August 23, 2011

Repost: Just Write.

A while ago Cory Bordonaro (owner of Four Hats Press, and printer of the wedding paper suite I designed for the big day... she is phenomenal) posted this on her blog and I was nodding in agreement to everything she said so I just had to share.

Deliver the Letter


It's no secret that I'm a fan of the hand-written note. I have an endless appreciation for the lost art of tangible thoughtfulness. So, as soon as I get my press up and ready, I plan on continuing to deliver sweet somethings in letterpress. Until then, here's a guide to great letter-writing.

1. Secure some sweet stationery. The paper-licious options on etsy abound. I love the typography and deep impression on these. And I can never say no to what comes out of Rifle Paper Company.


2. Brush up on your technique. While you want your notes to be heartfelt and not at all formulaic sounding, there are some sweet tips on getting your message across, care of the one and only, Emily Post. Read her tips here. I also love Ready Made magazine's diagram of a good love letter (as written by Mark Twain to his wife, Livy). See the cute treatment they gave it below.


3. Sign, seal, and deliver. I simply can't stand how much I love the idea of this collage o stamps. If you order a set, it comes with a variety of squares that add up to the correct postage value of sending a letter. And it's just so darn pretty.


  
Thanks Cory for sharing your thoughts on the art of letter writing.
 
Onward to writing a note, lickin' some envelopes and spreading some love!

August 18, 2011

The PGA Championship

The church I grew up (Perimeter Church) in is essentially right around the corner from the Atlanta Athletic Club, host to this year's PGA championship. The Athletic Club had already arranged to use Perimeter's parking lots for the tournament. After a large group of volunteers dropped out they asked Perimeter if they could recruit 250 volunteers promising to give a donation to the church's community outreach department. What an amazing opportunity for the community of believers to rally and be involved where they "Live. Work. and Play."

Getting a heads up about Perimeter's need for volunteers (thanks to my rockstar mom who gave her all to organizing and recruiting people for the tournament) Nathan and I immediately signed up to volunteer. After a few things fell into place with schedules, etc. Nathan and I were blessed with two prime volunteer shifts and tournament passes for Saturday and Sunday.

We had such a great time running registers in the merchandise tent selling more polo shirts and golf balls than we knew possible. The days on the course were phenomenal and a big congratulations to the champ himself-Keegan Bradley.


Unfortunately cameras were not aloud inside the gates but thanks to the trusty phone I was able to sneak a few pictures. However, I did earn myself a big fat "W" on my ticket (within 5 minutes of day one) ...meaning a warning from a PGA official reminding me of the rules.


Some of our goodies.




This picture earned me the "W" on my ticket.

Gorgeous Sunday morning on the course.

Uncle Bill and William got to join us Sunday!

Fun experience together.

A favorite of the weekend. Sunday morning before the crowds arrived.


August 11, 2011

Grace

But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works; otherwise grace would no longer be grace. Romans 11:6
Heidelberg Catechism Q & A 60
Leader: How are you right with God?
People: Only by true faith in Jesus Christ. Even though my conscience accuses me of having grievously sinned against all God's commandments and of never having kept any of them, and even though I am still inclined toward all evil, nevertheless, without my deserving it at all, out of sheer grace, God grants and credits to me the perfect satisfaction, righteousness, and holiness of Christ, as if I had never sinned nor been a sinner, as if I had been as perfectly obedient as Christ was obedient for me. All I need to do is to accept this gift of God with a believing heart.

The depth of my gratitude is so shallow. I long to fully grasp this amazing gift of our savior.

August 10, 2011

Spinach Pesto Lasagna

Alright, another Pinterest goodie...which we modified just a tad.

Spinach Pesto Lasagna
(Originial Recipe from: Pink Parsley)

Ingredients:
  • 4 cups torn spinach (we used a package of frozen spinach)
  • 2 cups cremini mushrooms, diced into medium pieces (we're not fans so we nixed these guys)
  • 1/2 cup pesto; commercial or homemade (we used some Trader Joes pesto-our favorite)
  • 1 1/2 cups fresh mozzarella, shredded
  • 1 (15-ounce) carton part-skim ricotta cheese
  • 1 large egg, lightly beaten
  • 3/4 cup (3 ounces) grated fresh Parmesan cheese, divided
  • 4 cups tomato-basil sauce; homemade or jarred (TJ came through for us again-so delicious)
  • 1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce
  • Cooking spray
  • 1 (8-ounce) package precooked lasagna noodles (We just cooked our own whole wheat noodles)
Directions:
  • Preheat the oven to 425. Spray a casserole dish with nonstick cooking spray.
  • Steam the spinach and drain the excess moisture.
  • Combine the mushrooms, pesto, spinach in a small bowl and set aside. In another bowl, combine 3/4 cup mozzarella, egg, ricotta, and 1/2 cup of the Parmesan cheese. Combine the tomato sauce with the pasta sauce.
  • Spread 1 cup of the pasta sauce in the bottom of the saucepan. Layer 3 lasagna noodles, followed by 1 cup of the spinach mixture and 1 cup of the cheese mixture. Repeat the layers, following the order of pasta sauce-pasta-spinach-cheese. Sprinkle remaining parmesan and mozzarella over the top.
  • Bake, covered, for 30 minutes. Remove the foil and bake an additional 15 minutes, until top is bubbly and golden.
Our results:
(Thank you iPhone)


Needless to say, we loved it!

So delicious!


August 9, 2011

Southern Women

If you were raised in the south and you are a female I think you will find some enjoyment out of this article from a fantatic magazine-Garden & Gun.

Southern Women-Allison Glock

A new generation of women who are redefining the Southern Belle

It is not posturing, or hyperbole, or marketing. (See: all those song lyrics about California girls and their undeniable cuteness.) Southern women, unlike women from Boston or Des Moines or Albuquerque, are leashed to history. For better or worse, we are forever entangled in and infused by a miasma of mercy and cruelty, order and chaos, cornpone and cornball, a potent mix that leaves us wise, morbid, good-humored, God-fearing, outspoken and immutable. Like the Irish, with better teeth.

To be born a Southern woman is to be made aware of your distinctiveness. And with it, the rules. The expectations. These vary some, but all follow the same basic template, which is, fundamentally, no matter what the circumstance, Southern women make the effort. Which is why even the girls in the trailer parks paint their nails. And why overstressed working moms still bake three dozen homemade cookies for the school fund-raiser. And why you will never see Reese Witherspoon wearing sweatpants. Or Oprah take a nap.

For my mother, being Southern means handwritten thank-you notes, using a rhino horn’s worth of salt in every recipe, and spending a minimum of twenty minutes a day in front of her makeup mirror so she can examine her beauty in “office,” “outdoor,” and “evening” illumination. It also means never leaving the house with wet hair. Not even in the case of fire. Because wet hair is low-rent. It shows you don’t care, and not caring is not something Southern women do, at least when it comes to our hair.

This is less about vanity than self-respect, a crucial distinction often lost on non-Southerners. When a Southern woman fusses over her appearance, it does not reflect insecurity, narcissism, or some arrested form of antifeminism that holds back the sisterhood. Southern women are postfeminism. The whole issue is a nonstarter, seeing as Southern women are smart enough to recognize what works—Spanx, Aqua Net—and wise to the allocation of effort. Why pretend the world is something it isn’t? Better to focus on what you can control (drying your hair) and make the best of what you have. Side note: Southern women do not capitalize on their looks to snag men, though that often results. The reason we Southern women take care of ourselves is because, simply, Southern women are caretakers.

An example: I have lived in the North off and on for fifteen years. In all that time, only once did another woman prepare me a home-cooked meal (and she was from Florida). I recently visited Tennessee for one week and was fed by no fewer than three women, one of whom baked homemade cupcakes in two different flavors because she remembered I loved them.

Southern women are willing to give, be it time, hugs, or advice about that layabout down the road. Southern women listen and we talk and we laugh without apology. We are seldom shocked. Not really. Sex in the City may have been revolutionary for the rest of America, but not for Southern women. Of course we bond and adore each other, and talk about all topics savory and otherwise. That’s what being a woman means.
In Terms of Endearment, a dying Debra Winger visits a friend in New York and is immediately bewildered by the alternately indifferent and aggressive way the women relate to each other.

“Why do they act like that?” Winger asks a friend, genuinely confused. Why indeed.

Southern women see no point in the hard way. Life is hard enough. So we add a little sugar to the sour. Which is not to suggest Southern women are disingenuous cream puffs. Quite the opposite. When you are born into a history as loaded as the South’s, when you carry in your bones the incontrovertible knowledge of man’s violence and limitations, daring to stay sweet is about the most radical thing you can do.   

Southern women are also a proud lot. In any setting, at home or abroad, Southern women declare themselves. Leading with geography is not something that other ladies do. You do not hear “That’s just how we roll in Napa.”  Or “Well, you know what they say about us Wyoming girls…” You may hear “I’m from Jersey,” but that’s more of a threat than a howdy.

There are other defining attributes, some more quantifiable than others. Southern women know how to bake a funeral casserole and why you should. Southern women know how to make other women feel pretty. Southern women like men and allow them to stay men. Southern women are not afraid to dance. Southern women know you can’t outrun your past, that manners count, and that your mother deserves a phone call every Sunday. Southern women can say more with a cut of their eyes than a whole debate club’s worth of speeches. Southern women know the value of a stiff drink, among other things.

Which brings us to what can only be called: the Baby Thing.

Southern women love babies. We love them so much we grab their chubby thighs and pretend to eat them alive. This is not the case in the North or the West or the middle bit.

I grew up, like all Southern girls, babysitting as soon as I was old enough to tie my own shoes. I was raised to understand that taking care of children was as natural and inevitable as sneezing, that when we were infants, somebody looked after us, and thus we should clutch hands and complete the circle without any fuss. I was also taught that your children are not supposed to be your best friends. Southern women do not spend a lick of time worrying about whether or not their kids are mad at them. They are too busy telling them “No” and “Because I said so,” which might explain why there are rarely any Southern kids acting a fool and running wild around the Cracker Barrel.

I have two daughters, Dixie and Matilda, and when we go down South, they are surrounded with love from the moment we cross the Mason-Dixon. Elderly men tip their hats. Cashiers tell them they are beautiful. To be a girl these days is more fraught than ever. But growing up among Southern women sure makes it easier.

Which is why we are moving back home. I want my children to know they belong to something bigger than themselves. That they are unique, but they are not alone. That there is continuity where they come from. Comfort too. That there are rules worth following and expectations worth trying to meet, even if you fail. If nothing else, I want them to know how to make biscuits. And to not feel bad about eating a whole heaping plate of them.

Because before I know it, my girls will be grown. And they will be Southern women too. And that, I believe, will have made all the difference.

August 8, 2011

Weekend Recap

Sleeping in on Saturday morning is such a nice break from the early-early mornings of the weekdays. However, those couple extra hours didn't keep Nathan and I from a little Saturday morning adventure...a trip to the Athens Farmers Market. It was such a fun little trip, providing ample opportunity for a few snapshots of produce and beautiful color. Oh and we did walk away with a purchase...an assortment of delicious cherry tomatoes. We lost a few on the way back to the car due to a hole in our bag. A nice lady informed us (being worried about ruining our new purchase) that "they were no worse off on the vine" as she stopped a car to help us gather our runaway tomatoes!

A few snapshots...

One booth had various bottles that had been melted into dishes such as spoon rests. The one on the right was my favorite. 
Loved these flowers for sale!

Nathan and I with our tomatoes (even the runaways).
Our lovely purchase.

Event number two of the weekend: Nathan's 10-year High School Reunion (I know, hard for both of us to believe!) There were 12 in Nathan's graduating class at Westminister Christian Academy and a majority of the group was able to come.

A few class members...a couple girls had to leave early.

Spouses.




August 4, 2011

Pinterest Board: Interior Design

Paint. Textiles. Furniture. Frames. All of it can simply make me swoon. Pinterest has done nothing but feed my addiction to all of those things.

Here are a few favorites from my Interior Design board:

Love the punch of color and that sink!



Crazy about this pattern. 



Color combo I just love. 
The symmetry and color combo is simply perfect.  
Love this. In our home we would make a little change from "sorry" to  "please forgive me"