Posts Tagged ‘books’
Earning {her} way to Relevant . . .
By now you’ve probably heard that I’m headed to The Relevant Conference this fall. And that lots of bloggers partner up with sponsors who help pay their way. But there are some bloggers who don’t find sponsors – some because they just can’t find a good match, and some because they don’t want to. Some of them are able to find partial sponsors, but they still need to cover a portion of the cost themselves.
Most of the non-sponsored and partially-sponsored bloggers are earning their way to Relevant through their home businesses. These ladies are, in essence, being their own sponsors.
Here’s a list of several of the bloggers trying to earn their way to Relevant. If you know of someone else, please send me a note and I’ll be sure to add them!
- Jolanthe of Homeschool Creations . . . {Relevant Designs} Blog makeovers/designs.
- Leigh of Funky Faith Girl . . . {Funky Faith Designs} Necklaces and art prints.
- Rebekah of Honey and Cheese . . . {Bekah’s Bookshelf} Used books and curriculum.
- Rachel of Titus 2 Homemaker . . . {Dayspring & Blessings Unlimited} Christian decor, cards, etc.
- Dawn of 5 Kids and a Dog . . . {Blessings Unlimited} Christian home decor, cards, etc.
- Sharon from Hiking Toward Home . . . {Blessings Unlimited} Christian home decor, cards, etc.
“Will you please call me Cordelia?” {UBP ’11}
It’s Day 5 of The Ultimate Blog Party and the open house is still going on here at Honey and Cheese. Today we’re going to start off with a fun Q&A session – and your answer will be your entry into a giveaway.
Here’s the question:
The King and Queen have just had a baby girl and they’ve named her Cordelia, only to discover that this lovely name has been given to 94% of baby girls born into their kingdom within the past year. Since they don’t want anyone but the new princess to be known as Cordelia, and because they got a little carried away, they’ve ordered everyone in the kingdom to change their names. What new identity will you choose?
Bonus entry: Leave a second comment with a quote from the book where I got the name “Cordelia.”
The prize: I’ll leave this post open till the end of the Ultimate Blog Party and then randomly select one winner. That reader will win one book (their choice) from Bekah’s Bookshelf, plus an additional surprise gift. I’ll also be selecting my favorite answer and that reader will win a similar prize: one book from Bekah’s Bookshelf and an extra surprise gift.
Project 52
In order to give myself an outline of some of the non-work-related things I want to accomplish, I’ve set a goal of tackling roughly one project a week for a year, for a total of 52 projects (which means I have a little bit of catching up to do). I left approximately three months’ worth of projects undecided, to allow room for new inspiration and ideas and I’ve marked out the ones I’ve already finished this year. I’ll try to remember to post updates here as I finish each additional project.
Here’s the list so far:
- Plant garden
- Put up bird feeders and houses
- Put up hanging flower baskets
- Make cupcake liner wreath
- Create and order wedding photo albums
- Finish sanding dining room chairs
- Finish painting dining room chairs
- Finish painting laundry room
- Sew sink skirt
- Make curtains for kitchen and family room
- Put up “white board” in kitchen
- Set-up craft area
- Make Baked Alaska
- Paint “accent” wall in dining room
- Paint cookbook shelf
- Purge closet
- Donate and/or sell crates of books
- Sew covers for pillow forms
- Dye napkins
- Install another shelf in bathroom closet
- Hang clock in living room
- Read Large Family Logistics
- Purge and file papers
- Hang chandelier (requires finding one!)
- Put knobs or handles on entertainment chest
- Hold cookie exchange
- Make quiche
- Frame and hang/display wedding photos
- Hang “Price of Freedom” print
- Install flooring in craft room and get rid of the extra
- Finish installing switch plates and outlet covers
- Complete bedroom curtains
- Hang plates on dining room “accent” wall
- Install or hang a “headboard”
- Have vows printed, framed, and hung
- Scan, enlarge, frame, and hang letter from Michael
- Write Grandma, Uncle Billy, etc. to ask questions about Grandpap
- Paint the porch
- Paint kitchen window sashes
- Give bathroom second coat of paint over tub
- TBD
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Additionally, each week I want to:
- Send a letter
- Play the piano for at least an hour
- Play the cello for at least 15 minutes
- Read for at least an hour
- Photograph a specific theme or idea
What are some of the things you hope to accomplish this year?
Oh the weather outside is frightful . . .
It’s a dreary day outside . . . cold, and gray, and rainy . . . so I thought I’d share some cozy recipes and links I’ve come across recently, to help cheery-up this dismal day.
- These hand knitted apple green fingerless gloved will keep hands warm and your fingers free. Bysweetmom {$24}
- Stir up a bulk batch of homemade hot chocolate mix and you’ll be ready to warm up from the inside out.
- Gray winter days are the perfect time to curl up inside with a favorite book, such as these editions of Little Women, Sense & Sensibility, and other classics. {$14}
- Creature Comforts has a tutorial on painting with tea, as well as a free printable card for you to practice on. Once you’re finished, you can write a note to a friend and send her a bit of cheer.
- Dandelion prints from HeyHarriet to remind you of spring. Don’t they make you smile.
{$18} - If you need a project to get you up-and-about, this Scruffily Quilt tutorial from Moda Bake Shop should do the trick. And when it’s finished, you’ll have a lovely quilt for snuggling!
- Mmmm. Just the spicy smell of this cranberry marmalade soap from Refresh Soap Company is enough to make you want to put everything down and take a warm shower. {$5}
- If you need a new warm-you-up recipe, try out this Broccoli Cheddar Soup. Bread bowls are not required, but they make it feel like a special occasion.
- The best way to turn a dreary day into a cheery day – remember to rejoice because God made today! {image copyright Reverence Media}
Read someone else’s letters
{Day 4 of Universal Letter Writing Week 2011}
Sometimes when you’re stuck for inspiration, or just want an enjoyable read, it’s fun to read other peoples’ letters, both real and fictional.
I love this excerpt from a letter Ronald Reagan wrote to Nancy on May 24, 1963:
Just think: I’ve discovered I can be fond of Ann Blyth because she and her Dr. seem to have something of what we have. Of course it can’t really be as wonderful for them because she isn’t you but still it helps to know there are others who might just possibly know a little about what it’s like to love someone so much that it seems as if I have my hand stretched across the mountains and desert until it’s holding your hand there in our room in front of the fireplace.
Excerpted from I Love You, Ronnie: The Letter of Ronald Reagan to Nancy Reagan. (I copied it precisely, so don’t come after to me to put the “e” at the end of “Ann.”)
And, of course, I can’t post a reference to Anne-with-an-E without sharing one of her letters to Gilbert. This little postscript makes me chuckle whenever I read it:
P.S.2. I have put in a new pen. And I love you because you aren’t pompous like Dr. Carter . . . and I love you because you haven’t got sticky-out ears like Johnny. And . . . the very best reason of all . . . I love you for just being Gilbert!
Excerpted from Anne of Windy Poplars which, by the way, is filled to the brim with all sorts of lovely notes and letters, such as this opening paragraph from Anne to Gilbert:
Dearest:
It used to be that the person I hated most in the world was the person who spoiled my pen-nib. But I can’t hate Rebecca Dew in spite of her habit of using my pen to copy recipes when I’m in school. She’s been doing it again and as a result you won’t get a long or a loving letter this time.
Do you ever read letters in which you play neither the part of the writer or the the recipient? Letters from Stonewall Jackson, Mark Twain, and Ronald Reagan are all good places to start. For fiction, books such as Anne of Windy Poplars and C.S. Lewis’ The Screwtape Letters are full of letters. If you want a fun one to read with your kids, try The Jolly Postman.
{This post is part of a series for Universal Letter Writing Week 2011. Click here to go to the original post and to find out how to enter the giveaway for a $10 Amazon gift card.}
{Image source unknown}
The Sunday List {September 19, 2010}
- When I was in TJMaxx earlier this week, I saw this edition of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland on clearance for $7.00. I love the picture book format and the gorgeous illustrations. I purchased this copy for myself and have been thoroughly enjoying it. After I get the storage containers I need, I’ll be saving up my Swagbucks for Amazon gift cards to get another copy for my nieces.
- This kitchen makeover from diyideas.com is absolutely beautiful!
- September 25th isĀ Museum Day. Check the listings here to find out if there’s a museum near you offering free admission. Note that the free ticket is only good for two people per household.
- Better Homes and Gardens is holding a “Share the Plaid” photo contest. Submit a photo of yourself with your copy of the BHG Cookbook, along with your favorite memory of using it, then get your friends and family members to vote for you, and you could win two copies of the new plaid cookbook – one to keep and one to share!
- This recipe for Giant Chewy Lemon Sugar Cookies looks delicious. It’s from Big Girls, Small Kitchens, and shared via Design*Sponge.
The photo of the week:
{Photo copyright Nick Amis. Discovered via Decor Amor.}
PaperBackSwap, SwapADVD, and SwapaCD
I’ve been using PaperBackSwap for a couple of years now and have really enjoyed it. The premise is simple – you send a book you no longer want to a member who does want it and you get a point deposited into your account. Then you use that point to request a book you want from someone else. It’s not quite as cheap as buying books at the thrift store, but there a whole lot more books on PBS than at the local Goodwill – and you can even set up a wish list so that you’re notified when a book you want is entered into the system!
This week I started using PaperBackSwap’s sister site, SwapADVD. It’s equally as simple to use as PBS, and the points are transferable between my accounts at both sites! I can send out a DVD I no longer want, and then use that point to get a new book. (My husband still can’t figure out why I need more books.)
I haven’t really used SwapaCD yet, though I do have an account there. For each CD you request, you pay a point from your account (also transferablebetween PBS or SwapADVD), and $0.49. It’s still a good deal, but I haven’t gotten around to trying it out.
Each site offers members 1 credit for the initial 10 items they post. They also offer 1 point for each valid referral (10 items posted on PBS and SwapADVD, 10 items plus money for trades at SwapaCD).
I have gotten rid of a quite a few “extra” books through PBS over the last couple of years, and I’ve acquired some nice ones in exchange. This is definitely one swap program I like a lot.
{Please note that the links listed above are referral links. If for some reason you would rather visit those sites without the referral, type the names of the companies into your address bar, followed by .com.}









