Samstag, 30. April 2011

Mural Painter Seeks Donors


Through my Brazilian percussion band, Batala , I have connections to so many different people, events and projects. One of my Batala sisters passed on this plea for funds to help mural painter, Joel Bergner create a mural to raise awareness about domestic violence in our communities. I checked out his paintings and immediately fell in love with the bold colors and simplicity of line. I hope some of my friends will also appreciate his style and the seriousness of this issue and help see this project to its completion. If you would like to donate, please see the link in the upper corner of my blog and thanks so much !

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2010/03/mural-painter-seeks-donors.html

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Self-erasing data

Self-Erasing Toshiba Drive Foils Thieves and Forgetful Owners “I applaud the logic behind Toshiba’s self-erasing drives, which uses encryptions to recognize which machine it’s in. If taken out and used in another PC, the encryption keys destroy the data, and voila, no-one can see all those photos and video you’ve meticulously stored away.” Gizmodo

Source: http://www.richardbanks.com/trends/?p=15538

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It's Getting Hot!


relax, baby, originally uploaded by howtouseart.

silkscreen, spray paint, pastel, charcoal, and acrylic
18" x 22"

Yeah, I think summer is officially here in Florida... As soon as you step outside, you get covered in an icky film of sweat and humidity. So that is why I'm staying INside and doing lots of painting! This is one from a few months ago, plenty of new ones to show you too, but of course I gotta take some pictures first...

I'm super excited because in a few weeks I am off to Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina. I am taking the "Print and Clay Buffet" class and learning how to make images onto pottery - yay! So exicted...and lucky because I got a scholarship to take the class. :)
I will keep you guys posted on how it goes and will definitely want to show you what I make!

Source: http://howtomakeart.blogspot.com/2010/05/it-getting-hot.html

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Scanning glasses

Brazilian Police to Wear Glasses That Can Scan Faces to Find Criminals “The glasses scans 46,000 biometric points on a person’s face and compares it against a criminal database. When the glasses find a bad guy (it’s actually a camera attached to the glasses), a red light pops up inside the glasses and alerts the [...]

Source: http://www.richardbanks.com/trends/?p=15548

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Hello!

Just a quick update, sorry for the lack of stitchy goodness lately, I've been on holidays:

But now I'm back and stitchiness will resume shortly. Thanking!

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/07/hello.html

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Mid-Year 2008 Stitch-along #1


Mid-Year 2008 SAL, originally uploaded by rufffledfeathers.

Look at one of the beautiful pieces I found on flickr today for the Embroidery group stitch-along. Blogged at www.ruffledfeathers.typepad.com.

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/07/mid-year-2008-stitch-along-1.html

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Metropolis Necklace-Etsy Beadweavers Challenge


This month's Etsy Beadweavers challenge theme, Fashion Through the Ages , struck a chord with me because I had a pattern developed that fit perfectly with the Art Deco style of design. I created the triangular portion of my Metropolis Necklace using the pattern I made with my BeadTool design program and stitched it in herringbone using 4 beads at a time. Then I worked upward in brick stitch to a decent choker width of 1/2" and finished out the rest of the choker in peyote. I had fun looking through my vintage button collection and found the perfect button to complement the Art Deco design. Of course, I finished it all last minute and could only get some basic photos done. Next time, no procrastinating (yeah right) ! You can check out all the amazing entries from our beadweaving team now and vote on March 8th.

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2011/03/metropolis-necklace-etsy-beadweavers.html

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The cat in Rabat



Dr Suess, Arab style

Source: http://microcosmic.blogspot.com/2008/01/cat-in-rabat.html

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A Pile of Potential...


...on the studio floor.

Source: http://howtomakeart.blogspot.com/2011/01/pile-of-potential.html

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259 Weekly Lost Podcast ? Series Finale Initial Reaction

Weekly Lost Podcast Series Finale Initial Reaction Click Here To Download In this episode, Stephanie and I are joined by die hard lost fans from around the world as we celebrated the series finale of Lost at a viewing party that we threw in Northern Kentucky. We will be devoting two episodes to taking your [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/generallyspeaking/~3/u41YRma5tiA/

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Sisters



Ambrotype in half case, two sisters in matching dresses!

Source: http://howtomakeart.blogspot.com/2011/01/sisters.html

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Gonna rock for literacy



The Pittsburgh band Mon Gumbo performs at the 2011 Mardi Gras to Make a Difference fundraiser for Washington County Literacy Council, which tutors adults who want to learn how to read. The nonprofit has volunteers teaching English as a second language classes, and also provides free books to babies and children in its service area.

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/03/gonna-rock-for-literacy.html

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Freitag, 29. April 2011

252 Weekly Lost Podcast ? Mirror Mirror

Weekly Lost Podcast Mirror Mirror Be sure to RSVP for the LOST Series Finale Party! Click Here To Download In this episode, Stephanie and I share the community reaction to Season 6 Episode 13, “The Last Recruit.” Don’t forget to give us a call on our listener line. It’s open and ready for your call [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/generallyspeaking/~3/a8jQZKrJtXc/

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Remember Hobbytex?




Today's transfers are a recent op-shop (aka thrift store) find. A pack of Hobbytex iron-on transfers, simply marked "No. 302 children designs". They were wrapped up in a plastic bag when I bought them, so I couldn't check what was in there until I got it home, and lo and behold:

More Vogart - a sheet of "Jolly Farmyard Scenes" (aka Vogart 705) and a mixture of kitty and doggy patterns from Vogart 102 and the days of the week kitties. Does anyone know how Vogart patterns ended up being licensed to Hobbytex and Made in Australia*? I know Vogart used to make fabric paint at one stage too... I might have to go a-Google-ing Hobbytex.

I think there's a sheet missing from the pack as the other sheets are marked B, C and D. The third sheet I have I'm guessing is a Hobbytex original, as I've never seen it before, and the designs defintely seem to be geared towards fabric painting rather than embroidery. I like the designs though, they're good and "boyish": sailboats, racing cars, a rodeo rider and an assortment of old aeroplanes.






So if the wee boys in your life don't want a kitteh or a doggie, then I think this Spitfire-like fighter plane is the way to go!

*(..as the patterns proclaim. I like seeing "Made in Australia" on things.)

PS. Yes, I realise that the flags and the winning cup are still upside down on the first car pic, but I know my stitchy friends have the technology to overcome this.

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/07/remember-hobbytex.html

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No "Miracle" Cures from Inflation; Impossible to Inflate Out of this Mess

Inquiring minds are reading The ?Miracle? of Compound Inflation by John Mauldin. Here are a few paragraphs worthy of a closer look.
Albert Einstein is famously quoted as saying, ?Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world.? And compounding is indeed the topic of this week?s shorter than usual letter, but compounding not of interest but of inflation.

First, let?s look at nominal GDP over the last 11 years, from the beginning of 2000. The data only goes through the third quarter of last year, so sometime this year it is quite likely that GDP will top $15 trillion.



Now, to see this in an interesting graph, the Fed has real GDP based on 2005 dollars. You can see that we are about back to where we were in 2008, prior to the crisis, and growing well below trend. But if we adjust for inflation, growth has not been close to what it was in nominal terms.



Now let?s run through a few ?what-if? scenarios.

What if the next 11 years look more or less like the last, with 4% nominal GDP growth? That would mean that in 2022 nominal GDP would be 50% larger than now, right at $22.5 trillion. But that is with only 2% inflation.

What if inflation were 4%, with the same growth? Then nominal GDP would be $30 trillion! What a roaring economy, except that gas would $8 a gallon (assuming current levels of supply and demand). In essence, you would need $2 to buy what $1 buys today. Don?t even ask about health-care costs. If your pay/income did not double, you would be in much worse shape in terms of lifestyle. That is the insidious nature of inflation.

But let?s think about that from a federal budget perspective. Let?s assume we get 20% of GDP in federal tax revenues, which is roughly a little higher than the historical average. That means total tax revenues would be in the range of $6 trillion. With 2% inflation, revenues would be just $4.5 trillion. If the federal government froze its spending at current levels for 12 years (no inflation adjustment), we would be running large surpluses under either scenario.

Higher inflation means US debt is easier to pay back, as nominal GDP is what we pay taxes on, not inflation-adjusted. Inflation is a tried and true method of dealing with too much debt. Inflation is also just another word for default, but it sounds so much better to the ear.
Whoa!

  • What about interest on the national debt?
  • What if we have inflation without the growth?
  • What about wage growth and revenue assumptions?
  • What about health-care costs and other government expenditures?

Mauldin is correct about the "insidious nature of inflation".

Unfortunately, Mauldin then provides an example that suggests inflation is a "tried and true" way of dealing with debt.

Let's quickly dispel such thinking starting with a look at interest on the national debt and health-care costs.

Health-Care Costs

Mauldin said "Don?t even ask about health-care costs." Well we have to ask about them. If health-care costs rise sharply, so will Medicare and Medicaid expenses unless they are capped.

Mauldin proposed such a cap to make his "what-if" model work.

Unfortunately, it is not rational to assume such a cap, nor is it rational to think other government expenses such as road-work, food stamps, education spending would be capped either.

Interest on the National Debt

Speaking of caps, there is no way to cap interest on the national debt except by eliminating the debt entirely.

I discussed interest on the national debt in Interactive Map: Paul Ryan vs. Obama Budget Details; Path of Destruction

Here are the pertinent charts but please take a look at the entire post if you have not seen it.

Deficit: Obama vs. Paul Ryan



Paul Ryan made good headway for three years, then fell flat for another 7. This is no way to shrink the national debt or reduce interest on the national debt as we shall see in a moment.

Obama's proposal is abysmal. He made some progress for a few years, then went into reverse.

Interest on the National Debt: Obama vs. Paul Ryan



The above chart shows the effect of cumulative failures to shrink the deficit.

Note that in 2021 president Obama proposes to spend over $900 billion a year on interest on the national debt. This is sickening, not amusing.

Paul Ryan would have us spending $687 billion on interest in 2021. His deficit proposal for 2021 is $731 billion.
CBO Analysis

Mauldin continues, and gets back on much firmer ground with a critique of CBO analysis.
What the CBO Assumes

The Congressional Budget Office makes projections, based on various Congressional tax bills, as to what future income and expenses might be. But to do that they have to make assumptions about the growth of the economy and inflation.

You can go to their website and see their economic forecasting. The data I will be discussing is on page 7, in http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/120xx/doc12039/EconomicTables%5B1%5D.pdf.

Let?s look at one of the tables.



Note that they have nominal GDP at $24 trillion in ten years (not far from my 2% inflation scenario above), but they assume rather robust economic growth for the next five years (beginning with 2012) of well over 3% and inflation down around 1.5%. Not a bad world if we could get it.
What Happens at "Modest" 4% Inflation?

Now that we have interest rate and inflation assumptions from the CBO, let's take another look at what might happen with 4% inflation.

The CBO projects the CPI will peak at 2.3% except for 2017 at 2.4% (quite an assumption). The CBO also projects short-term interest rates to be about 2 points higher than CPI, and 10-year rates at 3 points higher than the CPI.

Using those guidelines, at 4% inflation, short-term interest rates would be 6%, and 10-year rates would be 7%.

National debt will rise to $23-26$ trillion in the Obama -Ryan scenarios shown above. At 4% inflation (and 6% interest rates) what would interest on the national debt be?

At 6% interest, interest on $26 trillion would be $1.56 Trillion a year. However, that statement assumes we got to 2021 and then interest suddenly spiked to 6% and all the revenue assumptions held up. It would not work that way in practice.

Remember that we are running budget deficits and adding to the national debt under every scenario proposed so far. If we had 4% inflation along the way, interest on the national debt would rise sharply every year and that amount would add to the cumulative debt, as would any revenue misses.

If we had 4% inflation, would we have the revenue growth as presumed in Mauldin's "what-if" example? I highly doubt it. However, we can be sure that government expenditures would rise.

Also note that even IF revenues rose with inflation, so would government expenditures on health-care, road work, education, food stamps, etc unless one makes irrational assumptions.

Thus any scenario that suggests a budget surplus is possible with 4% inflation is preposterous.

What About Another Recession?

Finally, and as Mauldin correctly pointed out, the chance of a recession in the next 10 years is quite high.

Indeed, I think it is likely there are two or more recessions in the next decade. Thus, the CBO estimate, Ryan's estimate, and president Obama's estimate are all unrealistically optimistic.

Locking in Long-Term Rates

Ironically, the Fed could take advantage of low interest rates now by locking in favorable long-term rates now just as corporations have done.

Instead of buying treasuries and bloating its balance sheet, in theory, the Fed could have been selling treasuries, locking in debt at exceptional prices under 4.5% for 30 years, or 10-year debt at 3.4% (and could have done much better some time ago).

I said, "in theory" because that action would have reduced money supply, and Bernanke believes tightening money supply in the Great Depression made matters worse.

Exit Strategy Will Put Upward Pressure On Yields

Today the Fed has a different problem of its own making.

The Fed's balance sheet is stuffed with treasuries. Attempts to unload them would put upward pressure on yields regardless of what Bernanke says about his exit strategy (or lack thereof).

Impossible to Inflate Out of This Mess

The idea that inflation is a "tried and true method" of dealing with debt is complete Keynesian foolishness. Inflation is never a cure, it only seems to work in the short run.

Please consider these Statements of Ludwig von Mises regarding Interest, Credit Expansion, and the Trade Cycle.
There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.
Tried and True Illusion

Careful analysis including a look at interest on the national debt and other government expenditures shows there are no "miracle" cures from inflation, only a temporary illusion of success, much like the illusion that the housing bubble represented a solution to the collapse of the dot-com bubble.

Inflation it is the disease. Deflation is the cure, but it sure will not be painless.

In the meantime, the Monetarist clowns at the Fed and the Keynesian clowns in government are simply digging a bigger hole, cheering the illusion of success of ever-bigger bubbles.

The collapse of the housing bubble should be proof enough that the model does not work, yet Keynesian clowns everywhere persist with proposals that have never worked in practice, and cannot possibly work mathematically.

Addendum - A Long One:

Who Does Inflation Benefit?

One misguided soul commented that I ignored the fact that inflation benefits those with first access to money.

Hardly.

A search of my blog for inflation benefits access turns up hundreds of hits of which at least 20 use those three words in a single sentence.

Moreover, some of the posts were entirely devoted to that theme. For example please consider Hello Ben Bernanke, Meet "Stephanie" a post containing an email from a retired person living on social security complaining about the ravages of inflation. Please read it. Here is on key snip.
Fed's Policy Is Theft

Stephanie, it's a little known fact that inflation benefits those with first access to money, such as the banks, the wealthy (via rising asset prices), and the government (think rising sales taxes and property taxes when prices go up).

Everyone else gets screwed. You are right in the middle of the pack of those most hurt by the serial bubble blowing policies of the Fed.

Viewed this way, Bernanke's policies are nothing but theft, robbing the poor, for the benefit of banks and the wealthy.

This is why I support Congressman Ron Paul's effort to end the Fed.
Systemic Theft

Inflation most benefits banks not only because they have first access to money, but also because government and the Fed will bail them out if they get in trouble. The insidious result is the moral hazard policy known as "too big to fail".

However, that does not negate the possibility of deflationary busts as the following chart shows.

Total Credit Market



Total Consumer Credit



The proper way of viewing inflation is via expansion and contraction of credit. The first chart shows that credit dwarfs money supply, regardless of what your measure of money is.

We have never before in history seen a credit bust of this magnitude, yet there is no good reason to think another bust cannot happen.

Indeed we just went through a deflationary bust, and there will be more, just as happened in Japan. All the current focus on prices is simply misguided. The fact that gasoline prices have soared pales in comparison to $trillions in debt wiped off the books in the housing bust. That is not conjecture subject to debate, but a simple logical fact, yet people tell me all the time we have inflation as measured by the price of eggs or gasoline or whatever.

Phooey, we have inflation now and have been in a state of inflation since Bernanke revived the corporate bond market in Spring of 2009. When the corporate bond market heads down again, the economy will once again feel the effects of deflation.

Inflation and Deflation Defined

My model defines inflation as a net expansion of money and credit with credit marked-to-market. Deflation is a net contraction of money and credit with credit marked-to-market.

The marked-to-market concept takes the market perception of credit into the picture. Debt that cannot be paid back won't, but if the market lets banks pretend that it will, the system still functions. Such is the state of affairs right now.

Hyperinflation Ends The Game

There are numerous misguided proponents of hyperinflation. Most do not understand that hyperinflation is a political event (the complete loss of faith in currency), not a measure if interest rates or price inflation.

A political event happens first (complete loss of faith of currency), and hyperinflation is the result. For a discussion please see Debating the Flat Earth Society about Hyperinflation

For a discussion about the nature of money and how much is needed, please see
Gold is Money, What About Silver? Can Gold be Debt?

The key issue regarding hyperinflation is that it is a political event and that it would destroy the banks and the Fed if it happened. In tat sense it benefits no one. The Fed would not want it to happen, nor would banks and the wealthy.

That does not make hyperinflation impossible, but given the political stability of the US, it sure makes it damn unlikely.

Hyperinflation Theory vs. Practice

This is what it comes down to: In theory, Congress can easily cause hyperinflation. In practice, they won't, and neither will the Fed. As Yogi Berra once quipped "In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is."

Does Government Benefit From Inflation?

Earlier I stated how government benefits from inflation (higher tax collections was one of the ways).

However, unlike banks and the wealthy who can and do invest money in assets, government squanders money.

Sure, government may collect more in taxes than before, but governments everywhere perpetually spend more than they take in. In practice, interest on the national debt and rising expenditures more than chew up any alleged "benefit" of inflation.

Thus it is an illusion that government benefits from inflation (depending of course on your definition of "government").

However, politicians prey on the illusion of benefit and also on the public's demand for government to "do something". In that sense, corrupt and ignorant politicians do benefit from inflation.

Summation

Hyperinflation ends the game and is unlikely.

Periodic bouts of deflation in conjunction with longer periods of inflation serves to concentrate wealth in the hands of bankers and other wealthy individuals.

In general, there are No "Miracle" Cures from Inflation. Rather, inflation slowly destroys the middle class over time for the benefit of banks and the wealthy who were not so foolish as to be over-leveraged in debt.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MishsGlobalEconomicTrendAnalysis/~3/RKWaREYz8M4/no-miracle-cures-from-inflation.html

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Earth Day + Friday =

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Vintage embroidery - Mexico


Vintage embroidery- Mexico, originally uploaded by Vintage LOVE.

How wonderful is this? I found this pic on Vintage Love's Flickr.

I must apologise for the lack of posts of late, having to take down all the Vogart ones knocked the wind out of my sails, so to speak, but I'll be back soon with some cute patterns!

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/09/vintage-embroidery-mexico.html

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Twitter games

Twitter-Based Game Creates Video Game Obstacles From Real World Experiences “The app-based platform takes the angle of ?playing with reality? ? initially a combination of two standalone games that integrate real-world tweets into the gameplay. ?Route 140? is the first, a racing-style game where obstacles that players must avoid and overcome in the game world [...]

Source: http://www.richardbanks.com/trends/?p=15544

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Mural Painter Seeks Donors


Through my Brazilian percussion band, Batala , I have connections to so many different people, events and projects. One of my Batala sisters passed on this plea for funds to help mural painter, Joel Bergner create a mural to raise awareness about domestic violence in our communities. I checked out his paintings and immediately fell in love with the bold colors and simplicity of line. I hope some of my friends will also appreciate his style and the seriousness of this issue and help see this project to its completion. If you would like to donate, please see the link in the upper corner of my blog and thanks so much !

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2010/03/mural-painter-seeks-donors.html

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My book is OUT!!

I got excited and found some free time today to finish up the book! The issues with the cover that I had before are all fixed, yay! You can take a look at the order page and preview on lulu.com here.

My digital camera is being cranky (I'm kinda worried...), so I don't have photos of the book, but I did take this snazzy new video of it:

Source: http://howtomakeart.blogspot.com/2010/05/my-book-is-out.html

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Most Beautiful Royals Ranked

Filed under:

Who is the most beautiful royal ever? According to BeautifulPeople.com, the honor goes to Princess Grace of Monaco, a Hollywood star who gave up her Oscar-winning career to become royalty.

The biggest surprise: princess-to-be Kate Middleton is ranked third, surpassing her fiancé's mother, Princess Diana, in fourth. Queen Rania of Jordan and Charlotte Casiraghi of Monaco, Princess Grace's granddaughter, round out the top five.

Among the men, Prince Carl Philip of Sweden takes the top spot. The 32-year-old playboy beats out Andrea Casiraghi of Monaco, Prince Frederik of Denmark and England's Prince Harry and Prince William. How does Prince Charles rate? William and Harry's father is tenth, making the list truly a family affair.

Hot Searches for April 21, 2011:
1. Most Beautiful Royals - Kate Middleton passes Diana on list
2. Maundy Thursday - Meaning and tradition behind Christian holy day
3. Chelsea Handler Diet - Results of Chelsea's zero-willpower plan
4. Shuttle Launch - First family to attend Endeavour launch
5. Gerard Smith Dead - TV on the Radio bassist dead from lung cancer
6. Journalists Killed - American, British journalists killed in Libya
7. Columbine Bomb - Bomb, propane tanks found at Colorado mall
8. Obama Facebook - President holds Facebook town hall
9. Demi Lovato Bipolar - Teen actress reveals she has bipolar disorder
10. Candle Recall - Millions of candles pulled from stores over fire risk

Who is the most beautiful royal ever?

For more on today's hottest stories, check out our top searched list. Also check out AOL News Search for breaking news around the world. What other big stories happened today? Let us know! Come back for tomorrow's Hot Searches and follow us on Twitter and Facebook for daily updates.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Source: http://hot.aol.com/2011/04/21/most-beautiful-royals-ranked/

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Gabrielle Giffords Set For Launch

Filed under:

Doctors have cleared Rep. Gabrielle Giffords to attend the final launch of Space Shuttle Endeavour Friday, the second-to-last shuttle flight ever before NASA retires the program. Endeavour is commanded by Giffords' husband, Captain Mark Kelly.

Giffords has been in Houston for rehabilitation since being shot in the head January 8 in Tucson. She is expected to sit in a private area not visible to onlookers.

President Obama and his family will also attend the historic launch, scheduled for 3:47 p.m. ET at the Kennedy Space Center.

Doctors put Giffords' recovery in the top five percent of patients with a similar injury. She can speak short sentences (reportedly including 'love you' and 'I miss Tucson') and walk short distances on her owns.

Hot Searches for April 25, 2011:
1. Gabrielle Giffords - Mark Kelly says wife will attend shuttle launch
2. St. Louis Tornado - Airport will be '100 percent' by Tuesday
3. Obamas Easter Church - First family attends DC Baptist church
4. Prince Harry Wedding Date - Harry will bring on-off girlfriend Chelsy Davy
5. Nook Color - Update brings apps to color e-reader
6. Kentucky Derby 2011 - Dialed In out in front on AP's final Derby list
7. Renee Zellweger - See the star's style evolution
8. Health Care Repeal - Supreme Court rejects quick review of law
9. Bree Olson - Charlie Sheen dumped by 'goddess'
10. Barefoot Running - Is shoe-free the way to be?

Will you watch the Endeavour launch Friday?

For more on today's hottest stories, check out our top searched list. Also check out AOL News Search for breaking news around the world. What other big stories happened today? Let us know! Come back for tomorrow's Hot Searches and follow us on Twitter and Facebook for daily updates.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Source: http://hot.aol.com/2011/04/25/gabrielle-giffords-set-for-launch/

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BIG SHOP UPDATE!!



BIG shop update tonight at 8pm EST: necklaces, magnets, new prints, and handspun yarn!

It's all the goodies I have been meaning to post for quite some time now.

I had time today due to one of my New Year's resolutions: to devote more time to my Etsy shop and make it (and art/crafting in general) more of a priority in my life. In order to accomplish this goal, I decided to take 2 days off a week from work to focus on art. Since I'm not paying rent anymore (I'm living in a house now.), I don't have a huge budget and can afford to not work so many hours at my day job. It's the first day of my new plan, and already it has been working out wonderfully! I woke up at 6am because I was so excited about my day off from the job and working at home, ha ha.

Some of my other goals for the new year? Get back into painting. Draw/be creative daily. Make 1,000 Etsy sales. Teach an online screen printing course. Spend more time with my baby dog and my parents. Take more photographs...

Some of these are pretty lofty goals (1,000 sales?!), but I am determined to make my dreams come true this year! Wish me luck! What are some of your goals for the new year?

Source: http://howtomakeart.blogspot.com/2011/01/big-shop-update.html

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Donnerstag, 28. April 2011

Easter wasn't Easter without beet eggs

Pennsylvania Dutch pickled beet egg. (Scott Beveridge photo)
By Scott Beveridge

An Easter never went by in our house without beet eggs in the refrigerator.

And the kids needed to act quick if they turned their attentions away from their chocolate and wanted to eat one of those hardboiled eggs marinated to a pink color in beet juice, beets and onions. The adults on mom?s side of the family always gobbled those eggs up as if there were no tomorrow.

I never knew any explanation for why my mother concocted them, or why her sisters and brothers were hooked on them, other than those eggs tasted great. It wasn?t until this Easter approached that I began to wonder about that tradition and also decided to make a batch of them at my house.

So I asked my mom?s sister, Bonnie, about them and also turned to the mighty Google for answers.

?Our mother always made them for Easter,? my aunt said.

My grandmother was Iva Dail Coughenour Hart, a native of Dunbar in Fayette County, Pa. She would store her eggs in a crock in the back of a kitchen cupboard, my aunt Bonnie explained. My grandmother?s eggs turned so dark in the beet liquor that even the yokes turned pink, my aunt said.

Meanwhile, web searches indicated the recipe is peculiar to Pennsylvania and particularly the Pennsylvania Dutch, early German immigrants to North America. They also introduced beets to the continent.

My mother?s tradition began to make sense because Iva?s family had claimed to be descendants of the Pennsylvania Dutch.

She and my mom, June Hart Beveridge, also were experts in using common sense approaches to raising their children.

Having a big jar of beet pickling juice in the kitchen made perfect sense. It created the ideal place to add shelf life to all of those colored eggs the children ignored beside the chocolate bunnies, jellybeans and Peeps in their Easter baskets.

The Harts also carried with them a bevy of superstitions that some might consider to have been silly.

?It was bad luck to rock an empty rocking chair,? my mom often said, repeating the phrase she heard from her mother.

It?s also annoying as hell when a brat sits there rocking an empty chair and ignores a parent's instruction to stop. But that kid might pause and think when a parent warns that such behavior will bring the curse of bad luck upon his heads.

Another often repeated superstition around our house involved bad luck for placing shoes or a hat on the kitchen table. Well it?s also unsanitary to set shoes that might have just stepped on dog poop where you also place your dinner plates.

The other day Aunt Bonnie revealed another one that her mother repeated.

?You wash your hair on Good Friday and you won?t have a headache all year,? she said.

I wondered if that wasn?t something immigrants came up with to inspire their natty-haired children to scrub themselves off good before church on Easter Sunday.

Back to the beet eggs, ?

Unfortunately mom did not leave behind her recipe for them when she died in May 2010.

The Internet revealed scores of recipes, and nearly each one is different from the other. She likely just opened a can of beets and tossed its contents into her Tupperware jug with some salt, sugar, onions and an equal part of vinegar.

Others take the time to boil fresh beets and add to the juice such ingredients as horseradish, cinnamon, pickling spices, brown sugar and apple cider vinegar.

Anyone who is familiar with my recipes on this blog would know that I often take the lazy man?s approach to the kitchen.

I found a jar of gourmet pickled beets at the local grocery store and mixed it with the following: a dozen hard-cooked eggs; one large, chopped white onion; a few cloves of garlic; two tablespoons of horseradish; 10 whole peppercorns; several sprinkles of ground sea salt; a cup of cold water; and one cup of apple cider. The beets were jarred by the Safie Specialty Foods Co., and they were excellent. Peeling the eggs was the most time consuming part of the project.

The eggs tasted just fine but I would have rather had those this Easter from my mom?s kitchen.














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Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/04/easter-wasnt-easter-without-beet-eggs.html

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The Fox Girl, A Handmade Book










Go on a tour of the pages inside:


Listed in my brand new shop here!

Source: http://howtomakeart.blogspot.com/2011/02/fox-girl-handmade-book.html

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