Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Two more postcards!


Here are 2 more postcards I have been working on. TONIGHT IS THE LAST NIGHT I WORK ON COLOR...(insert creepy smile)... I had to tell my teacher that I sent a few of my projects away and she seemed to "understand". She really just laughed at me. Whatever, I am an artist, I do weird stuff. The best part about ending color class is that I am making a GIANT cupcake - cake for class on Thursday with multi-colored frosting! SO EXCITING!

Still on the topic of postcards, Tsuts got her postcard and apparently it made her day. What can I say? Its what I do.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Its snowing in my living room!





Yesterday, I came home to my roommates, Lucy and Nicole, declaring that we will be conducting a "craft corner" and by this they meant that we would be making A MILLION snowflakes to decorate our windows. As we cut out beautiful and creative snowflakes, we watched the movie "Elf" for inspiration. We clearly got carried away and decided to hang our snowflakes from the ceiling of our living room. It looks like a winter wonderland blizzard! Ironically, last night it actually snowed! Now it really feels like winter. Thank god I live with art students.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

More postcards!





Apparently, making postcards during my color class has helped me focus A LOT! I am finally enjoying the class and have been able to use my papercutting skills and applying it to collage. Yesterday our substitute professor, Daniel Abrams, really enjoyed them and suggested that I make a bunch and sell them in bundles for the holiday season...not a bad idea. If anyone is interested let me know! Here are three of my most recent postcards.


Monday, November 30, 2009

TURKEY TROT!


This Thanksgiving was incredible. My best friend, Shavit, got a pardon from the IDF to come to the states to visit his sick grandmother. Instead of seeing her, he stayed with me for the majority of the time. I convinced him to run the Prospect Park 5 mile turkey trot with me. He beat me by 2 minutes but I am still happy that I finished in under and hour. This photo is a) proof that we finished (and got swanky medals) and b) amazing to analyze Shavit's running fashion. Anyways, here is my "Thankful" list.

I am thankful for:
- Long underwear
- Overalls
- Leah's closets and sock drawers
- Sid
- Anna's vegan baking
- Shif and Josh bar nights
- My roommates in Ann Arbor
- Yonit's closet of costumes
- Bad TV
- My parents (for everything)
- Tofurkey
- Being able to run
- Being 21!
- Skype
- Working showers
- Shavit
- Sava's $1 veggie burgers on Mondays
- Cranberry sauce
- Airplanes
- Scandinavia
- Bicycles
- NYC
- Israel
- Apple sauce
- Yiddish
- Tsutsi
- The other YV girls
- Scarves
- Leah
- Blogs

and warm winter boots!



Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Postcards



I have had a bit of trouble concentrating in my color class. I really just don't care (even though I know I should). I seem to just be bored in the class and try to finish projects as soon as possible or put them off and deal with them last minute... and it shows. So I decided that instead, I would make my projects for friends and people I care about. This seems to be helping since I know it is a "gift". These are two "free studies" that I have turned into postcards. The orange one is for Sarah in North Carolina and the blue one is for Natalie in Brooklyn. They are my closest friends from my program in Denmark and we have been corresponding via postcards (a form of communication we fell in love with while being abroad). Hopefully my teacher won't mind that I am sending my project in the mail before I actually turn it in for a grade (she is getting a scanned copy...eek!) I also hope Sarah and Natalie don't read this blog post until after they receive these via snail mail.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

The Reluctant Dragon


My roommate, lucy and I are slightly obsessed with Disney's "The Reluctant Dragon" and the poem that is recited called "Upside down cake"

"Poor little upside down cake,
Troubles? You've got 'em!
For your bottom's on your top, 
And your top is on your bottom!

Poor little upside down cake,
Your troubles never stop!
For your top is on your bottom,
And your bottom's on your top!"

Monday, October 26, 2009

Tis the season to bake vegan pumpkin cookies!


Today, after eating an amazing piece of vegan apple pie that the fabulous Anna Foster had baked last night for breakfast and spending lunch with her at the food coop, I went to class and decided that today is the perfect day to bake cookies. My reasoning is that I love pumpkin (especially since its almost Halloween) and because I feel that this ceramics class I am taking Monday and Wednesday mornings is a support group for vegans (while eating Anna's crazy delicious baking). So today was the day to make Vegan Pumpkin cookies! I would just like to add that my neighbor and friend, Drake, ran over to my house because she read on facebook that I was baking...yeah they are THAT good! Here is the recipe for all of you to enjoy!

Ingredients:
1/2 cup of shortening
1 -1  1/2 cups of sugar
1/4 cup of soy yogurt (vanilla or plain...I use plain)
1 can of canned pumpkin 
1 tsp vanilla extract
2  1/2 cups of flour (whole wheat or all purpose)
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
a pinch of salt
1 tsp ground nutmeg
2 tsps ground cinnamon
1 cup of vegan (or regular) chocolate chips
1/2 cup of chopped walnuts

Directions:
1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F  and grease cookie sheets.
2. In a large bowl, cream together the shortening ad sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the soy yogurt, then stir in the pumpkin and vanilla.
3. In another bowl combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon.
4. Gradually stir into the creamed mixture.
5. Stir in the walnuts and chocolate chips.
6. Drop dough by teaspoonsfulls onto the cookie sheet. (they expand)
7. Bake for 15-20 minutes, until toothpick comes out clean.
8. Cool on wire racks
9. EAT AND ENJOY!

* This recipe was an adaptation from a recipe I got from vegweb.com ... but I think mine is better!

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Autumn and the Farmers Market





AUTUMN IS HERE! I love autumn in Ann Arbor for so many reasons. First of all, all of campus looks so beautiful and all the streets look dressed up. The other main reason I love autumn, is because the farmer's market is FANTASTIC! I have become an avid shopper of local and organic produce. Since I have been traveling almost every weekend, I have missed my out on my weekly Shabbos walk and shop at the farmer's market. However, they are also on Wednesdays! So I go in between classes for my veggies. Here are a few pictures of all the goodies that are sold  and the beautiful trees in the neighborhood where I live.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Haircut?



I spent this past weekend in St. Louis at the Olshan residence (Yonit Olshan = roommate and best friend). It was really great to fly back and have Monday and Tuesday off (THANK GOD FOR FALL BREAK!) so today feels like Sunday. Yesterday, Lucy and I decided to get haircuts and mine got chopped off! I thought it was time for a change. Now that I am not scared of people other than my family "hair cutter" ,Elise,  I thought "why not?". So this is the result.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Vegan Cupcakes!



On Tuesday I was notified that my teacher was sick and cancelled class and I wasn't expected to go to my other class so I did what any hungry college student would do, I baked! Some of you know that I have very strange dietary restrictions due to my extremely high cholesterol, so I have become a vegan by default. Tuesday morning, I baked vegan chocolate cupcakes with chocolate frosting! They were moist, tasty and delicious... everyone loved them and so would you. That is why I am going to give you the recipe.

1 cup soy or rice milk
1 tsp vinegar (I used apple vinegar)
3/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup vegetable oil
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup flour
1/3 cup cocoa powder
3/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt

1. Preheat the oven to 350 F and prepare a dozen muffin cups  in muffin tin/pan.
2. In a large mixing bowl, stir together the soy/rice milk, vinegar, sugar, veggie oil and vanilla extract. In another bowl, stir the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Sift the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients and make sure to get rid of all the large lumps.
3. Pour the batter into the cupcake liners until they are about 2/3 full. Bake for 20 minutes or until you poke the cupcake with a toothpick and it comes out clean.
4. Cool for 10 minutes -THEN ITS FROSTING TIME!

1 cup margarine
4 cups of powdered sugar
2 tbsp vanilla
4 tbsp soy/rice milk
1/2 cup of cocoa powder
dash of salt

1. Margarine should be at room temperature when placed in bowl.
2. Blend until mushy and then add powdered sugar, salt, vanilla, chocolate and soy/rice milk.
3. Spread on each cupcake!

I should warn you all that I had a lot of frosting left over so if you want to divide this recipe in half you might get by with enough for each cupcake. 

* I found these recipes from the New York Times and VegWeb.com


Tuesday, October 13, 2009

A mini adventure to Chicago

This past weekend I headed to Chicago for two reasons. One of my best friends, Josh, was running the Chicago marathon, and because I knew that eventually this semester I needed to visit Benna, my long time/childhood Yiddish friend. The weekend started off with a car ride with Josh's roommates and they dropped me off at Benna's apartment. Benna and I caught up on life and played bananagrams until we crashed. In the morning we had a quick breakfast before heading to the north side of Chicago. We were invited to eat in the sukkah of my friend Leana's parents. After stuffing ourselves with loads of food and the Yiddish language, Benna decided to take me to Andersonville, Chicago. She told me it was a quirky neighborhood that is also known for the large amount of lesbians in the area, but when I got out of the train and onto the street, something else caught my eye. In the distance I saw a water tower with the Swedish flag painted on it Swedish flags were waving everywhere! A smile was slapped onto my face as I began to have flashbacks to this past summer in Scandinavia. Every store window there was something about Sweden; It was either a bakery, delicacies, imports, clothing, restaurants...etc.  We even found a Dala horse statue with Stockholm painted on one side and Chicago painted on the other side. We ended up eating Indian food at a vegetarian Indian place. The next morning I left Benna :( really early in the morning and headed to Chinatown to stake out a great spot to see Josh run. My goal was to watch him at mile 20 and then rush to the finish line and watch him finish, but as I watched all the runners zoom by, I apparently missed him and ended up getting in touch with his sister because I thought he got hurt. Thank got he didn't get hurt but instead he ran right by me and I didn't even see him. Sad story, but I met the whole family and friends at the end, got to congratulate and celebrate with dim sum and then headed back to Ann Arbor. 






Monday, October 5, 2009

Interview with Lucy

In my previous post, I wrote about Lucy, one of my housemates and photographed her latest project. This is an interview I conducted with her about it.

Shif: "What was the assignment for this project?"
Lucy: "Good question...find a cultural significant wearable item and either use it as a starting point for what was supposed to be a small, quick project, but I don't do small quick projects. If I wanted to do a small quick project I could do that on my own time, but I like to over achieve as you can see (she is currently on the floor of her room making a 3D structured collage)"
Shif: "What was your inspiration?"
Lucy: "So my particular project, I had a really hard time thinking of something to do cause I usually over think my projects. So during my sophomore review, Ed West told me that my projects that are more successful were the more fun and silly than conceptual and profound. For this project I decided to work off the idea of Native American head dresses, which were never a traditional part of their garb and instead were made for the public eye. So I decided to make a birdcage hat that was over the top and glittery and not functional and the cages aren't made for any use or purpose. It was really fun to do and I don't usually work in 3D mediums so I kinda was just winging it and it worked out really well actually. Its the most stable thing I ever mad and it smells like Michaels."
Shif: "How did you go about creating this piece?"
Lucy: "Well, at first I wanted to make the cages circular, but soon realized you cannot make a circle out of something flat or in sheet form, which was kind of like a "duh" moment. I should have thought of that first. Instead, I decided to make a tube shape, which makes sense, and they are the shape of cages that they made in the colonial times to catch animals and show what they have caught ... and then I struggled with the hat part. I had purchased a fishing hat which I would cut the brim off and hope it would magically work but it didn't. So I made a band of fabric and sewed it onto my hat, sewed the cages to my hat and wired the cages together which makes it way more stable. Then I put the glitter foliage on the hat, actually while it was on my head. I went into the unisex bathroom and just attached it. And used what Sam Hanson taught me about hot glue. If you get hot glue on your hand, just put it in your mouth and it will stop hurting isn't that cool?"
Shif: "Haha, really? Thats crazy! So it was a big hit in your class?"
Lucy: "Yeah it was a huge hit and I actually wore it in class during the critique. Surprisingly enough, they figured out what it was and its a shame we didn't have more time to critique it but it was really fun."

Friday, October 2, 2009

Meet one of my roommates, Lucy.

I would like to introduce one of my roommates and a fellow second floor dweller, Lucy Engelman. She is also an art student at the University of Michigan and is currently taking a course called "Arts and Bodies". This class discusses different cultures and how what they see as normal or important to their own culture or upbringing is seen differently through the eyes of other cultures and nationalities. I will conduct an interview with Lucy regarding her last project in this class, and post it for all of you to read. Until then, here are a few photos of her birdcage hat and the lovely model is Lucy herself.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Yellow Circus

I decided to dedicate this post to Brittany Watson, one of my friends from the program I did this summer in Copenhagen (DIS). I just moved into a new house this September and have been able to paint our rooms! Brittany has a slight obsession with the color yellow and it may have rubbed off on me. I painted these yellow stripes on the white walls of my funky shaped room and according to one of my roommates, Sydney, refers to it as the "yellow circus".

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Welcome to the new blog!

Hello everyone!

I have decided that I loved blogging so much and I would actually start one for everyday things and not just on my travels (though I plan to create individual blogs for specific travels in the future). I have been inspired to continue and will do so on various things, whether it be events in my life, interests, projects I am working on or anything else. This specific post is dedicated to Sherri Smith, my fiber arts professor. Sherri is a bit crazy, sometimes in a good way and sometimes not so. She has other interests besides fibers and they include birds and mushrooms (to eat). Yesterday as I was working on my print in class, she made it clear that she had gone mushroom hunting and found hen of the woods mushrooms and was planning on giving a portion to whomever wanted. Since I now cook 90% of my meals, I was enthusiastic about receiving not only free food but another ingredient to experiment with in the kitchen. I followed Sherri to where she was keeping the fungus and was shocked when she opened the large paper bag and revealed the giant mushroom! She cut me off a portion and a centipede crawled out from inside! I screamed and then quickly wrapped it up in paper to bring home and cook. It was rather tasty if I do say so myself!
The content in this image is around 20% of the original mushroom.