Tuesday morning, I found a jewelry tutorial I wanted to try. It was, essentially, four identical heart-shaped pieces, locked together in a circle with wire wraps and beads to become a pendant. Here's what I started out to make: Wire wrapped flower pendant | Beaded wire pendent
Here's what came out:Susan's fancy
Gardening in Zone 7 (working for food)
Friday, March 6, 2026
Rerouting - March 5, 2026
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Driving Nanny - March 3, 2026
Saturday afternoon, as I was on the back porch, twisting wire for jewelry, Nanny came sauntering around the corner. She'd come to ask if I would drive her to her eye doctor appointment on Monday. I agreed, and we agreed on a departure time. Yesterday morning, I picked her up at 10:15 for her noon appointment. It was a long drive.
Nanny doesn't get much opportunity to talk to people, outside of churches, funeral homes, and grocery stores, and she had a fresh story to relate about something that had happened after church the previous day. She started the story as we started down her driveway on the way to the doctor.
As Nanny and another lady were leaving the building (they and the minister were the last to leave), they encountered an Hispanic lady in the church parking lot. Her tire had gone flat. She wasn't very fluent in English. Grandsons had to be called in to get lug nuts off. Nanny ended up driving the lady and her tire to a tire repair place. While they waited for the fix, the lady took Nanny to lunch. But the lady was able to drive away on a good tire.
We'd been on the road close to an hour by the time Nanny got to the part where she got home. We'd taken detours up family trees and down gravel roads her father had paved when he worked for the WPA in nineteen and thirty-five. I learned why the helpful grandson was living with his grandmother, how old he is, and where he works.
I just drove. . . .
On the heels of that story came news of cousin Duffy, who was in a rehab/nursing home in the same town. That one was a good ten-minutes leading up to the request: Could we stop to see about him after the doctor's appointment and after lunch at the all-you-can-eat buffet? The visit wouldn't take long.
(Lord Jesus . . . .)
Sure, why not.
My brain was numb by the time I got home, close to four o'clock.
My BFF called about suppertime, just as The Husband got home from work. I had her on speaker phone as he came out to the porch, telling her about my day with Nanny, and how I learned more than I wanted to know about some townsfolk in a story that was technically about a lady with a flat tire.
My BFF said, "We do the same thing."
I said, "I know."
And The Husband just laughed and laughed.
Thursday, February 26, 2026
I am shamelessly planning another craft store run this morning. Might even hit a dollar store or two for treasures I don't yet know I need. ;)
I had a few successes in the craft room yesterday, but lost points on one of them late in the day.
Several years ago, The Husband "inherited" a box full of old piano sheet music. For some reason, there was a trumpet practice book among the sheets. The pages are yellowed, and there are some interesting terms among them. I had the idea to make a resin pendant with a treble clef and key signature in it.
I poured a clear, tear-drop shaped cabochon, about 1" x .75". Poured it almost full and cured it. Check.
The printed treble clefs were just big enough to fill that space. Cutting them out to the perfect size/shape was hard. Since the plan was to make more than one (if I could get the process right), I didn't want to fool with scissors, so I traced around the cabochon, scanned it with the cutting machine, and jimmied around with the size until I got it just right. Stuck the music to my cutting board, et voila!
It then occurred to me that I could use that same scan to cut all sorts of things to go under that cabochon. I forgot about the treble clef for a minute and cut out some glitter vinyl that would fit it. I added a drop or two of resin to the cured cabochon (still in the mold), put the vinyl on top of it, and filled the mold the rest of the way. It worked perfectly!
Had to pour a new cabochon for the treble clef. Among my resin stash was a small bottle of transparent brown resin. It's just faintly brown. I used it for the cabochon.
The paper treble clef needed to be sealed (two coats, on both sides, with white glue that dries clear) before going in the resin. The online advice was to let it dry for several hours before putting it in resin. I might have rushed it, but when it felt dry to me, I used it.
The experiment came out okay. Wasn't crazy about the brown resin, but the cabochon is usable as a pendant.
After that, I moved on to making rings out of wire. Turned out 3 rings, two of which turned out okay.
When The Husband came home from work, I took him to the craft room to show him my accomplishments.
I could not find the treble clef cabochon anywhere.
Hermie's back!
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Gumption - February 24, 2026
It's too cold to be on the porch this morning. I won't be here long.
Trying to work up the gumption to work on some jewelry today. I hurt my knee yesterday - just leaned a little sideways to reach for something, and POP! It's a teenage injury that flares up now and then. My knee is swollen and "loose," but it doesn't hurt much as long as I keep it moving. When I get up after sitting a while, those first few steps are a bitch.
The tiny flowers that have been sitting in silica powder since the weekend have dried nicely. The forsythia maintained its color much better than they did when I used the silica microwave method. I found a few dandelions this morning, and one little purple bloom (don't know what it is). The cold snap seems to have made everything hold off blooming for a minute.
Since yesterday, I have made 5 bracelets. Every one of them has something wrong with it. :-/
I'm going to keep trying until I get it right.
Monday, February 23, 2026
Drying buds - February 28, 20276
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
UV Resin Adventures - February 10, 2026
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Friday, February 6, 2026
Break Time - February 6, 2026
Taking a break from reaping what I sowed 10 or 20 years ago, when I decided to dump all of my beads together in one deep box. I knew it was dumb when I did it, that at some point I'd have to either re-sort the beads or throw them out or give them away. I did this to make room for supplies for whatever craft craze next caught my eye.
Over the past couple of weeks, I've been digging around in the box, refreshing myself as to its contents, sorting by class - bead, finding, wire - into zip bags.
Reckoning time has arrived.
Today, I needed two matching beads for a pair of earrings. I know they're in that box. Somewhere.
Today, I started the color sort.
This is going to take a while.


