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Blue Hydrangea Easter/Spring Vignette


Hello friends. How have you been? It’s already April and Easter is this weekend. I love this time of year when everything starts to come to life again. I put together this pretty blue hydrangea spring/Easter vignette.
There’s something so nostalgic about blue hydrangeas. I’m not sure what it is but they make me feel so happy.Β 
I added some pretty white tulips. They make such a pretty contrast.
I shared how I made these decoupaged eggs. They look great amongst the flowers.Β 
Of course the painted eggs and some painted candles. The glass candlestick holders are from Dollar Tree. I think they’re so pretty.Β 
This simple bunny I purchased a couple of years ago from Homesense.Β  Such simple little display but it brings me so much joy. Happy April friends.

much love,

Lucy

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Heart Shaped Napkin Rings

Hello friends. Happy February! January felt long yet short at the same time. It’s Valentine’s day soon and I made another super easy DIY. These Heart Shaped Napkin Rings turned out so cute and were so simple to make.


I bought a wooden heart garland from the Dollar Store and removed it from the twine. I then glued the heart to a wooden ring and sprayed them with some gold spray paint and done!Β 
You can paint these any color to coordinate with your table. I like the gold because I can use it throughout the year.Β  I think these heart shaped napkin rings turned out so cute!

Thank you so much for stopping by today,

much love,

Lucy

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Spring Living Wreath


Hello again friends. It’s been snowing and Spring does not seem to be anywhere near, but I’m taking matters into my own hands.
I made this pretty living spring wreath using pansies and some moss.Β 
The day I made it, the sun was shining and I actually sat outside to make this wreath. But alas, it was just a little tease from Mother Nature.

I started by taking the pansies out of their pot…
Soaked some moss in water ….


And wrapped the pansies with the moss…
I used black thread to hold it together….
I then just used the same string to wrap the pansy β€˜moss balls’ to the wreath…
So easy and I love how beautiful it looks. To water it, I spray it everyday and because pansies are so hardy, it’s going to last a long time.Β 

I love it.Β 
I took a lot of photos because it was so nice outside and I was enjoying the little break of winter weather. Sadly, it’s been snowing
and cold so I brought the wreath inside. I can’t wait to display it outside and for Spring to finally show up.

Thank you so much for stopping by.

much love,

Lucy

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2025 in Reading

Another annual reading list I’m putting up without much commentary, but there were some bangers in 2025. β€œThe point seems to be this,” Kate Briggs writes, β€œleft to its own devices, the path of reading is very rarely chronologically ordered, thematically coherent, limited by language or respectful of borders. Books open out onto, they cross with and follow haphazardly on from one another. Left to its own devices, the path of reading strays all over the place.”

(Previously: 2024 in Reading, 2023 in Reading,Β 2022 in Reading,Β 2021 in Reading,Β 2020 in Reading)

LegendRough Guide to Ratings
🎭 – Plays
πŸ“ – Poetry
πŸ“– – Books (Fiction)
πŸ““ – Books (Nonfiction)
πŸ’¬ – Graphic Novels
πŸ”„ – Reread
πŸŽ™οΈ – Audiobook
❀︎ = Yes
❀︎❀︎ = Oh Yes
❀︎❀︎❀︎ = Oh Hell Yes
  1. πŸ““ A Month in Siena – Hisham Matar ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  2. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ““ This Nonviolent Stuff’ll Get You Killed – Charles E. Cobb Jr.
  3. πŸ“– Sisters – Daisy Johnson ❀︎
  4. πŸ““ Come Together – Emily Nagoski
  5. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– His Majesty’s Dragon – Naomi Novik
  6. πŸ”„ / πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Sabriel – Garth Nix
  7. πŸ“– The Captain of the Polestar – Arthur Conan Doyle
  8. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– As the Crow Flies – Melanie Gilman
  9. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Skip – Molly Mendoza
  10. πŸ”„ / πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Lirael – Garth Nix
  11. πŸ“– The Diary of Mr. Poynter – M.R. James
  12. πŸ“– The Morgan Trust – R. Bridgeman
  13. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Sunhead – Alex Assan
  14. πŸ“– Creation Lake – Rachel Kushner ❀︎
  15. πŸ““ Inciting Joy – Ross Gay ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  16. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Across a Field of Starlight – Blue Delliquanti ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  17. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Abhorsen – Garth Nix
  18. πŸ“– Martyr! – Kaveh Akbar ❀︎
  19. πŸ“– Memorial – Bryan Washington ❀︎❀︎
  20. πŸ“– The Vanishing Half – Brit Bennett ❀︎
  21. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Squire – Sara Alfageeh and Nadia Shammas
  22. πŸ”„ / πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Giant Days Vol. 3 – John Allison & Max Sarin
  23. πŸ““ The Noble Approach – Tod Polson & Maurice Noble ❀︎❀︎
  24. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ““ ADHD 2.0 – Edward M. Hallowell, M.D.
  25. πŸ“– Madness is Better than Defeat – Ned Beauman
  26. πŸ““ The Drummer and the Great Mountain – Michael Joseph Ferguson
  27. πŸ“– Return to Sender – Vera Brosgol
  28. πŸ”„ / πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Republic of Thieves – Scott Lynch
  29. πŸ““ The Creative Act: a Way of Being – Rick Rubin and Neil Strauss ❀︎
  30. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Rare Flavors – Ram V & Filipe Andrade ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  31. πŸ““ The Saviors of God – Nikos Kazantzakis
  32. πŸŽ™οΈ / 🎭 Arcadia – Tom Stoppard
  33. πŸ““ I’m Mostly Here to Enjoy Myself – Glynnis MacNicol ❀︎
  34. πŸ““ The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street – Helene Hanff
  35. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– The Many Deaths of Laila Starr – Ram V and Filipe Andrade ❀︎
  36. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Boys Weekend – Mattie Lubchansky
  37. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– The Jellyfish – Boum
  38. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ Offhand – Yuko Ota
  39. πŸ”„ / πŸ“– Finn Family Moomintroll – Tove Jansson ❀︎❀︎
  40. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Witchlight- Jessi Zabarsky
  41. πŸ““ Gift from the Sea – Anne Morrow Lindbergh ❀︎❀︎
  42. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Sunburn – Andi Watson and Simon Gane
  43. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– The Book Tour – Andi Watson ❀︎
  44. πŸ”„ πŸ““ Unmastered – Katherine Angel ❀︎❀︎
  45. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Thief – Megan Whalen Turner
  46. πŸ“– Art & Lies – Jeanette Winterson ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  47. πŸ“ The Inferno – Dante (trans. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
  48. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Fly by Night – Tara O’Connor
  49. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ““ Catching the Big Fish – David Lynch
  50. πŸ““ Eros the Bittersweet – Anne Carson ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  51. πŸ““ Art [Objects] – Jeanette Winterson ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  52. πŸ““ Power of Gentleness – Anne Dufourmantelle ❀︎❀︎
  53. πŸ““ / πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ One Bite at a Time – Ryan Claytor ❀︎
  54. πŸ““ A Year in Practice – Jacqueline Suskin ❀︎
  55. πŸ”„ πŸ“– The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay – Michael Chabon ❀︎❀︎
  56. πŸ“– We Play Ourselves – Jen Silverman ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  57. πŸ““ Think Little – Wendell Berry ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  58. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Heart in Winter – Kevin Barry
  59. πŸ““ No Bad Parts – Richard C. Schwartz ❀︎❀︎
  60. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ Past Tense – Sacha Mardou ❀︎
  61. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Fresh Start – Gale Galligan ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  62. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– A Girl on the Shore – Inio Asano
  63. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ““ / πŸ“– Pathemata – Maggie Nelson
  64. πŸ”„ / πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ It’s Okay That It’s Not Okay – Christina Tran ❀︎❀︎
  65. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ Home/World – Ben Hatke ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  66. πŸ““ The Light of the World – Elizabeth Alexander ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  67. πŸ”„ / πŸ“– The Voyage of the Dawn Treader – C. S. Lewis ❀︎
  68. πŸ““ Faith, Hope, and Carnage – Nick Cave and SeΓ‘n O’Hagan ❀︎❀︎
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Making Nonfiction Comics Event in Ojai

One week from today (Tuesday, December 16th at 6pm) I’ll be at my beloved local outdoor bookstore,Β Bart’s Books, for an interactive evening with fellow Ojaian and powerhouse cartoonistΒ Shay Mirk.

We’re celebrating the publication ofΒ Making Nonfiction Comics,Β a comprehensive illustrated guide for everyone who’s ever wanted to tell stories about the world around us in words and pictures. (If you can’t make the event, that link takes you toΒ bookshop.orgΒ where you can buy the book online.)

Look at this chonker!

This beast is a collaboration between Shay and fellow cartoonistΒ Eleri HarrisΒ and it is so!! good!!! In addition to Eleri and Shay’s hard-won expertise, there are also interviews and tips from so many big names in the field. You can learn about crafting everything from on-the-ground protest reportage to deep dive historical research to authentic personal narrative. This book is going to be the gold standard for years to come.

I feel lucky to have a brief cameo talking about running a community drawing night in Portland for several years in the twenty teens. Here’s a look at that:

This baby can fit so many cartoonists in it! (2013)

If you’re in the area, do come by. I’m gonna show off some kelp farming comics, Shay’s gonna talk about making the book, it’s gonna be very fun. Ojai may be 80ΒΊ during the day right now, but it gets chilly after dark, so bundle up! We’ll have zine templates for folks to fill out and fun slides to share and, knowing Shay, killer snacks.

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Magnifying Glass Decorative Object DIY

Hello friends. I hope you’ve been keeping warm. It’s been a crazy cold winter and we’re not even in February yet.
I want to start bringing in some natural elements soon but today I want to show you this super easy magnifying glass decorative item I made using Dollar Tree items.Β 
This one was so easy to make and it think it looks so great!


I used a magnifying glass, a candle holder, some hot glue and crazy glue.

Β I heated a knife over the stove and used it to cut through the plastic. You can also use a small hand saw.Β 

I then filled the candlestick with some hot glue, inserted the magnifying glass and added some more crazy glue in order to secure it further.

I then painted the top of the candle holder with some buff and rub and voila!Β 

Such and easy craft but sooo cool. I love how it turned out.

Thank you for stopping by.

Much love,

Lucy

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Oosterschelde and You(sterschelde)

Cat’s been out of the bag for a while: I’d rather be operating a switchboard than a megaphone these days.

To that end: I’ve been hosting more Zoom calls for my Patreon crew to hang out together, build community, and talk about their creative and adventurous projects on the regular. It turns out it’s extremely nice to do!

This month we’ve got a real treat: Patron Josh Horton will be giving a presentation about his journey around Cape Horn aboard the Dutch tall ship Oosterschelde. Josh joined up as part of Darwin200, an audacious voyage that’s been tracing the original path of HMS Beagle since 2023. They’re doing amazing work, and I’m really looking forward to getting a peek aboard.

Patreon community Zoom: around Cape Horn with Josh Horton, Monday, May 12th, 11am PDT

The call happens Monday, May 12th at 11am Pacific Time. You can find the Zoom link and everything here. Can’t wait!

  •  

New Comic: The Scale of a Man

Last year I got an email from Tania Sammons, a curator at Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum in Savannah, Georgia who had previously licensed my guide to sailors’ tattoos for a show. Her pitch was irresistible: an exhibition of comics based on model ships from their collection. Four cartoonists would be hired, assigned a vessel, then given six months to produce a short comic for publication in an anthology alongside an accompanying museum display.

BELLWOOD CATNIP.

It’s still amazing to me when tailor-made opportunities like this land at my feet, even though I know there are only so many outspoken boat nuts in the comics world. I leapt at the chance and spent the second half of 2025 weaving together a variety of favorite themes (Le Guin’s Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction! Manguso’s cathedral architect! The Ship of Theseus!) to explore the legacy of the Anne, the vessel that carried the first colonists to Georgia in 1732. The story started in the realm of primary sources and historical nonfiction, but completely transformed in the aftermath of my dad’s death in July. By the time I was synthesizing all my notes in the fall of 2025, it had become a quest to give the extraordinary model maker behind most of the museum’s collection his due.

A business card on cream stock for William E. Hitchcock, advertising Custom ship models, restorations, and cases. A small topsail schooler and rigging motif grace the card's deisgn.

Drawn to the Sea, the exhibit collecting comics and process work by myself, Avery Hick, Rich King, and Sharon Norwood, finally opens this week! While I can’t attend the party in person, I’m very glad to be able to share my contribution online. The Scale of a Man took far more out of me than I expected, but in hindsight it makes perfect sense. I really hope you like it. (I’ve included some photos from the exhibit as well as my artist statement below. There’s also a brief essay about some the research here.)

Content Warning: this comic deals with suicide and parental mortality. Readers with trypophobia may want to skip pages 14 and 15.


Exhibition Preview:

Three bulletin boards showing Lucy's notes and process for developing the project on a gallery wall.
A display case showing a selection of model-making books from Hitchcock's collection.

Artist Statement:

I joined the crew of my first tall ship at seventeen. I know more than most the temptation to cast a vessel as the hero of the story, but it’s a lie. We name them, adorn them, and rely on them, but ultimately ships are tools enlivened by the people who use them. They encompass exploration and cultural exchange, escape and immigration, enslavement and genocide. Rather than flattening the ship into a hero, I want to examine the ship as a vessel in every sense of the word, one brimming with discoveries and losses alike.Β 

In her essay The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, Ursula K. Le Guin invites us to explore the implication of the container as the oldest human invention. What would it mean to acknowledge that we have carried sustenance and stories in baskets, nets, and bottles for far longer than we have centered narratives around a Hero’s Journey built on aggression and conquest? β€œIt’s hard,” she admits, β€œto tell a really gripping tale of how I wrested a wild-oat seed from its husk, and then another, and then another, and then another, and then another—” but the essay encourages us to try.

Whether framing the hull of a ship or the panels of a story, we delineate the things we love. It is an affection that cannot be rushed. I was lucky enough to learn from many model ship builders in the course of creating this piece. Their generosity, enthusiasm, and expertise helped me appreciate what’s poured into each miniature vessel, and to recall something I need to keep close in my own practice: there is value in doing things that defy efficiency. These are fields where monotony walks hand in hand with craft. Some people throw their hands up and bemoan the death of such practices in the age of AI, but I believe we’re headed toward a resurgence in valuing the things machines cannot do.

There is nothing more human than dying. Steeped in my own grief at the loss of my father, I found my way into a story that took me places I couldn’t have foreseen. Early in the research process, I read that the colonists aboard the Anne slept below decks in suspended wooden cotsβ€”their similarity to coffins a reminder of how often such voyages become a passage to the underworld. Every journey requires a type of death. We leave behind our former selves, hoping to meet some new incarnation on the farther shore, but the past always comes with us in one guise or another.Β 

We don’t know what became of the Anne in the end; her own death, whatever that means for a vessel, went undocumented. Sometimes such losses are inevitable. But the containers we build, whether they be ships, comics, or museums, offer us a chance to see ourselves woven into the minutiae of the past. It is a form of immortality, one that relies on engagement, imagination, and tenderness, and it is always worth reaching for.

William Hitchcock at work beside a massive model ship on a workbench.

Drawn to the Sea opens at Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum in Savannah, Georgia on Friday, May 1st and runs through January 31st, 2027. Learn more about the exhibit and related programming here.

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Candlestick Holder Floral Arrangement

Hello friends. I hope all is well. It’s been a loooong winter and I’m in need of a little warmth and of course some color.
Today I’m sharing this adorable candlestick holder flower arrangement that is so easy to make but looks so pretty on its own or in a grouping.

You could use floral foam but I didn’t have any on hand so I cut a piece of pool noodle and used that as the foam base.


I simply cut a piece and inserted it over the candlestick holder. You can place it on the top, bottom or middle of the holder.Β 
I just poked several faux flowers throughout until I was happy.Β 
To cover the rest of the foam, I glued on some moss.Β 

I think it looks so pretty and I can’t wait to make this pretty craft again.
Please don’t forget to visit my friend’s beautiful flower crafts below.

Much love,

Lucy

Blogger’s Best DIY Flower Crafts

Two greeting cards on a light wooden surface: one with punch needle blue flowers and β€œso happy for you,” the other with two red tulips and β€œa new little blessing.” DIY purple and pink blooms and green leaves surround them.

Floral Embroidered Handmade CardsΒ | My 100 Year Old Home

Floral Embroidered Handmade Cards are one of those projects that combine creativity, storytelling, and meaningful making in the most beautiful way. Using fabric scraps, simple stitching techniques, and a little imagination, I created a collection of stitched cards that feel personal, artistic, and truly special to give.

A lit cream-colored taper candle in a glass holder is decorated with yellow roses, small white and yellow flowers, and greeneryβ€”a charming DIY crafting accent for your white kitchen countertop.

Candlestick Holder Floral ArrangementΒ | Craftberry Bush

happy happy nester

Punch Needle Crafting DIYΒ | Happy Happy Nester

Punch Needle Crafting DIY is a cozy, beginner-friendly craft, and I had the best time making these three adorable coasters from a simple kit. This project comes together quickly and is perfect for adding a handmade touch to your coffee table or gifting to a friend. If you’ve been wanting to try punch needle embroidery, these cute little coasters are a fun and easy place to start.

A garland of flower-shaped decorations, perfect for punch needle crafting or other DIY projects, is made from brown and patterned paper strips with circular centers, laid out on a white fabric background next to a spool of green string.

Paper Bag Flower Garland (Using a Trader Joe’s Bag)Β | Most Lovely Things

A simple paper flower garland made from a Trader Joe’s paper bag and hand-painted watercolor circles β€” an easy, charming craft that turns everyday materials into something unexpectedly sweet.

Two handcrafted ceramic tiles with artistic floral and abstract designs rest on a light wooden surface, surrounded by dried flowers and small white petalsβ€”a charming addition to any crafting or DIY space.

Floral Decoupage Tile CoastersΒ | My Sweet Savannah

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2024 in Reading

Turns out I’m two years behind on these so I’m getting ’em up! No commentary because I gotta run out the door to ink more pages of Seacritters, but hopefully I’ll come back to this down the line.

(Previously: 2023 in Reading,Β 2022 in Reading,Β 2021 in Reading,Β 2020 in Reading)

LegendRough Guide to Ratings
🎭 – Plays
πŸ“ – Poetry
πŸ“– – Books (Fiction)
πŸ““ – Books (Nonfiction)
πŸ’¬ – Graphic Novels
πŸ”„ – Reread
πŸŽ™οΈ – Audiobook
❀︎ = Yes
❀︎❀︎ = Oh Yes
❀︎❀︎❀︎ = Oh Hell Yes
❀︎❀︎❀︎❀︎❀︎ = Obviously this one hit at the right place and the right time
  1. πŸ“– The Raven Tower – Ann Leckie
  2. πŸ“– The Night Manager – John Le CarrΓ©
  3. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ It’s Lonely at the Centre of the Earth – Zoe Thorogood
  4. πŸ“– Network Effect – Martha Wells
  5. πŸ““ The Beauty in Breaking – Michele Harper
  6. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ The Five Lives of Hilma Af Kilnt – Philipp Deines
  7. πŸ“– The Fermata – Nicholson Baker
  8. πŸ“– Birnam Wood – Eleanor Catton ❀︎❀︎
  9. πŸ“– The Luminaries – Eleanor Catton
  10. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Lightning Rods – Helen DeWitt
  11. πŸ“– Prophet – Sin BlachΓ© & Helen Macdonald ❀︎
  12. πŸ““ Holy the Firm – Annie Dillard ❀︎❀︎
  13. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Making Money – Terry Pratchett
  14. πŸ“– Excession – Ian M. Banks
  15. πŸ““ Your Money or Your Life – Vicki Robin & Joe Dominguez
  16. πŸ““ Subculture Vulture – Moshe Kasher
  17. πŸ“– The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi – Shannon Chakraborty ❀︎
  18. πŸ“ The Peace of Wild Things – Wendell Berry ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  19. πŸ““ The Liars’ Club – Mary Karr ❀︎❀︎
  20. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Lies of Locke Lamora – Scott Lynch
  21. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ And Now I Spill the Family Secrets – Margaret Kimball
  22. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Sex Criminals Vols. 1-6 – Matt Fraction & Chip Zdarsky ❀︎❀︎
  23. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Red Seas Under Red Skies – Scott Lynch
  24. πŸ““ Travelers to Unimaginable Lands – Dasha Kiper ❀︎
  25. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Safari Honeymoon – Jesse Jacobs
  26. πŸ““ What If This Were Enough? – Heather Havrilesky
  27. πŸ“– Oliver VII – Antal Szerb
  28. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ How to Understand Israel in 60 Days or Less – Sarah Glidden
  29. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Republic of Thieves – Scott Lynch
  30. πŸ“ 44 Poems for You – Sarah Ruhl
  31. πŸ““ Wild – Cheryl Strayed
  32. πŸ““ Saving Time – Jenny Odell ❀︎❀︎❀︎❀︎❀︎
  33. πŸŽ™οΈ/πŸ“– The Thursday Murder Club – Richard Osman
  34. πŸ““ The Wild Edge of Sorrow – Francis Weller ❀︎❀︎
  35. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Nothing to See Here – Kevin Wilson
  36. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The City of Brass – S.A. Chakraborty
  37. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ The Worst Journey in the World: Vol. 1 – Sarah Airriess, adapted from Apsley Cherry-Garrard ❀︎
  38. πŸ““ Smile: The Story of a Face – Sarah Ruhl ❀︎❀︎
  39. πŸ““ Gender/Fucking – Florence Ashley
  40. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Pixels of You – Ananth Hirsh, Yuko Ota, J.R. Doyle
  41. πŸ““ Mr. Wilson’s Cabinet of Wonder – Lawrence Weschler / Visitng The Museum of Jurassic Technology IRL ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  42. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Waverider (Amulet Book 9) – Kazu Kibuishi
  43. πŸ“– Women Talking – Miriam Toews
  44. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Kingdom of Copper – S.A. Chakraborty
  45. πŸ““ Care: The Highest Stage of Capitalism – Premilla Nadasen ❀︎❀︎
  46. πŸ”„ πŸ““ Steal Like an Artist – Austin Kleon
  47. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Danger and Other Unknown Risks – Ryan North & Erica Henderson ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  48. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Lightfall: The Dark Times – Tim Probert
  49. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Empire of Gold – S. A. Chakraborty
  50. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Night Boat to Tangier – Kevin Barry ❀︎❀︎❀︎
  51. πŸ“– Funny Story – Emily Henry
  52. πŸ’¬ / πŸ“– Stargazing – Jen Wang
  53. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ In Limbo – Deb JJ Lee
  54. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Midnight Library – Matt Haig
  55. πŸ““ Four Thousand Weeks – Oliver Burkeman ❀︎
  56. πŸ’¬ / πŸ““ Coma – Zara Slattery
  57. πŸ““ The Long Run: A Creative Inquiry – Stacey D’Erasmo ❀︎❀︎
  58. πŸ““ Mutual Aid – Dean Spade
  59. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– The Book of Love – Kelly Link
  60. πŸ“– Red, White, and Royal Blue – Casey McQuiston
  61. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Godkiller – Hannah Kaner
  62. πŸ“– Whoever You Are, Honey – Olivia Gatwood ❀︎
  63. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ“– Sunbringer – Hannah Kaner
  64. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ““ Driven to Distraction – Edward M. Hallowell & John J. Ratey
  65. πŸŽ™οΈ / πŸ““ A Heart That Works – Rob Delaney ❀︎
  66. πŸ“– Nervous Conditions – Tsitsi Dangarembga
  67. πŸ““ Slouching Towards Bethlehem – Joan Didion ❀︎❀︎

Unfinished but Made Progress

  1. The Nature Book – Tom Comitta
  2. Annals of the Former World – John McFee
  3. The Divine Comedy – Dante
  4. Come Together – Emily Nagoski
  5. Wildwood – Roger Deakin
  6. The Idle Beekeeper – Bill Anderson
  7. Bear – Marian Engel
  8. This Nonviolent Stuff’ll Get You Killed – Charles E. Cobb Jr.
  9. A Month in Siena – Hisham Matar

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Ceramic Butterfly Specimen Display

Hello friends. I hope you’ve been well. We had a few days of warmer weather but we’re back to very cold days. During the warmer days I was inspired to create a few Spring crafts. Starting with this sweet β€˜ceramic’ butterfly specimen display.Β  You won’t believe how easy it was to make. Let me show you.


You’re going to need a 3D butterfly; used for scrapping booking. I found several sizes at the Dollar Store.
Paper napkin with a nice pattern. I love THIS one because it has various patterns and it looks like Chinoiserie.


-I spray painted the butterfly with white spray paint. You can also use acrylic paint.
You will allow it to dry completely.
-Take some Modpodge or Glue and spread it over the entire butterfly.
-Take the napkin and remove the bottom layer and discard. Place the napkin on top the glue and gently rub napkin until it
adheres onto the butterfly. Allow to dry.


Once it’s completely dry, spread layer of UV resin. I used THIS ONE.Β I’ve used it in another project you can see it HERE.Β 
Once dry, I used some gold paint to paint the edges and the body of the butterfly.

I then used a little bit of double sided tape and placed it onto the frame. You can of course place it inside the frame but I needed to place it over the glass for better photos.Β 
I love how this turned out and I can’t wait to make more specimens.Β 
The resin make the butterflies look like ceramic and I just love them.Β 

Look how pretty they look displayed on this arrangement.
What do you think? Would you try this?

Thank you so much for stopping by today.

much love,

Lucy

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Hyde and Eroticism

A quick one to say I’ve been thinking a lot about the different subtitles they’ve slapped on Lewis Hyde’s The Gift through the years, mostly because it was only this year I learned that the original 1983 edition looked like this:

The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property by Lewis Hyde

I LOVE IT. WHY DID THEY CHANGE IT. WHAT GIVES.

The whole thing is a far cry from 2019’s:

The Gift: How the Creative Spirit Transforms the World by Lewis Hyde

As well as the copy I first encountered (published in 2007), which features a third option:

The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World by Lewis Hyde

Which is…fine? It’s fine.

BUT WHO BURIED THE LEDE ON THE EROTIC LIFE OF PROPERTY?!

Audre Lorde originally presented β€œUses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power” as a paper in 1978, but it wasn’t published in Sister Outsider until 1984β€”just one year after the first edition of The Gift came out.

Sister Outsider Essays and Speeches by Audre Lorde
(There’s a nice write-up of this design on Fonts in Use, if you’re into that sort of thing, *cough*ROBIN*cough*)

I wonder about this post-70s literary landscape, everything still reverberating with the energy of the 60s, the explosive visibility of sexuality in American youth culture, the rising tide of queer voicesβ€”but also the broader definition of eroticism.

I just re-read Katherine Angel’s Unmastered: a Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell, which I picked up after Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again. Her exploration of eroticism veers more towards the question of what to do with desire that resists being codified, named, and negotiated in explicit terms. How do we reckon with consent culture alongside the lure of the unknown? What of discovery? What of the secret third thing?

Kate Wagner coming in at the right moment here with this essay:

A situational eroticism is what is needed now, in our literalist times. […] Arousal is a matter of the self, which takes place within the body, a space no one can see into. It is often a mystery, a surprise, a discovery. It can happen at a small scale, say, the frisson of two sets of fingers in one’s hair at once. It is beautiful, unplanned and does not judge itself because it is an inert sensation, unimbued with premeditated meaning. This should liberate rather than frighten us. Maybe what it means doesn’t matter. Maybe we don’t have to justify it even to ourselves.Β 

This draft has been languishing because I don’t have a neat bow to slap on the end of this. If there’s anything I’m thinking of, though, it’s that Hyde (or his publisher) wasn’t wrong to foreground eroticism in that first edition of the book. Eroticism is creativity, and neither are as much work as they are play.

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