Hamncheezr

Wife, mother, knitter, bibliophile, spaz. I am who I am.
For Mother’s Day my Granny gave me this necklace, which is locket or cage-like.  It came in a box with a small container.  Inside the container was an oyster shell.  I stared at it for a few minutes after reading the instructions because it was at the same time one of the neatest and most terrifying things I’d heard of.
The gist of it is, you had to pry open the oyster, dig out the pearl, see what color you got (supposedly the peach I received is for good health… which I could use all the help with that I can get), and then place the pearl inside the necklace.
Digging the pearl out was disgusting. And fascinating. I wonder where she got this because I think I should make my kids do it for school.
I couldn’t find anything saying what the metal was, so I may end up having to put the heart charm on a different chain so it won’t turn my neck green, but it was a pretty cool deal.

For Mother’s Day my Granny gave me this necklace, which is locket or cage-like.  It came in a box with a small container.  Inside the container was an oyster shell.  I stared at it for a few minutes after reading the instructions because it was at the same time one of the neatest and most terrifying things I’d heard of.

The gist of it is, you had to pry open the oyster, dig out the pearl, see what color you got (supposedly the peach I received is for good health… which I could use all the help with that I can get), and then place the pearl inside the necklace.

Digging the pearl out was disgusting. And fascinating. I wonder where she got this because I think I should make my kids do it for school.

I couldn’t find anything saying what the metal was, so I may end up having to put the heart charm on a different chain so it won’t turn my neck green, but it was a pretty cool deal.

petermorwood:

art-of-swords:

Sword Facts & Myths
All Medieval swords weighed at least 12 pounds – FALSE
Most Medieval swords weighed around 2.5 lbs - even long hand-and-a-half and two-handed swords weighed less than 4 lbs.
Medieval swords were not sharp - FALSE
Some surviving samples of Medieval swords are still sharp - many are razor-sharp.
All swords should balance within 2” of the guard - FALSE
A sword’s balance should be determined by its function, not an arbitrary standard. Swords intended for cutting often balance 5 or 6 inches from the guard.
Swords were made to cut through armour - FALSE
Period armour was often work- and case-hardened and curved such that it is difficult to hit at a right angle. Late Medieval thrusting swords, even the ones with a reinforced point, were used to thrust into the gaps in armour, not through the plate.
Viking swords were heavier than Medieval swords - FALSE
The Viking sword was a very highly developed sword form. Often the blades were quite thin in cross section, and as a result, were often the same or lighter in overall weight than other similarsized swords.
There is no such thing as the “perfect” sword - TRUE
There are only “perfect” swords for their intended purpose and the tastes of the owner.
A “good” sword should be able to bend past 90 degrees without taking a set - FALSE
Flexibility is only one of the aspects of the steel properties that is important in a sword. Too flexible, and it is inefficient in the thrust and the cut. Too stiff and it is prone to breakage. Most makers are content if a sword will bend to 45 degrees without taking a set.
Real swordfights were just like they are in the movies - FALSE
Swordfights in movies are choreographed for entertainment not authenticity. Edge to edge parries and fancy techniques are designed to heighten drama in a scene. An actual swordfight would be short, brutal and much quieter.
Japanese swords are the sharpest and best swords ever made - FALSE
Japanese swords have many admirable qualities and were well-suited to their intended use, but they are not necessarily sharper or better than a properly designed and sharpened Medieval sword. 
Medieval swordmakers were uneducated barbarians - FALSE
It is apparent from even a cursory study of surviving Medieval swords that blademakers and cutlers were highly skilled artisans with a profound understanding of mathematics and proportion.
Not all swords should be as sharp as a razor - TRUE
The sword’s intended purpose is always the guide to use — thrusting swords are not intended for cutting, so some may not even have an edge at all, just a well-defined and reinforced point.
Swords were tempered in urine or blood - FALSE
The steels smelted in Medieval Europe required either clean water or oil for quenching. Urine or blood would not allow a blade to temper properly.
The “blood groove” is on a sword to release pressure in the wound and allow the sword to come back out - FALSE
“Blood groove” as a term is a recent invention — “fuller” is the proper name for the groove or grooves on a sword blade. The purpose of the fuller has nothing to do with “blood” — fullers reduce weight, assist in the proper distribution of mass in a blade, and help make the blade more stiff.
A good sword can cut through a concrete pillar - FALSE
Swords were intended to cut through flesh, clothing, and (in earlier swords) leather or mail armour. They are not intended to cut wood, concrete or metal pillars, even though that is often seen in films.
A sword will fall apart if you don’t clean the tang of the sword - FALSE
The tang of a sword, if properly made and the rest of the sword properly maintained, will not require any maintenance for generations of use. 
Japanese folded steel is superior to European sword steel - FALSE
Folding steel was a technique used by Japanese smiths to try to get the best steel they could from very poor ore sources. Folded steel blades are more likely than modern monosteels to have large, unseen inclusions of impurities that may in fact critically weaken a blade. By folding the steel billet many, many times, they achieved a more even distribution of carbon and worked most of the impurities out of the steel. The result is stunningly beautiful, but we have to believe that if a 16th C Japanese smith had access to modern monosteels, he would have switched in a heartbeat.
Pattern-welded steel is superior to mono-steel - FALSE
Like folding steel, pattern-welding was a technique used to try to get the best steel from very poor ore sources.  Pattern-welding is the art of hammering together, and then twisting and re-hammering layers of iron (often of varying carbon content). The Celts as far back as the 5th century BC may have made swords by pattern-welding, and this technique was used extensively until at least the end of the 10th century.  After this, better, more consistent iron ore was obtainable, and furnace technology improved, making this laborious technique unnecessary. Also like folded steel blades, pattern welded blades are more likely than modern monosteels to have large, unseen inclusions of impurities that may in fact critically weaken a blade.
Swords are just big knives - FALSE
The design of a sword is far more complex than a knife. Flexibility  balance and vibration are far more critical in a sword-length blade than in a knife-length blade.

Info source: © 2005 Albion Armorers, Inc.
Photo source: © Royal Armouries


This information should be SO much better known.

petermorwood:

art-of-swords:

Sword Facts & Myths

  • All Medieval swords weighed at least 12 pounds – FALSE

Most Medieval swords weighed around 2.5 lbs - even long hand-and-a-half and two-handed swords weighed less than 4 lbs.

  • Medieval swords were not sharp - FALSE

Some surviving samples of Medieval swords are still sharp - many are razor-sharp.

  • All swords should balance within 2” of the guard - FALSE

A sword’s balance should be determined by its function, not an arbitrary standard. Swords intended for cutting often balance 5 or 6 inches from the guard.

  • Swords were made to cut through armour - FALSE

Period armour was often work- and case-hardened and curved such that it is difficult to hit at a right angle. Late Medieval thrusting swords, even the ones with a reinforced point, were used to thrust into the gaps in armour, not through the plate.

  • Viking swords were heavier than Medieval swords - FALSE

The Viking sword was a very highly developed sword form. Often the blades were quite thin in cross section, and as a result, were often the same or lighter in overall weight than other similarsized swords.

  • There is no such thing as the “perfect” sword - TRUE

There are only “perfect” swords for their intended purpose and the tastes of the owner.

  • A “good” sword should be able to bend past 90 degrees without taking a set - FALSE

Flexibility is only one of the aspects of the steel properties that is important in a sword. Too flexible, and it is inefficient in the thrust and the cut. Too stiff and it is prone to breakage. Most makers are content if a sword will bend to 45 degrees without taking a set.

  • Real swordfights were just like they are in the movies - FALSE

Swordfights in movies are choreographed for entertainment not authenticity. Edge to edge parries and fancy techniques are designed to heighten drama in a scene. An actual swordfight would be short, brutal and much quieter.

  • Japanese swords are the sharpest and best swords ever made - FALSE

Japanese swords have many admirable qualities and were well-suited to their intended use, but they are not necessarily sharper or better than a properly designed and sharpened Medieval sword. 

  • Medieval swordmakers were uneducated barbarians - FALSE

It is apparent from even a cursory study of surviving Medieval swords that blademakers and cutlers were highly skilled artisans with a profound understanding of mathematics and proportion.

  • Not all swords should be as sharp as a razor - TRUE

The sword’s intended purpose is always the guide to use — thrusting swords are not intended for cutting, so some may not even have an edge at all, just a well-defined and reinforced point.

  • Swords were tempered in urine or blood - FALSE

The steels smelted in Medieval Europe required either clean water or oil for quenching. Urine or blood would not allow a blade to temper properly.

  • The “blood groove” is on a sword to release pressure in the wound and allow the sword to come back out - FALSE

“Blood groove” as a term is a recent invention — “fuller” is the proper name for the groove or grooves on a sword blade. The purpose of the fuller has nothing to do with “blood” — fullers reduce weight, assist in the proper distribution of mass in a blade, and help make the blade more stiff.

  • A good sword can cut through a concrete pillar - FALSE

Swords were intended to cut through flesh, clothing, and (in earlier swords) leather or mail armour. They are not intended to cut wood, concrete or metal pillars, even though that is often seen in films.

  • A sword will fall apart if you don’t clean the tang of the sword - FALSE

The tang of a sword, if properly made and the rest of the sword properly maintained, will not require any maintenance for generations of use. 

  • Japanese folded steel is superior to European sword steel - FALSE

Folding steel was a technique used by Japanese smiths to try to get the best steel they could from very poor ore sources. Folded steel blades are more likely than modern monosteels to have large, unseen inclusions of impurities that may in fact critically weaken a blade. By folding the steel billet many, many times, they achieved a more even distribution of carbon and worked most of the impurities out of the steel. The result is stunningly beautiful, but we have to believe that if a 16th C Japanese smith had access to modern monosteels, he would have switched in a heartbeat.

  • Pattern-welded steel is superior to mono-steel - FALSE

Like folding steel, pattern-welding was a technique used to try to get the best steel from very poor ore sources.  Pattern-welding is the art of hammering together, and then twisting and re-hammering layers of iron (often of varying carbon content). The Celts as far back as the 5th century BC may have made swords by pattern-welding, and this technique was used extensively until at least the end of the 10th century.  After this, better, more consistent iron ore was obtainable, and furnace technology improved, making this laborious technique unnecessary. Also like folded steel blades, pattern welded blades are more likely than modern monosteels to have large, unseen inclusions of impurities that may in fact critically weaken a blade.

  • Swords are just big knives - FALSE

The design of a sword is far more complex than a knife. Flexibility  balance and vibration are far more critical in a sword-length blade than in a knife-length blade.

Info source: © 2005 Albion Armorers, Inc.

Photo source: © Royal Armouries

This information should be SO much better known.

(via libraryphantomg5)

Bad dreams, disturbed sleep. Over tired equals nightmares, maybe?

More coffee.

Home. Exhausted. I’ll be lucky if I can move tomorrow. Out of the house from 7:30am to 12:15am makes for a long day.

Dehydrated. All the water is needed. Babies asleep. Will pour powerade into them tomorrow. Bottles of water for me…will probably mean broken sleep from making trips to the bathroom.

Happy. Had a fun time riding roller coasters with my kids. Happy to see Tony having a good time and not having to rush to get home and go to work.

Alarm for church is set. Here’s hoping for sweet dreams.

Ahhh, bed.

Tenth Avenue North - Worn (with lyrics) (by tenthavenuenorth)

Oh my goodness, this song. 
I feel like they wrote this from my heart.
I will probably buy whatever album this is from just to get this song. <3

kqedscience:

Star Wars Abandoned 

“Photographer Rä di Martino tracked down abandoned sets from Star Wars in Tunisia using Google Earth, then photographed them. It looks kinda lonely out there without R2-D2 beeping around. But still, major nerd points for this project. Rä di Martino via DesignTAXI

(via shorthairedgirl)

People will love you. People will hate you. And none of it will have anything to do with you.

—Abraham Hicks (via heylauren)

(Source: fandhm, via shorthairedgirl)

No sneakers to be found in my size and price range.
Worked out.
Grocery shopped.
Cut Jeremiah’s hair, helped him and Hannah each take showers.
Just spent the last hour and a hal washing and cutting up fruit. I say my family will have quick healthy snacks this week, but honestly it’ll probably all be gone by Monday night.

Still to do:
Shower.
Find us all clothes for tomorrow.
Find us all extra clothes since it’s supposed to rain.
Charge camera batteries.
Gather various items of need, like allergy eyedrops and ibuprofen.

Gotta go to work at 7:30, but when I get done at 10 it will be amusement park time!

Today

Less than 4hrs sleep
Worked…did payroll
Made 10” throw pillow
Went to bank, post office, fabric store
Bought rubber snakes
Locked keys in truck… again
Rescued by inlaws’ AAA
Finished crocheting big granny square for 2nd throw pillow

Currently: Tactical short stick weapons class for the boy.

Later:
Look for sneakers
kisado
Grocery shopping

I’ve been looking for things to print on a throw pillow. So far I’ve come up with:

Hello Sweetie
Love is Spoken Here
Be Nice or Leave
I like this place and could willingly wate my time in it (from as you like it)
With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come (from the merchant of venice)
Dobby never meant to kill. Dobby only meant to maim, or seriously injur

I can’t decide, or decide if I should keep looking.

Speaking of ADD and crafty, I forgot to take a picture of the lamp shade I covered with a map of “Indian Country.” It turned out pretty cool, and that spray adhesive was fun!

We signed up for online banking because our bank changed their phone thingy and now it sucks.

It tells me the balance of all our accounts and loans!!

I *only* owe $17k left on my truck. *dies*