Riot and Frolic

a mostly ballroom dance, but also a bunch of other stuff, blog

  • I don't "craft" much in the summer months.  I have no motivation to pick up a crochet hook or try my knitting needles or really pull out the sewing machine (we're having a fight anyways).  So I've been at a bit of a loss when it comes to Thursdays and my self-imposed "Craftacular" theme for the day.  I haven't reeeeally crafted anything for months, unless you count hemming my jeans.

    Guess what today's post is about?  

    HEMMING JEANS!

    A couple months ago, The G bought me these SUPER BOMB JEANS from Level 99 at Karma Boutique.  They're so buttery soft and comfortable, they make me want to vomit.  In a good way.  And the ultra-fashionable girl at the studio has them, so I feel EXTRA COOL now. 

    level 99 jeans

    i look pouty and have great hair when i wear mine, too

    The thing is?  They are like 5" too long.  No joke.  5".  

    I'm not the tallest reed in the meadow, but it seemed a little excessive.  At least I got my money's worth of denim. 

    I checked out this slightly confusing tutorial on how to keep the original hem while shortening your pants from Make It and Love It.  

    Result?  Decent-looking properly-lengthed pants.

    hemmed jeans

    oh my Lord, ignore the wrinkles

    I did get in a fight with my sewing machine doing the second leg, but considering they have a slight flare (had to stretch out the top part to meet the bottom part), I think they turned out well.  The G and a few others were wondering how I shortened them while still having the fancy genuine-orange-thread-hem hanging out.  Score!  

    hemmed jeans

    neat. o.

    Do you get crafty in the warm months?  What kind of projects do you do?  Does grilling count as a craft?  IT'S GOING TO!

    Jamie Bower

    jace wayland, or a volturi?

    One year ago: there was no post.  For shame.

     

  • The term "bucket list" bugs me, so we will henceforth refer to it as The Beach Pail List.  

    beach pail

    can you dig it

     

    IMG_5447
    Resources:

    Ryan-Kwanten
    One year ago: Bratt… Party of 50? – seems timely

  • It takes a village to house the HUGE family get-together that is happening next week in Ohio.  

    For the second annual, immediate-family-only, Bratt family reunion, there will be 30 people descending on a boarding school for tennis tournaments, winery tours, beach-going, bantering, arguing, and eating.  

    Each adult-ish like person (or couple) is in charge of a meal or two, so I've spent the last week trying to imagine what to feed 30 people for one lunch and  one dinner.  One lunch.  One dinner.  30 PEOPLE, people.  That's a crowd.  

    I've come up with a few ideas that I'm pretty sure will be

        A) delicious 

        B) pleasing to 99% of the gang [because one person will only be 70% pleased, or two people will like 85% of it or something] 

        C) relatively inexpensive [sorry, in-laws, no surf and turf]

        D) satisfying [this is a very active bunch; no need having a load of choleric people getting hungry an hour after lunch].

    I'm pretty sure they planned this gathering just so I would amazing content on mah blog for an entire week, because guess who's going to document the whole thing?  

    who's got two thumbs?

    this lady

    Get ready for a whole lot of pictures of a whole lot of food (what is everyone else making?), folks (meet the parents, and cousins, and brothers and sisters…), and fun (did I mention The G and I are competing at the end of the week?).  

    Until then, get your Summer List O' Fun ready.  Tomorrow, I'll show you mine if you show me yours!

    paul bettany

    he shows his all the time
  • – V and Mae Cake's new hobby?  Feeding Zoo.  It's hilarious and surprisingly effective.  

    – V also has taken to making my bed in the morning.  Other chores I have pawned off on the wee ones? 

    • feeding the cat
    • changing the garbage bags
    • fetching the mail
    • setting the table

    I'm close to sitting back and eating bon-bons, people.

    – Zoo's first ride in a swing.  Don't panic.  This is as high as she went. 

    baby in swing

    it was fun for 4 seconds

    – super-neat gifties from two of my friends: a surprise trip to the spa for a massage and this sweet crafty…

    frame earring holder

    now I need more earrings

    – splashing in the MN Zoo's awesome fountain and a token trip to see the "farm animals" [or ZOO ANIMALS, you weird children!].  I made an effort to stop at the otters.  OTTERS.

    Sea Otters at the Grizzly Coast

    over there

    Sea Otters at the Grizzly Coast

    over here

    – how many times can I eat blueberries with cream?  

    blueberries and cream

    a lot

    – featured on the Typepad front page most days, along with some awesome illustrators and prolific bloggers.  Is this like an extended version of my swanky judging invitation?  

    – how awesome is Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution?  Both the book and the concept are rockin'.

    morgan freeman

    love me some mr. freeman

    One year ago: LLLL, where we did everything

  • Remember last week when I rambled on about the expectations of Silver level dancers?  Now I'll finish the theme off with the ye olde Gold level expectations.

    First of all, most dancers don't need or want to get to the Gold level because it's mainly for competitive dancers (in American style [Smooth or Rhythm]).  They are very few people who can lead or follow Gold figures (because it takes so long to master Silver), so as a social dancer, it's not a necessary goal.  It is completely acceptable to spend a lifetime at the Silver level.

    As with moving up to Silver, you should be doing all the Silver stuff already, and just adding a new layer of Goldness on top.  When you're learning the Gold level steps (otherwise known as choreography, if you're an American style dancer), you should be ready for some challenging syncopations and positions, dancing apart from your partner once in awhile,  and maybe a fancy trick or two.  

    But mostly, I want to see WHY you're doing all that nonsense.

    If you are a competitive dancer, and you want to do Gold, you have to embrace your inner Miley Cyrus.  Wait, no.  Your inner Meryl Streep.  Yes, let's go with her.  Note: do not channel Miley Cyrus.

    In other words, my Gold Stars, you need to perform.  Express.  Act.  Tell me a story.  The Gold level is the level where I want to forget about your "moves" (because you're doing them soooo well) and see what you have to say.  Figuratively.  

    Your tango should not be happy.  Your swing should not be sad.  Your rumba could have an eye flutter in it.  Your foxtrot could have hip motion.  

    Take each dance you're working on and write down (yes, write it, like, on paper) one word that describes that dance to you.  Check it:

    IMG_5432
    Then, put on the appropriate music and and get your groove on with that descriptive word in mind.  It might help to practice this in your house… alone.

    You will feel stupid the first few times. You will probably have loved ones tell you you make silly faces.  You may have an instructor tell you that your emoting is not actually showing through on your face.  (I like to call that "inemoting".)  But keep practicing.   Because, one day, the clouds will part and the angels will sing and you will make an appropriate Waltz Face.  

    It will be glorious.

    It will be Gold.

    Remember…

    Bronze: What, When

    Silver: How

    Gold: Why

    In that order.  Please don't show me Why before you have What, but that's a rant for another day.

    Jeffrey Donovan

    nea.

    One year ago: The Long Mile, where I complain about running.

  • My garden is at least one step beyond the planning stages.  Because now there are plants. Mostly, growing ones.  It is neat.

    Ignore our interesting garage and don't mind the weeds 'cause LOOK AT THE PLANTS!

    my darling garden

    my darling garden (only broken spoke members will get that)

    I had previously planted

    • 4 tomato plants 
    • zucchini
    • radishes
    • mini pumpkins (baby boo and jack-be-little)
    • sugar snap peas
    • marigolds
    • morning glories
    • sunflowers
    • a variety of greens (buttercrunch, romaine, Swiss chard)
    • sweet peppers
    • herbs (cilantro, dill, parsley, oregano, basil)

    Garden: Fail

    The morning glories, sunflowers, and greens all faded pretty quickly after transplanting them outside.   The sweet peppers were doing awesome (I hear they're picky), but then something ate them and the herbs.  Boo.  I am now armed with organic, fairly-nontoxic insecticide.

    I am starting more of the Garden: Fail plants from seeds as we speak and I have high hopes for the next round.  

    In the meantime, we had our first harvest- radishes!  I was super excited to pull these and thought they were so pretty and all that, then I left them out on the counter overnight and they were all weird and soft the next morning.  SAD.  Lesson learned?  Figure out how to tell when something is ripe and store it properly.  

    fresh radishes

    vegetable study

    Garden: Win

    The chives are a source of amusement to me.  They are quite pretty when blooming and the girls pluck shoots to munch on, so it seems they will spend the entire summer smelling of onions.  Wait, is that a win?

    chives

    i can't kill it

    The tomatoes are looking healthy, maybe because of the companion planting I did, what with the marigolds (natural pesticide in a pretty packaging) in front of them.  Yes, I squealed when the first flower bloomed.  I can only imagine what will happen if those morning glories work out.  

    I have no idea which way zucchini grow, but they're doing something that involves big yellow blossoms, which must be a good sign.  

    Sugar snap peas make white flowers.  Who knew?

    Pumpkins?  I don't know what they're doing either, but they seem to be having a good time.IMG_5369

    There are cedar 4X6s in the garage waiting to be transformed into Magical Bucket of Dirt #2.  Between the beds, I'm going to do this…

    grass and pavers

    Just the grass and pavers, not the BA chair and table (for now).  With the two garden beds, we'll have a little corner of "garden space" left where we can put our good ol' Weber (thanks for that wedding present, Miss KV… and nice initials!) and one of those fire pits, plus a couple chairs.  It'll be like we live in the suburbs or something.  I'll make ice tea.  

    where's Dale and Keri and Alana?

    holy shit, it's Tony Lucca!

    One year ago: Oh snap, the old-new design premeired

  • Maybe it's my new Zen from the yogas, but I've been trying to do One Thing lately.  Like, One Thing at a time until it's done.

    Yoga

    ommmmmmmmg, this is not what I do, or look like

    Tricky.

    It's very easy to sit down at the computer to, say, write a blog post, and end up checking Facebook, and Twitter, and oh there's that Yelp review I wanted to write, and what the hell does "welcome" actually mean, and what's new on Pinterest, and on and on and on.  An hour later, naptime is waning and there is no blog post.  Dammit.

    So's, I got my to-do list in front of me and it says "water the plants".  And I go and water them plants.  The ones on the porch, the ones in my room, the ones in the garden.  I don't stop to sweep up the mess under the table from lunch, I don't change the very full garbage bag.  I get those plants watered.  

    And strangely, I get more crap done.  

    Double bonus?  I'm prioritizing like a mo-fo.  Important things?  Check.  Stupid things?  NO CHECK!  It's like life is getting meaningful before my eyes.  Oo la la.  (On the negative side, this is also why it took me 3 weeks to get through the last two episodes of the Vampire Diaries and OMG they are amazing, but maybe not important.)

    The Vampire Diaries TV

    duh, i love both of them, too

    I'm all for multi-tasking, but maybe it doesn't help get anything done faster.  And I feel less stress.  Yay!

    Along the meaningful route, I'm making a list of Fun Things for the summer.  You know, those memory-making kind of events that'll make my kids forget that I'm usually just yelling at them to eat over the table and go to sleep and only remember that afternoon that we played in the sprinkler.  

    bucket list poster

    i'd call it a bucket list, but that reminds me of this terrible-looking movie

    What's your take?  Chronic multi-tasker?  Tunnel vision?  Have any killer summertime activities I must add to the list?  TELL ME!  I'll show you the list next week!

    Justin Timberlake

    i loved you when you were 12. google: MMC

    One year ago: it was Hot in Herre.

  • No, not the NBA.  Sorry, men.

    No no, my people, I'm just finally wrapping up the 10 Kitchen Tips for the Cooking Impaired.

    Since this is about 7 weeks and a day overdue, let's get to it:

    7. Instead of buying pre-cut and washed lettuces (which are sincerely GREAT if you don't have any time to eat), buy a couple different types of greens at the store, wash them, dry them, rip them up, and put them in your crisper drawer in the fridge (approx. time- 5 minutes).

    I make sure the drawer is clean, line the bottom with a couple paper towels, put the mixed greens in, and cover them with a couple more paper towels.  They keep just as long as the bags, but you get a ton more produce for your money.  Plus, then you have a green salad just waiting to be eaten.

    Fresh-Green-Salad

    it won't kill you

    Looking for some produce combos?  Check out Jamie Oliver's über-helpful cooking site for perfect pick-and-mix salads.  

    8. Easy measuring conversions to remember: 4 tablespoons = 1/4 cup, 3 teaspoons = 1 tablespoon.  

    Measuring-spoons

    also a great baby toy

    I can't tell you how often I use just these two.  

    9. If you need to learn how to do anything in the kitchen, consult the YouTubes.  It is often easier than calling your mom.  Spatchcock a chicken?  Check.  Crack an egg?  Check.  Chop an onion?  Check.  Make foie gras?  Check.

    10.  You bought one of those awesome take-and-bake baguettes from the New French Bakery at Target, but you didn't finish the whole thing (who are you?  Superman?).  The next day you want to have the leftovers with your soup, but you want a hot, crusty baguette, not the chewy ghost of last night's dinner.  

    To restore old baguettes to their former freshly-baked glory, put that baby under your faucet and "rinse" it off.  Yes, get it wet.  Then throw it in a 350* oven for 10 minutes and your day-old bread is as good as fresh.  It's bizarre and awesome.  Try it.

    Baguette

    carbs

    That last one has changed my life.  CHANGED MY LIFE!  

    Carbs.

    Tom Hiddleston

    Sof, you still there?

    One year ago: I had a Case of the Mondays, but I recommend some stellar stuff to make it feel like Friday.

  • – organized the DVD collection.  Controversial decision: filing "Casino Royale" and "Quantum of Solace" under "J", and both "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight" under "B".  

    – that vanilla extract I made?  Almost gone.  That's some gooooood bakin'.

     

    homemade vanilla extract
    or vanilla vodka, whatev

    – being reminded that I have the best friends ever  in the weirdest ways.

    – a lovely snack at Pittsburgh Blue.  We had the nicest waiter, Doug, and the food was AWESOME.  Holy smokes.  I INSIST that you go there and get the ONION PETALS because I nearly died and went to heaven from eating one.   The girls really dug their mac 'n' cheese and fruit bowls (it was an adorable presentation) and The G liked singing bad 90's songs in our deserted corner of the bar.  

    great service and food at Pittsburgh Blue

    monochromatic meals

    – how awesome is Crate & Barrel?  Sooooo awesome.  *drool*

    – chop chop chop chop chop chop chopping for Indian food night.

    indian food ingredients

    next time- food processor

    How was your week?

    Daniel Craig

    nice car

     

  • I'm talking about the standards for Silver dancers, not Silver Standard.  

    Hahahahaha- DANCE JOKE.  BAM!

     

    funny ballroom joke

    here's another one

     

     

    Anyhoo, back awhile ago, I told you what Bronze ballroom dancers are expected to do.  It boiled down to What and When.  

    We're moving up in the world to the ye olde Silver dance expectation.  Check it, it's easy, one word even: How.  In other words, TECHNIQUE.  

    Sadly, moving to Silver doesn't just mean you get new patterns or a shiny new class to join.  If you're looking for patterns alone and couldn't care less about technique, there are a million Bronze patterns out there.  That's why YouTube exists, yo.  Or you can check out new teachers, new studios, and new dance venues and pick up patterns left and right.  Probably forward and back, too.  DANCE JOKE!  BAM!

    If you want to progress in your knowledge and expertise of a not-so-ancient art form, then you should try out the Silver level of ballroom dancing.

    Let's assume you're doing all the things a Bronze dancer should know how to do (please give a moment, or week, to honestly reflect on that).  While doing all those Bronze-y things, in Silver, you're also going to work on HOW you do all them steps and timing.  HOW you get from foot to foot.  HOW you dance on time.

    In Silver, you will explore:

    • swing and sway
    • CBM and CBMP
    • super-fantastic latin motion
    • syncopations
    • body contact in the Smooth/Standard dances
    • interpretations of music (dynamic slows and quicks, long "2" in Waltz, etc.)

    If you're a Bronze dancer and are already working on these things, GREAT.  If you're a Silver dancer and have no idea what these things are, you are in trouble.  With me.  Personally.  Don't make me come over there!

    If you think you're ready for Silver, you should know these things before actually doing it:

    • ALL THE BRONZE THINGS
    • the fundamentals of an open left and right box (heel turn and all, folks)
    • what CBM and CBMP refer to, even if you're not good at it yet, or really get it either
    • the basic timing changes that could occur in a dance (Foxtrot- 1234; Waltz- 1&23, 12&3; ChaCha- 2&3&4&1, 2&3 4&1; to name a few)

    Wouldn't you rather have someone say, "Hey, aren't you in Silver yet?", than "Hey, why are you in Silver?"  

    It is normal for people who take private lessons once a week to be in Beginning for 6 months to a year; Bronze for 1 to 4 years; and Silver for 2 years to forever.  

    You wanna know what's after Silver?  GOLD!  We'll talk about that next week.  Good times.

     

    John Slattery

    get it? silver. fox. trot? BAM!

    One year ago: I wander around the awesome Snelby area.  Did I mention Associated Bank has free popcorn?  No?  Well, big fan.