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They never stop, they work all day long from early morning until late afternoon making our liquid gold known as honey
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I put down my needlepoint bunny that I've been working on since MWS and resumed the Bee Skep this afternoon, as Pookie and I decided we'd both flit between two projects today. (I'm loving the bunny, a small, relatively quick project, but it's fun to shake things up on a weekend.) The Bee Skep is a brutally challenging piece; it's all of 3 inches square and has been by far the most difficult thing I've ever made. So many techniques and intricate details and teensy-tiny things to manipulate and control! And so many different materials! When I last put this down it was after the first of the three memory-thread roses, which are very painstaking work. A few hours after resuming this project, I've got two more roses, a daisy, and three stems to show for my labor. Whew! Time to go back to my bunny for the evening, because I peeked ahead to see the instructions for the bees next. I need a break before taking those things on.
--Schn.
Noa hard @ Work tearin up sh*T like always. Dats my boy! He said take a pic while i do a trick mommie!! So i did.
GrandMa, the V.I.P.
Very Important Person : The Birthday Girl!
Very Idiotic Person : Never ever will just sit there and enjoy.
“People think what I do is something as a hobby or somehow that as others, I am wanting to write something based on fantasies that never could happen in Middle Earth over a mere infatuation of one character or the actor that portrayed him.
They think I do not like the films if I correct something I know is not in the works of Tolkien—like I am unaware of the difference between adaptation and actualization. I know some things are better left to the imagination or impossible to capture.
What most do not know is that I have a Bachelor’s Degree in English with an Emphasis on Shakespearean and Chaucerian Literature. They do not know I have a Master’s Degree in History with a concentration on Early Christianity. They do not know I’ve lived and worked in Hollywood or that I’ve studied Theatre.
What they really do not know is how hard I worked to write “The Kingdom of the Woodland Realm Trilogy”—seven days a week, sometimes 12 hours or longer—reading and studying the world Tolkien created to make my story feel it belongs there.
It is hard work and though I have accomplished much in a year and a half, there is not one day that goes by when I am not testing myself and pushing myself to learn more. If I have learned anything thus far, it is that I have more to learn long after my work is done.
I do not wish to change anything in Tolkien; rather I wish to uplift his work and shine a light upon what is known and unknown for there are far more things we have left behind that should not be forgotten. I think of it as giving back to the genius that gave so much to the world.”—J.M. Miller, writer of The Kingdom of the Woodland Realm Trilogy
Had been to Hattiangadi Temple.. where I found the Man cutting the wood.. it was very hot sunny noon.
this photo is taken with the camera EOS 1100D. this week’s wow was rigor, which means study hard in a good way for me. i took this photo at the library after school. ting ting is in focus, because she is doing her homework after school by herself at library. she is doing the math homework. that is why she is holding pen, and have notebook on the desk. i used the aperture of 4.5, because i wanted to make ting ting in focus. this is why the book, shelf, and boxes at the background is blurred. i tried to use the rules of third, but it did not actually worked.