Day 1

Day one of the school year is today. Yesterday was the first day for freshman only, but as a link crew leader I went for the morning too, the 100ish leaders cheered for the frosh as they entered the gym, got their nametags, and were squashed together into the bleachers.  We did activities as a big group of 500+ and then split into groups of 12 or so, with 2 link leaders to a group. This was our group, and we headed off to our assigned classroom to play games and activities that us leaders memorized. It was a challenge but I did like it and can’t wait to do it again next year.

On Monday, my last day of summer, I decided to clean off my desk. It had morphed into an art desk over the summer and it needed to be turned back to homework worthy.

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Here is a before picture of my desk, it’s nicer looking than usual because I had just finished a collage and so I had cleaned up all the scraps. But usually it’s a tornado of half-finished work. I use the magazines for my collages, as with the rubber cement. I like rubber cement –except for the fumes, because it doesn’t wrinkle the paper and it’s not very messy. My sketchbook doesn’t move, save a trip outside to take pictures or a vacation, this is it’s spot and it stays. I use scratch paper, especially when I glue because I swipe the brush over the whole paper and beyond so I can get the edges. It get’s real messy real fast and so I dump the paper after it to sticky. My makeshift wind barrier was to guard some cutouts, from a long ago collage, from the wind. The wind was from the window I opened, trying to air out the rubber cement smell. I  haven’t used it since, but I kept it up.

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Here’s the whole workspace, the other desk is a mix between Mary’s occasional desk, and my storage. See the amazon box in the corner of the other desk? Below is it’s contents.

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In it we have: paint chips, magazine cutouts, fabric scraps, an instruction guide to a lamp, old friendship bracelets, orange foam pieces (from a Nerf dart), post its, post it flags, receipts, beads, tickets, pleated paper, ribbon, a little box full of words cut out from magazines, my first crochet project, cardboard, and memory paraphernalia including; old Sudoku’s that I slaved over until they were shredding in my fingers, school photos, and my little letters and stories from my sister when she was just learning to write.mary-poem

I think Mary was around 6 when she wrote this. This is what it says, with no spelling corrections, see if you can read it.

Rose Hope

Rose she plas with mosaix

Rose she max got drones lick

a pige bac and a dog and pepi

and jrre and a brasclit and a

reing Rose she loves mom

Rose she read.

To: Rose

From: Mary

Here’s a translation:

Rose Hope

Rose she plays with mosaics. Rose she make good drawings like a piggy bank and a dog and a puppy and jar and a bracelet and a ring. Rose she loves Mom. Rose she read.

To: Rose

From: Mary

I love this, but for some reason I remember being really made that she gave it to me. But I did have it taped to my wall for a while.

This is another piece of writing from her that we didn’t find it till she was older.

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This time I’m only going to write it down as it’s written because the spelling isn’t as bad.

The Careman

The Careman is the man that cares abat evereeone speshole pepl that lived on the strete. because they do not have a hous and the careman gevs thos pepl 100 dolors. The Careman is the man that everone like but he is getting to old to wok and he’s in a welchar.

Awww…. after I was done enthusing over the two pieces I cleaned up. Here’s is the finished result, ready for homework, I hope it doesn’t get used too much!

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Roy G. Biv

RedOrangeYellowGreenBlueIndigoandVioletCollage.

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So many squares!

Has anyone else ever done this? Fill up a sheet of graph paper with patterns? I used to do this for hours, because it takes hours. But once it’s done, I’m so glad that I did it. This square pattern was fun because every time I finish a new “level” it looked better and better.

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And here is the final results. It has some varying squares because I made some mistakes. But I like it this way.

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Here’s Mary’s. It’s amazing how just the different colors changes it so much.

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I didn’t get a full picture of hers. But here’s a finished square.

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Textbooks

My school is under construction, that means no lockers for us until the first day. But we still got our textbooks at orientation and had to carry them home. I got 5 books and I still haven’t gotten my math or english books. I saw a few people with up to 7. But I have waited all summer to get my textbooks, not to read them, ha! But to cover them in butcher paper. Sound appealing? Bear with me the camera was on high exposure because it was dusk, so the pictures can be fuzzy.r and m blog pics t bday mom hair (1)

Butcher paper, also known as postal paper, is like thick brown wrapping paper. It comes in a really thick roll and is for surely sale at any office stores in the postal section.

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To start, cut out a long rectangle, 4 inches taller than your textbook, my paper is too short but it’ll still work,  and 3 and a half times the width, don’t worry about straight edges.

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Because the next step is to fold them down. Fold down the top edge about two inches, then measure where to fold the bottom up by lining it up with the bottom of the book.

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Despite the weary guise, this step is easy. Simply set the book on it’s binding and slide the papers edges so the line up.

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With the book returned to it’s [back? covers? horizontal position?] and all it’s pages flipped to one side, fold over the paper.

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Flip the pages over and repeat.

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Then close the book. But you’re not done.

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These next two steps are the trickiest part. One side at a time, slide the cover into the folded butcher paper.

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On the second side you will have to bend the cover back as far as it will go.

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But then you’re done! If the sides poke out, poke them back in. My books have diagrams and timelines in the covers, so I’m going to photocopy and paste the copy onto the butcher paper.

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My next step is to write what each book is on the spine so I can grab them easily. 5 minutes passing time.

54-40 Fight

Mary and I worked on this house of cards for an afternoon until the wind was destroying the house faster than we could build it.

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I love it when there isn’t a a roof and you can see the little rooms, but it kept falling down in the wind.

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It reminds me of this Brady Bunch; 54-40 and Fight Episode.

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We tried again, inside instead, on Monday. Without the wind knocking it down, it grew much faster.

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Gigantic, we had 3 people working on it. We only stopped because we didn’t have anymore cards!

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But the best part was knocking it down.

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But to clean up, we had to sort all the cards we used.

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