Saturday, September 23, 2006

Bento Boxes

I love packing my son's lunches in bento boxes. They are reusable; they keep the food in good shape; and they help make lunch more fun and attractive. They make it fun for me and that's important, dammit -- because making lunch every night is boring!

We just bought this Shinkansen bento box at the Sanrio store at Bellevue Square.

We bought this Pokemon bento box during our trip to Japan last year

Feeding a 7 year old food critic

One night after returning home from working late, I found this little critique of the Fontina cheese I had purchased waiting for me in the refrigerator. A very poor image due to the dim light and my inept use of my new camera, I'm afraid. I was told the green colored blob is someone who died from eating the cheese. The face on the bottom is someone who "is sick and will likely die" from eating this cheese. I like the coining of the term "off-demand". I use it all the time now.

School has started and it's back to making lunches. I've decided to start keeping a log of all the lunches I make - since it consumes more of my energy and time than I would like.

This lunch menu: Prosciutto,Turkey & Havarti Wraps; cherry tomatoes from our garden; and kiwi/huckleberries - plus milk and a secret tiny ritter bar hidden in his lunch box.

Saturday, April 22, 2006

Furoshiki Tips

Recently found another helpful furoshiki wrapping guide
.

This site also took me to a great photoblog with loads of interesting images taken in Japan.

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Origami plus

I love origami - but I can't make anything that doesn't already have a pattern. Check out the what MIT students created for the MIT Origami contest

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Artful Manhole Covers...err...Hatchcovers

Seattle Utilities has a new hatchcover design (will hatchcover really ever catch on?)


Here are some lovely utilitylids/ manhole covers /hatchcovers I saw in Japan recently. Looks like there are loads of Japanese manhole appreciation sites: Frangipani has a striking collection , here is a collection of Tokyo manholes...even quilts inspired by Japanese manholes

Kamakura


Iga Ueno


Samurai District, Kanazawa


Shitamachi,Tokyo


Kyoto


Takayama


Having Trouble remembering...wonder if it was Kanazawa

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Squeezable Mimi balls

During my recent travel to Japan I came across this interesting stress reliever. You really should click on the image and view it at the larger size so you can note other variations of the mimi ball (keychain, wristpad, etc.) and have a good look at the text on the display box. They appear to be selling rather well. According to the signage it's a great toy for ages 5+....ooooh baby!

Thursday, January 05, 2006

What to do when the box is huge?

My mom's present required a VERY large box. So large that I couldn't find any nice paper that would fit. So, I ditched paper altogether and just used decorative tape and a funky Target Christmas ornament...and I was pretty pleased with the results. The tape was pretty hard to cut - probably pretty apparent by looking at the picture, so next time I would cut in ways that don't require precision.

Sampling of this year's holiday packages

This is how I wrapped my friend Jen's gift. I have all the steps photographed...let me know if you'd like to know how this was wrapped. By the way this paper was from DZINZ( possibly here...not sure)



This is how I wrapped a Japanese iron teapot and trivet (testsubin). This is sort of a variation of the previous wrap except I used Mizuhiki and I worked to keep the lovely washi borders intact and visible on the sides and across the top.



This is how I wrapped a gift certificate we gave my parents. I like to use those flimsy plastic boxes that the holiday cards come in. I wrap the gift cert in a pretty tissue with a nice sticker to hold it, then slide it into the plastic box and wrap. They are usually the perfect size and it actually looks quite nice!