I found his blog during a quest for design tips, and have been nothing short of obsessed ever since.

Here is a man who is talented with all things gorgeous. He designs living spaces, flowers, and table settings. He’s been a caterer, a Food Network honcho, and is currently one of Martha Stewart’s right-hand men (only he’s taking a hiatus to be involved with Top Design, a television show in its second season on the Bravo Network). In other words, he’s the kind of guy I always thought I should marry, but it’s a dadgum good thing I didn’t because then I would’ve harbored an inferiority complex all the way to my death bed. (And anyway, I’m glad I ended up with Poor Kyle. Things worked out just as they should have.)

Eddie’s blog showcases delightful snippets of his personal design triumphs, including thrift store and flea market finds (i.e. “treasure hunting”), before-and-after success stories, and how to create professional flower arrangements from home. He proudly declares that it’s not necessary to spend buckets of money to create an elegant style. He even understands the value of white dishes (a personal obsession I am always feeding).

I could look at his before-and-after photos all day long. Especially this set, in which he transformed his kitchen light fixture and effectively changed my life:

Photos from Eddie Ross.

But it doesn’t end there.

Because this man is actually nice. As in…a kind and decent human. I commented on his blog (after finding it and devouring every post he’d ever written) and even went so far as to ask a design question of my own…

…and he wrote back. Personally. Within the hour.

Let’s recap: A guy who calls Martha “Martha,” and is actually allowed to do so…wrote me an email. With advice. Personalised design advice, just for me and my little house.

Photo from Eddie Ross.

So of course I blew it, as I do with all new friends {it’s my lifelong curse}. Being completely starstruck (because I’ve never gotten mail from a famous person before [I would be so pathetic in Hollywood]), I wrote him back. Like an idiot.

And he wrote me back again. A brand new email, with words different from the first!

Yes, I know it was stalker of me to write twice. It’s just that I couldn’t stop the visions of me and Eddie Ross, arm in arm, scouring the streets of New York for deals on the cheap. “Oh, Eddie Ross, you’re such a joker,” I would laugh, smiling at my new best friend who would be coming over to redecorate my brownstone apartment from top to bottom later that evening, and he’d show up with a fresh floral arrangement he’d thrown together just for me.

I know. Pathetic. I won’t be bothering him anymore, because enough is enough and I know it. In fact, as soon as I sent my googly-eyed second email, I regretted bothering him twice. With his fast-paced life in NYC, I’m sure he’s beyond annoyed with me by now.

Photo from Eddie Ross. Naturally.

But he’s my new best friend, and I won’t rest until I get a personalised invite to one of his amazing dinner parties. (Teasing, Eddie Ross. Just teasting.)

Seriously, though…I will proudly link to his blog on my sidebar, and a little piece of me will be besotted with him until the day I die.

Posted in design, like-it-link-it | 14 Comments

{Hypochondria and Me}

This is turning out to be the worst birthday week ever.

First, my sister called yesterday and told me that she had been planning on buying me Heather Bailey’s Trash Ties™ for months, but now, since I wrote about them on my blog, she’s not going to. Because now I’ll “never believe that she was going to buy them in the first place.” I tried to convince her that yes, I would believe her, but to no avail. I blew it.

I hate when that happens.

Then last night, to drown my sorrows, I ate an entire bag of Peanut Butter M&Ms™, which was a very bad idea indeed. Because not only did I throw off my record of not eating sugar (I’d made it 12 hours!!!), but it gave me a Pain.

That’s right. A Pain. I’ve got a Pain, and nothing I have done has helped. I’ve tried sleeping. And staying in bed. It was still there when I woke up this wretched morning.

I thought maybe it was just acid reflux, or maybe heartburn, but it isn’t anywhere near my heart.

It’s right there, under the maple leaf.

What is that, anyway? Did I break a rib? Or my sternum? It only hurts when I’m fully straightened out (i.e. standing up or stretching in bed). Hunching over, or curling into the fetal position, I feel just fine.
According to this diagram, it could be anything.
Photo from here.

Which means I’m going to die. Me and The Pain, in all our misery.

No Trash Ties™, and you’re going to die at 22. Happy birthday.

Posted in woe is me | 9 Comments

{Flip My Flop}

I got tagged by HeatherPride some time ago. I never follow all the rules of tags; I only ever write them, but rarely do I pass them on. I’m the kind of kid who ruined the chain letters for everyone else. Sorry everyone. Stop reading my blog if it bothers you that much.

Maybe you already knew…

…but just in case you didn’t:

Six Things Which Flip My Flop:

1. I have brushed my teeth in the shower since high school. Saves water. Plus, I like that I can let the toothpastes suds run down my chin in minty rivulets. Kind of like I’m a heathen, except I’m taking a shower so not really.

2. Poor Kyle hates it when I do this. [Not that he’s ever seen it happen, because this is a family-friendly blog, and for all intents and purposes, we sleep in two separate twin beds just like Lucy and Ricky did. In fact, he only knows about it because he’s reading this post right now.]

3. I wear contact lenses. They are clear, not coloured. My eyesight is so poor, they can’t even make coloured lenses that would also help me see. If contact lenses were glasses, mine would resemble those little flip-out dome things (they must have a name!) kids buy for five tickets at Pistol Pete’s Pizza. Or a pair of plungers. I wouldn’t be able to blink.

4. I find most nursery rhymes and children’s songs depressing. “I don’t know why she swallowed that fly; perhaps she’ll die???” How awful! I had a kamikaze fly enter my ear canal once, and it was terrifying. I can only imagine swallowing one, plus the entire zoo that came afterwards.

5. I eat dill pickles. Daily. With cheese. Cheddar, mozzarella, neufchatel, camembert…any cheese will do. I even eat dill pickles with cheese-flavoured processed snacks, like reduced fat Cheeze-its™ and cheesy rice crackers. Tonight for dinner, Poor Kyle and I had whole dill pickles, chilled, sliced and covered with nacho cheese Doritos™.

Photo from here.

6. Poor Kyle says, “You’re pretty sensitive about your travels. It breaks your heart to take any kind of road trip at all–business or pleasure–and not stop to tour every little tiny detail of the area.” He’s right–it’s true. And really, can you blame me? I love places.

And as a bonus, because it’s Monday and you probably need a little pick-me-up…

7. I once pepper sprayed myself. [It was not my proudest moment.]

Posted in what I'm about | 14 Comments

{Call Me Greedy, But Say it Softly}

***Preface: This post is about birthdays. Specifically mine. I was raised in a family where birthdays were celebrated. I have come to embrace the tradition of celebrating birthdays with loved ones. I like birthday presents. Call me greedy if you want, but say it softly so I can’t hear. I don’t think presents have to cost any money at all. If Poor Kyle were to simply write me a long, juicy love letter, I would consider myself gifted.

Since I know that would never happen, I wrote this post.***

Every year when my birthday rolls around, I set out to be close-lipped about it. I always want to see who will remember and who will forget. By not mentioning my birthday, I can assess who really loves me and who doesn’t. I’m pretty big on martyrdom, in case you haven’t noticed.

Unfortunately, I can never make it all the way to my birthday without blabbing to the world, so I never get to find out who my real friends are. I may never know.

This year is no different.

My birthday is coming up next week. I’ll be turning 22. [I kind of chuckle to myself when I realise that I’m turning 22, because most people I associate with are significantly older than me. Even the kids I went to school with are all turning 23 this year. I kind of have it in my head that everyone who reads this blog is older than me, and wiser to boot. So when I come to conclusions about marriage and money and life in general, I always feel like I’m the last one to know.]

Anyway, despite all my efforts not to remind Poor Kyle of my upcoming day, I have a niggling doubt in the back of my mind: “What if he actually does forget? How will I respond? This is the first birthday he’s ever been faced with as my husband–what if he totally embarrasses himself?

Not wanting to answer any of those potentially dangerous questions, I decided I’d better make sure he remembers. So for the past few weeks, I’ve been mentioning it.

And I’m easy to please, for sure. In fact, I’ve gone so far as to flat-out tell him things I would like for my birthday. None of them are expensive or out of our budget, because–though I do think birthdays should be celebrated–it’s not worth breaking the bank.

Any of the following items would make me a very happy birthday person indeed:

1. The best chapstick I’ve ever used. I’ve gone through three tubes and am due for another. Highly recommended (along with Burt’s Bee’s Pomegranate, my second-favourite).

Image from here.

2. Heather Bailey’s Trash Ties. One set of long, one set of short. I’ve been intrigued by these since before they became available, but they’re more costly than I would spend normally on hair dohickies. As far as birthday presents go, however, they’re pretty cheap.

Image from here.

3. A self-hosted blog. What a nice gift from Poor Kyle this would be. It may or may not be in the works right now. Stay tuned for more [or no] details.

4. A stipend to paint my kitchen. The purple walls are cramping my style, and I think I’ve finally picked a colour I like. I’ve got the time, I’ve got the vision…now all I need is the cash flow. Maybe once it’s decorated how I’d like, I can finally post photos of my house and put Jami’s curious mind to rest.

Twenty-two is coming soon. Let’s hope he doesn’t blow it.

Posted in what I'm about | 9 Comments

{Good Things Come in Reds.}

A couple of weeks before I got married to Poor Kyle, I went to Canada for a little visit. You know, just to make sure that I really wanted to take the proverbial plunge.

While I was visiting, my husband-to-be took me to sign up for a cell phone on his account. [Some might call me a money-grubbing woman of the night. Others might say Poor Kyle was my sugar daddy. But the way I figured it, we were getting married in a few weeks, and I needed a Canadian cell phone number. It only made sense.]

It was a lovely new phone—all shiny and red, just like most everything else I buy...
…like these twins…

…and these twins.

[Owning a pair of Steve Maddens has always been a goal of mine. The fact that my first pair were shiny, red, and on sale…it was fate. But I digress.]

Right away, I took the phone home and sat down with the manual, determined to figure out what all the buttons and cords and icons meant. I turned it on, and to my delight, realized that Poor Kyle had already left me a voicemail. (Little did I know that once we got married, his voicemails would almost immediately turn from “Hello, gorgeous—I know I just saw you five minutes ago but I just wanted to hear your voice,” to “Cuhmeal, where are you? I called twice already. Listen, I need you to bring me something for lunch—I forgot it again. Also, could you put my black hoodie in the wash today? I know you already did seven loads yesterday, but it’s my favourite hoodie. Oh. And I’ll be late for dinner—don’t wait up.” Oh, to be young again…)

Hardly being able to contain my joy at finding a new message, I pressed and held “1” to retrieve it, assuming that—along with every other cell phone I’d ever owned—voicemail was pre-programmed into the phone as speed dial #1.

It rang once, but instead of connecting me straight to the Voicemail Lady, it continued to ring a few more times. Suddenly, I heard a voice.

“Hello?” it greeted. He sounded about my age, and with a Canadian accent. He was no recording.

“Umm…hello? Is this…is this my voicemail?” I was dumbfounded. Surely it was a joke. Were Canadian voicemail systems set up with actual humans? “Is this guy sitting in a call center somewhere taking messages for me?” I wondered.

“Uhhh…pardon me?” came his equally perplexed–though very polite–reply.

Finally coming to my senses and realizing I must have simply dialed incorrectly, I apologized and hung up. I was so flustered, I didn’t even wait for him to say goodbye.

I checked my “Sent Calls” menu, and found that I’d just made a call to a number I didn’t recognize [and not just because I’d gotten a new phone number myself]. “How odd,” I thought, “I’d better try that again.”

Sure enough, the second time I tried to call my voicemail, I was met with the same human guy. Luckily, though, I [sort of] had the presence of mind to explain myself.

“I’m really sorry to keep bothering you,” I apologized. “I’m not an idiot. It’s just…I got this new cell phone today, and I’m trying to check my voicemails, but for some reason my phone thinks its phone number is you.” Even to myself, I sounded like a fool.

“Oh, sure,” he replied understandingly, as if that sort of thing happened all the time. [And as if I actually made sense.] “Well…I hope you get it figured out.” And then, in parting, “Talk to you later.”

Hanging up, I decided two things: One, that I had just made a new friend whose name I forgot to catch, and two, that Poor Kyle would know what to do. So I called him next.

“Hey, babe,” he answered.

“Hi. Hey, so a few minutes ago I saw I’d gotten a new voicemail, so I went to check it, but instead of the Voicemail Lady answering, it was a guy. And at first I thought he was my own personal assistant, but then I just realized my phone thinks its phone number is his, and now I have a new friend. He’s the guy whose number my phone stole, and we’re friends. What should I do?”

He didn’t believe me of course, until he saw it for himself later.

We still haven’t gotten the problem fixed, and it’s been a nuisance the entire time I’ve had this phone. I can’t text Google™, for one. Rather, I can text Google™, but Google™ thinks my cell phone is the other guy’s number, so Google™ replies to him. It took me nine months to figure out why Google™ never texts me back; I can only imagine how strange it’s been for my friend to receive random texts from Google™ these past nine months. Things like “Definition of onomatopoeia,” and “Linens ‘N Things. 1235 S. Arizona Ave. Mesa, AZ 85679 (602) 898-1234.”

Sometimes when I’m in a hurry and try to check my messages quickly, I forget my broken speed dial. When that happens, and my friend answers, I always chuckle. “Oh, hi. It’s me again—that girl whose phone is struggling with an identity crisis. Sorry to bother you.”

“Oh, no bother,” he assures, the smile in his voice transmitting itself over the telephone signal. “Talk to you later.”

I really like my nice friend–it’s almost like we’re pen pals, but without the pens. Maybe someday I’ll get to meet him.

Posted in fiascos, photos, thisandthat | 18 Comments