I requested a SQUARE credit card reader so I'll be able to take credit/debit cards at my booth at the Home and Garden Show on April 27, at the Rector Community Center.
Inspired by Elizabeth Scokin of Nashville, TN, with her Haute Coutoure Aprons, I launched a modification of the idea several years ago. My first endeavor was as a Christmas gift for Brenda Pilant, friend and co-worker at Bartlett High School. I designed for her a University of Memphis Hostess Apron,complete with jewels, netting, ribbon, and lace onto UofM fabric. It was a hit! In fact, I had requests for a UT apron which I never had time or energy to design.
Now, I have both time and energy and have been inspired to create more "designer" and "one of a kind" aprons. Currently I have a Zebra collection with Arkansas motif, and some B/W zebra motif aprons ala Audrey Hepburn and Ann Taylor. With a salute to my potential customers, I am working on a John Deere collection (husband/wife duo barbeque designs), a Camo Collection (both manly and girly), and a Dessert Apron collection with styles I've entitled "chocolate covered strawberries," "butterscotch candy," "peppermint chiffon," etc.
Garden aprons and jeans aprons also will be in my booth. I designed the jeans garden aprons from the back end of men's jeans so I could utilize the BIG pockets! Inspired from a YouTube video, I must confess, I prefer prettier designs. The fabric from Hobby Lobby, Hancocks, and Wal-Mart is so pretty and that makes it fun to work with.
On a card for one of the dessert aprons (Zebra and Pink with lace, ribbons, and bows) I advise that children be at grandma's house, because hubby will anticipate a special kind of dessert!
"Lemon Pie Sunshine" Blog extravaganza incorporates memoir,humorous essay, and opinion. I am pleased you enjoy reading it.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Friday, March 29, 2013
Arkansas Vistas: Dichotomy and Juxtaposition
Gorgeous natural beauty positioned against pervasive poverty.
Lush landscapes flourish within abandoned home sites. Perky daffodils sway where families once worked and played. Arkansas: The Natural State. So many gorgeous vistas around Fayetteville, Hot Springs, and Mountain Home. So much poverty around Camden, Pine Bluff, West Memphis, and Blytheville. Shift your mind's eye to Rector and then, to Roland, Arkansas.
If you have $90 per each to spare, you can tour Moss Mountain Farm, in Roland, Arkansas, the Garden Home Site for P. Allen Smith, consummate gardener and TV personality, Southern Living Home and Garden expert, and Little Rock, Arkansas, native. I adore a gorgeous garden, but prefer help and direction in maintaining my own. Weeding is not my favorite activity. Garden aprons, garden gloves, and a nice bench or stool would make my experience more inviting. I love the end result and gain inspiration from the beauty of gardens well-kept. The truth is, though, they have gardeners and architects, Vanderbilt money, and vision.
A trip to Roland, Arkansas, would be worth the time and expense, I surmise. There, Warren Stephens, the Arkansas billionaire, built a private golf club called the Alotian, which rivals Augusta National. Warren’s dad, Jack, was former chairman at Augusta National, home of the Master’s Tournament. Daddy was treated to playing rounds at Augusta National by his friend John Phillips, retired CEO of Louisiana Land and Exploration. Marvin and I drove through the gates April, 2012, but that’s as far as we got before being greeted by armed guards.
Both Moss Mountain Farm and Alotian Golf Club have been in my line of sight this week, so I investigated Roland, Arkansas. Located just west of Little Rock on Lake Maumelle, Roland is home to both P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home and Warren Stephens’ Alotian Golf Club.
Arkansas: The Natural State, Diamonds and Dearth, Dichotomy and Juxtaposition.
If you have $90 per each to spare, you can tour Moss Mountain Farm, in Roland, Arkansas, the Garden Home Site for P. Allen Smith, consummate gardener and TV personality, Southern Living Home and Garden expert, and Little Rock, Arkansas, native. I adore a gorgeous garden, but prefer help and direction in maintaining my own. Weeding is not my favorite activity. Garden aprons, garden gloves, and a nice bench or stool would make my experience more inviting. I love the end result and gain inspiration from the beauty of gardens well-kept. The truth is, though, they have gardeners and architects, Vanderbilt money, and vision.
A trip to Roland, Arkansas, would be worth the time and expense, I surmise. There, Warren Stephens, the Arkansas billionaire, built a private golf club called the Alotian, which rivals Augusta National. Warren’s dad, Jack, was former chairman at Augusta National, home of the Master’s Tournament. Daddy was treated to playing rounds at Augusta National by his friend John Phillips, retired CEO of Louisiana Land and Exploration. Marvin and I drove through the gates April, 2012, but that’s as far as we got before being greeted by armed guards.
Both Moss Mountain Farm and Alotian Golf Club have been in my line of sight this week, so I investigated Roland, Arkansas. Located just west of Little Rock on Lake Maumelle, Roland is home to both P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home and Warren Stephens’ Alotian Golf Club.
Arkansas: The Natural State, Diamonds and Dearth, Dichotomy and Juxtaposition.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Childhood's Easter Magic
I love the magic in childhood. Honestly, I've retained a good portion of that magic for my everyday, adult life. It allows me to see skies with sweet potato clouds and helpful bluebirds when I clean the house. It helps. Within the holiness of Easter week resides a springtime tradition in my family, one of many that I treasure.
We never feared the topsy-turvy Easter weather: our Easter Bunny, the one who returned to Capistrano year after year, found especially creative ways to lay Easter Eggs in the house. In fact, it was far more fun to find colorful harbingers of Spring on the toilet paper roll and in the laundry basket than to find deposits among the fresh onions and dewy grass. How did that Bunny jump all the way to the top of the refrigerator?
The Easter Bunny lays Easter eggs. He does not carry them around in a basket and hide them. No EB could ever lay 30,000 plastic eggs (bound to hurt) from end zone to end zone on a football field. Whoever began that game was goofy.
Merchants began the attempt to elevate Bunny to the status of Santa Claus, still the number one good-guy bearing gifts. Easter Bunnies lay Easter Eggs full of candy corn, lemon drops, Hershey’s kisses, and other assorted tiny confections. Easter Bunnies do not bring presents, nor do they bestow cellophane covered, humongous baskets already filled with a variety of springtime goodies. An honest-to-goodness EB would never suggest feasting on giant replicas of himself, fashioned in chocolate, begging for his ears to be munched off in bite size chunks.
Bring back the REAL Easter Bunny. Encourage the minds of children to suspend logic and anatomy. In the same fanciful imaginary world that permits Spider Man to string himself throughout a city, skyscraper to skyscraper, our children should free their creativity to welcome the EB with a return to his glory days. Egg Hunts are good fun, but there’s nothing quite like your own personal Easter Bunny laying his spring-hued candy-filled treasures. Childhood needs to celebrate the magic.
~Please read my More Than A Bracelet Blog. In it today, I share a Gordon Family Traditon, complete with a couple of pictures of Easter, 1954.
We never feared the topsy-turvy Easter weather: our Easter Bunny, the one who returned to Capistrano year after year, found especially creative ways to lay Easter Eggs in the house. In fact, it was far more fun to find colorful harbingers of Spring on the toilet paper roll and in the laundry basket than to find deposits among the fresh onions and dewy grass. How did that Bunny jump all the way to the top of the refrigerator?
The Easter Bunny lays Easter eggs. He does not carry them around in a basket and hide them. No EB could ever lay 30,000 plastic eggs (bound to hurt) from end zone to end zone on a football field. Whoever began that game was goofy.
Merchants began the attempt to elevate Bunny to the status of Santa Claus, still the number one good-guy bearing gifts. Easter Bunnies lay Easter Eggs full of candy corn, lemon drops, Hershey’s kisses, and other assorted tiny confections. Easter Bunnies do not bring presents, nor do they bestow cellophane covered, humongous baskets already filled with a variety of springtime goodies. An honest-to-goodness EB would never suggest feasting on giant replicas of himself, fashioned in chocolate, begging for his ears to be munched off in bite size chunks.
Bring back the REAL Easter Bunny. Encourage the minds of children to suspend logic and anatomy. In the same fanciful imaginary world that permits Spider Man to string himself throughout a city, skyscraper to skyscraper, our children should free their creativity to welcome the EB with a return to his glory days. Egg Hunts are good fun, but there’s nothing quite like your own personal Easter Bunny laying his spring-hued candy-filled treasures. Childhood needs to celebrate the magic.
~Please read my More Than A Bracelet Blog. In it today, I share a Gordon Family Traditon, complete with a couple of pictures of Easter, 1954.
Friday, March 22, 2013
Snowfall: Specializing in Surprise
"You've seen snow before. Shut the door."
Like a child, I responded in sassiness, "But I haven't seen this snow. Not on March 21, 2013."
After I snapped the picture, I shut the door.
Strange how no camera image can equal the crystal quiet of a snowfall played out in mental magic.
This snow covered the deck in planks of puffed powder. Snowfog hovered in the lights and surrounded the pond and pasture. Stacking flake upon flake, this Spring snowfall specialized in surprise.
Like a child, I responded in sassiness, "But I haven't seen this snow. Not on March 21, 2013."
After I snapped the picture, I shut the door.
Strange how no camera image can equal the crystal quiet of a snowfall played out in mental magic.
This snow covered the deck in planks of puffed powder. Snowfog hovered in the lights and surrounded the pond and pasture. Stacking flake upon flake, this Spring snowfall specialized in surprise.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Nothing's Like a Teenage Girl
There is nothing like teen-age friends, especially 14 year-old
girlfriends! The girl drama shared at my
kitchen table yesterday kept me smiling and shaking my head. Their sense of humor is hysterical. They’ve been my little buddies for 5 years,
long before Sarah Beth could drive the “Gator” out to Aunt Mandy’s to jump on
the trampoline.
Last evening, just as I put our stuffed bell peppers main dish into the oven, the doorbell rang. It was Sarah Beth and Shelby, my buddies. They started talking when they walked in and did not stop. Leaving their pink and brown girl-boots at the door, they made their way to my kitchen table. Their conversational style is contagious, so I chuckled and giggled right along with them. Marvin said that most of the time there were 2 females talking at the same time. One just instinctively knows when to take a breath.
The topics of conversation ranged from “an older classmate who got 3 days or 3 licks for slapping a mean girl,” “growing out your hair, your bangs, your sides…” to “well, the recipe called for 18 minutes, but I cooked it for 45!” And how did that work out for you? The recipe was for cookie dough topped with a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup, topped with brownie batter, all in the cups of a muffin tin. They promised me a sample for today. This time with not so much overflowing brownie batter.
Getting to share parts of life through the eyes of a teen-age girl is an absolute delight. It’s like grandchildren: I don’t have to enforce clean-room rules.
Last evening, just as I put our stuffed bell peppers main dish into the oven, the doorbell rang. It was Sarah Beth and Shelby, my buddies. They started talking when they walked in and did not stop. Leaving their pink and brown girl-boots at the door, they made their way to my kitchen table. Their conversational style is contagious, so I chuckled and giggled right along with them. Marvin said that most of the time there were 2 females talking at the same time. One just instinctively knows when to take a breath.
The topics of conversation ranged from “an older classmate who got 3 days or 3 licks for slapping a mean girl,” “growing out your hair, your bangs, your sides…” to “well, the recipe called for 18 minutes, but I cooked it for 45!” And how did that work out for you? The recipe was for cookie dough topped with a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup, topped with brownie batter, all in the cups of a muffin tin. They promised me a sample for today. This time with not so much overflowing brownie batter.
Getting to share parts of life through the eyes of a teen-age girl is an absolute delight. It’s like grandchildren: I don’t have to enforce clean-room rules.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)