Sunday, December 30, 2012

Christmas is over but...

I still need to make my Christmas post! Decorating the tree at Christmas has always been one of my favorite things.  From making different ornaments to creating paper chains to stringing popcorn to throwing on tinsel, there's nothing that I don't love about the Christmas tree process! Here are a few of my favorite ornaments that hang on my family's Christmas tree every year:

My Grandma Ludwig cross-stitched all of these ornaments! There are little stockings for each member of the family and she even made extras before she passed so that we would be able to add names for her great-grandbabies. Isn't that the sweetest?



My dad made this one for my mom when they started dating...the glitter's held up surprisingly well!

 This one isn't really an ornament, but it's my all-time favorite Christmas decoration! My Grandma Jones made this Santa in a ceramics class that she took in the 60's and I've always loved it...it's even the reason that one of my life-goals is to take a ceramics class at some point! I've already claimed it for myself one day!!

Molly's T-Shirt Quilt

Being out of school for winter break means that I've had tons of time to work on projects!! A big one that I finished up was my niece Molly's t-shirt quilt, and just in time for Christmas!

I first made a t-shirt quilt when I was 16 and my family's fallen in love with them ever since.  They're cozy and cuddly and filled with memories, especially since they're made from your very own old t-shirts.  I first made Maddy a t-shirt quilt five years ago, so of course Molly needed one too! For this one, I started out with a big pile of onesie's from Molly's first year:


After cutting them all up into 5"x6" rectangles, I laid them out on the floor into the pattern that I wanted.  I also added a few other colors of fabric, including some hot pink cheetah print and some glittery purple ladybugs!  After sewing the blocks together into columns, I sewed each column together to form the quilt top.  I didn't use any batting for this quilt because the backing I chose was a Hello Kitty fleece that was already thick and warm.  I laid the quilt top onto the backing fabric with the wrong sides together and then folded in the corners and edges, pinned, and stitched around.  I didn't take any pictures of this step, but I have a feeling that some of my TLU shirts are going to end up in a quilt here in just a few months so I'll take some then! And here's the final product:


One super cuddly quilt that Molly opened on Christmas and proceeded to throw over her head and drag around--I'd say that's a winner!

Monday, December 17, 2012

It Is A Fact

Bee Eye by kevincollins123
Bee Eye, a photo by kevincollins123 on Flickr.
It is a fact that bumblebees have hair on their eyes
and humans, also, should comb though everything they see.

"Letter to the Playground Bully", Andrea Gibson

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Beyond the Cover

Hugh Welch Diamond was a British physician and photographer who is known as the first medical photographer.  Working at an asylum, Diamond-like many others of his time-believed that mental illness could be diagnosed from a person's face, or physiognomy.  Previously, a variety of different artists and physicians attempted to describe the difference in physical features between the mentally ill and the so-called normal.  Working with the new photography techniques that were blooming at the time, Diamond developed the idea that photographing patients could be used medically to record the physiognomy, to aid in treatment, and to identify patients who were being readmitted.  

Seated Woman with Bird
Patient, Surrey County Lunatic Asylum
Patient, Surrey County Lunatic Asylum




















Representation of mental illness in the media is something that impacts me in a very particular way.  I think that even to this day, we have this centuries old idea that people who are mentally ill will somehow look different from those who are not.  They will be unkempt and will have some kind of difference in feature, and if not that then their behavior will be different.  Individuals with schizophrenia will always hear voices telling them to kill people and people with bipolar disorder will constantly be swinging from one extreme to the next.  That's what countless television shows, movies, comics, song lyrics, and even books would have us believe the majority of the time.  This isn't the truth though; you can have a mental illness and still be a beautiful, productive, funny, incredible, contributing member of society.  There are so many misconceptions, but we can fight through them.

People that I love very, very much have dealt with this kinds of issues.  But I would never call them crazy.  I would never describe them as unbalanced or neurotic or dangerous.  The truth is that many people are fighting these kinds of battles all around us, every day.  And when we use that kind of language, we're only fighting against them.  We're only making their battle that much harder.  And though Welch and others like him were living in a time where they truly thought that those with mental illness were somehow intrinsically and irreparably different from the rest of society, we cannot let those attitudes continue.  We must advocate for those who cannot advocate for themselves, each of us and all together.

References
Diamond, H. W. (1850-1855). Patient, Surrey County Lunatic Asylum [Photograph]. The Metropolitan      Museum of Art (2005.100.812), New York, NY.
Diamond, H. W. (1850-1858). Patient, Surrey County Lunatic Asylum [Photograph]. The Metropolitan Museum of Art (2005.100.19), New York, NY.
Diamond, H. W. (1855). Seated woman with bird [Photograph]. The J. Paul Getty Museum (84.XP.927.3), Los Angeles, CA.
Lansdown, R. (2011). Photographing Madness. History Today, 61(9), 47-53.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

I am going to do this better!

Okay, quick life update. I'm awful at keeping this thing up, but I'm going to do better!

Once upon a time I found a box of Basset hound puppies and convinced my lovely roommates that we could take them in and foster them until we could find them all good homes. This was the day before Thanksgiving.




Finals are also upon us which is making things just a tad bit crazy.  Definitely can't wait for next Wednesday so that all of this madness can be over!!