Little Style

LIFE IN PHOTOS :: The time my camera met her foot and lost

Aveline's feet running toward a Broken Camera

May 2013 - Curtains via Oaxacaborn

It’s a good thing I just had that epiphany about blogging more work-that’s-not-my-own-AKA-inspiration, because it appears my theory is going to be put to the test.

Immediately.

See those allegedly cute feet in the photo above?

Minutes after that image was captured, those very same little feet forcefully met with an open lens and shutter, causing springs and small parts to loose from their confines and fall onto the sidewalk, rendering the aforementioned camera slightly less than operable.

Then she went inside and colored on the stairs with pink and blue sidewalk chalk, leaving me to lament over the damage her kick left in its wake.

If you need me, I’ll be rocking back and forth, with a tiny spring in one hand and a brownie in the other.

Inspiration

INSPIRATION :: Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration

Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration - Serena and Lily Early Summer 2013

Remember back before Pinterest, before Tumblr, when inspiration was tactile and we could circle it with sharpies and cut it out and tape it to notebooks and stack those piles of inspiration on our desks?

Before Pinterest, these are the images I would have torn from the Early Summer 2013 Serena & Lily catalogue.

Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration - Serena and Lily Early Summer 2013

 Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration - Serena and Lily Early Summer 2013

Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration - Serena and Lily Early Summer 2013

Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration - Serena and Lily Early Summer 2013

Before Pinterest, This is How We Saved Inspiration - Serena and Lily Early Summer 2013

Inspiration

INSPIRATION :: How Holly Becker’s Post “Trends + Exclusive Content” is Changing the Way I Blog

How Holly Becker's Post on Trends + Exclusive Content is Changing the Way I Blog

This post by Holly Becker of decor8 has absolutely re-energized the way I look at blogging.

Too often lately, I’ve had a misplaced sense of pressure to produce 100% original content for this space. I’ve pulled back from sharing the incredible creativity of others, because of the incorrect notion that I’d be perceived as a copycat for showing you something amazing someone else has already made (despite the fact it would be attributed to the original source, credited, and linked).

Holly writes, “Some blogs only accept exclusive content. Other blogs won’t share what another blogger posted no matter how much they loved it because they are scared to upset someone or appear like a copycat. I’ve been teaching blogging classes online and workshops for over 4 years and most of my students are terrified to blog about something if another blogger already covered it. This can ultimately lead to the death of blogs as influencers and early adopters. Really gang. While I’m all for columns, exclusive stuff, taking your own photos, etc. I think balance and caution is needed.

How can we influence something or adopt it if we fear writing about it because another blogger already covered it?  How can we discuss trends if no one has images to share supporting those discussions unless they take these images themselves – and because they don’t have the images they clam up?…If we all become fearful or run our blogs like they are magazines where only exclusive content is featured and we refuse to share something another blogger covered, what will that mean for blogging?”

To me, what Holly says is even more impactful and powerful because she’s an incredibly creative individual who has loads of original content to her name. I mean, she’s the author of two books (both of which are in my living room at this very moment) and has a terrific blog with an active and engaged community of readers.

If you blog, or are any other sort of content creator, I highly urge you to read the entire article, as well as her responses in the comments section.  It will challenge you and free you, I think.

As for me, I’m done being scared to blog about a trend, a photograph, a brand, or another creative just because a big-name blogger has already pinned it to Pinterest. This space should be where I can share what I love, without fear.

I have a feeling you might be seeing a lot more of inspiration here in the coming weeks.

Inspiration

INSPIRATION :: 10 Cobalt Blue Patterns

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Watercolor by Luli Sanchez
Watercolor via Luli Sanchez

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog -  Mug via Hildas Hem
Mug via Hilda’s Hem

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Macaw via Sharon Montrose
Macaw via Sharon Montrose

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Garnet Hill Nautical Anchor Rug
Anchor rug via Garnet Hill

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Anthropologie Napkin
Napkin via Anthropologie

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Chantal Césure Ceramics
Ceramics via Chantal Césure

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Handwoven traditional Mixteco bedspread via Maggie Galton
Mixteco bedspread via Maggie Galton

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Anthropologie Bowl
Bowl via Anthropologie

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Fabric via La Viva Home
Mexican Fabric via La Viva Home

10 Cobalt Blue Patterns for Inspiration on the Oaxacaborn blog - Image via Selvedge Magazine
Quilt via Selvedge Magazine

I love cobalt blue. It’s the theme of the dishes, art and towels in my kitchen — and it reminds me of home, dear family friends, and beautiful memories.

Life in Photos, Theology

This Corner of Wednesday is the Most Beautiful Place on Earth

1000px - Silhouette of geometric garland in window via Oaxacaborn
Black and white interior via Oaxacaborn
Chinese lantern lights and Girl with Pearl Earring by Vermeer via Oaxacaborn

Outside, the sun shares the stage with the ragged-edged clouds, like an old shadow puppet show.

Inside, lego pieces click into each other and climb higher, building a tower which rises higher in imagination than it does in tiny reality. Johnny Cash strums on his old guitar, and sings through the decades, through record scratches all the way through to internet streaming.

I tap my foot without realizing it, as I pull laundry from the dryer and pile it into a basket, a colorful tangled-up heap of he-and-she-and-small person. There’s the lingering aroma of coffee and lavender, of biscuits and clean clothes.

There are dirty dishes in the sink and the bed is unmade and the couch pillows are on the floor, but I hum along and Aveline dances and this corner of Wednesday is the most beautiful place on earth.

Adoption, Poetry & Words, Theology

How do I Defend the Orphan When I’m Not Gladys Aylward?

“Learn to do good; seek justice, reprove the ruthless, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.” -Isaiah 1:17.

Every time I read this verse, I’m struck by its straightforwardness. And every time, it tears me up inside. Defend the orphan. How?

Deep down, I want to be Gladys Aylward and take a hundred children to safety. I want to just run out to the edges of the world now and scoop up all the waiting children and take them home — all of them.

Still Image from The Inn of the Sixth Happiness

It tears me up inside that I can’t.

I feel so helpless. I feel like I’m not doing anything, and that’s a torturous feeling when every fiber of my being knows it’s wrong to do nothing.

Pure and undefiled religion in the sight of our God and Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep oneself unstained by the world.” (James 1:17)

How can I do that?

A few weeks ago, after attending One Hundred Million Reasons to Celebrate, I was broken yet again by this burden. Several of the speakers there had been adopted out of orphanages, and as they shared, God asked me again, “How are you going to be my hands and feet?”

I don’t know the answer to that question yet. All I know is that I’ve been unable to ignore it. I can’t get it out of my mind. “Vindicate the weak and fatherless; do justice to the afflicted and destitute.” (Psalm 82:3)

While I continue to wrestle with the “how?”, I’ve been trying to help my friends the Jensen’s on their adoption journey.

And so there are 140+ auction items being bid on right this minute, and every dollar goes towards to the Jensen adoption fund.

Would you consider bidding, and sharing the auction link on Facebook, Twitter, or even your blog? It runs through May 6.  We can’t all be Gladys Aylward, but we can all help the Jensens bring one orphan home.

We must be global Christians with a global vision because our God is a global God.” -John Stott