Magnificent
Feb. 21st, 2003 08:31 amHey there, all...
It's time for the Friday Five...or Seven, if you really wanted to be technical.
What is your most prized material possession?
Hmm...that's a good question. I really don't have anything that I haven't or couldn't do without, and there are a lot of things that I really like, like my Changeling: the Dreaming collection, the spiffy drawing I got from Stephanie Gladden (of Hopster's Tracks) at MFM one year or this painting I bought from
stickypawz recently. I couldn't call anything *prized* though.
What item, that you currently own, have you had the longest?
This one's easy: Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Ryrie Brink. It was this biography of Brink's grandmother as a child, taken from stories told to her from her mom and grandmom. Really great 'frontier' children's book...I've had it since 5th grade (1989 or so).
Are you a packrat?
Yes. I'm slowly learning to get rid of stuff I don't *truly* need, though.
Do you prefer a spic-and-span clean house? Or is some clutter necessary to avoid the appearance of a museum?
Well, I'm in a period of transition. :) I have a natural tendency towards clutter, but I've been seeing the benefits of having a pretty clean place. Not too austere, just clutter enough to be 'lived in' without making it seem junky. This look can be achieved with a surprising minimum of stuff, though.
It's time for the Friday Five...or Seven, if you really wanted to be technical.
What is your most prized material possession?
Hmm...that's a good question. I really don't have anything that I haven't or couldn't do without, and there are a lot of things that I really like, like my Changeling: the Dreaming collection, the spiffy drawing I got from Stephanie Gladden (of Hopster's Tracks) at MFM one year or this painting I bought from
What item, that you currently own, have you had the longest?
This one's easy: Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Ryrie Brink. It was this biography of Brink's grandmother as a child, taken from stories told to her from her mom and grandmom. Really great 'frontier' children's book...I've had it since 5th grade (1989 or so).
Are you a packrat?
Yes. I'm slowly learning to get rid of stuff I don't *truly* need, though.
Do you prefer a spic-and-span clean house? Or is some clutter necessary to avoid the appearance of a museum?
Well, I'm in a period of transition. :) I have a natural tendency towards clutter, but I've been seeing the benefits of having a pretty clean place. Not too austere, just clutter enough to be 'lived in' without making it seem junky. This look can be achieved with a surprising minimum of stuff, though.