I keep my blog as a personal record of what I'm up to, which might be seen as working towards "An elegant sufficiency, content, retirement, rural quiet, friendship, books, ease and alternate labour, useful life"

I'm certainly not there yet.  There is quite some way to go!

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Entries by Gill Thomas (2254)

Sunday
Apr072013

Surprises

 

Jordi and I had been chatting about these

 

Transparent Watercolor Papers

 

I know, I have watercolours in all kinds of forms – Inktense pencils, Neocolour crayons, Gelati sticks, in tubes, in pans and some in bottles too.  But the idea of having papers with concentrated colour on them which will neither spill nor take up any room in my travel art kit appealed no end.

And of course, Jordi had not only tried them herself but had some to share.  How kind!

 

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Imagine my delight yesterday, then, when I came home to find a little package on the mat. 

 

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In the envelope was a quaint old package which was rather interesting, regardless of the watercolours inside.  Beware of imitations indeed – these are genuine “Peerless” colours!

 

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Cheek Pink brings to mind pictures of a bygone age, don’t you think?

 

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Of course, I couldn't wait to try them out for myself and went in search of a small pad of watercolour paper.

 

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The next surprise was inside.

 

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Looks like I’d been using this to scribble some ideas down for a village show or something.  But better things were on the next page…

 

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Someone’s drawings! 

 

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and

 

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Yes!  Edward’s drawings from a holiday in Switzerland, aged around five, I guess.  Can you tell what they are?  (A dark green train, a cablecar and funicular railway going up a mountain and a paddle steamer on the lake with the Swiss flag flying

How cute are they?!

I LOVE finding such things in surprising places and it quite made my day!

 

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Oh, and the Peerless Transparent Watercolours were rather lovely too, once I’d worked out which side of the paper held the colour.

Yes, I can hear Jordi laughing about that from here!

Saturday
Apr062013

At last

 

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Signs of Spring have appeared in this corner of the Cotswolds.  We’ve had blue skies for a couple of days now and though there was still a heavy frost this morning and we passed a fair bit of lying snow on the way into Cheltenham, there was a little more warmth in the sun than of late and we have the first daffodils out in the garden.

About time, too.

 

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We spent the morning in town with nothing special in mind.  A leisurely browse in the Cheltenham Waterstones confirmed my opinion that these bookshops have taken a distinct turn for the better of late.  No more tables piled high with the same bestselling paperbacks as everywhere else and no more bored staff standing behind cash registers.  Instead, how much more appealing to find interesting and imaginative offerings of rather more unusual titles which demand to be picked up and perused at length (and bought, for heaven’s sake!)

The day got better still, though, because having dropped in on friends for coffee late morning, we tempted them out to sample the fish and chips at Simpsons.  Looks like civilisation in the form of a reliable chippy has arrived in Gloucestershire at last.

Hooray!

 

(The photograph is of The Minotaur and the Hare, who sit on the Promenade in Cheltenham, right outside Waterstones bookshop)

Tuesday
Apr022013

Tuesday morning

 

after a four day weekend.  My hero has a meeting of his choir committee at 10 o’clock.  I have some of my WI chums coming round this afternoon to fiddle about with needle and thread whilst we gossip (we think of ourselves as a craft group), Ian the painter is working on a few small projects during the next couple of days and Edward’s heading back to London.

 

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Better make some biscuits then.

Saturday
Mar302013

Taking note

 

I’m a scribbler.  If I am to remember anything, then I need to write it down, and though I’ve tried writing notes on my ipad and on my phone, actually I prefer to write on paper. 

 

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Like many scribblers, I’ve got distinct preferences as far as the paper and writing implement is concerned.  My absolute preference is for the small Semikolon notebooks which are rather hard to find but worth tracking down for the beautiful paper quality and the small details which enable them to withstand a few months in my handbag.  At a pinch, I’ll take a small Moleskine Volant, for no other reason than the fact that they are readily available and I like the coloured covers.  The paper quality leaves a bit to be desired, but since my preferred writing tool is a conventional pencil, that’s not a major issue.  I have a collection of ordinary pencils in my bag which I usually keep sharpened, though I did encounter difficulties in the office recently when trying to find a pencil sharpener because it would seem that I’m the only one who uses such intermediate technology.  Eventually, a colleague did produce an amazing battery operated sharpener which others claimed could eat pencils by the inch.  Regrettably, on that occasion, my pencil proved too much for it and I could only offer humble apologies and a replacement!

 

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Anyway, whilst perusing the Amazon recommendations just before we left on holiday, I came across these Moleskine notebooks which are designed to use with Evernote.  I’d come across something similar last time we were in Japan and gave it and another, similar app a whirl but since both were native Japanese products, using them presented more of a challenge than I needed.  So, seeing this new Moleskine concept, I threw all my prejudice to the wind and ordered the notebook to try.

 

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Around the same time, I read about this.  All of this seemed to be leading me down the same pathway.  Perhaps it was time to look at a means of developing my note-taking methods, making them more effective and then digitising them?  What’s to lose?

 

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I’ve spent the last few days reading the book which backs up my experience that in writing something down, the process of learning/remembering is reinforced and actually takes that one step further by suggesting that recording thoughts visually as well as verbally makes that learning still more effective.  I draw in my notebooks anyway, not really because it helps me remember, but rather that it’s quicker to draw something than it is to describe it; for me anyway. Actually, looking at a page from my most recent notebook, I realised that perhaps I’ve been “sketchnoting” for sometime – not that I called it that, of course.

 

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Stream of consciousness stuff this morning then, to fill that scary first page in the book.  Taking the advice of the Sketchnote author to use an indelible pen rather than a pencil (and thinking it would digitise more effectively, too) I put my trusty pencil to one side and picked up one of my drawing pens.

 

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Looks like Moleskine books haven’t changed, then.

 

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But it does look as though the Evernote app doesn’t worry too much about that – the above image was recorded with my ipad and the page has recorded just fine.

So, the jury’s out.  The Sketchnote handbook suggests watching a TED video and sketchnoting it as practice, which I might do later.  In the meantime, there are plenty of fine sketchnote examples here which will either inspire me or put me off completely. 

We’ll see.

Friday
Mar292013

There’s a cow in the fridge

 

What’s more, it’s speaking Japanese!

 

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It’s one of my purchases in Loft, Osaka.  I spotted it and thought that I knew someone who would find it amusing, so added it to his little bag of treasures to give him this weekend.

 

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Fridgezoo creatures sit in the fridge and not only say “hello” when the door is opened, they also remind you to hurry up and close the door again, please.  I chose a Japanese speaker, of course, so the voice and the greetings are very cute!

 

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I was looking forward to trying it out, to see what it sounds like and what it would say, but had to be patient and wait until Edward arrived home yesterday afternoon.  Thankfully, he was as impatient as I was and so the little cow is sitting in our fridge for a few days before taking up residence in her permanent London home.

I think I’ll miss her cheery “O-hiyo”!