What’s in Your Beach Bag?

Beach Bag

  • Before you pull all your gear together, you have to start out with the bag. This one is amazing. Of course, you could use a backpack or one of those reusable grocery bags too, if you wanted to save a few bucks.
  • For some people, getting a new swimsuit and towel every spring is like a ritual. “Now I’m ready for summer,” the act says. I haven’t gotten a new beach towel since 2005 (I loooove the one I have) but I did get a new swimsuit this year, after the elastic finally went out on my old one. Yikes. Long story short–if I was getting a towel this year, I would get this one!
  • Sunscreen. I hate, hate, hate it! I dislike sunburns more, though. This stuff should get the job done without causing massive break-outs. I really do prefer the kind you rub in to the kind you spray on–it’s more effective and you’re able to make sure you didn’t miss a spot. Plus, you can ask someone cute to help you apply it ;)
  • Some people can really pull off the big floppy hat. I certainly can’t. If you know how to rock it without looking like a fool, I would like some tips. Anyway, it’s a super way to keep the sun off your face and shoulders. (Photo found here.)
  • Magazines–my current favorites are Bon Appetit and Sunset. Another fave that I used to read more while living in Kansas was Southern Living. The mix of food, travel, and interiors in those regional mags just does it for me!
  • Water. Yes! Make sure to stay hydrated. All that sun and salt water will leave you pretty crispy unless you drink tons of water. I like this kind of water bottle, with a straw.
  • Games. You could bring something as simple as a football or soccer ball. Group games like horseshoes are also really popular!
  • Snacks. My current guilty pleasures are these Terra vegetable chips. I can’t buy them because it’s too risky–I just might eat the whole bag in one sitting; and they aren’t exactly cheap!

“HOLD UP,” I hear you saying, “I don’t live near the beach.” Relax! Use this list as a jumping-off point for any outdoor activity, like a picnic at the park, non-strenuous hike, or something like that. Sub a lightweight blanket or tablecloth for the towel and you’re in business!!

I Heard a Lion – Little Wars

I’ve posted about I Heard A Lion on several occasions, especially the past two years when Doug was a part of the band and regularly practicing and playing shows.

The thing is, sometimes your friends are in a band and you support them just because you know they’re passionate about it… and then there are other times when you are genuinely blown away by the talent they have within them and by the music they are capable of making. Seeing them work together to create a song–many songs– something so complete with so many layers… it’s like watching a painter create a masterpiece. Well, I admit that I was a fan of I Heard a Lion long before Doug was in the band and now that he is not a part of them anymore, I still love them just as much. Maybe even more.

 

They have a new 6-track album coming out tomorrow, called “Little Wars.” Doug recorded some vocals and a number of keyboard tracks for this last September (you can see him in the video), and the guys have been working diligently on the album ever since. A lot of hard work and even more heart has gone into this album, so on behalf of everyone who has worked on it I encourage you to check it out. Digital downloads will be available on iTunes and Amazon this Tuesday, July 16… and if you click over to Amazon you can preview all of the songs right now. I highly recommend it!

For more news and info on physical copies of the album, make sure to like I Heard A Lion on Facebook and follow on Twitter.

Blurb Book Review

This review has been a long time coming, but I’m happy to jump right in! As you probably know, last year we went to Europe with our shiny new camera. My plan was to forego some of the cheesier souvenir trinkets in favor of ordering a photo book to remember the trip by. So, instead of buying (and carrying back) too much (we did get antique magazine ads) we took photos. Lots of photos.

Inspired by Stefani at Brooklyn Limestone, who makes an annual photo book about her travels (she travels a lot!) I used the same website she does–Blurb.

I used Photoshop CS4 on a mac, along with the Blurb software to create the book. One can get as creative as can be imagined–creating scrapbook-style pages or adding words, poems, stories, etc. I chose to simply include full-page photos. I alternated between three layouts: one with a full-bleed photo, one with a chunky black border around the photo, and one that included two photos on one page (great for vertical shots).

My Blurb book

My Blurb book

I ordered in July or August 2012 and it took about ten days to arrive–I would love to see their book printing facility, that prints hundreds of books on-demand and ships them all over the world. I am so happy with the quality of the paper and printing, and flip through it often. I selected a plain black cover featuring a list of the places we visited. This will make it easy to add more editions to the collection and maintain continuity. Spoiler alert: the collection has already expanded!

The book has become especially dear to me now that our hard drive crashed taking all of our photo files with it. (I may make a second attempt to have them recovered, though.)

My Blurb book

To hold up basic tenets of the Scientific Method, I decided to give it another go, you know, just to ensure the quality was still up to snuff these days. I jumped into my time machine and dredged up all my photos from my study abroad experience in Morocco, and the subsequent week-long trip to Rome and Paris. I was especially interested in how the book would turn out when made from photos taken by a simple point-and-shoot (when compared with photos we took with the DSLR in Europe).

My Blurb book

My Blurb book

My Blurb book

For the lower-resolution photos, I took them into photoshop and upped the DPI (dots per inch) from 72 to 300, for a stab at best results. Therefore, I can’t say how a book would turn out with lower-resolution photos. Example of photo quality: it’s much easier to tell in person (duh) but the shots of the coliseum and the pizza above are quite pixelly/grainy in person as a result of using a basic camera in low-light conditions. On the other hand, the photos taken outside under bright sunlight look nice (see two photos up). Although I made my adjustments in photoshop, the photos definitely aren’t as nice as the Europe book, and I’m not surprised or disappointed–it’s a result of the original photos, not Blurb or their printing. Either way, I’m happy to have a book to hold in my hands and flip through, as opposed to a facebook photo album.

Now I’m eager to fill in the gaps with photo books from 2010 and 2011, as well as compiling one from Salvation Mountain and Palm Springs! I’m addicted!