Showing posts with label Kleenex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kleenex. Show all posts

Thursday, August 17, 2023

A Rainbow Lens of Odds and Ends

Sign: Hobby Lobby

Flipflops: Katy Perry Collection.  From Nordstrom Rack, Zulily, Amazon, and Macy's.

Kleenex: Target

Photographing my favorite things, whether they be a too-cool-for-school sign, a rainbow of Katy Perry flipflops, or a box of Kleenex that arrived in an adorable cherry print instead of boring faux marble, always makes me so happy.  

Which isn't something you usually hear about a trifecta ending in tissues. 😏

Monday, November 7, 2022

Flowering Trees and Sparkling Seas: The Power of Prince Edward Island


You know how you read a book and it turns out to be bad?  And then you read another book, and that one's bad too?  And they're both so bad that you want to forget about them and most certainly not blog about the experience?  Well, that's what happened to me last week.  So I turned to a tome that could never let me down: The Landscapes of Anne of Green Gables.


In this pictorial treasury, creative writing professor Catherine Reid highlights the life and times of Anne of Green Gables author L. M. Montgomery.  Which was a delight and a comfort to me because Anne of Green Gables is my favorite book.  Reid weaves passages from Montgomery's -- scratch that, Maud's -- books and journals with photographs of her beloved Prince Edward Island in a way that makes you feel like you're there.  Unmatched in its unkempt beauty, this smallest of the Canadian provinces beats at the heart of Maud's classic novel.  Anyone who's read and been changed by Anne of Green Gables knows that it's Anne's connection to the natural world that makes her story so special.  For this eleven-year-old orphan, every earthly thing brims with whimsy.  Flowers are friends, forests are haunted, and brooks always mind their manners.  Humans have failed Anne for so long that she turns to nature for strength and solace.  And the same was true for her creator.

Although not an orphan, Maud was raised by her grandparents and suffered from a series of hardships, including depression.  Writing about rainbowed skies, ice crystal-cast woods, and rioting gardens -- and a girl who wouldn't let life beat her -- transported her to a more welcoming world.  Even the title of her most famous book showcases the color of nature, rebirth, and second chances.


The other night, I was crafting and re-watching You've Got Mail, which is a movie I thought I didn't like (random, I know, but stay with me), when I was struck by the scene where Meg Ryan's Kathleen Kelly is closing her bookshop for good.  One customer tells her that Kathleen's mother, who owned the shop before her, sold her a copy of Anne of Green Gables and advised her to read it with a box of tissues.  Then the woman starts sobbing, and Kathleen produces some Kleenex.  By that point, the movie was already growing on me (due in no small part to Kathleen's confession that daisies are the friendliest flower), but that cinched it.  Because anyone who understands Anne -- from Kathleen Kelly to Nora Ephron to that crying customer -- can't be all that bad.


And Reid, to use Maud’s own parlance, tops this list as a true kindred spirit.  Her love and reverence for Maud and Anne radiate from every page of her heartfelt tribute. 

In Anne of Green Gables, Anne famously says, "I'm so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers."  And although, as you know, I'm no fan of fall, I appreciate the sentiment.  

Because I'm so glad to live in world where there's Anne and Maud and Prince Edward Island.    

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Islands and Black Holes and Other Locales



 Island Beat Necklace

Dress: Venus
Tee: Material Girl, Macy's
Shoes: Guess, DSW
Bag: XOXO, ROSS Dress for Less



 Fabulous Felt Fruit Stripe Necklace

Dress: Kohl's
Shoes: Barefeet Shoes
Bag: Xhilaration, Target



 Awesome Aliens Necklace

Top: Gap
Skirt: Marshalls
Shoes: Charles Albert, Alloy
Bag: Eleven Peacocks, Etsy
Belt: Gifted

This Island Beat Necklace is the last of my tissue box creations.  Which saddens me a little, especially given my fruitless online search for novelty Kleenex boxes hiding out in a warehouse or some Sam's Club shopper's basement.  But no matter.  There's a whole world of pretty packaging out three to be pillaged.  In particular, I'm hoping to score some unicorn-emblazoned folders.  But the generosity of the retail gods remains to be seen.

Speaking of which, I found the extraterrestrials of the Awesome Aliens Necklace in orbit in the Target dollar spot.  They're actually silicone drink markers cleverly coined as "Space Invaders":


I glued them on these black holes of felt splotches, sealing their fate with a choking helping of glitter glue.  Today's Target run netted some even more enchanting cheapies, which I plan to put to use some time after Christmas.  

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Kleenex Clean-up With a Hint of Magic





 Time for Lime Necklace

Dress: Modcloth
Shoes: Guess, DSW
Bag: Chinese Laundry, JCPenney




 Crazy Canary Necklace

Dress: XOXO, Macy's
Shoes: Alloy
Bag: Marshalls




 Watermelon Wedge Necklace

Dress: Lulus
Shoes: Guess, DSW
Bag: B Fabulous



I Scream for Ice Cream

Dress: Marshalls
Bag: Glamour Damaged, Etsy
Shoes: Guess, DSW

These are the necklaces I made with my remaining novelty Kleenex tissue box cut-outs.  More tropical than the sweetly pastel first batch (except for you, I Scream interloper), they make me miss summer.  Which is fitting because I finished them while watching that steamy (and seamy) summer blockbuster Magic Mike.  The gritty tale of a male stripper-slash-aspiring-furniture-maker-with-a-heart-of-gold starring real-life ex-stripper and "sexiest man alive" Channing Tatum was fun enough but left me wanting more.  (No, not more of that.  Believe you me, of that you see plenty.)  No, like any crafter worth her rhinestones, I wanted to find out just what inspired Mike's domestic design dreams, and if anything would ever come of them.  But then, maybe the somewhat open ending was more satisfying than a neat-and-tidy deus ex machina.  Because with themes this dark, nothing beats keeping it real.  

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

One Tough Ombre




 Strawberry Smash Necklace

Jacket: Decree, JCPenney
Top: Mossimo, Target
Jeans: Arizona Jeans, JCPenney
Shoes: Betseyville, JCPenney
Bag: Uniquely Different, Etsy



 Cherry on Top Necklace

Dress: Modcloth
Shoes: Betseyville, Macy's
Bag: Uniquely Different, Etsy
Sunglasses: Fred Flare



Raspberry Rhapsody Necklace

Sweatshirt: Delia's
Tank: Express
Jeans: Barefeet Shoes
Shoes: Candie's, Kohl's
Bag: Betseyville, ROSS Dress for Less

That's what they'll say when they see me in this mint pleather motorcycle jacket and pink ombre-dyed jeans. (Unless they say something else . . . but let's go with that.)  I like to think that these edgily ethereal ensembles make nice backdrops for necklaces that started life swaddling tissues.  Remember those triangular, fancy, food-themed Kleenex designs from a couple of years back?  They mimicked everything from cake wedges to orange slices and were so cute that I couldn't help but save them all.  Initially, I thought I'd fuse the triangles together to make a couple of mega trinket boxes or maybe even some cool mobiles.  But it wasn't until last week that I got inspired to cut out the frilly focal points of the dessert-themed boxes to make kitschy pendants.  I mounted the strawberry, cherry, and raspberry pieces to felt backgrounds and coated them with glitter glue before surrounding them with dessert-shaped cabochons, ribbon flowers, and rhinestones.  Flanking them with pretty pearl beads once finished was a no-brainer.  I had such a blast that I can't wait to tuck into the next trio!