Thursday, December 30, 2010

The Excitement Is Building!


I just now confirmed a new giveaway! Can you feel the excitement building?! I also just got this picture from another giveaway participant and couldn't wait! How cute is this? The very talented Kelly Roberts is giving away this cupcake themed set and you can have it personalized. Love it!!!


Remember that all of the fabulous giveaways start bright and early January 1st. Check back every day for a new prize and opportunity to win. All you have to do is comment and you are entered. Woo hoo!

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Triplets


Three babies, oh my! Kristin Pruitt is beyond blessed with her healthy babies. Avery, Jaxon, and Kinsley share a nursery. Orange is the color that ties all of their bedding together.


Kristin liked the dots and stripes design that I had done before. She also found this font. Her order was so easy to put together! As I was finishing them, her friend, Wesley Hillis, asked about getting for her as a baby gift. What a wonderful surprise!


Thank you so much Kristin and Wesley! I hope they look absolutely perfect in the nursery.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Bailey's Quotes


Five canvases in five different sizes.


All done in red, black and white with a request for some zebra.


All with wonderful messages of self confidence and positive thinking.

What a great idea! Thank you Tina and Bailey Walker. I hope they match your bedding and look just perfect in your room.























Monday, December 27, 2010

Ten Days of Giveaways


The "Ten Days of Giveaways" promotion is really taking off. I am excited to say that I am going to have to change it to the "Thirteen Days of Giveaways"! It's a wonderful problem to have! So many of my talented friends jumped right in and agreed to participate. Thank you all so much!
I do have several from last year who are back and better than ever. I also have some newcomers that you all are going to love.


My Duck Duck Goose is on etsy. Wendy and I have talked quite a bit lately because I am always ordering custom "Lauren" shirts, invitations, and cards from her. I absolutely love all of her stuff! Here is the card (with matching stickers, of course!) that I ordered for Lauren's Valentines this year. Wendy is participating in the promotion this year!

Check back all week to get sneak peeks at all of the giveaways!

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Avery


Holly Kurzrock in Mufreesboro ordered this 12x24 canvas what feels like forever ago! I knew she was giving it as a gift and that I needed to wait to share it. It's been killing me! I love this girly girl design, the colors, and especially the font.


It is planned for a baby nursery, but I think it would look pretty in a little girl's room or even a teen's room. I would also love to see it in other colors or with an antiquing glaze. Oooohhh...so many ideas for the new year!

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Oh, The Food!


There's no doubt about it... I love Christmas! I love the family, the presents, the general good feeling in the air. But my favorite thing is the food. There are several treats the I really only get at Christmas and sometimes Thanksgiving. Believe me, I made the most of it. There is so much salt in my system from the country ham that its not even funny. That stuff is like crack. One little taste and you just can't stop. I will be paying for this and I am seriously considering some kind of "cleanse". It was totally worth it.
Lyndsay Neal way out in Missouri has a family member that feels about macaroni and cheese the way I feel about country ham. It has become sort of a family inside joke. Lyndsay ordered this little surprise. I would love to see the reaction when it was unwrapped!

I hope you all had a fabulous holiday, that you got everything you wished for, and toasted your family and loved ones. Merry Christmas!



















Thursday, December 23, 2010

Families

I just got to spend some quality time with Mike's family. The cousins got to play together all day yesterday. We all sat down to dinner together. We gave each other gifts, most of them one at a time. The kids all got to spend the night together at MeMaw's house. Then we all had breakfast together at our house.
We don't get to see other but a few times through the year. I know it is so important for and especially the kids to be together and really got to know one another. We do this every year and it is one of the things I look forward to the most.
We miss you, Michelle and Jamon!








I did bunches and bunches of family canvases. Most of these are Christmas gifts for special family members. There are so many different colors, fonts, and designs to these. All of them look great and are custom designed for that family. Thank you all so much for the orders! Enjoy this time with your family.
Happy Holidays!

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Sabrina


Ashley Musculus down in Kissimmee, Florida is anxiously awaiting the arrival of her canvas and her new baby. I thought I'd dedicate today's post to her. I know how hard it is to wait!


Her baby girl, Sabrina, is due in the next couple of weeks. Ashley is spending this time getting the nursery ready. I don't know what I did with the picture she sent me of the bedding. I wanted you all to see how cute it is, but also how well this canvas matches.


It's not really pink. It's all of these shades of more of a coral with little touches of light blue. It is very unusual, but beautiful, and the monkeys are just too cute.


The walls are a pale shade and the furniture will be white. I thought the rich chocolate brown would really stand out. Ashley asked for a few rhinestones. I almost forgot about them (even though I had already planned where to put them!) and added them after this picture was taken. They are the perfect finishing touch!


Thank you, Ashley! Best wishes and happy holidays to you and your growing family!















Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Year Kenny Loggins Ruined Christmas

The year I learned that Christmas did not, in fact, originate as a celebration of my amazing ability to temporarily transform into a "good" child for a few weeks was the year my grandparents took me to see their church's nativity play.  My dad's parents were heavily involved in their church and felt that, at six years old, it was time that I start appreciating the miracle of Jesus instead of using Christmas as an excuse to whore out my integrity for presents.  Even though my parents weren't religious, they let me go to the play because it was important to my grandparents.

From my grandparents' flowery explanation and frequent use of the word "miracle," I went in expecting to be blown away by the production. Unfortunately, the church moms and the pathetic excuses for actors that they called their offspring failed to bring the characters to life in the way I had hoped.  And the story just seemed to center around everyone being really impressed with Jesus and there wasn't much suspense and not a single battle scene.



I could see that the story had potential, but I was deeply disappointed by the whole experience.


By the time my grandparents dropped me off at home, I had convinced myself that I needed to take matters into my own hands and reinvent the birth of Christ so that it conformed to my expectations. My parents and I lived with my maternal grandmother and my aunt, so I would have more than enough talent to work with - all I had to do was create a compelling story line.

I walked through my front door with purpose and gathered my family members in the living room to tell them about my vision. I was going to rewrite the birth of Jesus Christ and I was going to make it POP.

My mom, always wanting to nurture my creative side, agreed on behalf of everyone that we should go forward with the production. I would be playing the part of Mary and my dad would be Joseph. My aunt and my grandma would play the wise men. My mom would be filming. The dogs were slated to play the animals in the manger, but they kept trying to chew the eyes off of the doll I'd chosen to play Jesus, so their parts were cut and they were relegated to the bedroom for the duration of the production.

Once I had assigned everyone their parts, we set about the task of gathering costumes and props. Joseph was outfitted in a brown bath robe and Mary wore a blue blanket over her head like a cloak. The wise men, who were heavily intoxicated at that point in the evening, decided to dress themselves like gypsies.


I felt that the struggles of my character, Mary, needed to be emphasized. The audience really needed to understand that she was suffering. I constructed my costume accordingly.


By the time I was done reinventing her, Mary carried a cane, walked with an exaggerated limp and was completely covered in BandAids.


She was also blind.

The first scene opened with Mary and Joseph walking across the desert in search of shelter. I took my dad's hand and slowly paraded around the house, making a big show of being horribly disabled.


I was slightly annoyed when my dad broke character to ask my mom if she put the leftovers in the refrigerator, but I tried to work around the interruption and carry on. I couldn't let myself be distracted by the incompetence of others.

I had never been more serious about anything in my little life.  I ad-libbed my lines with the greatest sincerity, pausing after each one to let the weight of my plight sink in.


Every now and then, I would pause my dramatic musings and make my dad knock on a door and ask "Is there room at the inn?" At which point, my mother's disembodied voice would say "I'm sorry. There is no room at the inn." And then I'd make my dad feign complete outrage at the detached voice.

Me: "Now yell at the innkeeper!"

My Dad: "Arrggghhhh!"

Me: "No, Dad! Actually yell words at him!"

My Dad: "You... innkeeper! You dirty innkeeper!"

Me: "Do it better than that."

My Dad: "Oh, I'll... I'll show you, you rascally innkeeper!"

Me: "NO! You aren't saying it mean enough."

My Dad: "How do I say it mean enough?"

Me: "Say 'I'll rip out your guts and feed them to a monster and then I'll kill you!'"

My Dad: "I'll rip out your guts and feed them to a monster and then I'll kill you."

Me: "Louder."

My Dad: "I'LL RIP OUT YOUR GUTS AND FEED THEM TO A MONSTER AND THEN I'LL KILL YOU!!!"

Working with my family was turning out to be more of a struggle than I had anticipated.  They seemed to be actually looking for opportunities to derail my theatrical masterpiece.

Once we had cycled through knocking on every door in the house in much the same fashion, I went back to the first door and started the process over. At some point in this endless litany of repetitive scenes, my mom interrupted to try to get things moving a little faster.


My mother didn't seem to understand how serious I was about my part.  Fortunately, I got bored with the scene well before I'd gotten around to reenacting it a million times.

It was finally time for Jesus to be born. Due to my incomplete understanding of childbirth, the scene involved Jesus being tossed across the room, as if in flight, and me running over to where he landed and acting really surprised to find him there.


The wise men were in the kitchen making more cocktails while Jesus was being "born" and they missed their cue. My mom ran into the kitchen and yelled "Jesus is here!" to which the wise men responded "Oh! Right! Shit. Hang in there, Jesus! We're coming!! "

They stumbled into the living room, still clutching half-full glasses of vodka which they hadn't had time to pour orange juice into, and yelled, as if the baby Jesus were partially deaf or mentally challenged "HELLO JESUS. WE COME BEARING GIFTS."

Grandma: "Wait, where are the gifts?"

Aunt: "Didn't you bring them? We were supposed to bring gold, frankincense and that other one." 

Grandma: "I thought you were going to bring them."

Aunt: "I was busy keeping my eye on that star and trying not to get us lost. You were on gold, frankincense and whatever duty."

Grandma: "Well, I was brushing the camels."

Aunt: "You aren't supposed to brush camels." 

Grandma: "You don't know that. Have you ever owned a camel?"

Aunt: "Of course. I'm a wise man. I know all there is to know about camels."

Grandma: "Well, then you should know that camels need to be brushed. A lot."

Aunt: (skeptical silence).

Grandma: "Well, I guess we don't have any gifts after all. Sorry Jesus."

I was not happy. I ordered them to go find some gifts for Jesus.

They scavenged around the living room for a few minutes and then returned bearing a pack of cigarettes, the remote control and a Kenny Loggins tape.


Aunt: "We're back! And we have the gifts!"

Grandma: "They are specially imported from distant lands."

The gifts were most definitely not imported from distant lands. I had just seen my aunt and grandmother pick them up off of the floor, seemingly at random.  Their inattention to detail infuriated me. They weren't even trying to make the play seem realistic.  They were sabotaging my monumental production with their lazy, unrealistic props.

Me: "Jesus doesn't want those things."

Grandma: "Sure he does. Jesus loves Kenny Loggins."

Me: "No. He hates him."

My dire seriousness only served to fuel their desire to toy with me.

Aunt: "No, no, no. Jesus was a huge Kenny Loggins fan."

Grandma: "It's true. I saw it in the Bible once."

Me: "Grandma, Kenny Loggins wasn't even alive back then."

Grandma: "Oh yes he was.  Kenny Loggins is immortal."

They both burst into raucous laughter.  They thought they were being awfully clever.  Apparently my mom and dad thought so too, because they joined in.


At that point, they were all laughing too hard to clearly impart any further knowledge of Kenny Loggins.

I looked at them, strewn about the room; contorted with laughter over their own stupid jokes.


They were a disgrace.  They had somehow managed to take my moment in the spotlight and irreversibly derail it until it was entirely about Kenny Loggins. This was supposed to be MY moment, not Kenny Loggins' moment. It was so unfair. They were ruining my life.


I couldn't contain my fury any longer.


An unforeseen plot twist arose when, in a final attempt to jar my family into cooperation, I cast the baby Jesus to the ground and began to repeatedly bludgeon him with my cane.

Even though they weren't religious, the violent blasphemy unfolding before them made my family feel slightly uncomfortable.


My grandmother tried to intervene. 


For a moment, it seemed as though my outburst had succeeded in bringing my family back into a more serious mindset. But after a few moments of tense silence, my aunt quietly squeaked "Kenny Loggins wouldn't beat the baby Jesus..."

It was over.  Any hope I had ever had of getting my family members to act out their parts with integrity was shattered.  They laughed and laughed until I thought they were going to asphyxiate on their own wretched spittle.

My mom eventually realized that it was her maternal duty to step in and discipline me when I did things like strike the baby Jesus repeatedly with a blunt object, so she tried to pull herself together and send me to my room. 


I didn't want to spend any more time around these horrible, undignified people anyway, so I stomped away to my room where I could reenact the play with a more cooperative cast.


I still hold a small amount of resentment toward Kenny Loggins.