Blue Dog Art & Design

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

On the Band Wagon! GO MASON!

George Mason University is until recently relatively unknown small school in the 'burbs of Washington, DC. I think it is great that their basketball team has shocked the world and themselves to make it to the Final Four. So as a resident of the city that George Mason helped to found, I'm jumping on the band wagon. Here is a little history from the school's Web site. GO MASON! (I must also add a congrats to the lady turtles for making the final four as well!)

GMU Documentary History: George Mason 1725-1792

George Mason was a prominent American patriot, born (1725) and died (October 7, 1792) in Fairfax County, Virginia. He was a statesman who insisted on the protection of individual liberties in the composition of both the Virginia and United States Constitutions (1776, 1787). And he was ahead of his time in opposing slavery and in rejecting the constitution compromise that perpetuated it.

As a landowner and near neighbour of George Washington, Mason took a leading part in local affairs. He also became deeply interested in Western expansion and was active in the Ohio Company, organized in 1749 to develop trade and sell land on the upper Ohio River. At about the same time, Mason helped to found the town of Alexandria, Virginia. Because of ill health and family problems, he generally eschewed public office, though he accepted election to the House of Burgesses in 1759. Except for his membership in the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia, this was the highest office he ever held -- yet few men did more to shape United States political institutions.

A leader of the Virginia patriots on the eve of the American Revolution (1775-'83), Mason served on the Committee of Safety and in 1776 drafted the state constitution, his declaration of rights being the first authoritative formulation of the doctrine of inalienable rights. Mason's work was known to Thomas Jefferson and influenced his drafting of the Declaration of Independence. The model was soon followed by most of the states and was also incorporated in diluted form in the federal Constitution. He served as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates from 1776 to 1788.

As a member of the Constitution Convention, Mason strenuously opposed the compromise permitting the continuation of the slave trade until 1808. Although he was a Southerner, Mason castigated the trade as "disgraceful to mankind"; he favoured manumission and education for bondsmen and supported a system of free labor. Because he also objected to the large and indefinite powers vested in the new government, he joined several other Virginians in opposing adoption of the new document. A Jeffersonian Republican, he believed that local government should be kept strong and centeral government weak. His criticism helped bring about the adoption of the Bill of Rights to the Constitution.

Soon after the Convention, Mason retired to his home, Gunston Hall, always a favorite and satisfying retreat in the midst of a large and affectionate family.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Okey Dokey



Today’s post is from my “Forgotten English” calendar*. Each page contains a word with a definition and then also includes a lifestyle snippet. Today’s word is "square dinkham," which according to the Soldier and Sailor Glossary, 1925, means true, straightforward, and correct. However, that’s not why I’m posting.

The snippet for today, Thursday, March 23, 2006 is titled “Okey Dokey” and I now share it with you my dear readers:

Okey Dokey

On this date in 1839, the coinage O.K. made what may have been its first appearance in print. The Boston Morning Post used it—facetiously to mean “all correct”—in a report on the locally based Anti-Bell-Ringing Society, whose mission was to halt the clanging of dinner bells. That year, waggish newspapermen began using it and other slightly off-kilter initial-formed terms, such as K.Y. for “no use” and, later, K.O. for “commanding officer”. In 1840 O.K. became a catchword during President Martin Van Buren’s unsuccessful reelection campaign. Van Buren was popularly known as “Old Kinderhook,” after his hometown in New York’s Hudson River Valley, and a group of his advocates created the O.K. Club. But another U.S. president, Woodrow Wilson, was apparently so sure that O.K. stemmed from the Choctaw word okeh (meaning “it is so”) that he would write it as such. O.K. became the best known of all Americanisms, formally adopted as both a noun and a verb, and became part of many languages worldwide.


Fascinating stuff. First, I’ve been spelling okey dokey wrong (okie dokie). Second, I had no idea of the origin of O.K. I have learned something new today.

*You have no idea how many hits I have received from people doing searches for this word.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Wednesday Eye Candy


Today I shall post about jewelry. I haven't posted lately because quite honestly I'm tired of posting about my iPod and potty training my kid and that's really all that has been going on with me lately. Enough.


So, today I give you a necklace that I made over a year ago. It is made of snowflake obsidian and since it snowed here in Northern Virginia last night (a dusting on the grass) I thought this piece appropriate. The drops are made with hand done wire work spirals and accented with stardust silver round beads. This is still one of my favorite designs.

Last night I made eight more fused pieces that I hope to string into necklaces rather than just hanging them as pendants on plain silver chains. Another pendant sold at my hair salon, so I placed an order for more chains to replenish my display at the salon. I might try to sell a strung necklace at the salon just to see if there is any interest beyond the fused pendants.

Have a good day everyone!

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Calling All of You Cool iPod Kids



I am interested in knowing what type of playlists you have set up and what your favorite playlists contain. If you don't care to type an entire list, just give me a few of your choicest selections. I'm open to any and all suggestions that you might have.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Weekend Reflections



1. The weather here in Washington, DC was absolutely fantastic this weekend. Our crocuses and irises are in full bloom. We were outside almost the whole weekend. We got a bunch of yardwork done and washed my car, which sorely need it.

2. I'm SO ready for daylight savings time to start. The sun is up at 6 a.m. and so are my kids. They are way more likely to stay in bed when it is dark. The earlier it gets light out, the earlier they get up. 6:20 a.m. Saturday morning and 6:38 Sunday morning.

3. Potty training SUCKS on many levels, but our little one did much better this time around. Less accidents and he really tried hard. My hands are dry from washing them a million times first from helping him potty and then from rinsing out the big thick training underwear. His incentive to stay dry is big boy underwear with the Madagascar characters on them. (Sidebar: The movie Madagascar is freakin' hilarious even if you aren't two years old.) When I get desperate to get him to poop in the potty, the incentive ups to candy for breakfast, which may or may not actually work.

4. There is nothing better than watching my kids and husband running around in the yard playing baseball and soccer. It is so amazing to see my husband teach them to catch and hit the ball. We also started a new round of swimming lessons. This session is the two-year-old's first lesson. The toddler & me class is first followed by the pre-school and me class. This allows the parents to work with their children in the pool. Hubby and I tag-teamed. Next week will prove to be interesting as hubby is timing a canoe race and I have had to recruit a friend to help. Impossible for me to be in the pool with one and keep the other from getting into trouble.

5. Only an hour and a half until Grey's Anatomy. I know, it's sickening and pathetic, but I love this show and it wasn't on last week because the Oscars were televised instead. If you watch the show regularly you understand the addiction. I don't even wait to watch it on TiVo. I have to watch it right when it starts, commercials and all. Again, sick and pathetic.

I hope you all had as good of a weekend as we did at the Blue Dog House!

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Per Maki’s Request: A Tag


Ten years ago, March 1996:
I was living in Gaithersburg, Maryland working in Bethesda, Maryland at a job that I hated. I had worked as a graphic designer as well as production manager, but had been promoted to being the Training and Development manager. I developed tests to assess the graphics software knowledge of designers applying for temp jobs. I had a wicked commute down I-270 and spent WAY too much time in traffic. (Sadly, that commute is even worse now than it was ten years ago.) I was 28, miserably single, and pretty much hating life.

Five years ago, March 2001:
(Wow. A lot can happen in the span of five years. Between 1996 and 2001 I changed jobs, moved twice, and met and married my husband.) OK, at this time five years ago, I was married, living in Alexandria, VA, and was seven months pregnant with our first son, which means I was tired and working (different job) like a crazy woman to make sure my work was covered while I took 3 months of maternity leave.

One year ago, March 2005:
Same job, which I still mostly like. Working on tiling the shower in a rather intricate mosaic that I had the bright idea to create in our remodeled master bathroom. I have had people ask me if I would come to their house and tile for them the same way. No effing way is my standard reply. It took us three months to tile the shower. There’s no tub, just the shower and it took freakin’ forEVER. I wouldn’t even do it again for myself.

Yesterday, March 8, 2006:
I worked. Went home and made dinner, started laundry. Got the kids bathed and put the youngest in bed. The oldest helped me fold laundry from two days ago while we watched American Idol. Put him in bed, switched the laundry over to the dryer and started another load. Sat at the computer and ripped more CDs while pricing out a bracelet for Jaded. Downloaded U2’s “Beautiful Day” video from iTunes. Husband came home. I finished ripping CDs for the evening, put the load of laundry in the dryer and went to bed. Exciting day. (I cracked 3 gigs on the iPod last night, yet I am still stressed that I will fill all 30 gigs of it.)

Tomorrow, March 10, 2006:
Hmm…Friday. I’ll come to work (if I don’t have to take my youngest to the doctor—he’s got a wicked cough that PediaCare does not seem to be helping). One of my co-workers that I actually like returns to the office after having been in London all week so we’ll probably go here for lunch and have margarita’s. (That’s right kids--I can drink at lunch.) Go home and make dinner or convince husband that we should eat out. Get the boys in the bathtub and into their beds and maybe watch a movie.

Yes, it is an exciting life I lead these days. I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

People I will tag although you are under no obligation:

Fictional Rockstar
Mass
Jaded
Pobble
Washington Cube

(Graphic borrowed from Interstate Label Company.)

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

XM Radio + iPod = Bliss

Alright kids. Blogger or perhaps my workplace has been giving me trouble and I haven't been able to post and in some instances comment. It's probably only a matter of time until I'm busted for blogging from my office. Trust me you have to "eff-up" far worse around here to get canned. Two words: Brain Trust. But I digress…

XM has added a new channel "Big Tracks". This channel is hilarious. I was listening driving the kids to daycare this morning and David Bowie "Rebel Rebel" came on the channel. I crank the volume and proceed to rock out. My kids are just looking at me from the back seat wondering what the hell was wrong with me. I guess I have not played enough Bowie for them yet. The two-year-old loves AC/DC "Back in Black". Watching kids try to immitate mommy head banging while strapped into their car seats is great entertainment. Arms and legs flying everywhere as much as a five-point harness will allow. After I dropped them off I heard Eddy Money "Shakin'" and Quarterflash "Take Me To Heart". They have dubbed the channel "Classic Rock for Our Generation". The station is seriously bringing back memories from high school and college. Yeah, I know to some of you I'm wicked old. I'm OK with that. Lita Ford w/Ozzy Osbourne "Close My Eyes Forever" is on the channel now. LOL!

Now, I finally got an iPod and am currently obsessed with ripping my CD collection and figuring out what playlists to create.* I downloaded some wonderful songs from Fictional Rockstar today and found the songs to be quite wonderful. Kudos to you MA! I have yet to actually purchase anything from iTunes, but have started a list for that too. I have a 20 song iTunes gift certificate from one of my vendors and I'm hoping to use it soon. I'm pretty sure that I'm going to have to at least download a U2 video just because I can. I seriously have to get the AC adapter because I'm burning up the battery listening during the day. Thank you to everyone for your helpful accessory suggestions.

Right now I have to head into a meeting, you know so I don't get fired for blogging. Oh yeah, one more thing...between the XM and the iPod and my swell noise cancelling headphones, the Brain Trust is almost non-existent. Ha!

*Jaded, although it may seem that way, I have not forgotten about my task.

Friday, March 03, 2006

What's Your Politik?



Last night I went to see Coldplay and Fiona Apple in concert. I was somewhat disappointed in the performance by Fiona Apple, who I was really looking forward to seeing. I think she is a great artist, but maybe she was off her game last night because she just didn't sound that great. She may have a had a throat thing going on as she kept clearing her throat and she sounded hoarse. I was really expecting her to be great live, but not so last night.

Moving along, Coldplay put on an excellent show. For the first time I could see how the band could be compared to U2. Chris Martin actually sounded a lot like Bono in his singing, which I had not really picked up from the CDs. They put on a great high energy show. To me a good artist exudes the music and makes you just feel it coming out of them with a sense of passion. I get this from Chris Martin. I was not really sold on Coldplay when they first hit the U.S. It took me until the release of "Clocks" to really begin to like them. I became sold on them when the played the Grammy's and I saw Martin banging out "Politik" on the piano. You could see the music and passion coming out of him in that performance.

Our seats were low in the arena, but pretty far back from the stage and I need new contacts so I couldn't see that well. Every now and then they projected on a screen behind them. This was the kind of show that it was OK that you couldn't see that well because they just rocked the house. They did a really great acoustic set and at one point Martin ran from the stage down the aisle all the way to the back so those of us far from the stage could see him. Towards the end of the show people on the floor raised signs wishing Martin a Happy Birthday as he turned 29 yesterday. They did one encore and ended with "Fix You". It was a great show and I would definitely see them again.

I think I am finally getting an iPod this weekend. I might sneak off to Best Buy at lunch and get it then. Any recommended accessories or quirks I should know about to get started?

Have a good weekend everyone!

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Is It Just Me...



Or is this just a heinous looking outfit? This lovely get-up is available through this well-known catalog retailer and was the lead image in an e-mail that I just received. The rolled down waist, the elastic at the knees, the criss-cross high heels...ugh! Maybe I'm just totally out of it fashion-wise, but I wouldn't be caught dead in this look. What do you think?

(For those of you counting...this makes two posts in one day. HA!)

Finally...I can post!



Sheesh! Blogger went squirrely on me the past two days and I haven't been able to post or comment here or at home. I finally get time and can't get in to the system. Argh!

I've almost gotten my magazine off to the printer. Hopefully tomorrow or Monday at the lastest. Just in time to start on the next issue.

I am going to see Coldplay and Fiona Apple tonight and am really looking forward to the show. My friend and I are having dinner before the show to which I'm also looking forward. It is not often I get a night out to myself.

My littlest pup took a bad fall coming into the house last night and spent four hours in the emergency room. He fell and hit his head on the edge of the cement step coming into our house. The cement has pea gravel mixed in it and is rather rough. Poor little thing got a puncture wound right in the middle of his forehead and bumps and scraps all over his forehead and nose. He needed two stitches. Not fun at all. He came home from the hospital just fine though. No concussion, just all banged up. This makes the second time he's needed stitches in his head. He fell at daycare a little over a year ago and needed four stitches that time. This makes two times he's had stitches and he doesn't turn three until June. This can't be a good omen for the future. Yikes! The first time I had stitches was because of a c-section when my first child was born.

That's all for now. I'll try to post a review of the show tomorrow.