Hey friends.
I haven't mentioned this before, but as the time is here for transparency, I must come clean. This blog began as an assignment. No, not some creative outlet or medium for free speech, a graded classroom project.
Not that the idea of creating such a blog hadn't crossed my mind at times, but it took the push of the Western Seminar titled "From Tweet to Blog to Book" to not only inspire, but require the creation of such an online journal.
And boy am I glad I took this class. Not only is it a break from the monotonous day to day college curriculum, but also the chance to create something wonderful.
As well as keeping me up on my online presence, it keeps me honest on my physical creative being as well. It's so easy to say "I'll do it later" or "I'm so busy" rather than just sit down, take time for yourself, and make something you've been wanting to. Or even better, spend time with someone not just studying across the table from them or next to them in a loud bar, but actually being present with someone and creating something together.
That's the biggest thing I miss as school has created more constraints on the way I spend my time.
And bottom line, it's worth setting aside what needs to be done for a little bit to do something purely because I want to.
So this blog remains. And as I grow and learn how to speak visually online, this blog will grow and become more. I will always have ideas in the back of my mind and now, with the ability to share and this positive accountability, I owe it to this newborn baby to continue. It can be for those creative souls out there looking for ideas, the bored internet browser, my curious mom, and also for myself and the joy it brings me.
So though it began as an assignment, it will continue as a choice, and one I'm extremely excited about.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Pick Up the Pan
It's one of those weeks. One of those times when you just can't sit down so you have to remind yourself to shower and eat meals and sleep. One of those times when the basic needs go out the window because the higher needs of success and designing things and getting an education and trying to keep your friends seem much more important. It's one of those weeks.
So I forced myself to cook. No, not microwave, cook. Between the instant rice, instant oatmeal, and last weeks leftovers, I had to remind myself that I still had a kitchen and hands and the capacity to make something fresh.
Granted it's an omelette, but this is one darn fine omelette. Some sautéed onions and peppers, grilled turkey, sliced up bacon, and gooey melted soy cheese all wrapped up in a hefty blanket of eggs.
My plan was to not need food later that day, and I succeeded. This mouthwatering delight turned food baby and powered me for hours.
If this doesn't make your mouth water, then you're either not a college student or you're vegan.
That said, it could have been my personal drought of good food or really just a luckily great combination, but for me this was the omelette of omelettes. Really gosh darn fantastic.
Its funny living with 5 roommates because I see we all go through that same cycle, and I think that some of our best foods come out when we've gone without cooking for so long. Have you ever made anything awesome when you've gone without cooking for a while? I'd love to hear or see what your own "taste famines" have created.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Oh sweet coffee break
So this week I had the need to thank someone for their help with a previous project. He leads a similar life to my own: minimal sleep, maximum coffee intake. As such, I concluded that the perfect way to show my appreciation was with the one thing generally missing in this daily routine, delicious homemade sustenance.
The answer, coffee cake.
And as I was mixing it up, it only seemed time and cost effective to whip up my own gluten-free batch to get me through the week.
I googled "starbucks coffee cake" and with a few minor tweaks for the Gluten-free version, it came out incredibly delectably. I've enjoyed it thoroughly up to this point. I was hesitant to follow through on the call for pecans, but I'm glad that I did, it really rounded out the flavor.
For the recipe go here
All packaged and ready to gift.
And to eat..
I highly recommend this one! Eat up.
The answer, coffee cake.
And as I was mixing it up, it only seemed time and cost effective to whip up my own gluten-free batch to get me through the week.
I googled "starbucks coffee cake" and with a few minor tweaks for the Gluten-free version, it came out incredibly delectably. I've enjoyed it thoroughly up to this point. I was hesitant to follow through on the call for pecans, but I'm glad that I did, it really rounded out the flavor.
For the recipe go here
All packaged and ready to gift.
And to eat..
I highly recommend this one! Eat up.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Shoes Fit for a President (or Prime Minister)
In honor of Presidents day this week, as well as a looming shoe order, I tried my hand at a time lapse video of their creation. The order called for one Denmark shoe and one American shoe, and this is what became of it...
Gosh that video download process was unreal. Took me over a week to figure out, as the URL kept coming up empty. Glad to see it's finally working out and I can now share.
So my first time lapse, and much too long to watch without skipping along, but enjoy and let me know what you thing of this style of presentation. I have one on the way of The Great Room Rearrange of 2013.
Here's some other shoes I've worked on in the past as well.
Gosh that video download process was unreal. Took me over a week to figure out, as the URL kept coming up empty. Glad to see it's finally working out and I can now share.
So my first time lapse, and much too long to watch without skipping along, but enjoy and let me know what you thing of this style of presentation. I have one on the way of The Great Room Rearrange of 2013.
Here's some other shoes I've worked on in the past as well.
As always, thanks for stopping by.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Lovely Loving Berries
With this cake "business" I operate, I often get requests for all sorts of random treats that have nothing to do with cake. I can't say that I'm not flattered, but sometimes I find myself fairly lost. So when I was asked to do a few dozen chocolate covered strawberries I should have said, "Sorry I don't really do that." But against my better judgement and the fact that the kindest man wanted to give them to his wife and two daughters, i folded.
After $20 of wasted chocolate that i burnt, things went pretty smoothly. Lesson learned, double check your internet sources. The first website that I looked at about chocolate dipping suggested using butter to mix with the chocolate. WRONG. As soon as all of the chocolate started turning to crumbs before my eyes, I went back to the computer and found that butter contains water which makes the chocolate seize. So later I found that it's vegetable shortening that I wanted to use the first time. So on I went.
And the best part? There were a ton of extras...
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Barrel-o-Apples Spread
Inspired by my favorite blog MoreDesignPlease, I decided to make a sweet treat that keeps on treating, apple butter!
Here's how they turned out. It tasted a bit like congealed apple sauce, but it's a nice change from berry jams. I can't wait to do this again with other spreads. If you feel so inclined, you can find the recipe here: recipetips.com. (I did end up having to use a stick blender to get out some of the apple chunks if you do try this recipe yourself)
I had a wonderful time cooking, canning, and decorating these adorable little jams to share with my classmates. Plus my roommate helped out, which always makes any baking time so much more enjoyable. We made some Gluten Free biscuits to go along with the spread, though since I've tried it with all sorts of baked goods whenever I crave something sweet.
Here's how they turned out. It tasted a bit like congealed apple sauce, but it's a nice change from berry jams. I can't wait to do this again with other spreads. If you feel so inclined, you can find the recipe here: recipetips.com. (I did end up having to use a stick blender to get out some of the apple chunks if you do try this recipe yourself)
Thursday, January 31, 2013
What a Winter Week
Our studio is like a casino, no windows, bright lights, and time goes warp speed. And it's amazing. Jamming to whatever comes up on Pandora, cutting and molding cardboard through endless paper cuts and hot glue burns, and getting to know those diligently working around me, through the delirium and creative energy. I truly love it.
But when my roommate reminded me that I promised to make cupcakes for her fundraiser tomorrow I had to put it aside for as short of time as possible, and jam out some halfway pretty treats.
I remembered a trick my boss taught me about dipping the frosting in sugar to make it look crystalline. With it being winter time I decided to expand on that, make them white like little snowballs, and make a complementary cupcake with a simple swirl and silver dragees.
Overall I'm happy with the rapid turnout. So if ever you need a quick and beautiful cupcake, grab the sugar and sprinkles and don't hold back!
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Stripe Tease
The walls themselves were a huge project, but now, 5 months later, I was dying to tie in the living room with the same fun stripes! With the neutral colors, they can spice up any color scheme. Here's what you need:
-2 White twin sheets ($4.75 each at Fred Meyer)
-1 can of Krylon Pewter Gray spray paint
-2 8" shite pieces of cardboard as wide as your curtain
Simply space out the cardboard 8" apart on your curtain laid on a flat surface and spray away at the uncovered section. Move the cardboard down the curtain to complete the stripes. I was a bit nervous that with light shining through the sporadic paint might look weird, but I barely notice. So easy, and I'm really glad I did it!
I think it made a huge difference! Let me know what you think and if you try it in your own home! I'd love to see what other color combos people come up with! Maybe ombre?? Next room...
Thursday, January 24, 2013
A Million Little Pizzas
Knowing that my friends were getting together for a meeting at our house today, I decided to come up with an easy snack that would still be super cute. With a variety of taste buds and my own need to balance the sweet and savory, I came up with six simple recipes. All have less that 4 ingredients and were devoured in minutes! Once the pizza dough shells are made, you can truly fill them with anything.
Making the Pizza Dough "Shells"
Now for the Toppings!
Here's the six I cam up with, but I recommend experimenting! So much could be made just from leftovers or random ingredients in the fridge!
Sweets
& Eats
Enjoy! And let me know what other awesome combos you come up with, I froze some shells for next time :)
Thursday, January 17, 2013
On Blogging & My Aesthetic Journey
Welcome to Luscious Vicious, home of everything deliciously designed, both tasty and non-edible. I encourage you to read the "about me" to further understand what the heck I'm doing here. But bottom line, I love art and design and the very personal media that can be created with two hands.
Before haphazardly posting projects galore out of my own passionate desire to create, well, anything really, I feel the need to explore my own design aesthetic. What do I like? What's my fashion sense? What artists inspire me? What does this even mean? And honestly, I'm lost.
Putting on paper (well virtual paper) the very essence of my personality in visual form is a daunting task and one that I'm not even near prepared for. Ask me on my death bed and I surely will still not know my own design aesthetic. But I have to be comforted in my own ok-ness with this conundrum. I suppose I should be scared given the looming amount of design interviews and portfolio reviews I have to look forward to within this lifetime. Reviews where I will have to vomit a glorious rainbow of aesthetic cohesion that says, "I am Bailey Jones."
Things and ideas I liked last year or even last week I don't really like right now. But now that I'm searching the portfolio of my mind, I'm finding more and more consistencies in things that constantly make me smile and think, "Damn that's so cool." So here's what I like, potentially who I am, and the ongoing journey into the creative mind:
My favorite car in the world. Not because 70s hipster revival told me so, but because both my parents drove Volkswagons growing up and my mom still holds on to her red vanagon dearly. But yes I do love retro themes, bright colors, community cohesion, free spirits, peace signs, and all else that this embodies (except heavy amounts of drugs).
Baking things. I have a somewhat successful cake business for a college student. And as terribly time consuming as it may be, I don't think my obsession for making edible things look cool will ever wear off.
This is not my family tree house, but it expresses my designerly love for everything natural. Trees, wood, natural fibers, clovers, the color green, and indeed, Swiss Family Robinson Treehouses have been a constant favorite.
Why do these things matter? Because we all come from somewhere. After some review, my current ever-changing "design aesthetic" has been deeply influenced by my family. The things I'll choose to create are likely some off branch of these things, or else just a whim that will further influence my personal style. Whatever the case, I'm excited.
Never Stop Creating.
Before haphazardly posting projects galore out of my own passionate desire to create, well, anything really, I feel the need to explore my own design aesthetic. What do I like? What's my fashion sense? What artists inspire me? What does this even mean? And honestly, I'm lost.
Putting on paper (well virtual paper) the very essence of my personality in visual form is a daunting task and one that I'm not even near prepared for. Ask me on my death bed and I surely will still not know my own design aesthetic. But I have to be comforted in my own ok-ness with this conundrum. I suppose I should be scared given the looming amount of design interviews and portfolio reviews I have to look forward to within this lifetime. Reviews where I will have to vomit a glorious rainbow of aesthetic cohesion that says, "I am Bailey Jones."
Things and ideas I liked last year or even last week I don't really like right now. But now that I'm searching the portfolio of my mind, I'm finding more and more consistencies in things that constantly make me smile and think, "Damn that's so cool." So here's what I like, potentially who I am, and the ongoing journey into the creative mind:
My favorite car in the world. Not because 70s hipster revival told me so, but because both my parents drove Volkswagons growing up and my mom still holds on to her red vanagon dearly. But yes I do love retro themes, bright colors, community cohesion, free spirits, peace signs, and all else that this embodies (except heavy amounts of drugs).
Baking things. I have a somewhat successful cake business for a college student. And as terribly time consuming as it may be, I don't think my obsession for making edible things look cool will ever wear off.
This is not my family tree house, but it expresses my designerly love for everything natural. Trees, wood, natural fibers, clovers, the color green, and indeed, Swiss Family Robinson Treehouses have been a constant favorite.
Why do these things matter? Because we all come from somewhere. After some review, my current ever-changing "design aesthetic" has been deeply influenced by my family. The things I'll choose to create are likely some off branch of these things, or else just a whim that will further influence my personal style. Whatever the case, I'm excited.
Never Stop Creating.
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