Thrift Store Find: Canning Jar Pitcher

You know those moments when someone picks up something you want at a thrift store or yard sale, and you have to play it cool and hang around the item nonchalantly until they put it down and walk away before you can scoop it up? Well, that happened to me with this pitcher. Twice. While I was looking at other dishes and things, I saw someone pick this pitcher up. I slowly made my way over while she debated with her companion as to whether she needed it or not. I was keeping my fingers crossed, sending mental signals that said “not, not, not, not.” However, by the time she had put it down someone else had picked it up, forcing me to play the same waiting game all over again. Finally she put it down, and I barely waited for her to turn around before I snatched it up.

After taking this picture I had to move these up on a high shelf because Chowder kept trying to eat the leaves.

As side note: It seems like every day there’s something new blooming in my backyard. I’m not sure what those beautiful yellow flowers are called, but they’re new as of yesterday. Does anyone recognize them?

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Tomato Plants

I started cherry and pear tomatoes indoors at the beginning of March. I don’t have a grow light or an especially sunny windowsill out of the reach of my cats (my biggest complaint about this apartment, actually), so I stuck them under a table lamp and hoped for the best. I thought they were doing okay (I’ve never grown tomatoes from seed before), but then I saw Kirby’s tomato plants. Even though his are Better Boy tomatoes, not dainty little cherry or pear tomatoes like I’m growing, I was still shocked at how thick and straight the stems were–they really put my leggy little tomato plants to shame.

Photo taken on April 5th.

So, I dug out some flower pots and bought some potting soil and tried to tackle the task of saving these poor guys. Thanks to my copy of The Bountiful Container, I think the operation may have been a success. I buried the seedlings as deep as I could, which tended to be up to the seed leaves. The Bountiful Container says this encourages a complex root system, something that tomato plants really benefit from.

Photo taken on April 5th.

I couldn’t always get up to the seed leaves, as most of my plants were actually pretty tall–just stringy and spindly.  You can tell by the pictures how puny they were.

Photo taken on April 15th.

Only ten days later, they’ve really  made an improvement.  This is the same plant!  The stems have thickened considerably, and there’s a lot of new leaf growth.  I transplanted four cherry and five pear tomato plants, and all of them are thriving.

I call these redneck greenhouses.

When I first set them out it I wasn’t sure if they would make it.  I had been putting them outside during warm days, but I was afraid they were still a little too weak to make it on their own.  I dug some plastic bottles out of our recycle bin and made these redneck green houses using an exacto knife.  Tomatoes love heat and humidity, and these really helped to stave off the cold for their first few nights outside alone.  I’ve taken the covers off now, however, and the plants are doing fine.

I’ll probably have to upgrade the containers at some pint, as many of these are pretty small (the one pictured is actually one of the largest ones), and I don’t want to plant them in the ground because we’ll be moving so soon.  I’d like for the containers to not be too ugly, but I can’t afford to spend much (if any) money on them, either.  Do you know of any interesting, attractive planter ideas that won’t be a pain to move?

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Happy Birthday Melody!

My friend Melody’s birthday is tomorrow, and while she lives several hours away Chowder and Maxine wanted to dress up and celebrate just the same :)

Maxine absolutely loves Melody.

When Chowder was a kitten he loved scratching Melody's feet in her sleep and making her cry.

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Bird Mobile from Spool

I’ve had this Spool Sewing Bird Mobile Tutorial bookmarked for over a year.  It’s really the perfect stash-busting craft–the birds are so small that almost any fabric scrap is usable, and it’s so easy (and free) to go outside and break off a few sticks and tie them together with string, twine, fishing line, thread–or whatever else you have on hand.  So, in honor of the April Stash Bust I ignored the trepidation I felt about a grown, childless woman having a bird mobile hanging in her house and made one of these beautiful things happen.  Thanks to my 12′ ceilings and the fact that I don’t have a ladder, it’s currently suspended from my ceiling fan, but I have the perfect corner picked out for when I manage to procure a ladder.

That's twine I used to tie the branches together.

The floral fabric is more of what I used to make the Sweet Spring Jersey Skirt, while the the orange and yellow were bought as discounted remnants, and the purple is left from a curtain I had hanging in my dorm room my freshman year.  I had the twine left over from a jewelry project I did a while ago, and I broke the sticks off of a bush in front of my house.

That round thing is what turns the light on and off.

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Something I Love

I'm not sure what these are called, and they're probably worthless, but I love them just the same.

I really, really hate to dust.  Because of this, I am also not too crazy about knick-knacks, as they tend to just collect dust.  I think that too many of them can be overwhelming and look more like clutter, so I try to be pretty minimalist about what junk I choose to have on display.  These vases are some of my favorite things.  I have no idea what they’re called, and I’m sure they’re not worth more than the couple of dollars I pay for them at thrift stores.  Still, I can’t help but love how clean and fresh that milky white glass can look in a sunny spot. I’m pretty particular about which ones I buy–I typically pick the ones with interesting patterns and designs on them.  I’ve amassed this collection (definitely too strong a word, considering I only have four) over the past year or so; the little bud vase, purchased yesterday afternoon, is my most recent find.

Do you know anything about these vases?  I’m particularly interested in whether or not they have a name.

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