Follow Me On Twitter

Thursday, October 20, 2011

I'm Listing Like Crazy on Ebay (mikenmelody92) - Vintage, Designer - Clothes, Clothes, Clothes!

Here's just a sample of what I'm listing right now on Ebay. I've got tons more to list...more to come daily...Ralph Lauren, Chico's, Coldwater Creek, Talbots, Ann Taylor, Levi's, Disney, Pendleton, Venezia, London Fog, Banana Republic, J Jill, Apple Bottoms, Vintage coats and jackets, High-end designers like Richard Tyler & Issey Miyake too!  And you can't beat my prices - no way!  Go to my Ebay page and click on the left side, Items for Sale:  http://myworld.ebay.com/mikenmelody92

 Girls Apple Bottoms Jeans sz 14
 Ann Taylor Jacket
 Ann Taylor Shirt XL
 Banana Republic wool sweater Sz Large
 Issey Miyake vintage pleats pants - Japanese designer


 Talbots sweaters

 Pendleton jackets
 Talbots jackets
 Talbots pants


 Chicos Travelers Jacket sz 3
 Chico's sleeveless top

 Disney Tinkerbell jacket
 Silk jacket
 Wool coats
 Worthington gold metallic top
 Pendleton
 Lauren by Ralph Lauren linen top Sz XL

 Levi's 550 purple jeans
 Richard Tyler Couture skirt sz 12
 London Fog Sz 20 trench coat
 Talbots linen pants
 Talbots jeans
 Sophisticates by Pendleton blazer
 Venezia for Lane Bryant sz 18 black jeans
Vintage wool coat

I'm listing up a storm right now, so check me out on Ebay:  mikenmelody92

I've got everything from Apple Bottoms to Worthington....Vintage and Designer to Classic Casual and work clothing.  Awesome stuff - if it all fit me, it would be in my closet right now!  :)

Cute Packaging Matters!


Unboxing Desire: The Psychology Behind Packaging

This might sound crazy — in fact, I know it will. But do yourself a favor, park your tuchus in any section of a retail store, and watch how people shop. “But Chappell,” you say, “I don’t want to be a creepy stalker like you.” Don’t worry, just be as discreet as possible — trench coats: optional — and watch how shoppers pick up products, testing their weight while carefully reading item descriptions. There is infinite entertainment in watching how shoppers determine what to buy — one person might buy a toaster simply because it comes with a red paint finish, and another chooses towels through a vigorous terrycloth-to-cheek methodology. While there are many factors that influence our purchasing decisions, there’s no doubt that the way a product is packaged plays a huge role.
Countless studies have concluded the same thing: the better an object looks on the shelf, the more likely we are to take it home. Just consider a store display of iPods — rows of impeccably molded plastic cases, almost just as desirable as the product inside. Yet knowing all of this did not prepare me for running across the unboxing trend — short, first-person videos of buyers unpacking recently purchased items. While most of the videos tend to focus on electronics, they run the gamut from packaged foods tofeminine hygiene products. So what is it about packaging that compels us to fetishize it just as much as the product housed within?
There is, in fact, a deep-rooted history behind the psychology of packaging. When Henry P. Crowell packaged what would later become Quaker Oats, he marketed them as “pure” by comparison with oats sold out of barrels in late 19th century general stores. By the 1950s, purity became a symbol of civilized supermarkets, where bruised fruit and dented cans were quickly removed. “In the First World,” writes Susan Willis in a study on commodity packaging, “the package is a fetishized sign of the desire for purity, which, in the fullest sense, is also a desire for security.”
The desire to rip open the packaging and pull out the object in proud wonderment is engrained in buyers from an early age. It is an act that, when considering product packaging, you might equate with gift wrapping. However, as Willis reminds us, the two are radically different: ”The anticipation we associate with the gift-wrapped present is for the unknown object. In anticipating a plastic-wrapped commodity, we imagine the experience of its use since its identity is already revealed.” When it comes to the imagination, we simply can’t help it — when we see a shiny, packaged product on the shelf, we envision putting it to use and how it would potentially improve everyday life.
We’ve all had our run-ins with effective packaging design. You might have oohed and aahed over the unboxing of a new iPod, opening its packaging as if it were a jewel case. Or you are all too familiar with the maddening frenzy that results from a seemingly impenetrable, heat-sealed plastic shell. Like a primate struggling with cracking a coconut, we resort to sharp objects — scissors, car keys — to free our purchase from its PVC prison. Perhaps nowhere is this hysteria so well documented as it is in a scene from Curb Your Enthusiasm, in which Larry David sinks into pure desperation as he struggles to release a new GPS system from its packaging (see above).
More than just an over-the-top, humorous observation about life, Larry’s depravity reveals just how packaging dangerously stokes our desire for the product within, reverting our civil manners to their caveman-like roots. This violent reaction to seeing and ultimately realeasing a desired object from its packaging is exactly what keeps companies designing newer, shiner boxes for their products. But over the coming years, alternative packaging solutions will certainly be a big topic as we try to get on better terms with Mother Nature. For now, we’ll have to weather the storm, recognizing when it’s the product we want, or the shiny case it comes in.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

See My Newly Made Silver Goth Romantic Cross Skull & Fleur de Lis Necklace Pendants!

 Romantic Heart Flower & Skull Pendant  $20
 Gorgeous Heart Cross and Flower Pendant $22
 Scrollwork Heart and Beaded Flower Pendant $18
Beautiful, Romantic Hearts, Fleur de Lis and Cross Silver Pendant $24
Amazing Silver Heart with Cross Pendant $16

I'm so excited about these new pendants I'm making!  They're all silver with either a silver & bead flower or a fleur de lis charm on the back, so they look cute even if they flip while being worn.

I'm adding more as we speak, so please check out my shop:  http://www.natureangels.etsy.com/ to check out all my silver pendants & cross necklaces.  Considering the work that goes into making them, they're priced to sell - Add them to your Christmas list!

Thursday, September 29, 2011

I've Just Added All These Beautiful Crosses To My Shop - I Love Them!













Thanks for checking out all my new Cross and Crucifix Pendant Necklaces I just added to my Etsy shop!

http://www.natureangels.etsy.com/

I just love them and am having so much fun making them out of silver, jade and glass beads, etc...
I've priced them from $40 to $48, depending on my cost of supplies, so they're very reasonably priced for Christmas gifts, for other holiday gifts, or to treat yourself  ;)

I can't wait to get my hands on some more cross pendants so I can get back to work - these have really inspired me and gotten my creative juices flowing.

Enjoy!

OMG, this sounds so good! I know what I'm doing this weekend!

http://www.etsy.com/blog/en/2011/how-to-make-chocolates/?ref=fp_blog_title

How to Make Chocolates


Based in both Paris and Amsterdam, Yvette van Boven works as an illustrator, food stylist and recipe writer. Her first cookbook, Home Made, brings together over 200 from-scratch recipes in one beautifully illustrated collection. Together with her cousin Joris Vermeer, she has a restaurant and catering service in Amsterdam called Aan de Amstel. She is very fond of eating oysters, but today she’ll teach us how to make chocolates. Here’s Yvette.
I grew up in Ireland. I am no stranger to writing cookbooks. I wrote my first one when I was four years old. From then on I continued to indulge my almost morbid passion for collecting recipes and cookbooks, preferably illustrated.

My mother and the women on our street made a lot of things with their own hands, out of necessity or by tradition, and my sister and I did the same. We made soda bread, biscuits, shortbread and stew for our toy restaurant. We made ice creams, yoghurt, butterfly cakes, and ginger ale for our dolls or friends.

My mother made everything herself because there simply wasn’t a lot to buy in the stores at that time. She showed me that by making things yourself, you can adjust the flavor to your own taste. Even now, in our restaurant or at home, we make everything from scratch ourselves. I wouldn’t know how to do otherwise.

As far as desserts are concerned, I would say I have a weak spot for bread and butter pudding. I have a recipe for Panettone and custard pudding in the book that uses Italian Panettone bread instead of a regular loaf. This makes the dessert lighter, so you can eat more of it. It also contains prunes soaked in Amaretto…need I say more?

My recipes represent a starting point to help you on your way, but I hope you will make up your own versions and create fresh memories. Be sure to invite me.


Making Chocolates, the Home Made way

When making chocolates, you need some skill. Melting chocolate is just not that easy and you have to acquire some experience. Stirring too much is bad, since the chocolate will become grainy. Heating it too much is also bad, since it will also become dry and grainy. Under all circumstances, the following applies: If at first you don’t succeed, try and try again. And be prepared for some failures. For your first chocolates, stock up on some extra chocolate. Then you can make another batch, no worries! The best temperature for chocolate is 104° F, hence a little warmer than body temperature. Just check with your finger.

Ingredients:
For the ganache:
1/2 cup cream
7 oz chocolate (70% cocoa)
2 tablespoons butter
Cinnamon or liqueur for flavoring
Plastic wrap
Wax paper
For the outside chocolate layer:
7 oz chocolate
4 oz melted white or milk chocolate for decoration
Parchment paper to dry the chocolates
Wax paper for the icing


For the filling (ganache) you need twice as much chocolate as cream: 1/2 cup cream and 7 oz chocolate (70% cocoa).

Heat the cream in a heavy-bottomed saucepan. You can add flavoring such as cinnamon, liqueur, or nothing!

Melt 2 tbsp butter in the hot cream.

Finely chop the chocolate and add it to the cream. Turn off the heat and leave to melt.

Stir the mixture carefully into a glossy smooth mass.

Pour the ganache into a tray lined with plastic wrap and place in the refrigerator for at least two hours.

Transfer to wax paper.

Cut into equal squares.

Melt 7 oz chocolate over a double boiler.

Using a carving fork, quickly dip the ganache in the chocolate...

And leave the chocolates to dry on parchment paper.

Create an icing bag with waxed paper.

Fill it with 4 oz melted white or milk chocolate.

Decorate and leave to dry, then serve with coffee.

Did you enjoy this recipe? For more sumptuous sweets (and savory meals!), pick up a copy of Yvette Van Boven’s Home Made. Abrams Publishing is offering a 30% discount to Etsy readers who buy directly from their site. Simply enter “etsyhomemade” at  checkout. This coupon code expires on October 11, 2011.

 Have you ever made chocolates? What’s your favorite type of sweet?

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

My First Festival / Market is this Weekend in Humble, TX

Well, Peeps....Wish us Luck.....Mom & I are gonna give the festival thing a try this weekend at Trade Days in Humble, TX.  I'll have my handmade jewelry and upcycled purses/journals/dayplanners for sale, and Mom will have her gorgeous handmade cards there at a super low price, because she wants some major sales!

Let's hope things go better than the time we tried to sell designer clothing at the flea market in Security, TX....I don't think anyone in that neck of the woods (literally woods) had every heard of Chico's, Coldwater Creek, J Jill, or Talbots.  I sold 1 necklace that day, and we sold no clothing. 

I'm excited to see what Trade Days is like.  It's at the Convention Center on Will Clayton Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  If the weather cooperates, there's supposed to be a pretty good crowd.  I'm interested to see what other vendors show up too.  It should be fun!

UPDATE:  We had a ton of fun at Trade Days, and we're really looking forward to going there again the 3rd weekend in October.  We'll be in booth 17D, so come by and say Hi! 

We met so many awesome vendors and made some sales too, which was exciting. Everyone just loved Mommy's cards and thought they should have been much more expensive.  I agree, totally!

This is a very well run trade fair in my opinion. They allow the vendors to set up Thursday evening, and there is 24 hour security on the site, so you can leave your booth set up all weekend, which is a big help!
We loved it and can't wait to go back! 

I have to admit we did some shopping while we were there, so that kind of cut into our profits, but we couldn't help ourselves. There are so many awesome antique dealers there, as well as jewelry, supplies, 1200 thread count Eqyptian cotton sheets for $20.00 (couldn't resist!), and a really cool booth with everything Scottish. Mom & Dad bought a beautiful bonsai tree, and we got some great ideas for our booth set-up.

Hope to see you there!  :)

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Check me out on Ebay - I'm a Top-Rated PowerSeller now!

http://myworld.ebay.com/mikenmelody92

I'm listing and selling things like crazy these days. Check out my auction listings...I've got so many name-brand clothing items, it's not even funny!

Coldwater Creek, Chico's, Lucky Brand, Talbots, Lane Bryant, Ann Taylor, Levis, 7 for all Mankind, Citizens of Humanity...

I started out with womens' items, and now I'm branching out to mens' and boys'.

My prices are awesome....Don't pay Retail - are you crazy??!!  
:)