Friday, April 8, 2011

White.


Our principal rented Tron for the school to watch today since we've been working so hard to get ready for testing next week (which Corey said makes her the "best principal ever!"). Anyway, as we were waiting for the movie to begin the DVD menu was on our tv screen and one of my students said, "'Tron' has a consonant blend!"

So watching movies can be educational. I guess we're ready for testing!

And I'm looking forward to watching Tron for the first time on Blu-ray tomorrow at Joe & Jon's.

P.S. I found the photo of the girls in white here. For the record I don't agree with his review.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Lavender.


(not current moon phase)

P.S. The moon twilight is by ploop26 at deviantART.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Pink.


I just noticed it's Spring Colors Week at Poppytalk! I'll join in today and finish out next week. Here's the schedule: Wed - Pink | Thu - Lavender | Fri - White | Mon - Green | Tue - Yellow.

I love these little Harajuku Girls. I first saw them about this time last year in the mall. They're actually perfume bottles. Too bad I don't really wear perfume. I think I like the one with the hearts and the one with the headband the best. Which one is your favorite?

Coincidentally I just went to my friend's blog and she wrote a sad story about the color Pink. Enjoy.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Building the Pauson House

I requested Building the Pauson House: The Letters of Frank Lloyd Wright and Rose Pauson edited and introduced by Allan Wright Green as an Early Reviewer because Frank Lloyd Wright is a Phoenix icon. There are tours, a street named after him, and his buildings are all around town.

Imagine 1938, when the best way to communicate is a letter, but it won't be received in an instant. You have to get your message across clearly, all the while making sure your character comes through. This book has photos, but is primarily a collection of letters between artist Rose Pauson, who the house was built and designed for, and Frank Lloyd Wright. It may sound boring to read about all of the details of the house that Rose wants changed, money haggling, and looking at many revised blue prints, but Rose and Frank's unique personalities are the real stars of the letters and the book. They refer to the group of people working on the house as "The Fellowship," and it really feels like one, even after the house is built and it leaks like crazy. I think the romantic in me really just enjoyed reading letters. ("You wrote her letters?" "Oh mail. It was called 'mail.'" "Stamps, envelopes. You know, I've heard of it.") ...I delighted in seeing the old stationery Rose wrote on when she stayed at the Biltmore, when Frank wrote on Santa Fe "The Chief" stationery, and Western Union Telegrams! I suppose if someone released a book with a bunch of emails and texts it just wouldn't be as much fun.

I'm not spoiling anything by telling you that after 2 years of writing letters (including less than one year of building), Rose and her sister live in the house for a year, rent it out, and on April 11, 1943 the renters leave a door open, the amazingly long curtains blow into the fireplace right next to them, and the Pauson House burns down. All that remains today is part of the chimney, which was moved 200 yards so we could have 32nd Street.

Corey and I went on a field trip yesterday to check out "Shiprock" as it is known by locals. It's the entrance to a neighborhood of expensive houses. It's difficult to find an exact address but it's easy to find. Drive east on Camelback, turn north on 32nd Street, drive over a canal, turn west on San Miguel, and there it is:

That's me with my book, nerding it up. We compared the pictures in the book to the chimney and were able to match up the rocks! The weird thing is that when I got back in the car, my bookmark (the publisher sent the book with a bookmark depicting one of Frank's art glass designs. Whoa. I did not know he designed glass too) was on the page where Rose asks about fire insurance! Creepy.

This book is a real gem. Now I want to read The Women and Loving Frank and go on a Taliesin West tour!

P.S. Rose Pauson? Never heard of her before this. She's not even listed in my little art book. But here is one of her paintings, Trees In A Landscape With An Orange Road:

Saturday, April 2, 2011

autumn, summer, spring, whatever

Autumn Wonder by Debbie Adams is the inspiration this month at ARTastic:

The extra challenge is to use clouds, trees, and autumn colors.

The painting (autumn!) made me think of the pictures I took from our hike in July (summer!) which I still hadn't scrapped (spring!).

I had this brown paper which was perfect, combining books and nature. Too bad the best designs would be covered by my pictures. First I was going to cut them out with an exacto and switch them which would be time consuming and difficult to match up. Then I remembered we have a scanner now!

I placed 3 of the scanned ones I like over the less desirable images...

...like this.

Voila! I used the leftover paper to make a pocket in the back to keep my journaling in, and to make a tab to pull the journaling out. I printed the journaling from my blog, attached the tab, and added 51 with letter stickers (the hike number in the book).

I didn't get to use any of the pictures that had clouds, but at least I got the trees and brown in there.


I also finished this from our trip to DC in January:

I tried to use a lot of things from the brochure. Also, how excited was I when I found this paper? It has a train theme and a monkey, and my sister-in-law wore a monkey hat on the train!!!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

the dog park according to Trent

Trent's my nephew.

He's in second grade.

We went to the dog park when he came for a spring break visit.

He wanted to take the pictures.

I think he did pretty good.

He also got 2 strangers to play catch with him.

The dogs loved it and it was free.

Cute kid!

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Hotel du Lac by Anita Brookner


I read Hotel du Lac for a "journey" theme read on LibraryThing. The main character travels to the exclusive Hotel du Lac in Switzerland to recover from something "Terrible" she had done. During her stay there she meets several interesting characters and through her interaction with them takes a self-reflective journey.

Overall I felt the book was o.k. but it didn't end the way I thought it was going to which made me like it more.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Happy 1st Day of Spring!


We loved listening to the birds sing their songs today! Captain and Caprica had fun dragging toys outside to play with.

P.S. Where the fairies are asleep is by ploop26.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Emily and Einstein by Linda Francis Lee


I chose Emily and Einstein as an Early Reviewer but after I got it I wondered why I had.
1. The husband dies, and I try to avoid books where the husband dies.
2. Some of it is told from the dog's perspective, and I just had a bad experience with a book completely told from the dog's perspective.
3. It's chick-lit, and I just don't enjoy chick-lit as much as I used to.

I guess I chose it because secretly I knew I'd like this story. Even though the husband dies, he was a jerk, and is reincarnated into a dog from the shelter Emily volunteers at, which she adopts and names Einstein. Although some of it is told from Einstein's perspective, it's more plausible because he's a person in a dog's body. And even though it's chick lit, it comes around at the end with some fresh insight and a positive message.

Have you ever seen the movie Little Black Book? It has that sort of feel.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Who's Patrick?


Yesterday...

Me: Even though it's St. Patrick's Day tomorrow you guys still have to wear your uniforms.

Student 1: Who's Patrick?

Student 2: A starfish.

Student 3: You know, from SpongeBob.

Happy St. Patrick the Starfish from SpongeBob Day!

Friday, March 11, 2011

Hope for a happy ending


Corey woke me up at 3:22am to tell me there had been an earthquake and tsunami in Japan. I couldn't really process that information before falling back asleep, but it was the first thing on my mind when I woke up.

As I listened to news about the disaster on my way to work, I began thinking about who I know in Japan. I was friends in high school with a foreign exchange student named Yoko. We remained pen pals for a few years but stopped writing in college. I wondered if she and her twin sister are ok. I also thought about one of my favorite authors, Haruki Murakami, who lives in Tokyo.

Tonight I googled Haruki Murakami with tsunami to find out if he is safe. That question wasn't answered, but I found this eery article opener from The Los Angeles Times on February 25, 2005:

TOKYO — Japanese writer Haruki Murakami has never witnessed a tsunami. But he has imagined one.

In his 1988 short story "The Seventh Man," Murakami's narrator is a man damaged by the childhood memory of watching his best friend sucked away by a killer wave, the furious sea retreating, he wrote, as if "a gigantic rug had been yanked by someone at the other end of the earth." A stream of fiction has come from Murakami since that story. But its theme of inconsolable loss came back to the author while watching images of Southeast Asia's recent calamity, where anguish endures long after the calamity passes.

I haven't read "The Seventh Man" but its relevance makes me want to read it before some of the other things written by him which I still haven't read. (I have read Kafka on the Shore and The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle.)

Haruki and Yoko I'm thinking of you today!

Monday, March 7, 2011

my bookmark looks like this


Right now I'm reading Hotel du Lac by Anita Brookner. It's alright, but my bookmark is super cute! It's called cherrytree bird and it was created by Masha Dyans. I use a rotation system for my bookmarks so none of them feel left out. How about you?

Sunday, March 6, 2011

anne hathaway is cute

Last Sunday we went to our friends' annual Oscar Party. They always make a theme drink and this year it was The Toy Story (a martini with gummy bears on the bottom).

I haven't heard a single media source say that James Franco and Anne Hathaway did a good job, but we thought they did fine. I don't know how creative you can get when all you're doing is reading a teleprompter! In fact, I thought Anne Hathaway was cute because she seemed kind of dorky, like someone I would be friends with.

Here are my favorite dresses she wore:



The moment that sealed my Anne Fanship was when she made sure everyone could see her dress could do this:

She seems like fun to me!

And Corey and I both lost again for the most correct Oscar picks! Maybe next year.

P.S. I got these pictures from Luxist.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Tonight I met Temple Grandin!


Luckily for me I'm in a book club with our school psychologist because she emailed me today saying she had an extra ticket to go see Temple Grandin tonight!

Dr. Grandin spoke for about an hour and it was very interesting, although most of the things she talked about were covered in her movie. My aha-moment was when she talked about how she is unable to attend to 2 tasks at once, reminding me once again that there is a wide array of brains in my class!

And even though I bought 31 books in February I had to buy one more so I could get her autograph! It was on my wishlist anyway:

The top photo is of my friend Alana getting her autograph. I should have spent more time thinking about what I was going to say to Dr. Grandin...She asked me what I do for a living and after I told her she didn't say anything. And all I could think of to say was "I like cows" but I didn't say that because I knew that would be lame. Here are the things I thought to ask/say after:

Do you have any pets?

Who is Catherine Johnson? (her co-author)

Do you want to see a picture of my dog?

Do you like to read? What are you reading now?

The part in Animals in Translation where you tell us people and dogs coevolved blew my fucking mind.


I had to laugh because it made me think of my friend Stephanie having a similar what-do-I-say-to-this-author moment (although hers was from being a super fan and mine was from teaching first grade all day).

Despite being tongue-tied I had fun with my friends and it is always good for me to learn about different kinds of brains!