An Edible Bouquet: Chive Blossoms

Photo by Davin Risk All Rights Reserved

I came up with this idea while on assignment for Budget Living magazine. The idea was approved but sadly the magazine folded shortly thereafter and I was never able to see this concept to fruition.

The editor had asked me to come up with something for wedding season, a request that kind of made me laugh inside at the time because here is where I admit something that will either horrify and alienate a percentage of my readers and/or limit my future potential revenue stream: I don’t care for weddings.

I know they’re really just big, fancy parties but even big, fancy parties are a bit too ostentatious for my taste. I like to have fun, just not when that fun comes at the expense of truly enjoying myself or you know, spending money I don’t have. And the pressure. Weddings are so rife with pressure. The warnings are numerous. This is the most important day of your life, they scream. So it HAD BETTER be perfect! I’ve experienced a lot of drama at weddings over this false premise. During my one and only (never AGAIN) poorly executed maid-of-honor appointment I had to talk the bride off several proverbial ledges over what I thought were inconsequential details like, say, the colour of the fabric that the ring pillow would be made from. It HAD to match perfectly, don’t you see? Except the thing is, it did match perfectly.

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Project The Best and Most Ass Kicking the Roof Garden Has Ever Been, EVER 2008

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

While the street garden and the community garden plot are both merrily on their way the roof is a disaster. I started an assortment of edibles a while back amidst the chaos with the intent of organizing it, and then didn’t. When the local television stations starting calling about coming to shoot the garden for various growing season has begun segments I knew I did not want to find myself profusely apologizing for the lackluster show like I did last year.

“Hello. Welcome to my assortment of random empty containers. Please avoid pointing your camera in this direction, and that one, and while you’re at it you might want to crop out that pile of junk to your left.”

That’s the problem with a small space, there are no hidden spots to tuck away and hide the mess. Just everything out on display all the time. And so Project The Best and Most Ass Kicking the Roof Garden Has Ever Been, EVER 2008 was launched this afternoon and let me just say, it really is going to kick even harder than ever this year! Or something.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

On our way back from lunch I had the sudden impulse to transform an old metal frame into a chalkboard. We stopped at the local art store and picked up some Masonite. As soon as we got back Davin got on the job, transforming what was once an over-the-top framed 3-D hologram of Jesus that I had garbage-picked on a night stroll years back into a place for us to draw pictures. The drawing you see in the photograph is tame, embarrassingly quaint really in comparison to some of the images that first graced the board. I wish I had photographed those, although I am sure there will be plenty more like them in the future.

The project started out on a whim but once it was done we all agree that a place to draw and doodle outside is one of the best non-plant additions to the roof garden ever.

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Spring-Inspired Crafts

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If you’re still waiting to see actual flowers in bloom these cheerful, flowery crafts should do the trick.

  • Crochet a flower necklace according to Crochet Me’s brilliant project instructions. Even the chain is crocheted!
  • Follow along with Artsy-Crafty Babe’s tutorial for making floral button pins. I may just get through that massive box of random buttons after-all.

- via Craft blog.

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Acquired in Vancouver

Photo by Gayla Trail

I didn’t buy much in Vancouver — I’m not really a shopper but am more of a walker and picture-taker. In fact everything I acquired in Vancouver was collected within a single block. Upon arriving in the neighbourhood of my scheduled two-hour coffee I happened upon a thrift store that I could not pass by without a quick peek inside. Like most urban thrift stores it was overflowing with banal junk but I did make a small score of four seventies era women’s magazines for 25 cents each. The magazines all appear to be very informal and naive in tone, suggesting that they were produced in someone’s living room. When you think about it they are not at all unlike the blogs of their time — first person musings and experiences as told by your average Jane packaged according to the popular media of the time.

The best of the bunch is “Women’s Household” from 1977. The cover seems rather progressive, depicting a bride and another woman who appears to be presenting the bride with a ring. Given the “a woman’s place is in the home” and religious content inside the magazine my bet is that the second woman was meant to be a bridesmaid. But with a man suspiciously absent from the scene and the title “Women’s Household” (as-in a household of women) I prefer to imagine it as a covertly disguised message to the closeted second-wave woman’s libers of middle America.

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But I digress. Let’s get to the gardening portion.

The first article is a garden club newsletter meets Better Homes and Gardens style feature on “handicrafter” Grace Swanson, a Floridian retiree who lives in a mobile home with her husband Chester and toy poodle “Grace’s Black Beauty.” Grace and Chester are avid gardeners who love to decorate their home with Grace’s macrame and beaded fruit projects.

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Also within the gardening vein are features articles on balcony gardening, crafting beads from rose petals and a large column called “Garden Talk” which functions much like our forums section today. My favourite section called “Golden Age” features photos of Mrs. Albert Unger and members of her local Garden Club with a gigantic macrame plant hanger and floral wall hangings crafted from rug scraps.

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The above is an ad in the magazine. No exaggeration there. Hey look! It’s a “Tomatoe Tree!” Times have not changed that much. This sort of thing still resides at the back of even the most reputable gardening magazines.

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The “Write These Shut-ins” column is not about gardening, but I could not resist showing it to you. I just really like the idea of a “card shower.”

The “Workbasket and Home Arts” magazines (1972-1979) do not contain much in the way of gardening information but they are chock-a-block with old gardening ads. This magazine is a bit more sophisticated/professional than “Women’s Household” so the most interesting and charming ones are found in the classifieds and the “Shopping with Ellen Jordan” sections most of which are devoted to pyramid-type schemes that sell craft kits to individuals and women’s groups under the pretense of making quick cash.

I stopped at a used bookstore on my way to the coffee meet-up and picked up the book, “Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times” by Steve Solomon for $7.95. With so many books, seed catalogues, magazines, and assorted reading materials on tap I haven’t even had a chance to break the spine but it certainly sounds up my alley.

My final acquisition in Vancouver were two packs of seeds traded with long-time You Grow Girl member and contributor Janet Martin whom I finally had the pleasure to meet and chat with. I can’t recall what she took in exchange but I grabbed one pack each of ‘Tuscan’ Kale and ‘Graham’s Good Keeper’ Tomato from her. Predictably, I chose the tomato entirely because of the olde-thyme-ish name although I told myself it was because it’s a large, long-keeping disease-resistant determinant.

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Flower Flair

Photo by Gayla Trail

Look at the pretty floral pin I made thanks to some scrap yarn and my new Vintage Flower Loom Kit purchased from Cathy of California.

I have been collecting old-school crafting books and booklets for years and happen to have some of the booklets Cathy’s kits feature but have never come across the actual little doodads used to make them — when I saw these kits for sale I jumped. I am deeply regretting that I did not shell out the extra dollars for the straw flower kit. Apparently a lot of people were itching to craft through the 70s and the kits sold out fast. WHY? WHY WHY? I needed an enabling nudge to go the extra distance but didn’t have an enabler on hand. Dang it!

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