Saturday, May 31, 2008

My Review of Long Drop-Waist Knit Dress

Originally submitted at Chadwick's

Versatile day or evening option. Dropped waist, full sweeping skirt.

  • Flattering fit-and-flare silhouette.
  • Polyester/rayon/spandex; machine wash.
  • Imported.

Misses 35” from natural waist



Comfy, elegant and easy

By Amy P. from Seattle, WA on 5/31/2008

 

4out of 5

Fit: Feels true to size

Waist: Feels true to size

Length: Feels true to length

Pros: Comfortable, Flattering, Attractive Design, Versatile

Best Uses: To School, On a Date, Comfort-Oriented, On The Weekend, Casual Work Days

Describe Yourself: Career, Bargain Shopper, Eclectic, Classic, Casual

I bought this dress in amethyst and the black. I think the fabric for the amethyst dress is a little lighter than the fabric for the black, and I was initially a little disappointed. But then I wore it on a hot day and found that it was a perfect weight for summer. It also looked very flattering on my overweight body, and made me feel very good about myself. I would recommend trying it, as others have said, with the caveat that you might have to return it if it's not quite what you're looking for.

(legalese)

Thursday, May 29, 2008

My Review of 4-Piece Matte Jersey Wardrober

Originally submitted at Chadwick's

Versatility equals value, and this wardrober is rich with mix-and-match possibilities! Includes: Long sleeve V-neck cardigan, scoop neck tank with side slits, pull-on style pants with elastic waist and elastic waist A-line skirt. All in easy-care, easy-wear polyester matte jersey. Machine wash. Imp...


Poor quality fabric, uneven fit.

By Amy P. from Seattle, WA on 5/29/2008

 

1out of 5

Waist: Feels true to size

Sleeve Length: Feels too short

Chest Size: Feels too small

Pros: Durable

Cons: Chafes

Best Uses: Travel, Casual Wear, Office

Describe Yourself: Conservative, Comfort-oriented, Practical

The pants and skirt were a good fit, but the tank top and shirt were both too tight, and the fabric was a polyester that felt like sandpaper. Also, the fabric seemed uneven in weight, the tank top seemed heavier than the shirt fabric. I returned this item.

(legalese)

Sunday, May 25, 2008

My New Sewing Machine

Soooo, I got a completely unexpected gift from my aunt on Mother's Day, a new sewing and embroidery machine. It's a pretty nifty machine, it has all kinds of bells and whistles like an automatic thread cutter, and automatic buttonholer (which so completely rocks!). It also does a pretty nifty overlock stitch, satin stitch, darning stitch, and monograms. It's generally a very cool machine and I'm happy to have it. You can check it out on Amazon here.

The sad thing is that I'm not really that excited to have a new sewing machine. Don't get me wrong, I'm totally grateful that she bought it for me...but it feels really selfish that I got this new think just for me. I keep thinking that for the same price as this machine, we could have gotten the kids a Nintendo Wii, and then more people than just me could have enjoyed it. I don't think I can send it back, because I do really, really want it, and because it was a gift. But there's guilt, definitely.


On the bright side, I guess that means I'm not a sociopath.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Paint Dancing

I want to go Paint Dancing next month. I keep making excuses not to go, and I know it's because I'm afraid to be uninhibited in public. But I don't know why I'm afraid to be uninhibited. Is it because I think I'll be embarrassed? Or because I might like it too much and lose my mind entirely? Could be both.

I do kind of feel like losing my mind, because I'm faced with moving again, and I really, really, really don't want to do it. Argh!

It's late and I'm supposed to be doing something else right now, so I will round this out tomorrow with the saga of the tooth. Which still hurts. Even though the dentist says there's nothing wrong with it.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

My Toofis Hurts

So I've been avoiding having this tooth pulled forever, and now I know why. It hurt like the dickens (what does that mean anyway?) to get it out, and it hurts now. Oh and I have this big hole in my mouth that it will take six to eight weeks to go away, and in the mean time, I've got to rinse with saline after every meal to get the nasty food particles out.

Don't eat rice when you have your tooth pulled. It gets trapped in the hole and it's a pain in the ass to get out.

Friday, April 11, 2008

I Skipped Over the Foot Thing

So...on New Year's Eve I broke my foot. Somehow I haven't managed to tell this story until now, maybe because I was too busy being in the midst of the drama to write about it. It goes something like this:

I fell down a hill, don't ask me to explain how, and hit my foot on the sidewalk. (My son says this story will be better if I claim to have been attacked by ninja midgets wearing purple suits, but I think that happens often enough in life so that I don't need to be making up stories about it.) This was at work, outside the building I work in, btw. I laid there on the sidewalk, with the pain in my foot steadily increasing, and wondering if it was possible to die of foot pain. While there I managed to observe no less than three people see me laying there, say nothing and walk off. Nice, right? Finally these guys asked if I needed some help, to which I hesiatated before replying yes. Was it because of shock, or because I really for a moment thought I didn't need help. I'm not sure any more, because I was actually contemplating being able to walk on this incredibly, INCREDIBLY painful foot as I lay there, get this, if I waited a few more minutes (laying on the sidewalk, in the cold). When they got to me, they asked if they should call an ambulance.

I told the nice gentlemen that I didn't need an ambulance, I only hurt my foot. I also told them that if they could help me get back on my feet, I thought I could make it back to my office on my own. They exchanged some very skeptical looks, and rightly so. Then they helped me all the way back to my office, acquiring an ice pack and an abandoned office chair to help move me along the way. I wish I had gotten their names, they deserve good samaritan awards or something.

After I got back to the office, it occurred to me that I had NO IDEA how I was going to get home or to the emergency room or wherever else I thought I should be going. Also, my co-worker left after I assured her that I could handle my rapidly swelling foot on my one. Stupid me. So I called boyfriend.

Of course he rescued me, although he was really, really annoyed that he had to. I did have to make my own way out of the building, using a surplus chair that I then abandoned on another floor. (Screw that chair.) Here's where it gets good:

I went to the emergency room. After letting me sit in the waiting room for an hour, at least, in extreme pain, they gave me some halfway decent drugs and took an x-ray. During which they want me to bear weight on the incredibly painful foot. Riiiight. Diagnosis - sprain, no broken bones. Go home and walk on it as soon as possible and it will get better. They gave me an ace bandage and some crutches and sent me on my way. I'm a gospel sort of girl so I tried to walk on it almost immediately. Meanwhile, it's swelling even more and getting really purple. Can you guess where I'm going with this?

I couldn't walk on it the next day which was New Year's Day, which sucked. On January 2nd, I called in sick to work and called to make a follow up with my regular doc, since it still just didn't look right. When I call in, the operator says to me "I see you have a couple of broken bones in your foot." Huh? So ok, then, I have two broken bones. I go in to the doctor, they want to take another x-ray, more requests for weight-bearing (idiots, you want me to put pressure in the broken bones?) Then they give me this incredibly heavy cam walker, and tell me to make an appointment for a CT scan. Oh and I have three broken bones, one of which is a bone that almost never gets broken outside of professional sports.

So I go in for the CT scan, which is really far away from the entrance to the hospital, by the way. They are really rude, there. Then they show me the scan, with the four broken bones. (Remember the sprain?). So I have to go to the orthopedist. Before I even get THERE, the doctor reads my scan and x-rays and decides that because of the delicate nature of the break, all five broken bones are along the midjoint of my foot and my whole foot could just fall apart at any minute, I need to to see a specialist. I'm kind of scared to do that, actually, because every time someone new looks at my foot, more bones are broken. It's...alarming, to say the least.

The specialist is really great. The number of bones don't go up, and they put me in an aircast, which is lighter than the cam walker and actually gives me the support I need. The rest of the story is boring...I might need surgery, or maybe not, I go in for the surgery, they put me under, but I don't need the surgery, I get a cast, I can't go back to work for six weeks and when I do go back I'm persona non grata, and then they 'don't need me anymore.'

I have a new job that I like better, but my foot is still pretty damaged, and it's never going to be the same. Which totally sucks. On the other hand, I got a six-week vacation, even if I didn't get to go anywhere. Unfortunately I can't remember it because of all the painkillers.

Grand total of injury statistics: Five broken bones and one job.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

More about the Christmas Tree, House Rotation and Sundry Other Stuff

Huh, so the previously mentioned Christmas tree is finally off the property altogether, along with last year's Christmas tree, assorted cat furniture, the old couch, some mattresses, and a whole U-Haul full of garbage. Yay! I feel lighter. Of course in the time-honored tradition of never making a clean break, I forgot to put the old vacuum cleaner in the truck, so that's still hanging around in the middle of the backyard. I think of it as an art piece now. Plus I enjoy the reaction I get when people come over and look out the back door (which has two muddy boy hand prints right about at viewing level) and say "hey, do you know your vacuum cleaner's in the backyard?" and then I say, "It's not my vacuum cleaner." There's always this moment of silence which I think of as a golden opportunity for a really witty comment. Mostly people let me down though.

What else is new? The clean up was accompanied by my roommate moving out, and a Korean exchange student moving into the revolving room. I think I'm going to start calling it that, because it seems like someone is always moving in and out of it. I wish I could find someone who would just stay in it, and not have to keep finding new roommate options. I wish I could afford to just leave it empty or turn it into an office.

I need new area rug for downstairs, and being the incredibly cheap person that I am, I think I will start trolling the free items on Craigslist and Freecycle, hoping to find something semi-presentable, since I don't want to spend money on a new one. I figure the cats will pee on it anyway, so something used is easier to let go of, in theory. Of course if we follow the example of the old couch, which sat in the carport for six months because I couldn't bring myself to admit that it wasn't still a viable asset that SOMEBODY would want, or the example of the desk that sat in front of my house with the free sign on it, getting rained on and warping until one of my neighbors begged me to let him cut it up with his chainsaw and dispose of it, once I own the carpet, it will pretty much be a permanent part of the inventory until...well, until it falls apart I guess.

One really comforting thing about owning a lot of crap: I never worry about anything getting stolen. I figure I can find something just as good at the next rummage sale for under $20, so where's the anxiety? Ok, I am a little anal about the silverware, but hey that's good stuff! I had to pick through a lot of Goodwill bins to get that matching stuff!