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A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 28 - Apple. Also! Winter Hibernation! Dec. 18th, 2009 @ 05:16 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge!  Day 28 - Apple!Day 28 - Apple

It has been a dreary day here, and for all dreary days, there is an appropriate response: curling into a ball and taking a nap. Apple is always on top of this idea, but at other times exists only as a surprised blur flitting about the house. There's just no between.

Here we are in one of the still moments. Shhhh.


Plush A Day Challenge - Temporary Winter Hibernation!Oh yes! Winter hibernation!
The Plush A Day Challenge is going on Winter Hibernation until January 1, 2010! This will give me time to work on, finish up, start some presents, do a lot of travelling, all kinds of stuff for the holidays!

I'll probably still post occasionally, but I know you all read this at work, and you'll be off gallivanting as much as I will. So, me and plushies will be back in two weeks - see you then!

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 27 - Jenkins the Dragon! Dec. 17th, 2009 @ 05:41 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 27 - Jenkins the Dragon!Day 27 - Jenkins the Dragon

Originally, I was going for dinosaur, but then things just got out of hand (especially the tail!) Then what hatched was Jenkins here. As a dragon, he enjoys fighting adventurers, milkshakes, and hanging out in dungeons.

What is it with me and out-of-control tails on these plushies? The squirrel, the red panda, and now the dragon! My tail obsession must stop!

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 26 - Ninja! Dec. 16th, 2009 @ 04:18 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Days 26 - Ninja!Day 26 - Ninja!

The photo is a little blurry, because it is difficult to catch a ninja even when they let you take their picture.

I can not give you any further information about this ninja on pain of tiny pointy death from above.

In order to make myself use up this embarrassment of tshirt material, I am instituting a Plush a Day Challenge to myself. Essentially, I have to make some sort of plush creature every day.

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

Beard Rock 4 Life! Dec. 15th, 2009 @ 12:46 pm
[info]sullust

Posted via email from sullust.org


I love my comfy sweater! Dec. 15th, 2009 @ 12:06 pm
[info]sullust

Posted via email from sullust.org


A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 25 - Fatbird! Dec. 15th, 2009 @ 01:06 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge!  Day 25 - Fatbird
Day 25 - Fatbird!
I'm not entirely sure this is a bird - it's wingless, and it eats all of the cashews I throw into the yard. Do birds even eat cashews?

It's pretty cute hopping around, though. Even if it scares the squirrels.

In order to make myself use up this embarrassment of tshirt material, I am instituting a Plush a Day Challenge to myself. Essentially, I have to make some sort of plush creature every day.

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 22 - 24: Barton the Red Panda, The Tartan Terror, Sleep Pea Dec. 14th, 2009 @ 12:42 pm
[info]cleahpatra
Combining all of the weekend plushies, plus today's, into one post - here they are!

A Plush a Day Challenge! Day 22 - Barton, the Red PandaA Plush A Day Challenge! Day 23 - The Tartan TerrorA Plush A Day Challenge!  Day 24 - Sleep Pea
Day 22: Barton, the Red Panda * Day 23: The Tartan Terror * Day 24: Sleep Pea

For more info on each of them, click on the picture!

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

Readin' Round-up 2009 Dec. 13th, 2009 @ 03:27 pm
[info]zophos
You'd think that having a baby would mean I hadn't read anything past May. You'd be wrong. While it is getting harder to get more than a few minutes of uninterrupted reading time these days because I have to stay on high alert lest the Christmas tree become horizontal, I still have naptimes and as much as Evelyn likes to play with me (i.e. use me as a personal jungle gym), she does reach a point where she's all "Can you entertain yourself for a few minutes while I stare at and poke this microscopic bit I found on the carpet? Cool. Thanks." Now that I've been pretty diligent about keeping up my goodreads account, I actually have a fairly accurate record of everything I've read this year. A lot of the reviews are verbatim so if you've seen 'em once, you may want to skip.

The only bad thing about read so much is that half of it doesn't stick in my mind. This is also a function of having gotten all of these books from the library so I have no way of refreshing my memory.

Actual books (I can't remember the order I read them in since I added a bunch of them to goodreads at once):

1. A bunch of baby, pregnancy, birthing books which I am not going to bother listing because I don't use any of them anymore.

2. Great American Hypocrites by Glenn Greenwald - Greenwald is just about the only reason to read Salon anymore yet this book was kind of a letdown in that it was mostly things I already knew and it was quite repetitive. I think I will stick to his columns.

3. Annie Leibovitz at Work - I like seeing how real photographers work.

4. The Great Gatsby - I don't know how I missed this in high school. I didn't have any trouble finishing it, I just didn't care much afterward.

5. Silver Rights by Constance Curry - This is a book about desegregation in my home town. It was quite enlightening.

6. Wishful Drinking by Carrie Fisher - Very funny. I think I covered this one earlier.

7. Slaughter-house Five by Kurt Vonnegut - Another one I probably should have read a long time ago. I liked it okay.

8. Pushed: The Painful Truth About Childbirth and Modern Maternity Care by Jennifer Block - I'm so glad I gave birth in Canada at a hospital with good policies.

9. The Vaccine Book by Dr. Bob Sears - Confirmed what I knew, that vaccines are safe. Still I learned a lot.

10. Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes - Rarely is there a book that turns my thinking upside down. Rarer still is a book that gets me to change what I do. This is one of those books. It's kind of sad that it seems to have been more or less ignored since I think Taubes has the thread that will unravel the whole obesity "epidemic".

11. Lives of Girls and Women by Alice Munro - The first I've read by her. I was trying to read more Canadian authors. I won't make that mistake again.

12. Little Brother by Cory Doctorow - Fairly enjoyable though a lot of "Hello, this is what me, Cory Doctorow pretending to be a 17-year-old, thinks of this issue" plus over-explaining that comes across as condescending.

13. Push: a Novel by Sapphire Written by Sapphire with score by Sapphire by Sapphire - It's better than the movie but not by much.

14. The Language Police by Diane Ravitch - I don't doubt that there are some censorship issues out there that need to be addressed in education. This book doesn't do much to help the problem though.

15. Inherent Vice by good ol' Tommy P. - I'm just going to call this like I see it: this is Big Lebowski fanfic crossed with Fear and Loathing. Terrible, terrible jokes, like jokes your dad would tell.

16. Columbine by Dave Cullen - The most shocking thing I took from this was the sheer scale of the attack if it had gone according to plan. If they had had any clue about building bombs, this would never have been remembered as a "school shooting" but would have been filed as the worst domestic terrorist attack on American soil. Also, I'd like to give a brief Nelson-esque "haw haw!" to the fact that Cullen thinks CO2 cartridges are "whip-its". Yeah, you just try to get a buzz off of those.

17. Half the Sky by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn - I see eye-to-eye with Mr. Kristof on a lot of issues. I think he wants to save the world, but he doesn't gloss over the fact that that's very hard to do since all of the well-intentioned acts in the world can just blow up in your face. He isn't shy about pointing out the failure of a lot of aid programs. All in all, I think this is a very important book about the state of women worldwide.

18. NurtureShock by Po Bronson and Ashley Merriman - Pretty much Freakonomics for parents and educators. Interesting and informative. I really wish Tools of the Mind were available as a curriculum up here.

19. Bad Mother by Ayelet Waldman - Ayelet Waldman calls out all the haters from her days as a Salon columnist. I must confess, I was once one of them. But now I get a lot of where she's coming from. Because being a mother does mean that you are in the center of a cultural tug-of-war and no matter who wins, you still lose.

20. Superfreakonomics by the Stevens - More of the same yet less compelling. The shitstorm from the geo-engineering chapter has been amusing though.

21. Manhood for Amateurs by Michael Chabon - MICHAEL CHABON HAS A THIRD NIPPLE!!! and other revelations. Just kidding, the essays in this are pretty good. A couple of them are excellent. He espouses one of my closely held theories - that purposeful procreation is one of the ultimate expressions of optimism.

22. Love is a Many Trousered Thing / Stop in the Name of Pants by Louise Rennison - Just catching up on my YA reading. Josh said, "Why are these books all about pants?"

23. JPod by Douglas Coupland - Internet commenters TRICKED me into reading this even though I knew better and had avoided it since it came out. I would say that putting yourself in your own novel is usually a literary form of jumping the shark, but Coupland has more or less hopped back and forth over the shark since Girlfriend in a Coma. At a different point in time, I would have hated this book to death. I can only give a sigh of resignation these days.

24. The Road by Cormac McCarthy - I wrote a song about it.
Walkin' in a Nuclear Winter Wonderland.

Bad guys clang, are ya listenin'
In the road, ash is glistenin'
A terrible sight
We're hungry tonight
Walking in a nuclear winter wonderland

Gone away is the bluebird,
and the trees and the cow herd,
No one sings a song,
As we trudge along,
Walking in a nuclear winter wonderland.

In the meadow we can build a crude shelter,
Then pretend that we are safe and warm

Papa says: Are you okay?
Son says: No man,
There's a baby on a spit
and here comes a storm.

Later on, we'll conspire,
As we dream by the fire
To face unafraid,
The plans that we've made,
Walking in a nuclear winter wonderland.


Hey, I didn't even have to change the last verse.

Re-reads:

1. The Kindness of Women - in honor of the passing of J.G. Ballard

2. Geek Love - It was part of the A.V. Club's book club.

3. Big Fish - I think it was the first thing I grabbed in the bookcase before taking a bath.

Graphic Novels/Comics/whatever you want to call them:

1. Batman: The Killing Joke - Not a series. Also a waste of a $20 gift certificate. I liked it pretty well, but I did not need to own it.

2. American Widow by Alissa Torres - I was expecting something a little more poignant and little less bitching about the incompetence of FEMA.

3. Fun Home by Alison Bechdel - I read this and I liked it, but now I don't really remember much about it.


Completed the Series:

1. Y: The Last Man - I enjoyed it and I'm glad I waited until the series had finished to read it. Sometimes I have to learn that lesson over and over.

2. Girls by the Luna Bros. - Naked vampire bitches from space. Post-apocalyptic in a different way from Y:TLM.


Incomplete Series so far:

The library's graphic novel section is not only badly organized, it's spread over several areas. Plus people pick up the books and either hide them or steal them. This makes it difficult to start and continue a series of TPBs because you can only requests books that are not marked as "in" and if you can't find the one you want, you have to send the librarians out to look for the missing volumes just to prove they aren't there and THEN you can request a copy from another library. It's kind of an exhausting process. These are the ones I just haven't had the energy to finish tracking down because Volume 2 is "In" but it is clearly not present.

1. Scott Pilgrim - Cute and Canadian. I may search out the rest next year.

2. 100 Bullets - I like the premise and I want to see where the later volumes go.

3. The Sword - I haven't finished this one yet because the last volume won't be out until next year, but I'm with it so far.

A Plush a Day Challenge! Day 21 - Mender of Broken Hearts (Gerald) Dec. 11th, 2009 @ 01:43 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 21 - Mender of Broken HeartsDay 21 - Mender of Broken Hearts

People are always wondering how to mend a broken heart, and that's where Gerald here steps in. With his patented "HeartWelld" welding technique, he fixes the various fissures, cracks, and general wear and tear that most hearts endure.

On the weekends, Gerald says he enjoys playing the violin.

In order to make myself use up this embarrassment of tshirt material, I am instituting a Plush a Day Challenge to myself. Essentially, I have to make/post some sort of plush creature every day.

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 20 - Zombear! Dec. 10th, 2009 @ 08:10 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 20 - Zombear!Day 20 - Zombear

We all knew it was coming - nothing goes with cute brains better than a zombie! This guy is a zombie bear, hence his name Zombear. He would be sad that his ear is all bitten off, but he's just more interested in staring directly at your skull.

Where your delicious delicious brains are.

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

I really just can't ever get enough of this song Dec. 10th, 2009 @ 12:04 pm
[info]sullust

Posted via email from sullust.org


A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 19 - Brains! Dec. 9th, 2009 @ 02:38 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 19 - BRAINS!Day 19 - Brains!

This is a brain on my windowsill. It's pretty happy about it. The temptation to name her "Sarah Bellum" is pretty high. But we're just gonna stick with "Brains."

In order to make myself use up this embarrassment of tshirt material, I am instituting a Plush a Day Challenge to myself. Essentially, I have to make/post some sort of plush creature every day.

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

I Just Love This Cat Dec. 8th, 2009 @ 01:38 pm
[info]sullust

Posted via web from sullust.org


A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 17 - CONbot! Dec. 8th, 2009 @ 01:02 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 18 - ConBotDay 18 - ConBot

ConBot is made from some more of the Boston 2009 FUDCon tshirt that I had. This part includes the tag cloud, which I really like the visual imagery of.

Unfortunately, ConBot is a bit crazed - look at those eyes! Maybe there are too many words on his belly?

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 17 - FUDbot! Dec. 6th, 2009 @ 03:59 pm
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 17 - FUDbot (front)Day 17 - FUDbot!

A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 17 - FUDbot (back)This robot is made from the FUDcon Boston 2009 shirt that I got - in fact, I plan to make 2-3 robots from the material! I was reminded about this shirt since FUDCon is going on right now up in Toronto!

His full name is Leonidas Stentz, but he prefers "FUDbot" so I'm fine with that. FUDbot likes to wear my chopsticks in his back pocket because they "make it look like I'm a sweet ninja!"

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

A Plush A Day Challenge! Day 16 - The Saddest Monster Dec. 6th, 2009 @ 11:39 am
[info]cleahpatra
A Plush A Day Challenge: Day 16 - The Saddest MonsterDay 16 - The Saddest Monster
In order to make myself use up this embarrassment of tshirt material, I am instituting a Plush a Day Challenge to myself. Essentially, I have to make/post some sort of plush creature every day.

Even with such cheerful colors, the saddest monster is still pretty sad. It's okay monster, let's go to the movies.

Cross-posted from blog Leah's Stuff

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