HELLO my name is Heather

  • Smoochy Pops

    Valentine09
    Valentine's
    Day is even better when it falls on the weekend.  No
    school-night-date-night conflict and there's time to have fun with the
    kids as well. 

    I've been working on some interesting design
    projects this week.  It drives me crazy that I can't show sneak-peeks. 
    Some of my contracts actually prohibit me from letting the cat out of
    the bag – or the hen out of the haystack, to start a new cliche.  While
    I'm plugging away on product-design, I'm working on package design as
    well — and I love it — I love designing boxes.  My inner engineer
    gets the baton.

    Perhaps next year, I can make some funky, 3-D
    valentines for folks to download and get those folds, flaps, tabs and
    tucks out of my system.  I wish I had thought of it last week, but was
    mightily engaged in the storm of drawings and prototypes strewn across
    the studio.

    I'll make a note.  Till then, here's wishing you a
    Happy Valentine's Day weekend! Go smooch someone cute, or someone
    sweet, or someone cute and sweet. Or eat something cute and sweet if
    you have no one to smooch.

  • Wormhole

    EarlyTTHBa

    I sorted through old pictures today from before we had digital cameras, from before we had Charlotte.  For hours, on my entryway floor, I flipped through picture after picture of Elijah as a small child, then left to pick him up from school.  When he opened the car door to sit next to me, I swear my peripheral vision blurred into quick streaks of bright colors and I fell forward into one of Wheeler’s ‘wormholes.’  When did my son become a young man, all angular and grouchy?  When did my hair grow long?  And have a full ten years really gone by since I invented Trash Ties?   GoGilbertCoverJan2009

    There’s a great article in this month’s Go Gilbert! magazine outlining my personal history with my children’s hat company, Noggins, the invention of my Trash Ties hair accessories, and later finding my passion for art and surface design.  If you’re in the Gilbert, AZ area, pick up a free copy at a nearby salon, office, or restaurant, or click here to browse through the issue online. 

    Interviewing for this article really took me back to the sweetness and the struggle of my life ten years ago.  To the tiny city apartment we shared in Hollywood where Elijah and I spent all of our time together and often did not get outside for days on end. 

    NewYears2000n3t3
    After living in that apartment for a few months, I began to feel unexplicably uneasy about it and to feel strongly that we needed to move.  I loved living in Hollywood, but there was something wrong that I couldn’t pinpoint.  Drumming up money for a new apartment fell to me and I had meager resources.  Isaac worked till late into the night and took with him our only car.  I had toddler Elijah with me at all times and the internet was pretty useless back then. 

    As time went on, the prompting to get out of that apartment grew steadily stronger.  It was a problem I tried to fix alone, but could not.  It was a difficult, dark time.  One night, after sitting about in a stupor for weeks, I knelt in desperate prayer for help and within half an hour of that prayer, was handed Trash Ties.  It wasn’t a literal handing-over, but spiritually, that’s what it felt like.  Like a gift tied in silk ribbon, with a note saying, “You are loved.  Everything will be okay.”  At 23, that was my first hugely spiritual experience.

    With a little experimentation, Trash Ties were invented in the late evening of January 25th, ten years ago last week.  In the months following, I worked around the clock, squeezing every ounce of hope and will power into patenting Trash Ties and preparing it for market.  It was a raw, tender time, but man am I grateful for the adventures we had back then and for all that we learned!

    TrashTiesContactSheetHBb
    In digging through old photos today and in reading over this new Go Gilbert! article, I realized that I have yet to tell that early story.  The struggles I went through and the help I received along the way are an integral part of my personal journey and I need to keep that history. 

    Yes, Trash Ties enabled us to move from our Hollywood apartment.  It wasn’t till a year after we left that I learned why I had felt so strongly about moving.  It’s a crazy story, involving one horrifically sick little boy.  I’d like to continue telling that story here and there in future posts if you can go easy on me for getting emotional at times.  The reflection does me well.  Some old memories seem like forever ago and some seem like yesterday.  I have learned a lot and I have a lot to be grateful for.

  • Inaugural Scuffs

    InauguralScuffs

    To
    tap things off
    this month, I started my dance class.  I'm on tap of the
    world, the tap dog, at the tap of my class, tap o' the mornin' to ya…
    tap that one.  Good grief.

    What a great leg-workout, and hokey
    and fun to boot.  Imagine stomping about on a wooden floor to a song
    called Carrot Stew, a dance that conjures picnic plaids, poofy skirts,
    pantalettes, and pig tails.  Sure, I'll start with clogging, but I'll
    need to add true tap dancing at some point if I'm to continue my
    rappity-clackity-dancity-fantasy. 

    Watch Eleanor Powell go.  That ain't no clogging costume either. 

    It would be extra cool to mix tapping with swing dancing. Oh if I had nothing else to do than dance all day.   

  • Through the Tunnel

    OMGoodness!  What a whirlwind month.  We've managed both of our
    kids' birthdays, a wedding anniversary, a house hunt with/for my sister
    & her family, a new office/warehouse hunt for Trash Ties, a Creative Escape
    project design (fun!), a raised garden bed for the backyard, a
    snow-camping adventure, and a monster sinus infection.  That's on top
    of the regularly-scheduled programming around the studio. 

    SnowTunnel2

    Elijah
    is now 12 and Charlotte turned 4 yesterday.  Let me say, twelve is a
    big one to absorb as a parent — how did that happen!?!  His cub paw
    hardly fits in my hand anymore.  Four is a little crazy too. 
    Especially when you're four-year-old speaks as well as an
    eight-year-old and has a snappy, sophisticated sense of humor.  My mom
    calls her Scarlett Bailey for her salty coquetry.  Sugary treats aren't nearly as tasty without a pinch of salt.

    Just
    yesterday, when my mom asked Charlotte what she'd like to eat for her
    birthday dinner, Charlotte replied, "Nothing."  Then, when she saw a
    twinge of disappointment in my mother's face for her lack of an answer,
    Charlotte continued with a devlish smile, "Barf would be good!" 

    My
    mom and Charlotte had a good laugh over that one.  Mom loves
    Charlotte's sassiness, so she gets a good helping of it.  In the end,
    Charlotte chose hot dogs and strawberry lemonade, with cauliflower and
    "green olives that taste like black ones" on the side — in
    combination, far better than Mac N Cheese alone, which was the
    runner-up menu.

  • One Shingle at a Time

    Baileydollhouse

    Isaac’s
    back on his feet and back to work on Charlotte’s dollhouse.  It was a
    crafty day all around.  Isaac shingled the dollhouse for hours, while
    Elijah built his first model airplane.  Charlotte looped velvet ribbons
    and string back and forth across my studio, while I sketched and
    painted new fabrics.  No computers, no Nintendo DS’s, no Gameboys, Wiis
    or XBoxes, just some old-fashioned, creative, use-your-mind fun.  It
    was a good day.

  • Happy New Year’s Eve!

    We’ll see how tonight goes.  I’m already spent from staying out late
    last night to celebrate my wedding anniversary.  We went to a nice
    Italian restaurant and then out to see The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. I’m still mad that Cate Blanchett didn’t receive an Oscar for Elizabeth.
    There’s a scene in CCofBB where Cate dances on a terrace or gazebo in a
    fabulous red dress… Watch for it.  It’s breathtaking.

    Grumblec_2

    The photos above are from our Nutcracker outing.
    Charlotte’s trying hard not to smile.  Isaac and she had a game going.
    (This explains the funky camera angles.  I don’t know about Charlotte,
    but I thought he was funny.)

    Anyhow.  I’m just popping in.  As today’s the last day to use our Happy Holidays coupons at the
    Heather Bailey Store, I thought I’d just post a quick reminder.  I’m
    feeling chattier than I thought though. I really do need to head out before the stores close. We have some party-prep errands to
    run.  And I need a break from the computer — I’m all
    boggle-eyed.

    On that note — Have fun tonight & be safe!

  • Frazzle-Dazzle

    Tree08_2

    What a week.  Isaac had to go back to the emergency room on Monday
    and was admitted to the hospital.  The doctors wanted to keep a close
    eye on his blood chemistry, which had been out of whack since last
    Wednesday when Isaac first went to the emergency room for dehydration.
    It turned out he’d had a fit of rhabo-myolysis.  Certain enzymes in his
    blood needed to be flushed out with an IV while they made sure that
    gunk didn’t damage his kidneys.  At home, that same night Charlotte
    developed a super-fever and I had to baby her through the night to keep
    her temperature down:  wet towels on the forehead, icy drinks,
    medicine, blanket rearrangements.  I was up every hour or so.

    Christmas2up3_2

    Our whole dollhouse plan for Charlotte could not be completed
    without Isaac, so I had to dive into the stores for a last-minute,
    second gift-plan for Charlotte on Tuesday.  I had limited options for
    who to call for babysitting, not wanting to get anyone else’s kids sick
    for the holidays.  My mother dashed in with her flashing cape and
    super-hero goggles to save the day.  Six frenzied hours later (lots of
    long lines) I was back with a full sleigh. Then it was gift-wrapping
    till 3am and fever-nursing all night again.

    Isaac surprised us on Christmas Eve by returning from the hospital
    earlier than expected. His bloodwork was looking better and better and
    his kidneys had been working perfectly, so the doctors let him come
    home for Christmas.  That night I fancied up our Christmas tree with
    new baubles and fronds as a surprise for Isaac.  I didn’t originally
    know if he’d be home before Christmas or not.  I figured a dolled-up
    tree would add some holiday magic to our otherwise frazzled week. 

    Christmast_2

    Christmas day was wonderful — though I was exhausted.  My parents
    watched with us while the kids stirred up a storm of torn paper and
    ribbon.  Later, Isaac made a champion breakfast of apple-fritter-bread
    french toast, hash browns & bacon. Christmas dinner made a
    last-minute detour to our house and everyone came over for a potluck of
    good food and a white elephant exchange.  (I ended up with The Godthumb
    on dvd — perfect white elephant, Matt!) 

    Noway3_2
    My mom made all four of her kids a picnic blanket with loops at each
    corner.  Each blanket came with a carrying bag and a set of tent stakes
    for tacking the blanket in place through the loops.  What a ton of work
    — and inventive!  (I’ll take some photos next time we head to the
    park.)

    I’m sure this Christmas will go down in family history — two
    emergency room visits, a multiple-night stay in the hospital, a
    last-minute Christmas swap-out for Charlotte, all-night fever care, a
    Christmas dinner moved to our house, and new, feel-better tree bling to
    jazz up our one perfect day this week — Christmas.

    Yesterday I slept-in till 2pm.  And I’m still tired.

  • Cracking Nuts

    It seems like everyone I know has had some sort of hard, sad news
    this week — or something dramatic going on.  Late night chats,
    distracting movie outings and the like have all been required.  What a
    crazy week. 

    Nutcracker_2

    Our contribution to the drama involved a trip to the emergency room
    on Wednesday night.  Isaac had some weird CO2 build up in his upper
    body that caused his muscles to seize up and curl him into a contorted
    ball — in lots of pain.  It had something to do with dehydration and
    low potassium (I think).  He had exercised the previous hour and was on
    a cool-down.  I haven’t had a chance to research this sort of thing
    yet, but it
    sounds a lot like decompression sickness — that scuba-diving thing. 

    Isaac’s no namby-pamby either.  I’ve seen him blow off disgusting,
    horrible gashes that should have required stitches, long tumbles down
    rocky terrain while mountain-biking, etc.  For all of his macho
    flesh-wounds, he says this CO2 thing was the worst pain he’s ever
    felt. 

    The pain was quickly resolved with a steady drip of liquids — mixed
    with some calming something-or-other.  He’s been sluggish and tired
    since, as his blood chemistry evens out again, but he’s almost
    recovered.  Just a rough and strange interlude.  And Isaac and I missed
    Elijah’s school concert : (

    The holidays now resume.  I’ve spent the last day-plus, sewing
    flouncy holiday skirts for a friend’s daughters and dollhouse dress-ups
    for Charlotte.  I absolutely love to sew gifts, but I haven’t had the
    heart for it much this year.  There hasn’t been much friend-sewing
    since I made these doll blankets (here & here).

    Let’s just say it’s great to be back at it!  Sound the triumphal horns.  Now, if I can just learn how to create time.

    December07_2

    I’m hoping to have the presents delivered before we head out to see
    the Nutcracker tonight —  care of the Moscow Ballet.  I expect we’ll
    have to get more serious about dance class once Charlotte gets a good
    look at the ballet gowns.  Charlotte is quite graceful.  She’d be a
    great dancer.

    Oh yes!  And speaking of dancing.  For years, I’ve wanted to sign up
    for a Tap Dance class — just to make a loud, dancey racket.  I’ve done
    some research and found (via Jen) a Saturday morning clogging class for women.  I
    guess clogging shoes have two taps on each shoe, while tap shoes only
    have one, therefore clogging = bigger racket.  That works for me — as
    long as I still get to use Jazz hands : )  So I’m doing it!  I even
    convinced my friend, Sarah, to take the class with me.  I just need to
    find me some clackity-tappity shoes by January 10th.

    Some Tid Bits

    • Another giveaway — it must be giveaway season:  visit Ever After today to enter a drawing for a gift basket of paper-craft supplies from my Freshcut paper line.
    • My assistant, Tara is having a baby girl!  (More gift-sewing to do.)
    • The laundry is all folded!
    • I discovered Apple Fritter Bread (ala Super Target).  It’s amazing. 
      Now I want to create my own recipe for it — and maybe other bread
      recipes based on treats from the doughnut store.
  • Oh, Homey!

    Tthappyholidays_2

    Here’s another holiday Trash Ties giveaway!  Visit Simple Mom
    to enter.  Tsh is giving away a gift basket of health & beauty
    items, including something called ‘Soap Nuts’ for your laundry.

    Isaac’s snowy Photoshop doodle reminds me I need to go snap a photo
    of Charlotte’s new dollhouse in progress.  It’s getting there — slowly.  We had better step to it.  One more week till Christmas.

    And here’s a news spot on Trash Ties from Studio 5.  April from Sweet Life in the Valley put together a whole presentation on great Christmas gift ideas.  The Trash Ties section is about half-way through.  If you’ve ever wondered how tightly Trash Ties hold, watch the host’s finger turn purple.