Friday, June 24, 2011

Blog Tips: Grade Your Website

(för svensk versionen, se nedan)

Ever wonder how your blog looks to the outside world? Is it the best it can be from a 'technical' point of view? Is it set up correctly so that other people can find it?

Have a look at these websites to learn something interesting (and an objective view) about your site.

Woorank.com
Just type in your website address and click the 'Woorank Report' button to see what the 'pros' are looking at. For instance, I found out that a majority of the photos that I have on my site are missing the 'alt attribute'. Why is that important? It is a short code in the photo that allows the viewer to see a text description of your image if there is something wrong and they can't actually see your photos. If there is no 'alt attribute' text, the viewer doesn't see anything except a red 'x' in a small box.

Website Grader
This analysis tool is from HubSpot and it is a super simple report process. You can even get a comparison between your site and someone else's site - gives a bit of interesting insight.

There you have it. A little different view of your blog page and small steps to make it better (from the perspective of the World Wide Web).

Until next time...
Michael




Någonsin undrar hur din blogg ser ut till omvärlden? Är den det bästa det kan vara från en "teknisk" synpunkt? Är det korrekt inställd så att andra människor kan hitta den?

Ta en titt på dessa webbsidor för att lära sig något intressant (och en objektiv syn) om din egen webbsida.

Woorank.com
Skriv bara in din webbadress och klicka på 'Woorank rapport "knappen för att se vad" proffsen "tittar på. Till exempel fick jag veta att en majoritet av de foton som jag har på min hemsida saknas det "alt-attribut". Varför är det viktigt? Det är en kort kod i bilden som gör att betraktaren att se en textbeskrivning av bilden om det är något fel och de kan egentligen inte se dina bilder. Om det inte finns någon "alt-attributet" text, ser betraktaren ingenting förutom ett rött "X" i en liten låda.

WebsiteGrader.com
Det här analysverktyget är från HubSpot och det är en super enkel rapport process. Du kan även få en jämförelse mellan din blogg och någon annans webbsida - ger lite intressanta insikter.

Där har ni det. En liten annan syn på din blogg och små steg för att göra det bättre.

Tills nästa gång...
Michael


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Saturday, June 18, 2011

My Favorite Things - Mason Jar Revival



My friend, "L", recently asked on Facebook…”Should I really buy another mason jar?” As if it were really a question!

Here's a small collection of DIY mason jar projects I’ve found most inspiring lately. If you have a ’must see’ mason jar project, leave a comment at the end of this post with the website so we can all check it out.

Have a seat in the blue velvet chair, relax, and enjoy the show!

Who can resist these cookie mix cuties - spotted at Bakerella.



These mason jar meals are perfect for picnics - spotted at The Decorated Cookie.

They call this one the redneck wine goblet. I'm pretty sure someone out there in blogland can pimp this up into something better! As seen on Random Good Stuff.


Away from the kitchen and on to the home decor. You've probably seen this little blue chica out there already. The perfect clean-up for country chic homes - spotted at Heather Bullard.


It's simple and effective - as seen at Napa Style.


It's no wonder this beauty is for sale at Etsy. BootnGus calls it 'Stardust'.


This casual chandelier was used in a wedding tent, but would be fab in a dining room as well. Spotted at Beth Helmstetter Events


Wow! As seen on Apartment Therapy.


Melissa's Greetings made this lamp inspired from The Big-Ass Book of Crafts.



They were just experimenting and ended up with this little wall light gem - at Kelly + Olive.


I think I would have preferred that all the jars were the same size, but kudos to Liz Marie for this project.

I love the pop of color on these painted jars-turned-vases - as seen on Joy's Hope.


Birthdays, weddings, births...photos in a jar would be a fun touch at any special occasion - spotted over at Oh Lovely Day.


I love this pin cushion from Andy Rubio. I wonder when he'll be back from fishing.


Now let's turn our attention from indoors - to outdoors. OK...it may not be for the outdoors, but it is photographed outdoors. This jar-bottom necklace pendant is from Bottled Up Designs.


These halloween luminaries made from mason jars make me smile - thanks to Crafts by Amanda.


Featured at Concrete & Lullabies, courtesy of Love Life Images, these wedding flower displays are simple and effective.


There's a tutorial for making these mason jar outdoor lanterns over at Chez Beeper Bebe.


And finally, wouldn't you just love to have this stash from Collectors Weekly so that you could try all of the projects above???




Make sure to check out my Pinterest Mason Jar Board because there's lots more to see where this came from!!!  Do you have one of your own? Or one that you've been inspired by lately? Post a link in the comments so we can all have a look.

Until next time...
Michael

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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Recycled-Repurposed Rotary Telephones

I have a HUGE appreciation for creative genius! Just look at these sheep created from old rotary telephones. LOVE them!

See more photos at What the Cool

And there is always at least one black sheep in the family!

See more photos at What the Cool

Yes, the bodies are the telephone cords. Remember those long cords? We had a 10ft cord at our house...which I think was stretched to about 20ft after 3 teenage girls used it.

Side note:  My son recently found an old unused rotary dial telephone at his grandparent's house and brought it home. I literally laughed out loud when I had to show him how to dial on it!

Until next time...
Michael



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Sunday, June 12, 2011

How to Sew a Summer Dress and Save the World (DIY) - Part II


Summer dress #2 is now complete.

I was just about to send away an old shirt that was too small for me. But I just love the pattern because it’s filled with American images and feels like home (even though the shirt was purchased here in Sweden). 


What was I thinking? It would make a cute little summer dress for Mia (which seems to be my first thought for every piece of clothing I get rid of right now). Time to pull out the borrowed sewing machine and open my stash of knitted doilies that I collected a while back with good intent to decorate some funky clothing items for my little half-breed chica.


Because I have no sewing training, and because I have very limited patience for prep work, I once again did everything by eyeballing it instead of any serious pattern measurements. Big tip: using as many existing seams as possible goes a long way with my kamikaze sewing style.

It was pretty straight forward. Figure out how wide you want the straps of the dress to be, and set a pin there. Then cut from that point down towards the bottom of the shirt, creating an A form. Again, I just eyeball it.


Then I put another pin at the point that would be the bottom of the armhole. I folded over enough to make a seam and stiched around what would become the armhole area. Then, with the material wrong side out, I stiched from the armhole down the side to the bottom seam - which was already done as it was the original bottom of my shirt. Repeat same thing on other side. In the end it is a no-fuss A-frame girl’s dress.




But it’s missing something. Embellishments! In come the doilies. I tried laying a few different colors, sizes and patterns on the dress to see what fit best. These doilies were all picked up cheap at 2nd hand shops, so I’ve created a nice little stash to choose from.


In the end I chose a layered effect. The bright blue is actually an old-fashioned knitted dishcloth (properly disinfected in my washing machine, of course). With a cute little crocheted (I think) white doily accented with a couple of buttons from my collection.


I couldn’t just throw the arms of the shirt away, so I stiched a seam on the cut end and voila! A pair of matching little leggies.


I have a feeling that Mia’s summer wardrobe is going to be quite the experiment for me. Thank goodness she doesn’t mind being the guinea pig!







Until next time...
Michael

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Thursday, June 9, 2011

A Short Story of How I Came to Thrift

(för svensk version, se nedan)
 
The seeds for my fascination to make ’something out of nothing’ must have been planted long long ago, in my subconscious as a young girl. It’s not like my mom packed us kids in the car for a weekly junkyard visit. No, it’s more that she quietly nourished the seedlings with her thrifty brilliance - cutting coupons and saving $ before it was trendy, reusing and sewing our clothes, making homemade ketchup and putting it back in an empty Heinz ketchup bottle, or growing her own vegetables in the back garden. Sure, she was doing it out of economical necessity and not because of any eco trends that existed at the time. But I now know she was an unconscious environmentalist, ahead of her time – using and reusing, purposing and repurposing, saving and thrifting.

My career in marketing helps me put things into perspective (or at least as much perspective as a marketing person is able to have). Everything that my mom did to save money, mainly because we didn’t have any extra to spare, can be ’spun’ according to today’s environmental consciousness and the desire to show our own eco-friendly ways. Here are just a few examples.

Making powdered milk and putting it back in an empty milk jug…well, I still can’t come up with a current trendy equivalent for that one. It was what it was…low-to-no budget! But I love mom all the more for giving it a try! 
                             
’Entertainment on a dime’ also became a part of my life very young. I was born in Los Angeles, California, and my mom took off one afternoon each month from her secretarial job to take us girls down to the beach…”The poor man’s vacation”, as she called it. I was too young to remember, but I’ve seen photos from those ’vacations’, and I look happy. Really happy. And even if my own children have travelled the world, they seem happiest when we end up on a beach and in the water – so I am sure those afternoons at the beach with mom were the best of times. And they were free!



I am several years out and many thousands of miles away from those days as a young girl. But the thrifty seedlings of my childhood are now well established in my psyche, I cannot, nor do I try to, resist. Nowadays my heart leaps with joy every time I hear my own son say, ”Good thing I found that (piece of junk). We can make something with that!”

I smile to myself, knowing that I’m not such a bad parent after all.


_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _

Nu i svenska -

Fröna till min fascination att göra "något av ingenting" måste ha planterats för länge länge sedan, i mitt undermedvetna som en ung flicka. Det var inte som när min mamma packade oss barn i bilen för veckans skrotupplagsbesök. Nej, det är mer att hon lugnt närde småplantor med sin sparsamma briljans - skära kuponger och spara pengar innan det var trendigt, återanvända och sy våra kläder, göra hemgjord ketchup och lägga denna i en tom Heinzketchupflaska, eller odlar hennes egna grönsaker i trädgården. Visst, hon gjorde det av ekonomiska skäl och inte på grund av eko tendenser som fanns vid den tidpunkten. Men det jag vet nu är att hon var en omedveten miljöaktivist, före sin tid - använda och återanvända, purposing och repurposing, sparande och thrifting.
Min karriär inom marknadsföring hjälper mig att sätta saker i perspektiv (eller åtminstone lika mycket perspektiv som en marknadsföringsperson kan ha). Allt som min mamma gjorde för att spara pengar, främst eftersom vi inte hade några extra, kan "snurra" enligt dagens miljömedvetenhet och viljan att visa våra egna miljövänliga sätt. Här är bara några exempel.

Då                                                             Nu
"Hand-me-down" kläder                            Miljövänlig kläder, älskade-igen kläder
Handsydda kläder                                      Specialanpassade eller ‘repurposed’ kläder
Handgjorda ketchup                                   Gourmet eko ketchup
Secondhand butik puchases                       Eco shopping
Loppmarknad fynd                                    skattjakter
Junkyard                                                    återvinning/upcycling ’Chic Boutique’
Att göra mjölkpulver och lägga tillbaka i ett tomt mjölkkartong ... ja, jag kan fortfarande inte komma med en nuvarande trendig motsvarighet. Det var vad det var ... låg till ingen budget! Men jag älskar mamma desto mer för att hon försökte!
"Underhållning på en femöring" blev också en del av mitt mycket unga liv. Jag föddes i Los Angeles, Kalifornien, och min mamma tog ledigt en eftermiddag varje månad från hennes sekreterarjobb för att ta oss tjejer ner till stranden ... "Den fattiga mannens semester", som hon kallade det. Jag var för ung för att minnas, men jag har sett bilder från dessa "semestrar", och jag ser lycklig ut. Riktigt glad. Och även om mina egna barn har rest runt i världen, verkar de lyckligast när vi hamnar på en strand och i vattnet - så jag är säker på att dessa eftermiddagar på stranden med mamma var de bästa av tider. Och de var gratis!
Jag är flera år och många tusen mil bort från den tiden som en ung flicka. Men sparsamheten från min barndom är nu väl etablerade i mitt psyke och jag kan inte, ens om jag försöker, motstå. Numera hoppar mitt hjärta av glädje varje gång jag hör min egen son säger: "Tur att jag funnit en "bit skräp". Vi kan göra något med det! "

Jag ler för mig själv, medveten att jag är inte en så dålig mamma trots allt.



Until next time...
Tills nästa gång...
Michael
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