Photography Challenge - Week 2

Lots of fun photo's to capture in week two of the White Peach Photography Challenge - this has certainly got me thinking (and reminiscing like in yesterday's post!) and some days I had to think outside the square.

So here we go with this weeks photos.








Leanne

Olivia 18 Months

My little niece is now eighteen months old!
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Isn't she beautiful?!

linking up the hair blowing shot for 'Wind' @


Let's not forget her sweet baby sister!
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Linking up Baby Kendall's photo to Paper Heart Camera: Show and Tell: So happy.

LEM's Challenge: Smile

& Simplicity's photo challenge: New! Olivia is newly 18 months!


Sweet Shot Day







Wordless Wednesday: Pasta from scratch



More Wordless Wednesdays over here..




wordless Wednesday : at the park



please play along by following the simple rules
add your wordless blog post to the list below
please just images
as this is a link up all about your photos that don't need words
link back to here 
feel free to use the WW button if you would like to(right click on it & then paste into your blog post)


enjoy your wednesday & thank you for being here


seasons...


Mum and I went to a bookstore today and found Donna Hay's Seasons discounted by almost 50%. She got it for me - thanks, Mum :)

It's been a while between cookbooks - hard copy is so much nicer than the online recipe sites with their adds and pop-up windows. This one is a delicious, weighty brick of a thing. As the name suggests, this one has a 'four seasons' structure with each one offering some 80 pages of sweet and savoury food. Goes without saying that the photography is beautiful (Donna is a food stylist as much as she is a chef) and the images alone make you want to head into the kitchen.

Cooking on a budget sans dishwasher can be uninspiring sometimes. You lapse into necessity cooking and forget that it's still possible to make cheap, simple, tasty meals that don't use every pot, pan and utensil in the house.  Donna's recipes for pumpkin and feta loaf, flat roasted chicken with almond and mint, lemony peach cake and crushed raspberry tart remind you that everyone can afford to cook yummy food.

Now, if I could just fit Mum's wicker chair in the boot...


Who inspires you to get cooking, or is it something you've always loved to do?

The Twilight Zoned Out


I haven't written about sleep in ages, which is remarkable considering that getting the Tsunamis to appreciate it in the same quantities that I do has been a preoccupation of mine for about seven years now. One day I'll do a BIG POST telling you all about the trials and tribulations of why-we-don't-get-a-lot-of-sleep-around-here and how-that-makes-us-feel... actually, writing that post will bore me so much that I might actually fall asleep, so I'll get right onto that. But, in the meantime, this is a little post about a little bit of my sleep tribulations and it's only a little bit boring.

I want to talk about the 'half sleep' - the 'Twilight Sleep'. Mothers of newborns will know exactly what I'm talking about here. It's the sleep your body is having when your brain is actually wide awake listening for your baby to make an imperceptible noise that only you can hear at around 3.37am so you can leap instantly out of bed and be at their side in a jiffy. It's the sleep you might also start having if a loud crash awakes you in the middle of the night and your brain thinks 'oh my god, one of the darling children has fallen out of bed' but your body says 'yeah, whatever' and tries to go back to sleep. Alas, after a crash like that it's only Twilight Sleep that you'll achieve.

Recently my friend the Twilight Sleep has been visiting me when Maxi-Taxi makes his 3am stealthy entrance onto the mattress we've got set up in our room for just that purpose. Yes, he has his own temporary bed at the foot of our bed and we'll just ignore the fact that recently it's been sporting it's own feather doona with a cover that marries well with our bedroom's general colour scheme...

Judge not, it's been a very lengthy, sleepless battle to get him to this semi-independent point. The idea is that he sneaks on in and if he can get himself out of his bed, up the stairs and onto the mattress without waking us, the mattress stays. If he wakes us up, the mattress goes. It's been quite a few months now and the little mattress is working it's magic. Except of course every night the sweet little boy who comes creeping as quietly as he can wakes me up anyway because I've been in Twilight Sleep mode just waiting for him to come up every night.

That's what Twilight Sleep does to a mother. It's the expectation that our children are going to need us and they probably really don't, but we can't be sure because we're only half asleep so we hear every little sound so it sounds like they sorta do. It's a vicious circle that I'm not sure how to break. Whenever I bemoaned the fact that my babies were yet again playing up during sleep time, my wise Mum always said to me "you can't make them sleep" and she was absolutely right. Unfortunately it's true that we can't make ourselves sleep, either.

If you have any suggestions whatsoever to help a Twilight Sleeper like me just go the f$#k to sleep*, please let me know. In the meantime, if you need me, just breathe extra heavily and I'll come racing.

* My absolute favourite children's book of all time.

[Image from here]

Hand beaded hangers

Hand beaded hangers
I was looking for some cute hangers for my laundry room to add a pop of colour, so thought I would have a go at beading some wire dry cleaning hangers I had lying around. I bought a selection of beads in pink, blue, green and white to match my bird trail curtain fabric. The beaded hangers were quick and easy to make and I love how they turned out. I think they look like candy, and if you're a regular reader of my blog you know how much I love candy!


Beading Hangers

Hand beaded hangers
What you will need
  • White wire hangers
  • Pink beads
  • Blue beads
  • Green beads
  • White beads
  • Hot glue gun


Instructions
  1. Carefully untwist hanger
  2. Thread beads onto hanger until full of beads
  3. Twist hanger back together
  4. Thread beads onto neck of hanger
  5. Hot glue gun last bead in place


Beaded Hangers
Hand Beaded Hangers
Beaded hangers