Showing posts with label Lois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lois. Show all posts

5/7/25

Family Birthday Brunch

Each year, we celebrate five family birthdays at once. Steve and his dad have late January birthdays, Steve's mom and his sister have late February birthdays, and I have a March birthday, so we usually find a date in late February or early March that works for all of us to get together for a nice meal. This year was particularly special, as my mother-in-law turned 80. We celebrated with Champagne Brunch at the Grand Island Mansion. It was wonderful.  

Family Birthday Brunch (affiliate link)

This layout was inspired by a color challenge. The requirement was to make a page using tints (colors that has been lightened by adding white). I enjoyed working with pastel shades that I don't normally use when scrapping. 

2/24/25

Christmas 2024

Last week was the final game of Bash Bowl VII. After two games, the score was tied. My team, Twisted Scissors, won Game 1. Our opponents, Scrappin' Banshees, took Game 2. As they say, it all comes down to this. 

Here is my contribution for Game 3:

Christmas 2024 (affiliate link)

It's busier than my layouts usually are, but I'm happy with it. I've had those patterned papers and die-cuts for years; SEI released "Holiday Cheer" in 2011. So I'm glad to finally have used them. 

Here are the elements for Game 3:


I earned three points for Twisted Scissors: one for ephemera I sprinkled at the top left and bottom right; one for a textile (that's a white ribbon above the photo); and one for the Project Life cards that I layered above the photo and that are holding my journaling. It would have been easy enough to add buttons, but I didn't want the lumps and since I wasn't going to do paper distressing anyway, it would only have meant a single extra point.

2/22/24

Bash Bowl 2024: Christmas 2023

Bash Bowl is back and I'm excited to be playing along! There are some changes this year: there are three 1-point elements (previously there were five) and one 2-point element per game with a 5-point touchdown (instead of 7); we do not need to submit a 'before' photo; and each game is only three days long. I'm playing for the Scrappin' Banshees this year. Goooo Banshees!

Here is the playbook for Game 1: 


I was not happy when I saw this first playbook. The pictures I printed wouldn't make sense with a rainbow, and I couldn't think of any song lyrics or quotes that fit them either. I don't use a lot of shiny stuff in general, and I don't like interactive elements that get hidden in a page protector. Ugh. I could force all of those onto a page, but I wouldn't be happy with the results. I decided to just go for a single point: shiny. 

I matted our group photo from Christmas, then used shiny gold tape and a fun patterned paper to create a background that looked like gift wrap. As I was looking for embellishments, I found a vellum sticker with Christmas song lyrics on it! I adhered it directly to the photo, added the other embellishments, and finished with the date. Two points for the Banshees!

Christmas 2023 (affiliate link)

This is a rare page from me with no journaling. But I felt like whatever I would write ("We hosted Steve's family for Christmas 2023.") wouldn't add anything to the page. One could argue that future generations won't recognize the people, but: a) I have no confidence that my only child is going to keep my scrapbooks and pass them on to those future generations; b) everyone's name appears on other pages within the same scrapbook; and c) I can just list the names here. Top row left: Steve's sister Teri, his aunt Lois, his mom Pat, his dad Dave, and Steve. Bottom row: Steve's wife Cindy (aka, me) and his son Trevor. Everyone has the last name deRosier - Pat and me by marriage and everyone else by birth. You're welcome, future generations!

2/10/23

Family Fun at Napoli Culinary Academy

If you're like me, buying gifts for older relatives is challenging. They are trying to downsize and don't want to collect more things, and/or they just buy themselves the things they want when they want them. There's only so many times you can give them the same consumable items before it doesn't feel like a thoughtful gift anymore. 

Experiential gifts are the perfect solution. This year for Christmas, we gave Steve's parents, aunt, and sister a certificate for a cooking class and dinner at Napoli Culinary Academy in Sacramento. I designed and printed cards using the academy's logo, then backed them with cardstock. Then I went through all the available classes in January and February with room for 7 people, on dates that didn't conflict with previous obligations, and with menus that worked with various family members' food restrictions. I put those onto a separate sheet, along with a flag showing that particular day's cuisine.  


When we got together to celebrate Christmas (ahead of time because we thought - incorrectly, it turns out - that we'd be flying on Christmas), they picked their desired date and cuisine. Here's a closer look at the options: 


They all look good to me. The group picked "A Taste of Italy" on February 7, so I made the reservations.

During the day, Napoli Culinary Academy is a non-profit cooking school offering diplomas in Culinary Arts. In the evening, those students act as staff for the 3-hour cooking classes like the one we did. They also operate a cafe and do catering. 

When you arrive, you take a seat along the outside of a U-shaped table. You can order drinks from the full bar. 


Next is the cooking demo. The chef demonstrates (with help from the audience) on a small center table with overhead cameras that project to screens behind him. For our class, he demonstrated cream of broccoli soup and pasta puttanesca. We got to taste each - delicious!


The 17 attendees were divided into 2 teams, then we headed into the kitchen. During the demos, the culinary students had done all of the prep work for the meals we would be assembling. Here you can see Teri on the left working on the puttanesca and Trevor on the right making cream of broccoli soup. The rest of the family tried to squeeze in behind them, but there wasn't room. 


There was space for 4 people on each team to work comfortably. For our team of 9, that means 5 of us weren't participating. That was fine with me, as it gave a chance to take pictures, but it's a consideration if you're expecting every person to get to have a hand in making the meals. 


When the food was ready, we returned to our seats and the culinary students plated the food we'd made. We all LOVED the broccoli soup. 


Look at these happy faces!


The puttanesca was a hit, too. (Does anyone else immediately think of these books when see 'puttanesca'?)


The portion size was enormous. They recommend you bring containers to take home your leftovers and all of us did. 


There was no demonstration, nor explanation, of our dessert. It just showed up. Since affogoto is just vanilla ice cream with espresso poured over the top, it didn't require explanation or demonstration. I didn't think to take a photo, so you'll have to imagine a dish of ice cream with an inch of coffee at the bottom and a ladyfinger resting at a jaunty angle. 

Overall, we enjoyed the experience. It was fun to do together as a family and definitely something I'd consider again. I'm especially interested in Napoli's 'Cooking with the Movies' nights. In addition to the Sound of Music theme that was one of the choices I gave my inlaws, they also have classes built around The Little Mermaid, Lady and the Tramp, Ratatouille, the Godfather, and more on their calendar. I definitely recommend Napoli Culinary Academy. The class was a great gift for difficult-to-buy-for family members and a unique way to spend an evening. 

3/4/22

Thanksgiving 2021

We hosted Steve's family for Thanksgiving in 2021. This including the newest member, our great-nephew. It's been awhile since we've had a toddler in the house; it certainly makes you look at everything with fresh eyes! He too was seeing our house with fresh eyes - a rabbit to meet, stairs to climb, and a large container of balls to go through. He is a delight. 

Thanksgiving 2021 (affiliate link)

I kept this layout really simple. I started pictures of everyone around the table, except me (although that's my plate of food I photographed), then added a picture of the dessert buffet. I added a journaling card, a random scrap to hold the date, a border sticker, and a sticker for the title. My favorite part of the layout is that the StickTogether mosaic of Trouble is photobombing everyone. 

2/11/20

Christmas 2018

Christmas 2018 is in the album!

Christmas 2018


For this page, I really wanted to use the newsprint patterned paper as my background, but I only had a single sheet. With some careful cutting, I used it across the top of both pages, then did the same thing with the red paper at the bottom. I'd originally had the photo blocks flipped (intending to put a title in the top left and the journaling would be in the bottom right), but by inverting them and using the patterned paper as a title, the little bird at the top of the tree is looking directly at the title. The snowflakes form a visual triangle along with the title and bird, which also highlights the gift my inlaws had just opened (a slightly modified version of this, which they'd requested). I'm happy with how this turned out.

Incidentally, you may have noticed that I added a Scrapbooking tab to my website. I've posted a (very) small sample of the layouts I've made that represent my style, as well as links to my favorite basic scrapbook supplies.

7/2/18

Christmas 2015

I pulled out the Christmas supplies and scrapped the photos from 2015. It feels really good to fill those spots in the album. Here's Christmas morning with my family:

Christmas 2015 (affiliate link)

And here's Christmas dinner with Steve's family:
Christmas 2015 (affiliate link)

They're from the same day and will sit next to each other in the album, but I intentionally used different supplies and different shades of reds and greens to distinguish between the two. I'm particularly happy with the mitten embellishment I made on the second layout. Mostly, I'm really glad the photos are finally in the album.