Lucy realizes that her life is not really interesting in excruciating detail, so this is her homage to brevity and LOLs.

Currently, she talks English at students in Hokkaido, Japan.

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I’ve decided that it would be awesome to live in a scenic spot in a tiny house like this. Better yet, have two of them face-to-face with a small courtyard in between. One would be the living house, the other would be an art studio / guest house, and the courtyard would be pretty sweet for barbecues. Ahhh, I can dream!

I’ve decided that it would be awesome to live in a scenic spot in a tiny house like this. Better yet, have two of them face-to-face with a small courtyard in between. One would be the living house, the other would be an art studio / guest house, and the courtyard would be pretty sweet for barbecues. Ahhh, I can dream!

design WIN!

Eliza Strozyk’s incredible wooden rug. (Via Inhabitat.)

Eliza Strozyk’s incredible wooden rug. (Via Inhabitat.)

design wood

One day, I will have my own wood shop and I will be able to make things I think are awesome.
On another note, why do people on Flickr NOT upload larger sizes of their images and then NOT let people link to the URL of the thumbnails? What the heck is the harm in letting people actually SEE these images? As a museum-lover who likes to get in close on paintings and sculptures and see traces of the event that went into its making, thumbnails with no option to enlarge always leave me immensely disappointed. It is like receiving a beautifully-wrapped present with a promise of something meaningful on the inside, but not actually being able to open it because the whole thing is sealed in a plexiglass tube.
But then again, it could just be because I am pretty danged mediocre at photography and no one would ever want to take my stuff (but please tell me if someone does, as it would make me feel that much more significant).
Thanks to Slappy for the link.

One day, I will have my own wood shop and I will be able to make things I think are awesome.

On another note, why do people on Flickr NOT upload larger sizes of their images and then NOT let people link to the URL of the thumbnails? What the heck is the harm in letting people actually SEE these images? As a museum-lover who likes to get in close on paintings and sculptures and see traces of the event that went into its making, thumbnails with no option to enlarge always leave me immensely disappointed. It is like receiving a beautifully-wrapped present with a promise of something meaningful on the inside, but not actually being able to open it because the whole thing is sealed in a plexiglass tube.

But then again, it could just be because I am pretty danged mediocre at photography and no one would ever want to take my stuff (but please tell me if someone does, as it would make me feel that much more significant).

Thanks to Slappy for the link.

design wood

bauldoff:

Lead creative on the Obama ‘08 campaign logo and newly appointed VSA Partners strategist, Sol Sender shares about the mark’s development process. (via quispologies)
Watch the video (YouTube): Part 1 / Part 2

Awesome, but the blue skies and grassy fields reminds me of that Windows wallpaper (and that does not equal promise and change to me…).
I would really like one of the pins pictured at the top, though.

bauldoff:

Lead creative on the Obama ‘08 campaign logo and newly appointed VSA Partners strategist, Sol Sender shares about the mark’s development process. (via quispologies)

Watch the video (YouTube): Part 1 / Part 2

Awesome, but the blue skies and grassy fields reminds me of that Windows wallpaper (and that does not equal promise and change to me…).

I would really like one of the pins pictured at the top, though.

design Obama

A name tag design I made in subtle tribute to the Charlie the Unicorn video (you can handle searching YouTube yourself, right?). Tell the world you can show everyone the way to Candy Mountain! Buy it on one of the boring shirt choices I’ve made, or stick it on anything SpreadShirt carries! (It’s REAL high quality printing.) And because I don’t feel right making money off of someone else’s acid trip creativity, I’m donating any money I make to some good causes.

A name tag design I made in subtle tribute to the Charlie the Unicorn video (you can handle searching YouTube yourself, right?). Tell the world you can show everyone the way to Candy Mountain! Buy it on one of the boring shirt choices I’ve made, or stick it on anything SpreadShirt carries! (It’s REAL high quality printing.) And because I don’t feel right making money off of someone else’s acid trip creativity, I’m donating any money I make to some good causes.

design pandling