Upgrading..
March 05, 2006

Dear Internets -

I'm upgrading my site from MovableType 3.1 to 3.2 today. Hopefully this does absolutely nothing to my site from your perspective, but you never know. If you see anything wonky, please drop me a comment or an email and let me know what the issue is.

Thanks!
The Management

Posted by katybeck at 10:32 AM | Comments (0)

Candles!

I made teensy little candles this weekend, using various sauce dishes as containers. They look so perfect on my coffee table I can hardly bear to light them!
Sauce dishes

I keep my candle supplies in a plastic bin in a closet, and until Saturday this box had remained unopened for several years. When I lugged it down to my kitchen and opened it, it REEKED of this terrible mixture of Peach and Watermelon candle scent that came free with a starter candle kit I got early on. If I worked around that smell all day I'd give it away for free, too.

I also spent a bit of time working on a project thats been bouncing around in my head for a while. It involves spray gloss enamel and recycled metal containers, but its not quite ready for its closeup quite yet. Soon!

Posted by katybeck at 09:34 PM | Comments (2)

On the road..
March 12, 2006

Much to my surprise, my number one grad school choice emailed me this week, asking me to come in for an interview. They'd narrowed down the original field of 200, and were spending more time getting to know the remaining candidates. I jumped at the chance, and now I am sitting in the hotel Starbucks surfing the free wifi. I am looking out on a rainy, dreary New England afternoon, but with the promise and excitement of making it even this far, it looks really beautiful to me. Even the lost luggage, the task of replacing all of my interview clothes tomorrow morning, hasn't affected me yet. There's still 24 hours until my interview, though. Lets hope I can keep it together until then.

Posted by katybeck at 01:14 PM | Comments (3)

Apparently I did something right..
March 21, 2006

because I got in!

Gobsmacked would be the appropriate word for what I'm feeling right now. But excited and happy, too. Eventually I will come off the happy cloud, probably about the same time I sign my life away in student loans. But for now, woohoo! :)

Posted by katybeck at 04:27 PM | Comments (2)

Easter buzz is beginning..
March 28, 2006

With all this talk of Easter and eggs starting to swirl around the blogging community, I thought I'd bring up a really fantastic alternative to Paas. Even as a kid, I thought the standard egg dye colors you could get in your grocery store were pretty boring. And don't even get me started on the whole glitter, tie-dye, sticker options. In middle school, however, my friend Laura introduced me to a whole new world of egg dying: pysanky.

pysanky

Pysanky is a traditional handicraft, originating in the Ukraine, that involves using hot wax and intensely-colored dyes to create intricate patterns on Easter eggs. The word pysanky literally means "to write," and the tool you use to apply the wax is essentially a heated fountain pen (either electric, or held over a candle) that you fill by dipping the nib into a chunk of tinted wax. You can do single colored eggs, like the one I made at left, or get as intricate as your heart desires. The traditional designs are rich with symbolism, too, and you can lose yourself in the patterns alone.

The best part of pysanky, though, is the colors! You can get deep, intensely pigmented dyes in all sorts of non-traditional colors like dark blue, brick, scarlet, and even black.

Traditionally, eggs are dyed while still raw and then left to dry out. Eggs are porous, so if an egg is left undisturbed for long enough, the insides will just dry up and form a little ball inside that rattles. The key word here is undisturbed - I tried this with my first dozen or so eggs, with absolutely disastrous results. (Think egg explosion with 1.5-year-old rotten eggs covering the dining room from floor to ceiling. NOT fun.) After that I invested in an egg blower. You can also hard boil the eggs, and while the dyes are non-toxic, you shouldn't eat the eggs after dying them.

Even if you don't use the pysanky writing tool - called a kistka - the colors available in the dyes blow any wimpy Paas kit right out of the water. Here are a few spots to find them:

HearthSong
Yevshan Ukrainian Store
The Caning Shop

A brief flickr search reveals TONS of amazing eggs online! I seem to be attracted to mostly red ones. This apple didn't fall far from the tree, apparently. :)

The woman who made most of these also has a really nice photoset/tutorial on the whole pysanky process.

Posted by katybeck at 05:03 PM | Comments (2)