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Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus

Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
I suppose it is inevitable that a journey through a dozen countries would include transportation from a variety of planes, trains and automobiles. Including days where the itinerary reads something like spend all waking hours on a bus. All part of the adventure! Our first long bus ride was the journey to cross Laos, from Vientiane to Luang Prabang – from the new capital to the old capital. And from the last two updates, you might think I’m ready to whinge about being completely uncomfortable, worried about a million species of small insects and really wishing I was one of those lucky people who have never experienced travel sickness. But I promise you right now: I shall not be saying any such thing. For I may have left a bit more of my heart in Laos than I ever left in San Francisco.

Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
There are those who love to research every little detail of a place before they arrive, so they can be fully aware and recognise what they see, almost as if they have been there before and are just visiting home after many years. I’ve been that person sometimes. On this trip, I really am not. I’m reading a lot as we go, and I have a big habit of jotting down the names of various places we might see during the day then plugging them into Wikipedia the next time we grab some wi-fi access. (It’s a little different but I’m actually quite enjoying that system!) Of all the countries we’re visiting, Laos was the biggest unknown quantity. Neither of us had been there before and neither of us read much about it. I think it was mentioned in one single lesson of my high school history classes. I’m not sure how many Westerners could point to it on a map, much less tell me what to expect there.

Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
Which makes it the perfect place to cross by bus, during the day, to get an idea of exactly what lies on the line between those two points. Small villages set by the road, happy to make a few sales to the buses that pass a few times a day. Homes made from grass but accompanied by satellite dishes. Scenery that includes mountains and valleys, blue skies and moody clouds, jungle and prairie.

Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
As much as my poor head can’t fathom why I would want to sit on a vehicle that continues to zig and zag around tight corners and climb and descend enough that my ears don’t know whether to pop or unpop, my more sentimental side was amazed to see little mountain scenes like this that reminded me of Iceland but with an entirely different climate. That alone may explain why I fell in love with Laos. Oh how I can wax lyrical about Iceland all the livelong day, I promise.

Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
But also because there is a sheer happiness here that does what this kind of travel should do: refresh the soul and put things into perspective. Once the bus rounded this corner, this little girl turned and ran to our windows with the biggest smile, just waving as fast as her hands could. That smile is one we saw all over this country. Especially from children – children who don’t have a toy box filled with gizmos or the latest pair of shoes. There’s a great deal of imperfection here for children too. So much. Please don’t think that my go-first-read-second approach to this place left me with that much naivete. But there is just this little bit of something right to see happiness in simplicity. Something much sweeter than many things we have seen elsewhere along our journey. For this bus ride, anyway, it was a little contagious. I found I was still smiling even when our bus broke down at the side of the road and we had an hour or so of sitting still while the driver bashed at some whatsits with a hammer until we could drive again.

Travel Notes on Crossing Laos by bus
Plus, it’s not so often that when you break down at the side of the road, this is the view from your window. My head was happy for the chance to stop moving for a little while anyway.

More about what we found when our bus eventually arrived soon. But crafty stuff first.

xlovesx

Scrapbooking giveaway winner

scrapbooking giveaway winner
scrapbooking giveaway winner
Congratulations to Rachel, who wins a selection of paint dabbers and ink pads from the Jenni Bowin for Ranger collection! Rachel, email me (shimelle at gmail dot com) with your mailing address pretty please.

Thanks for all your entries! Is it wrong that with almost every type of sweets you mentioned as your favourite, I went ‘mmmm’? Darn my sweet tooth!

New giveaway next weekend so there’s another chance to win – don’t forget!

xlovesx

Scrapbooking giveaway day

scrapbooking giveaway day

Here’s a new giveaway for this weekend: goodies from the Jenni Bowlin for Ranger collection! One commenter will win a prize pack of paint dabbers and ink pads in Jenni Bowlin’s signature colours, created by Ranger Ink!

To enter, leave a comment on this post. Tell us which flavour/colour of sweets you would pick from a bowl! (Don’t worry, they are imaginary and therefore calorie-free!)

Entries close Sunday at midnight UK time. Good luck!

xlovesx

Five ideas with the Martha Stewart Butterfly Punch

5 scrapbooking ideas with the martha stewart butterfly punch
5 scrapbooking ideas with the martha stewart butterfly punch
Today the lovely Leanne Inkpen is joining us for a guest post about one of my favourite scrapbooking tools: the butterfly punch! I love cropping with Leanne and her ideas never fail to inspire me, so I hope you love her creativity just as much! Take it away, Leanne!

So it might be kind of obvious when you look over my recent layouts that I love butterflies. Even my little man has butterflies on his page on a regular occurrence. The Martha Stewart butterfly punch is my go to embellishment. It works in so many ways and always works well. And seeing as I love to use my punch so much I thought it would be cool to see what else can be done with the punch rather than just adding to a page for a bit of interest – though this is still my fave thing to do!

Butterflies in a frame
First off a framed picture, you could use your favourite papers at the moment or ones which match your decor. I’ve stuck this straight done to a piece of kraft but if you have a shadow box frame this would look great with them stuck on 3-D foam. I only had a small frame at home but I think a larger frame would look amazing. This would also work with any other fave punch you have. I’m thinking of doing one for my son’s room using stars instead of butterflies.

5 scrapbooking ideas with the martha stewart butterfly punch
Use the negative
A layout using the punch in a slightly different way, instead of using the punched element I used the butterfly negative. I started off by punching a whole strip out of a 12×12 sheet of cardstock, which eventually got cut down to the strip of 3 used behind the title. I then chose patterned paper to sit behind the negative. I wanted this layout to be really bright, but the butterfly embellishment was not working when I tried bright cardstock as well. By using a darker tone really helped pull the layout together, and made the butterflies stand out.

5 scrapbooking ideas with the martha stewart butterfly punch
String a garland
Paper garlands are very on trend at the moment, and didn’t go the whole way of getting the sewing machine out to make mine (anyone who knows me knows i have a slight fear of sewing machines, even though I dream of creating gorgeous fabric items for home). Instead I used some bakers twine and glued punched out circles back to back with punched butterflies on top. I then gave them a quick spritz of a Mister Huey. I think this is very pretty. Just got to decide where to hang it now.

5 scrapbooking ideas with the martha stewart butterfly punch
Tone-on-tone card
If you are like me and have in the past made the odd card here and there, people soon come to expect a handmade card. Because of this I have developed a quick but impressive design I can use and adapt. I actually made a similar card for Laura when she got married, and when I told her about my idea to write a guest post about the Martha Stewart punch, she suggested that I made another card like it. So here is a similar card! Extremely quick but looks fancy. I just punched kraft butterflies and attached them with foam squares onto a kraft background. I inked the edges using a distress ink in brown. I have in the past done white on white butterflies but inked in brighter colours. This card there is a ‘flock’ of butterflies (not sure this is the right terminology for them!) but you could do it more uniform like the frame if you prefer. I hand wrote a greeting again on kraft, but stamped or printed would work just as well.

5 scrapbooking ideas with the martha stewart butterfly punch
Design your own patterned paper
And finally. I am a recent user of mists and spray inks, but I am fast falling in love with them. What I loved about using them on this project as it unified all the patterned papers together. My initial idea for this page was to make my own patterned paper using punched butterflies, but I opted for a small panel instead of a whole sheet. This is great for using up scraps. I went through my scrap bag and pulled out papers that co ordinated. I punched out a load of butterflies and then glues them onto white card. After this, I sprayed them with the lime green maya road mist. I then trimmed the panel down to size. Make sure you stick your butterflies on a larger area than you intend to use, so that when you trim the panel you have that patterned paper look. If you don’t have any mists, this would still look great without. I opted for pinks and greens as this was the colour theme for Laura’s wedding.

I hope this has inspired you to think up new and exciting ways to use those punches rather than just for the added dimension.

And for those of you who love the Martha Stewart butterflies, you might want to check out her newest butterfly addition: the classic design in an anywhere punch format, so you can use it right in the middle of the page or anywhere else you would like!






Hi, My name is Leanne Inkpen and I am a paper addict. There you go I said it. I love scrapbooking and have been doing so for about five years. There are so many things I love about this hobby (paper being one of them!) Through it I have made some wonderful friends, have a great support network and mostly I love recording the memories and taking the photos. I have been with my boyfriend for nearly ten years and he just proposed! Happy Times. We also have a rather lovely little boy together which has really changed my approach to scrapping. I love looking back at my albums and pages, it really does bring the memories alive again.

You can read more about Leanne on her blog.

Travel Notes from Vientiane, Laos

travel notes from vientiane laos
travel notes from vientiane laos
Just like that, we woke up one morning on the northeast border of Thailand and made our way to the Friendship Bridge. It looks like nothing more than the standard way to make a motorway cross a river, but the idea of a bridge of friendship, you have to be pretty cynical to not see some bit of sweetness in such a name. Cross the bridge, fill in some paperwork, present your passport and presto: welcome to Laos.

Everyone says you’re crossing from Nong Khai to Vientiane, which is roughly true. True in the sense that those are the nearest towns, but you’ll need a tuk-tuk to get you from the town of Nong Khai to the border, a bus to cross the bridge and your choice of tuk, taxi or another bus to take you from the border to Vientiane itself. After an hour or so comprised of tuk-tuk transportation, a bus piled with people and their chickens and a bit of an adventure in the back of a pick-up truck (something I have relatively little experience with, considering I grew up in Kansas), we are finally in Vientiane. And we have been taken to the road of our hotel, and our driver roughly points ahead and says it must be somewhere down there. ‘This is the road but I no know that hotel.’ Looking down a street that doesn’t seem like it will end until it falls into the sea, we start walking, trying to figure out the numbering system in this particular locale.

travel notes from vientiane laos
Laos Cable: A house with a bunch of satellite dishes in the front garden. Of course.

Oh, street numbering. Some towns are pure bliss, with odd numbers on one side and evens on the other, and everything ascending by one or five, so very simple to decipher. Alas, somewhere along the line, that system required forward planning. Not all towns have embraced such a radical idea. Other towns have numbered the buildings on a given street in the order they were built, regardless of their location on the road, meaning number 17 is quite possibly next to number 342 then followed by 57. Still other towns have more mystical numerical systems, with the owner of each property consulting a priest to find which number his house is destined to be, meaning that number 17 is quite possibly next to another number 17, since it’s quite unlikely that the priest was keeping any sort of list of which numbers he had already allocated on any given road. And to think I once had a lengthy conversation trying to explain how if the street where I grew up only had about ten houses on each side, our house number could be in the 17000s. That system pales in comparison to auspicious apartment numbers, I tell you.

travel notes from vientiane laos
Anyway, we figure out the numbering of this street – or at least some pattern that seems to be working – and realise we have been walking the wrong direction. We should probably go in the opposite way to what we were told by the truck driver. Of course, when we do, we see the name of our hotel in gigantic lighted letters, high above anything else in our field of vision. Well, at least we are now sure we are not lost.

travel notes from vientiane laos
Vientiane is the capital city of Laos. The official buildings are mostly in a French colonial style, though the only other French influence that still seems evident is in the cooking (never a bad thing). This town has become to southeast Asia what Brussels is to Europe – so there are diplomats here and plenty of embassies and meeting halls and the occasional unbelievably expensive car, like a shiny Aston-Martin or Rolls Royce, rolling down the road with thirty year old sedans that really wish their upholstery was still made with something other than duct tape. Calling it Brussels makes it sound like a significantly sized place. It isn’t. One can walk all of Vientiane in a day or two. Almost everyone seems to do this by bicycle, which might make it possible to see everything by lunchtime, perhaps. It’s a bit like a capital town rather than a city, and that is quite sweet really.

But there are things here that are not sweet. Like the street we nicknamed ‘Open Sewer Avenue’, for the sidewalk is paved there, but every so often there’s an entire section of paving missing and absolutely nothing – except the open sewer system – to catch you if you’re not looking at the ground. I have to admit we quickly learned another way to get from A to B to bypass Open Sewer Avenue completely, and I would suggest anyone who wants to keep their head up do the same frankly.

Our overnight stop in Nong Khai was my introduction to backpacker lodging. The sort of place where everyone is friendly and happy to talk about their journey and doesn’t really care where you come from or where you live. But also the sort of place where you need a flashlight to unlock the door to your room, where the mosquito netting is for practical reasons rather than to make your room feel aesthetically exotic and where the air-conditioned rooms are pretty much always available rather than being the first rooms to be booked. Oh, and when you check in? You don’t give a check-out date. You just decide when you’re going to leave and let them know that day, be it one night or ninety. It’s a whole other world to Howard Johnson’s, for sure.

travel notes from vientiane laos
Between sleeper trains, backpacker central and all that communal transportation in the heat, I managed to hit my threshold of OH MY GOODNESS I AM NEARLY NOT HUMAN right about the time we checked into our hotel in Vientiane. A hotel with a perfumed lobby. And check out dates. And hot showers. A blow-dryer, a kettle and laundry service. It wasn’t what anyone back home would define as a fancy hotel, but I was ready to rate it right up there with the Ritz. I do believe I danced with the hair-dryer like something out of a chick flick, celebrating the first time in a bit over a week that I had been able to do something somewhat respectable with my hair.

Wait. A bit over a week? Nine days into this trip and I’m already freaking out about the hairdryer? Goodness me, how am I going to make it to Argentina at this rate?

Taking a deep breath (and joyfully, it was a deep breath of steam from the hot shower!) I made some sort of decision: I will take what I can get when I can get it. And I will agree to just get over the rest. Exhale.

I resolve that it is okay to dance with the hairdryer when one appears, and spend the extra ten minutes constructing some hilariously inappropriate-for-backpacking hairdo as a result. I resolve that it is okay to indulge in the cheapest manicures I’ve ever seen when I find one and have time (so far, that has meant a £4 mani/pedi in Vientiane and a £1 manicure in a Saigon market). I resolve to not let it phase me when yet another backpacker asks me ‘really, you’re doing this trip in a dress?’ and to not feel ashamed of the glory of a hot shower, the smallest bit of make up, chick lit to read on the bus, window shopping and the occasional pink cocktail.

At the same time, I accept these things will not be available every day. I accept the entire world does not share my need for pristine public toilets. I will learn to check my food for bugs before I dig in. I will not whine excessively about how my feet have more blisters than when I wore pointe shoes every day.* I will understand that sometimes you have to step just a tiny bit into the unknown in order to get anything from an adventure. Without the unknown, there is no adventure at all.

travel notes from vientiane laos
Vientiane is a small place. The most obvious tourist spot is a sort of Laotian Arc de Triumph that was never finished with a sign that describes it as a ‘monster of concrete’. There’s that, a few temples, a few government buildings, a pretty view of the Mekong and Open Sewer Avenue. It’s nice enough, but not exactly the sort of place where you need to stay ages to get a feel for everything.

Just long enough to catch that deep breath. Then onto the next stop with an entirely new outlook.

xlovesx

*To those of you with a special concern for my health and well-being, I promise at the time of writing my feet are a bit blistered, but perfectly fine, I have only eaten bugs once that I know of and it ended up not being a problem (and The Boy has actually ordered bugs on purpose!), and I have mostly perfected a system to cope with scary toilets. Oh, and I have only had one pink cocktail too, actually. You can sleep without worry.

Scrapbooking Sketch of the week

scrapbooking sketch and layout idea
scrapbooking sketch and layout idea
Layout ©twopeasinabucket.com. Click here for supply list.

While we’re at it with new things for the new year, how about this: one sketch + example layout each week, just for fun? Nice and simple, and to your own interpretation. No need to participate every week (unless you want to!), so you can follow along when you fancy, when it suits you and use any supplies (paper or digital) and photos that you like. What could be easier?

This week’s sketch is from a layout I made recently for the garden at Two Peas and it’s all about one photo plus plenty of patterned paper. Once all the papers are popped into place, there are just three accents. I went with one design in several sizes, and of course, each one features a punched butterfly. But that’s just me – you can of course use anything you fancy!

scrapbooking sketch and layout ideas
If you create something based on this sketch, leave a link in the comments. I’d love to highlight some pages each week, so please share!

And just like that, it’s so simple, I think I’m done with this post! Happy scrapping – I hope you like this simple new addition to each week.

xlovesx

Papercraft tutorial :: Making a birdcage card

papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
Today I’m happy to introduce Sandy Ang, a scrapper with Singapore with a great idea for making a paper birdcage! I hope you enjoy Sandy’s tutorial.

Sandy here to share my Caged Bouquet card with you.

It’s inspired by the popular bird cage trend and is a challenge to myself to recreate the cage’s curvature on a card. It went out to Holly Lefevre who featured me on her blog. She was sweet enough to say it’s on display at her house where she can admire its beauty everyday.

To create this card, I used the following supplies:
Paper – K&Co. Life Journey, Jenny Bowlin Vintage Bookprint Black, g.c.d studios Artsy Urban, yellow cardstock
Embellishments – K&Co English Floral Frames & Stickers, g.c.d studios Artsy Urban die-cut borders
Others – Tattered Angels Glimmer Mist Sweet Clover

You can, of course, use any supplies you fancy to create your own birdcage! Here’s how:

papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
Start with a 8.5“x5” paper. Leave a 1” tab and cut eight 1/2” wide slits, each bar being 1/8” wide.

papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
Prepare your bouquet, top trim and bottom trim. I used a mix of paper and stickers, and made the trims with a big scalloped edge.

papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
Cut the top and bottom brackets. I’ve misted mine to match the g.c.d studios border.

papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
Assemble the birdcage with strong adhesive.

papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card
Finally glue onto the yellow cardstock base. The curve is created by wrapping a 4” rectangle over a 3.5” base, best shown in this shot from an unconventional angle.

No birds in my cage, just some blowsy English roses visited by fluttering butterflies.
papercraft tutorial :: birdcage card






Sandy Ang is a crafter from sunny, little Singapore who loves card-making, paper construction and creating altered objects. She is the resident designer for Singaporean brand KCK. You can find more of her work on her blog.

Scrapbooking giveaway winner

scrapbooking giveaway winner
Thanks to Everyday Keepsakes, we have two winners for the latest giveaway.
Congratulations to..
scrapbooking giveaway winner
scrapbooking giveaway winner

Serene and Sylv, please email me (shimelle at gmail dot com) so I can put you in touch with Meredith at Everyday Keepsakes! You each get to choose what you would like with your $50 gift certificates. Enjoy!

If you weren’t a winner this week, please try again next weekend with a new giveaway! And check out Everyday Keepsakes for a great gift or a little something for yourself!

xlovesx