growing old, life hacks, photography

Repurposed Spoon

A big serving spoon can be a better shoehorn than a shoehorn.  Looks better too.

While shoehorns with short handles make me bend over too much, those with long handles slip off my heel prematurely.  The intermediate length of a big serving spoon’s handle works well.  The bowl of the spoon cradles my heel and stays there until I want it to move.  Shoehorns are too flat for cradling.

Tho slow at learning physical skills, I got the hang of using the spoon as a shoehorn quickly.  The trick is to tilt the handle forward while lifting the spoon out from between heel and shoe.  (Pulling straight up would scrap the edge of the bowl along the Achilles tendon.)  The lower leg is in the way, so a slight tilt to the side is needed along with the forward tilt.  This is simpler than it sounds.  If I can do it easily, so can most people w/o specific disabilities.

Does the spoon really need to be brushed stainless steel like mine?  No, but it does need a thin bowl that is smooth on the outside as well as the inside.  Go for metal to be sure.  The spoon will last forever and be seen often, so it’s worthwhile to get one that’s eye-friendly.

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– Gray button (upper left corner) reveals widgets, –
– above post (on phone) or beside it (on desktop). –
humor, photography

Elmer’s Epoxy Epic

The [Menu] button (atop the vertical black bar) reveals widgets like the Search box.  Typing just the [Enter] key into the Search box is a way to browse WordPress blogs.

Cee’s Oddball Photo Challenge: 2018-08-12

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? ? ? ?

What U see depends on when U look.
Here is the same detail under typical lighting:

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A detail of what?
Scroll down to see the answer (image & text).

Keep scrolling …

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A clever craftsperson repurposed some windows from an old house as suncatchers, with shards of colored glass held in place by clear liquid epoxy.  Alas, the epoxy components were not measured just right for the one I bought.  (It’s difficult.)  Sticky gunk oozed from cracks and seams after a few weeks of exposure to hot sun.

An epic battle between Elmer’s Glue and the rogue epoxy ended in victory for Elmer.  On one side of the suncatcher, a thick coating of glue was needed in some places.  I added more to make a whimsical mix of clear and cloudy, roughly 50-50.  The ratio is not so critical as when mixing epoxy.

My suncatcher is a good size for hiding the squirrel baffle above my hanging bird feeder, and it has withstood years of hot summer sun w/o having any gunk get past Elmer.  On the other hand, a few squirrels have gotten past the baffle.

humor, photography

The Towel Brothers

There are grander true stories of failure and redemption, but this one can be illustrated by photos with many horizontal lines, in response to a challenge.
(BTW, the [Menu] button atop the vertical black bar reveals the widgets.)
Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Horizontal Line(s)

Ken is a colorful “kitchen towel” but …

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… can’t keep up with Hank (a “hand towel”) at drying.

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What else can towels do? I repurposed Ken to …

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… block glare from the light over the sink …

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… and left the drying to Hank.

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