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Showing posts with label about me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label about me. Show all posts

Saturday, 30 August 2025

Pearls of Wisdom

DIY pearl tree by eSheep Designs
One of two painstakingly hand-crafted pearl trees...
I love trees.

It's not something that I think about on a regular basis, but whenever I see an unusual or particularly magnificent tree, I'm reminded of this fact.

On our vacation through Cape Breton Island and Ottawa, I was captivated by how leafy trees canopied the highways in that part of the country. It's so unlike what I see at home on the prairies, where – if it's not flat farmland disappearing into the horizon – the trees are more the tall, sparsely branched evergreen variety than the thick, bushy deciduous kind.

Anyway, for those of you who don't give two figs how I feel about trees, that was a long preamble to the subject of today's post, which you can tell from the photos is clearly not about sewing, although it is somewhat about trees. It is also a bit about problem solving and making do. As I've learned over the past decade, to evolve as a student of sewing – or any craft or livelihood – it is extremely helpful to know how to adapt to unforeseen circumstances.

pearl trees crafted by eSheep Designs
Pearl trees bookending my ROKR wooden owl...

Sometime last year, I looked up what item traditionally marks a 30th wedding anniversary and learned that it was pearls. When I did a search for what type of pearl gifts were common, I found a whole lot of trees. Naturally, my immediate thought was, how can I DIY one?

Off I went to YouTube.

By the way, I don't recall which exact videos that I watched, but here is an example that shows one way of tackling this (you'll have to copy and paste the link to make it work):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opJhbuOsvmE




After seeing a couple of videos, I felt confident of being able to attempt the process. I wasn't looking to replicate anyone's project, just wanting to understand the basic technique enough to put my own spin on something. (Didn't realize how true that would end up being at the time!)

For supplies, trips to Dollar Tree and Dollarama yielded the following items for $8.50:

dollar store supplies
My DIY supplies...

I was actually quite pleased with the look of the pearls and purchased four packages in three different sizes. Underneath the supplies, you can see my planning sheet where I scribbled out how to make various branches and how many beads they would require.

I'm calling them beads because that's what I assumed they were based on the labeling on the packages. Even after I opened them up and dumped them into small zippered bags, it still didn't occur to me that they were oddly missing one important characteristic of being called a "bead."

THEY HAD NO HOLES.

not beads from Dollar Tree
Technically, not beads!

On the day that I sat down to start making my tree, I cut a length of wire and finally noticed that I had no way of threading these!

I knew that I only spent $7 on these "beads" and could have gone out and found others with actual holes in them, but something told me to make the best of the situation and come up with a solution. This meant, of course, going back online and searching for ideas.

What I came across were stones and other found items being wrapped with wire to make jewelry. While I could see how that would work for odd shaped pieces, a slippery round bead would surely be hard to wrap, right?

As it turned out, if one is patient and determined, it's doable.

pearl trees crafted by eSheep Designs
A "make do" solution...

At first, I used two lengths of wire, overlapping them to form a cross around the pearl. I figured this would be the most secure way to hold them (and it probably is). However, this method used up a lot of wire and the result wasn't pretty. It led me to decide that my original instinct – the single wrap that you see here – was the right choice, even though it's obviously not the most secure.

What I discovered was that if I twisted really tightly, the hold was surprisingly good. (And no, I didn't have to apply any glue.)

My plan was to make twenty branches with eleven beads on each. The first seven beads were the small size, followed by two medium and then two large ones. The branch pictured below is nicely done – I definitely got better with practice – but the first attempts were imperfect, to say the least.

pearl trees crafted by eSheep Designs
I made eighteen branches in this general style...

I ran out of wire after finishing fifteen branches, so it was back to Dollarama to pick up more. With a new supply of wire, I decided to start wrapping branches together to see if I could form a decent looking tree of any sort. It soon became clear that this particular wire wasn't strong enough to support more than three branches put together, so – once again – it was time to re-think the process. Instead of one big tree, I decided to create an arrangement using combinations of three branches.

DIY pearl tree by eSheep Designs
This arrangement has six branches...

My plan was to push these branches into a floral foam block and then put that into a decorative pot. But around the same time as this crafting was happening, I was trying to find a way to make a couple of Airwick air fresheners work again.


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Airwick Life Scents Touch & Glow
Destined for the garbage bin, these came in handy...
I'd had these for years and years and didn't realize that the batteries aren't replaceable. (What a waste, huh? Luckily both of these units were free; would have been a bad purchase.) With no way to initiate the warming action anymore, I had pulled off the plastic cover and was simply waiting for the remaining oil to disperse. The little glass bottles, however, gave me inspiration.

They are just the right size and have enough weight to them to hold my pearl branches in place. The opening, however, is only big enough for three bunches of three branches, so I made only three others, calling the project a done deal at eighteen branches total.

Very happy to have found another opportunity for reuse in the most unlikeliest of circumstances!

DIY pearl tree by eSheep Designs
This arrangement is made up of nine branches...

By the way, as I was wrapping the branches together, I only had three beads pop out on me. I was super impressed that they held up to being manipulated in such a manner. I had another two pop out as I twisted and bent individual "leaves" to arrange them, but all in all, their holding power has been amazing.

In the end, I'm totally satisfied with how this project came together after the unexpected obstacle of beads having no holes. (Oh, I've since been edified about these pearls: apparently they're meant to be used decoratively as filler for vases or glass containers. I still think they should be clearly labelled as having no holes, however.) The only real negative was that it wasn't a project that hubby was able to participate in; per my original intention. I had envisioned us taking the supplies on our vacation out east and assembling branches during our down time. Given how the process ended up being rather finicky, neither the ultimately fragile branches nor hubby's bigger fingers would have made that plan a reality!

Before I sign off – to stay on topic and as further evidence that I am fond of trees – here are three tree projects that are actually sewing related that I've either made or provided a reference to: the hanging Christmas tree, tabletop tree and button tree.

'Til next... 🇨🇦🍁

Saturday, 28 December 2024

A Look Back at a Year of Blogging/Not Blogging

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
Find what fuels you in life...
Is everyone happy to be done with this past week? (I know I am!)

As I look back on and bid adieu to 2024, one thing that I can definitely say is that it's been a different sort of year than the previous ten.

Twelve months ago, I signed off here without knowing when I'd be back. After a decade of uploading a new blog post every Saturday, I was about to embark on a new phase of not doing so.

What the phase would involve in terms of what I'd be doing was a mystery, but I gave myself permission to do nothing, if that had been my desire.

What ended up here was six months' worth of focus on a junk journal project, which involved a little bit of sewing, so it wasn't totally off topic.




The Journal


The journal itself has become part of my daily routine throughout this past year, and will continue to be for the foreseeable future. It's also grown in girth, moving even beyond its original jumbo size; the cover closure no longer overlaps.

Jumbo Junk Journal by eSheep Designs
Getting even bigger...

In September, I filled up my first notebook and progressed into a second, which was easily threaded into place inside the back cover. (Our motor association travel magazine provides a vast array of images to tear out and paste onto the covers of these basic dollar store notebooks.)

Jumbo Junk Journal by eSheep Designs
Old notebook filled up (insets); new notebook in place...

On a regular basis, I flip through the notebook portion and transcribe the most memorable quotations into the main body of the journal. (Some are scattered throughout this post; I hope you find meaning in them as I have.) The more time goes by, the truer it is that we are only here for a (relatively) short while. It's a blessing to be able to find what your passion is and to able to give your time to its fulfillment.

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
Fulfillment can be achieved a little bit at a time...

Oh, and although I am of a mind that this journal should be mostly reserved for uplifting content, I did think it worthwhile to include this little gem from one of my favourite literary characters.

Jumbo Junk Journal by eSheep Designs
Jane Austen was remarkably worldly for her age...

While this quote has been applicable throughout the decades since it was originally written, I find it especially true now with the prevalence and general acceptance of fake personas cultivated by people with ulterior motives. (Be smart about who – and what – you choose to trust... especially in the age of AI.)

The Bags


Giving Away What We Make
A coat tree that exists just for my bags...
A little over a year ago, I also wrote about giving away what we make.

It was an accounting of the problem that we sewers commonly have, of making things that are difficult to sell and in many cases, just as hard to give away.

Yes, we can gift things, but unless we are very knowledgeable about the recipient, it may not end up being a welcome or usable gift. (And as I've said, before, it's not always the thought that counts!)

In this post, I listed nine of the bags that I've made through the years and made them available to any takers, provided that shipping costs were covered by the recipient.

You may be curious as to how it turned out, so here's a little update.

Right after the posting, I received two requests from a couple of regular readers. Those orders were fulfilled in the early part of 2024 without any major issue. (I did learn, however, that there always seems to be a lineup at the post office outlets near where I live, despite Canada Post's ongoing troubles.)

eSheep Designs bag giveaway
Messenger bag has a new owner...

It wasn't until August that I had the opportunity to winnow this collection down further. Hubby and I reconnected with some extended family members, one of whom is a young lady I haven't seen since she was twelve.

Once we established that there was an interest, she selected matching bags for herself and her sister: the Betz White Flight Bag and the modified Dubstepper messenger. I've always considered them both highly functional and the customized messenger is a great choice for a student.

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
Life is short... fill it with things you love doing!

Oftentimes, there is just no better feeling than knowing that something you made is being appreciated and used by someone! (Oh, and if anyone is interested in the others, this offer still remains in effect, although my ability to mail anything might be questionable for some time yet, what with our postal service still being backlogged after their recent work stoppage.)


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The Internet


So how did I feel about blogging and being online this past year?

Well, there was a definite lack of pressure, which is a good thing. (I think that posting once every three weeks or so is manageable for the immediate future.) I appreciate the opportunity to continue writing, period, as it's a pastime that rejuvenates me and keeps me sharp.

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
The world needs more hard workers and fewer blowhards...

As for the other part of that question, I purposely avoided consuming a lot of social media interactions in 2024, having seen how even the comment section on seemingly innocuous news stories can explode into vile arguments for no apparent reason.

brain rot - Oxford University's Word for 2024
Image courtesy of Oxford University...
No, the world is not getting better, regardless of any desire of mine for it to be so. I've said what I can and continue to do what I can, but no more extended soapboxing or grandstanding for me here either.

On the brighter side of things, Australia gets a fist pump from me for having the gumption to set a world-first law by preventing kids under 16 from accessing social media. Getting to the "how" of this decision will be challenging, I'm sure, but more countries need to take a stand and get on board. Perhaps then, Oxford University won't have to choose such depressing words of the year in future.

I ended up writing nineteen blog posts this year. I can't tell you whether that was more or less what I expected, since I had no goals or expectations on that front. (I just knew the number wouldn't be anything close to fifty-two.) If the junk journal hadn't happened, I may not have posted until the summer. When I said last December that I might use the extra time on my hands to sew more, I couldn't have been more wrong!

The Sewing


The concept of "extra time" is relative when you don't actually have a fixed work schedule. As a retired person, whatever you need to do will always magically take up the amount of hours that you have.

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
Shedding life's complexities can be freeing...

The extent of my sewing for this past year was probably less than I had ever done in any of the dozen years leading up to 2024.

To summarize what I accomplished on that front, there were the small amounts of sewing relating to the junk journal (vinyl storage pocket, various ephemera — the cover was actually a late December 2023 project), modifying some tea towels for Mom, the new laptop case for hubby, two Passport & Travel Document Keepers for an SIL, "darning" some socks (and this was only hand sewing), the fabric "gingerbread" house, and three projects that will be the topics of posts for the first part of 2025.

The Surprises


As promised when I announced my break from blogging, I still "hung around" in 2024 to ensure that comments were responded to, that spam was fried, and that pattern sales were fulfilled. It's always a pleasant surprise to receive comments about posts from long ago. (The persistence of spam is not so much appreciated, but I wasn't inundated by them.)

Always one to dig into stats – I once pondered a career as a statistician, would you believe?? – I kept a close eye on popular posts and trending posts. Not that knowing what they are would drive me to change my blogging habits (although I might just summarize them next year in a blog post); it was just out of simple curiosity.

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
This was my most significant breakthrough of the year...
 
It surprised me when – essentially all year long – a post about how to fold a blanket into a cape has held its position at number one. (Since I'm writing this part one day before this post goes live, I'm sure that if you check out the left sidebar, that post will still be at the top of the "Most Popular" list.)

Really odd why that topic has been of such interest. Also surprising – given that it is a popular topic – is the fact that the post currently holds the number one position for the search term "how to fold a blanket into a poncho". (Apart from employing best practices from the get-go, I don't do a lot of tweaking with SEO.) Because I'm not actively looking to grow my blog's following, newbie visitors referred from online searches are always a welcome surprise.

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
My 2025 wish for you...

Further on the topic of new readers, I was surprised to gain a few more subscribers this year than I had any expectation to gain, given my reduced involvement. (It was probably enough to equal the number who bailed on me right after my announcement of "quitting" last December — LOL!)

As we close off the current year, let me leave you with three important questions. Are you keeping well? Are you staying smart? And are you still being kind?

eSheep Designs Jumbo Junk Journal Quotes 2024
Aldous Huxley and Paddington Bear have good ideas...

I sincerely hope so. 🤗

On that note, 'til 2025...

Saturday, 13 April 2024

Living & Crafting Sustainably [Pt 5]: Choosing the Right Hobbies

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
How can we sew, craft and live more sustainably?
Are you someone in search of a new hobby? (As opposed to someone "not needing" another hobby. 😉)

If so, is there such a thing as a "bad" hobby? Maybe one that's not so great for the environment or not sustainable? Does your favourite pastime pass muster for being (somewhat) green?

About four years ago, I became aware of a craft called diamond painting. A friend was gifted with a kit and she completed it as part of her pandemic pastimes (photo below).

It didn't occur to me at the time, but what an environmentally unfriendly hobby it seems to be!

For those who don't know what diamond painting is, it involves sticking tiny coloured plastic gems (called "drills") onto a coded mat to create sparkly pieces of art. It's essentially a plastic version of paint by numbers that produces a finish resembling cross stitch.

Diamond painting sample
An example of diamond painting done by a friend...

Those who are strong supporters of the craft say that the detailed attention required to do it has a calming effect on them and thus improves mental health. Personally, however, I can't get over the fact that someone actually invented yet another way to introduce millions upon billions of tiny bits of plastic – contained in small plastic bags, sorted by colour, no less – into our lives.

Not for me, and to be totally honest, I usually find the results gaudy and "unhangable". (My other half was given one as a thank you gesture. He had told the crafter that he liked it, but it's still rolled up in its box, as there's no way in the opposite of heaven that it's going up on our wall.)

Mental health benefits aside, diamond painting doesn't seem to qualify as a sustainable hobby.




Sewing With the Right Materials


On the other hand, whenever I do a search for "environmentally friendly hobbies", sewing is almost always included in the results. More and more, it's due to the fact that sewers are sourcing supplies in thrift and second-hand stores... and their own closets. (As for sewing machines, they've always been common finds in garage sales and the like, not to mention that you can sew by hand.)

But sewing is not without its environmental controversies, apparently.

Last fall, someone posted a comment on a YouTube video, strongly admonishing "the bag world" for not acknowledging the problem of plastics in making bags and purses, particularly as it applies to using vinyl as the material of choice. This person thought that pattern designers should be taking more leadership in discouraging the practice.

Printed vinyl by ONEART
Printed vinyl called Colorful Heart (by ONEART)...

Apparently, apart from the usual faux leathers that have been around forever, there are now all sorts of clear printed vinyls – called TPUs: thermoplastic polyurethanes – that one can sew with; or more properly, with which one can sew.

I've not made a bag entirely out of vinyl in years, but I do own a small supply of (clear) vinyl that I sometimes incorporate into my sewing projects. Most of it's repurposed, so I'm not so much contributing to the problem per se, but I get the concern over how introducing more options into the marketplace isn't necessarily a good thing. (That doesn't address the ever-increasing practice of sports arenas and stadiums mandating "see through" bags, but I digress.)

Printed cork fabric called French Symbol by SorenCut
Printed cork fabric called French Symbol (by SorenCut)...

Fortunately, there are always better options when it comes to materials for sewing that are environmentally friendly, even apart from repurposing existing textiles. If being transparent is not a requirement, a material that has a similar texture to vinyl/faux leather that is a more sustainable choice is cork.

In terms of cost, there doesn't seem to be a whole lot to differentiate the two; a 12" x 53" cut of the TPU is about $23 (CDN) and a 12.5" x 52.5" cut of the cork is about $26 (CDN). That said, most selections of cork are always going to appear a bit muted compared to the colourful vibrancy available in vinyl. I say most, because there are selections like this one below that might convince you to try cork for your next project.

Portuguese cork fabric
Image courtesy of frameyourbag on Etsy...

This particular piece is smaller than the others at only 26.77'' x 19.69" – and sells for about $19 (CDN) – but it is definitely more colourful than the usual variants of cork.

There is also an increasing movement among established sewers to "sew down the stash." I don't know the actual numbers, but let's say that many people have purchased fabric over their lifetimes, just to have it. Sewing down your stash simply means that you will not buy new fabric until you use up your own supply.


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Indoor & Outdoor Gardening


Gardening, in general, is another widely recommended sustainable, environmentally friendly hobby.

I really dislike outdoor gardening, but the indoor variant that hubby started a couple of years ago has rubbed off on me... somewhat. I must admit that it is tremendously rewarding to see seed, dirt, light and water combine to grow actual food.

indoor garden harvest
Tomatoes, arugula, spinach, romaine and kale from our indoor garden...

And all without the messiness of dirty dirt (indoor dirt is arguably "cleaner", believe me), dealing with insects, and roasting under the hot sun. I am so not suited for outdoor gardening! We grew cucumbers along the side of our house last summer, and for a period of several weeks, I refused to look at them. We had had an explosion in the mosquito population and just venturing out onto the lawn next to the garden was sure to provoke an assault by those pesky buggers.

indoor garden carrots
Emerging carrots...

Inside, I'm able to put my hands into the actual plantings and fiddle with leaves without fear of finding a huge spider climbing onto my fingers. (Although, we have had aphid problems, so it's not all bug free.). I'm not sweating in the heat. I've heard that some folks like the whole experience of "being at one" with nature when they garden in the traditional sense. They are welcome to it.

Scrapbooking Without Supplies


In the three or four years prior to starting this blog, I was very much into virtual scrapbooking. It was a relatively environmentally friendly hobby, quite in contrast to the ultra expensive, material-laden, and ultimately wasteful version of scrapbooking that was all the rage in the early 2000s.

Digital scrapbook pages
Two pages from a digital scrapbook that I made after a Mediterranean cruise...

Digital scrapbooking allow you to scatter various embellishments over your pages just as you would with physical scrapbooking; they're just not tactile "things" with actual texture and substance. Words and text – in various fonts – can be added anywhere, photos can be sized and arranged and creatively edged without cutting, and there is virtually no end to the types of paper you can select for the background.

Digital scrapbooking
As a bonus, you can also use any one of your own photos as the background "paper" (see example at left), which you wouldn't be able to do easily with physical scrapbooking.

After completion, your work can be printed out or left as an electronic file. I don't know what today's preferred apps might be for digital scrapbooking (it might simply still be called a photobook service), but I used Shutterfly back in the day for at least two of my books. (Wait for a sale before printing and you can usually get up to 50% off no matter what resource you use.)

With digital scrapbooking, there is no mess, no need to hoard supplies, and you can indulge your creative efforts without lugging around huge boxes. (There are still scrapbooking events – conventions – that crafters can attend, although they are not as popular or prevalent as they were in their heyday.) And unless you print out every book you make, you also don't need to find a spare room in your house to store the actual scrapbooks that no one will want in thirty years.


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Journaling


Which leads us to the topic of my most recent post, journaling. Whether a junk journal like what's been occupying my time, or an art journal, or a travel journal, or just a day to day diary journal, journaling is usually considered a sustainable hobby.

eSheep Designs' Jumbo Junk Journal sample page
Harvestng Spoonflower packing slips and cards for my jumbo junk journal...

At the bare minimum, all you need is something to write on and something to write with. With junk journals, art journals and travel journals, you just populate the pages with appropriate ephemera, none of which you need to buy... it's kind of like scrapbooking the way it was done in the "old days". In the sense that these types of journals encourage reuse of things that might otherwise be thrown away, they would definitely qualify as being environmentally friendly. (Natasa at Treasure Books has a video showing how she embellished an entire journal using just an old magazine. Just yesterday, I harvested two images out of an Avon catalogue for my journal.)

Project JJJ Update
Jumbo junk journal by eSheep Designs


Speaking of, for those of you curious about my progress on the JJJ project, you can do a virtual flip through of it (of the first signature, in any case) in PDF format here.
 

Reading, Writing & Stimulating Conversation


This last section is sort of a personal aside. I have always enjoyed reading and writing and it suddenly occurred to me that they are quite sustainable activities to enjoy: they cost virtually nothing.

Jessica Pan quote
During my ongoing search for quotable quotes for my junk journal, I came upon a bunch relating to introverts. It may not surprise you to learn that I am a die hard introvert who always plans her escape from large gatherings before arriving at them. Introverts are not automatically shy nor socially inept, they just find being in large groups of people draining and need time alone to re-energize. (I regularly tell people that there are only a handful of individuals in this entire world with whom I can spend more than five hours at a time.) Anyway, it turns out that reading and writing are – no surprise here – popular hobbies for introverts.

The third item in the heading above may appear to you to be an outlier for introverts, but yes, we love one on one conversations. In point of fact, that entire heading is taken from my first real resume. In lieu of extensive work experience, we were told to list some hobbies. I quite correctly assumed that the description of "stimulating" would attract attention and invite questions.

Tuman Capote quote courtesy of BrainyQuote.com
Courtesy of BrainyQuote.com...
Did you know that questions are the lifeblood of conversations? And that truly listening to the other person – and not interrupting – leads to the ability to ask questions that keep a conversation going like a good natured table tennis match?

I was at a fair sized gathering last month and had conversations with five people whom I had never met before. Out of the five, one was truly a great conversationalist, another was good. The remaining three... well, let's just say that I don't know if they ended up learning anything about me after our talk, beyond what little I offered up myself. (I know stuff about them, because I asked.)

In the big scheme of things, learning and mastering the give and take of meaningful conversation is a rewarding and sustainable hobby for everyone. What do you think?

'Til next...

Saturday, 2 March 2024

How My 2024 Crafting Project Came To Be

Mexico beach
Paid a price to fly from -45° to +25°...
and not just in terms of dollars!
Hello!

Is anyone here?? Or has everyone fled to greener pastures? (Remember, they could be fake!😉)

Anyway, if you are here, thank you for stopping by. I hope you've been keeping well. Me, I haven't been as lucky. I was sick over Christmas and barely recovered in time for hubby and I to head off to Mexico in mid January for our first "fly out" holiday in over four years.

The morning we left, it was -45 degrees Celsius at YEG airport; that's -49 to you Fahrenheit folks. Too cold to de-ice the plane before our scheduled takeoff, our departure was eventually delayed by over ten hours. Yep, love to fly... not!

The first couple of nights at our hotel, we were blasted by an AC unit that may not have been very clean. With my compromised immune system, I promptly ended up with a nasal infection that got progressively worse. On the day we were to fly back, I was literally without voice. Miraculously, the frigid cold temperatures of the Great White North seemingly KO'd whatever bacteria was infesting my respiratory system once I got home; I recovered substantially overnight – could talk at least – and within the week, I was "clear". But it sure wasn't fun for a normally healthy person to have spent the better part of six weeks being under the weather. (Not to mention being super paranoid about getting sick again ever since.)

Anyway, enough about my unexpected health challenges. Let's begin today's post by flashing back to January 6, 2024.




It's the early morning hours of the first Saturday in ten years on which no new blog post will appear in this space, and I'm lying awake, composing in my mind some of the words that you'll be reading here in the coming weeks. Yes, old habits are hard to break. (That being said, I did not miss having to schedule weekly posts to go up over the past couple of months, which surprised me.)

No blog posts scheduled
No posts scheduled for a long time!

I was reminiscing on how, back in the latter part of November, with all of my remaining blog posts composed and merely awaiting last minute edits, my YouTube attention had been captured by a channel called Treasure Books, hosted by a talented individual named Natasa, who creates magnificent works of art under the guise of junk journaling. (Boy, that's one long hummer sentence!) I had originally come across her channel three years ago I made my personal project portfolio.

image courtesy of Treasure Books on YouTube
image courtesy of Treasure Books...

For those who are not familiar, junk journals are pretty much what the name implies: they are journals (i.e., books that you write in) made out of things that one might normally throw out or toss into a recycle bin. A common variant of a junk journal is actually made out of a discarded hardcover book, keeping the cover intact and often retaining and making use of some of the pages.

My old notebook
Anyway, if you go back to my last regular blog post, I had talked about having taken up a daily routine of handwriting and scribing life affirming quotes. Towards the middle of December, the notebook that I had been using for that purpose (the back of which is shown here at left) was down to its final pages and I was pondering what I wanted to use going forward.

Alternate notebook
For a variety of reasons, I didn't want just a notebook anymore. (No matter that there are so many different styles to choose from at dollar stores these days, like the one here at right.) Some of the quotes that I had been collecting were "keepers", and a more permanent place for them – where I could flip through and see them featured in creative ways – was what I really wanted. As I scribbled towards the last pages of my original book, the concept of a quotations themed junk journal bubbled up in my head, along with immediate ideas for various things that I could add to the mix, to make it be everything that I was looking for as a solution.

After a quick visit to YouTube, realizing this idea became my crafting focus for the latter part of December, and essentially, for all of 2024.


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Why all year? 

Because in many ways, compiling a junk journal can be a never-ending process that doesn't require completion (and certainly not in any given timeframe). As it's turned out, it was precisely the kind of diversion that I was looking for to occupy my time during this transition from regular blogging.

Since I had to keep to myself between Christmas and New Year's, I had a lot of time on my hands. I took advantage of it and made tremendous progress on my journal, which had by then already been dubbed the Jumbo Junk Journal. (It currently weighs three and a half pounds!)

Junk journal pages
An up close peek at the edges of my jumbo junk journal...

It was jumbo not in the sense of being large in overall page size, but in girth. From my exploration of online videos, I found that I really liked the creative treatments of the edges of junk journal pages. Using different elements to add bulk and extend them in quirky ways appealed to me. Purposely aiming at irregular and uneven is antithetical to the normal order and neatness that I strive for in everyday life, which is yet another reason why this is the perfect transition project for me.

reusing greeting cards in junk journals
I have many, many, many of these greeting cards that I cannot possibly use... but maybe now?

I was originally motivated to make a junk journal for the repurposing and upcycling opportunities. Certain things were accumulating that weren't necessarily garbage or trash, but were definitely adding up beyond my needs (and certainly beyond my wants). I'd been gathering up such items to take to a local "reuse" store, but as I said in my post about donating, reusing at home is always the preferred solution.


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As you might suspect, junk journals are generally "no sew", paper-based things. (Although as you can see in Natasa's sample above, some makers like to sew decorative stitching around the perimeter of the papers used, as a way to embellish them.) As a sewer, of course, it was always my plan to come up with a custom fabric cover, one that would wrap around and protect the entire journal, overlap on top and then cinch closed with a ribbon belt. I also envisioned a fabric pen holder inside to keep various writing implements handy.

Most importantly, perhaps, the cover had to accommodate a notebook. Yes, back to the notebook.

Notebook component of junk journal
My junk journal has a removable notebook component built into it...

After careful consideration, I thought, there's no reason why I can't have a junk journal that incorporates a regular notebook for daily use. The creatively adorned junk journal pages can be used to preserve the especially meaningful thoughts and quotes, while the basic lined sheets of a notebook would provide the necessary space for my handwriting practice.

In the end, I managed to come up with a solution that allows for easy daily use. The notebook is an integral part of the entire junk journal; it's not just slipped in as an afterthought. Even though it's removable (so that it can be replaced once it's filled up), it is securely attached in the meantime and is functional without having to contort anything.

Over the upcoming weeks and months, I'll be sharing bits and pieces of my junk journaling adventure here. But... is the subject remotely captivating to any of you who have read this far?? (Remember, I have zero ability to gauge whether a topic will be a hit or a miss!) If this doesn't snag anyone's interest, then most of these next posts will truly be a "blogging for me" effort.

But then, that's been my philosophy since the beginning, so that's okay too! (¬‿¬)

'Til next...