• Easter Show Volunteering – Shift #2 🎪

    A woman in an acid green hat with a sunflower painted on her face

    I was back again at the Show today, directing folks to the Quiet Room and helping visitors find their way around. And how cute is this? These amazing folks at the Face Painting booth offered to put a sunflower on my cheek!

    Me: Oh, glitter too?!
    The artist: You HAVE to have glitter. ✨

    Face painting booth at the Sydney Royal Easter Show

    It was a lot cooler today—which was nice!—but in the afternoon the wind kicked up and it started spitting rain. Fortunately I had a poncho, and it didn’t last long

    A person in an acid green shirt and hat, frowning and wearing a poncho in the rain

    And for today’s food-on-a-stick, I went with another classic: Cheese on a Stick! I liked the crunchiness of the batter, but this didn’t quite feel like enough value for $8. Twisty Potato is still winning…

    A woman holding a deep-fried, buttered piece of cheese on a stick


  • Another day at the Easter Show!

    I’ll be standing near the Quiet Room with a big sunflower 🌻 sign if you are visiting today. #eastershow

    Another day at the Easter Show!


  • Flowers 💐

    Happiness is… having a florist neighbour who sells you their leftover bouquets at a discount!

    Flowers 💐


  • The dark side of the Moomins

    Tove Jansson’s beloved stories, which turn 80 this year, are not cute: they are angry tales of apocalypse and breakdown.

    Yep. Whenever I recommend or introduce the Moomins to someone new, I always point out that these are not Disney characters. There are stories that are gloomy and scary and sad. There are characters that clearly have mental health issues. Even the cute cartoons will sometimes traumatise* you. Shit gets dark. My Swedish friends have jokingly told me that this is simply the nature of Finnish culture. It’s clear reading this excellent New Statesman piece though that a lot of it was informed by Tove Jansson’s experiences growing up during WW2, and later dealing with the unwanted fame and attention her characters had brought her. While I’m sorry that she came to resent her success so much, the melancholy (and anger and greed and naughtiness…) she infuses makes the characters so much more interesting and resonant for the readers.

    * Once I was visiting my sister and looking after my young nieces and nephew, I decided to introduce them to the Moomin animated series, which you can find on YouTube. In the second episode, they find a magical hat that makes little clouds they fly around in. Fun, right? I forgot entirely that Moomintroll later climbs inside the hat, and it transforms him into an ugly monster that no one recognises. He ends up sobbing “Don’t you recognise me, Mamma?!!” and it’s really awful and scary, and the kids FREAKED OUT. My sister came home to crying children and me trying to explain “No really, his Mom eventually recognised him and he changes back and everything is okay!” I think it put them off Moomins for years. 😂

    Transformed sobbing Moomintroll hugging his mother


  • Hop Harvest Fest

    Four people driving beer at a craft brewery

    This week is the Inner West Hop Harvest Festival, and today we managed to cross off 5/11 craft breweries. Only 6 more and Mr. Snook gets a t-shirt!

    Stamped “passport” showing 5 breweries visited

    Four drunk people at a craft brewery


  • Aldimania

    Needed some new shoes for puttering around in the garden and taking out the trash. Couldn’t resist when I saw these today!

    A person’s feet, shod in black rubber clogs that say ALDI on the side


  • Flu shots

    The best time to get vaccinated for the Aussie flu season is NOW! 💉🦠

    Two middle-aged nerds waiting at a chemist after a flu shot


  • Links I’ve been enjoying lately


  • Highlights of the Easter Show Arts & Craft Entries

    At the Arts Preview last week, I took a lot of photos of all the Arts & Crafts entries that caught my eye. Sometimes because they were beautiful or clever, and sometimes because they were METAL AF. They’re mostly in the order I saw them, so you get the full “meandering around the display cases while pounding drinks” effect.

    R2-D2

    This crochet R2-D2 was fully life-size, and it was a big hit with the viewers. I like it, but he looks a little oddly muscular and organic to me for a robot! (And what’s with that crocheted, mounted dinosaur head?!)

    Felted Wind in the Willows characters

    I loved these needle-felted Wind in the Willows characters. Mr. Toad even has his driving goggles!

    Crocheted chainsaw head guy

    I mean, who is this little crochet guy with a chainsaw head and hands, and sweet red high-tops? Kudos to Andrew Galagher on the ribbon!

    Byte Couture - dress made from keyboard keys, cables, and computer RAM

    I gasped when I saw this “Byte Couture” dress in the Cabinet of Excellence. It was in the “Recycled Garment” category and used computer keys, RAM, and cables to fashion a dress. Well done, Stephanie Powell!

    Crocheted doll

    This crocheted doll is very expressive, but it freaks me out a little bit. It reminds me of the podlings from The Dark Crystal somehow.

    Amazing quilt with circles

    This quilt is why I was not particularly surprised or disappointed to miss out on a ribbon, as it was competing in the same category as mine. 😳 Amazing work, Tonia Barton!

    Cat skellington

    Andrew Galagher strikes again! This “Cat Skellington” won the blue ribbon in soft toys or dolls.

    Punk teddy bears

    Loved the punk teddy bear! I didn’t even realise he has a safety pin through his nose.

    Volcano quilt

    How cool is this volcano quilt? The artist is a teenager!

    Creepy mosaics

    This was the point where I started to appreciate how the folks doing the displays had sometimes grouped together thematically or visually similar items. That mosaic of the Joker stopped me dead in my tracks, and then I was able to appreciate the other two next to it.

    Bag End cake

    This Bag End cake won an award in the “Most Creative Cake” category. Very cute!

    Dragon cake

    And this one won in the “Gravity Defying” category. I love the little Shaolin monks in front of the temple!

    Spartan helmet embelled on a jacket

    SPARTA! This beaded denim jacket was insane.

    Octopus bottle

    I thought this octopus glass sculpture was lovely. It reminded me of The Dream of the Fisherman’s Wife and some of the Minoan vessels we saw in Crete last year.

    Rabbit head sculpture

    The creepiest thing about that rabbit sculpture is how the eyes were set back inside the head so the damn thing seemed to track you as you walked past.

     A baby made of pills

    At first I thought this PILL BABY was creepy, but then I discovered that A) the artist is a doctor, and B) she titled it “A self portrait of the younger me.” Now I think it’s amazing.

    Creepy house sculpture with an eye peering out

    This is entitled “Fairy House Light,” so I think maybe it lights up? That would be the scariest night light ever.

    Horse head fascinator

    I loved this horse head fascinator mixed in among the fancy lady hats. Hell yeah! This would be amazing to wear to Melbourne Cup Day. (You know, if one supported such barbarism.)

    Baby dolls

    I think we can all agree that, of the “Dressed modern dolls,” the one on the right is actually way scarier.

    Rocking chair

    Stephen Rutherford was in the queue right in front of us with this rocking chair at the Drop-off Day a couple weeks ago. Rodd and I both admired it, especially the way it looks like he’s incorporated some recycled pieces. I was happy to see he won a ribbon in the “Innovative” woodwork category!

    Freddie Mercury, crocheted

    Crochet Freddie Mercury, of course. Nice.

    Animal skull headdress and shield

    Another badass thematic display of an “animal skull headdress,” decorated medieval shield, and what appears to be a DRAGONSKIN GAUNTLET in the background.

    Marie Curie textile artwork

    This Marie Curie themed textile artwork was done by the same teenager who did the volcano quilt. Very cool!

    Armadillo toy

    What a cuddly looking armadillo!

    Paper mache doll

    I can appreciate the skill required to make this papier-mâché doll while also worrying that it comes to life in the night to kill people.

    Magpies

    I really liked the bold graphic qualities of this painting of magpies.

    Gum trees by Ted Lewis

    I recognised the style of this piece immediately and was pleased to verify it was by Ted Lewis. We very, very nearly bought one of his paintings a few months ago, and I’m still thinking about it. I love in this one how you don’t notice the galahs at first.

    Sugar glider print

    This print of sugar gliders was so intricate and so beautiful!

    Banana replicator

    Banana replicator! This amused the hell out of me. It was in the “raster artwork” category, and I had to look it up in the schedule to see what that actually means: “The image must have originated from an original photograph, including photographs purchased within Copyright or acquired after Copyright has expired. The image may be significantly manipulated or enhanced using Photoshop or equivalent computer software.”

    Meerkat

    Meerkat! Mr. Snook is a big fan. We were delighted to discover that the German word for meerkat is “Erdmännchen,” which means “little earth man.”

    Greenhowe clowns

    I almost thought I’d escaped—that as a society we’d moved past this particular brand of evil—but of course, there’s gotta be a goddamn Jean Greenhowe clown. I kid, but not really. It’s not an Easter Show without someone knitting a Greenhowe clown.


  • Brew Day

    My office window has a perfect view to keep an eye on Mr. Snook’s homebrewing activities today!

    Brew Day



ABOUT

My name is Kris. I’ve been blogging since the 90’s. I live in Sydney, Australia, and I spent most of my career in the tech industry.

No AI used in writing this blog, ever. 100% human-generated.


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