Monday, February 27, 2012

{crafts} Natural Bean Jewelry


I love these necklaces. They would be so much fun to make. I think the hardest part would be drilling the holes. Once the holes were drilled it would be fun for a child to help string the beans! This tutorial is part of Etsy's How-Tuesday and can be found at: http://www.etsy.com/blog/en/2012/how-tuesday-natural-bean-jewelry/

Natural Bean Jewelry


“Me, sexy? I’m just plain ol’ beans and rice.”  — Pam Grier
Once thought of as the seat of the soul, beans have been buried with the dead, deemed the seed of sin, grown for almost nine millennia, and eaten daily across the globe. With over 4,000 cultivar they come in coats of many colors: rich red and purple kidney, tawny intricate tans of cranberry, or the the simple stark contrast of the black eye. I’m Lisa Kraushaar of radicals— by day a mild-mannered Etsy Admin — here to show you how to make beans into beads, and focus on the legume’s more decorative values.
Supplies You’ll Need:
  • Approximately 300 dry beans, any type (Pictured above are calypso beans, black eyed peas, red beans, and cranberry beans.)
  • Waxed thread
  • Flex shaft or dremel hand tool (or any tool that drills)
  • 1mm drill bit
  • Bench pin (or another wooden surface to drill into)
  • 4 mm spherical burr
  • Super glue
  • Scissors
Directions:
1. With your bench pin at the ready, firmly secure your 4mm burr in your flex shaft or dremel. Carve a nook the size of the beans you’ve decided to use in you bench pin. This will serve as a brace to hold your bean secure when you apply the pressure of your drill.
Beans with drilled holes. Expect some bean dust!
2. Replace the burr with your 1mm drill bit in your flex shaft. Pinch the bean firmly parallel to the direction you’ll drill your hole. Hold it securely in the nook you’ve carved in your bench pin. Place your drill at the desired entrance of your hole and apply firm pressure against your drill bit and bean. At a gentle speed, push your drill through the length of the bean.
Hold your flex shaft firmly, but without a stiff wrist. In the event that your drill skips away from the bean, a loose wrist will give you the flexibility to pull away before nicking your fingers. You can brace your drill wrist against your bench pin for greater control.
Repeat step 2 until you’ve drilled holes through all of your beans.
3. Unspool about 2 1/2 yards of waxed thread. String your beans until you have about 6 ft. of beaded cord. The wax thread will be stiff enough to string your beads without a needle. If the tip of your string becomes frayed, twist or snip it back into a point. If you have any problems stringing your bean, blow air through the hole of the bean or clear it out with a needle.
4. Firmly tie both ends of your beaded string twice. Apply a small amount of super glue to your knot. Make sure to coat the spaces where stings some together. Let it dry overnight.
5. Snip the remaining string tight to your knot. Since you’ve glued the knot, you need not fear it will untie. You now have a beautiful string of beans that can be draped several times around the neck or wrapped around your wrist for a striking bracelet.
6. Wait for the oohs and ahhs to begin!

Thursday, February 23, 2012

{a thought for Thursday} Pain and peace

It's so hard to forget pain, but it's even harder to remember sweetness. We have no scar to show for happiness. We learn so little from peace. ― Chuck Palahniuk, Diary

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

{read: don't miss this one!} The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson

This is the story of the book I almost didn't read. The title didn't draw me in, I didn't like the cover, and the fact that it was set in North Korea put it low on my to-read list. Yet the good reviews kept piling up, so I put it on my library hold list. When it came in, it sat on my shelf until the day before it was due. Finally I picked it up to see if I wanted to read it or if I should just return it. Pak Jun Do and his story captured my imagination, and the story grew stronger as the book went along. (I had to pay 30 cents in late fees, but it was well worth it.)

This book is remarkable for the glimpse it provides of bleak North Korean life and the harsh regime, which at times reminded me of the Cold War and at other times reminded me of the Nazi death camps. Yet parts of the book are laugh-out-loud funny, such as the descriptions of American life and especially American blues music. In other places, unexpected honesty contradicts the propaganda and party line that you expect all citizens to espouse. I think one of the triumphs of the book is Johnson's ability to flesh out the characters to explore how they deal with the daily struggle of life under the Dear Leader and still retain their humanity. The plotting is understated yet crafty, as pieces of the first half of the book take on a larger significance in the second half than you expected when you first encountered them.  

The Orphan Master's Son is definitely a contender for the best book for 2012. It's by far the best book I've read this year and perhaps the best one I've read in the past 12 months. If you only read one book this year, make it this one.

The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson (Random House, 2012)
My rating: 5 stars

Thursday, February 16, 2012

{a thought for Thursday} A clean slate

Isn't it nice to think that tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it yet? — Lucy Maud Montgomery

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

{read: a love story} The Storm at the Door by Stefan Merrill Block

By chance, this was the fourth novel I'd read in a row that might be characterized as a love story. (The others were Vaclav & Lena, To Be Sung Underwater, and Major Pettigrew's Last Stand -- all excellent.) This is a much darker book than any of those. Stefan Merrill Block writes a fictionalized account of his grandparents, Katharine and Frederick, and of their struggle to maintain a marriage through Frederick's manic depressive episodes. After flashing some old ladies late one night, the latest in a long string of drunken, inappropriate episodes, Katharine agrees that instead of going to jail, Frederick should be committed to the famous Mayflower Home insane asylum so he can get well. Alternate chapters detail this time in their lives from the views of Katharine and Frederick.

Karen Russell, author of Swamplandia!, has a blurb on the book's jacket that I think captures the essence of the book: "To get at truths that are almost unbearable: that love can fail, that a mind can immolate, and that language can sometimes leave us lonelier than our original silence."

This is a powerful, dark book about mental illness, love, and trying to make the life that you thought you could have. Yet when it comes to fictionalized accounts of grandparents' lives, I prefer City of Thieves by David Benioff, and when it comes to Block's work, I prefer his first novel, The Story of Forgetting. I think the storytelling in both of those is more fluid and compelling, and I found the characters more interesting. This isn't to say that Katharine and Frederick aren't complex as they wrestle with their own demons and try to figure out how to live, together or apart. Block continues to explore the impact of mental illness on relationships and families, and I can't wait to see what he writes next.

The Storm at the Door by Stefan Merrill Block (Random House Publishing, 2011)
My rating: 3 stars