Thursday, December 09, 2004
I don't even want to think about the time...
It's not exactly what I had it mind (and I really don't think it is all that nice looking), but at least it is something more than I had before and I can always go back and change it when I want.
My plan is to use it for communication with family and friends, and update every-so-often. My blog I'll keep updating regularly - it's for the things I don't want my grandparents to read. Of course, with the way my life has been lately, I FEEL like a grandparent myself.
I am heading to Bruges (Belgium) on Saturday and I am counting down the days until I get a break from school. It hit me this evening that I will be on a plane to New York in a week from Monday! Then it hit me that I only have two weekends left to do my Holiday shopping - agg!! I just have to make it through next week with school, then I can go crazy with the gifts!
Sunday, December 05, 2004
Rochester, twice in one weekend...
Enough sap. Moving on...
We drove to Rochester to see the flick - nice town not far from where I am. It was a new area that has been built-up and looks quite familiar to many complexes I've seen in Knoxville, Charlotte or any other American town. There was a Mexican restaurant, an Italian restaurant (advertising its 'American Italian' cuisine) and the movie theater.
Saturday, I took the train to Rochester for the Dickens Christmas Market, described as:
An hour south-east of London, this compact city beside the River Medway,
celebrates its links with Charles Dickens - he lived and wrote there for years -
with a Dickensian Christmas celebration. The free annual event includes a High
Street parade of his fictional characters, with top-hatted gents, ladies in
bonnets, chimney sweeps and the ultimate Dickensian character: the street
urchin. There are also carol singers, ice-skating, roast chestnuts and mulled
wine to enjoy.
It was nice. Historic Rochester is beautiful! The old streets and buildings were amazing. There is even a castle, right in the corner of town! I'd love to go back and explore more, but as for the Dickens Christmas Celebration, it was too crowded to really enjoy too much. There were lots of people dressed up and lots of people selling mulled wine and other treats. There were carnival rides one the grounds in front of the castle and there was fake snow drifting around in the air. They even had a night-time parade where everyone sang carols and carried candles. With the 'snow' and the candles, it really was magical.
I've heard really nice things about Rochester, even as a place to live it is supposed to be very nice. I am impressed with how there is plenty of old stuff, even with the amount of new stuff that is being built-up in the area. The reason I haven't made it to see Rochester until now has to do with the fact that they've been doing work on the railway since January 2004 and that you have to take the train to Higham, then a bus from Higham to Strood (that's the part of the tracks they are working on), then catch the train from Strood to Rochester. It was not horrible, but I think I will wait for the train to start running again before I attempt to explore the rest of Kent. Guess Canterbury and Dover will have to wait until the tracks are fixed and running again...
I'm off to daydream about meeting my own Mark Darcy... You never know, it could happen.
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
All I Can Do Is Smile...
I teach three year 7 classes (a high ability class, a middle ability class and a bottom set). I have limited the about of experiments or practical I do with my bottom set because (although I absolutely adore the students) they tend to get a little over-excited, don't follow instructions and break things. Today we started a new topic, energy, and the first lesson is to practice using a thermometer. So, I decide to keep it simple with this class and we'll measure the energy loss when hot water cools... Basically they measure the temperature of the water throughout a 10 minute period and record their results in a chart.
I drew the chart on the board for the students to fill in: two columns - very simple: minutes and degrees Celsius - I even filled in the minutes for them (1 min, 2 min, 3 min, etc). So all they had to do was watch the clock and write down the temperature of the water...
Once the students started, I walked around the room, monitoring each group to see if they needed help. This one group of girls caught my eye because they were talking and laughing and not really concerned about time. So, when I checked with this group, they assured me that they were watching the clock. It seems that they recorded the temp after one minute without a problem. Then, they watched the clock for two minutes and recorded the temperature. And then three minutes before they recorded the temperature, etc... They were up to five minutes when I spoke with them...
Monday, November 29, 2004
March Vacation Plans
It is a bit less expensive than the 12 & 16 day tours I was looking at before, but we will be staying in hostels and I will need to bring a sleeping bag. I asked the Travel Agent about her thoughts between the"Time Out" tours (the ones I was originally looking at that stay in B & Bs and Hotels) and the "Concept" tours and she said that the "Time Outs"tend to be older (28 to 35) and tend to be couples. She said that if I was a young 28 then I would enjoy the "Concept" tour better. So I took her word for it. It means that I get to see the cities in France that I wanted to see for a lot less money... As long as I can handle community showers for two weeks!!
The Dinner...
Thursday, November 25, 2004
Pumpkin Pie...
Not a particularly special day, some of my kids made an effort to wish me a Happy Thanksgiving - that was sweet! Otherwise, just a typical school day...
Hope everyone had a nice holiday! And for those of you shopping tomorrow - be careful - "Day AfterThanksgiving" trips to the mall are hard-core! I've seen the sweetest looking ladies take others DOWN for sale priced clothing. It's a dangerous world we live in... (and suddenly I'm stuck with Genesis' "Land of Confusion" in my head.)
Wednesday, November 24, 2004
Happy Hump Day!
I had a good conversation with the acting Head of Department yesterday. She asked me about next year, and what my thoughts were (I seem to remember having this conversation with her once before). I told her that I'd like to stay. Of course, wanting to do something and being asked to do something are two completely different things in the world of employment. I've been reading up on expectations for getting my Qualified Teaching Status and it is going to take some serious work. Plus, the big, bad OFSTED will be paying a visit before the end of February.
There's a lot riding on performance right now...
Monday, November 22, 2004
Triple Challenge... And Now I'm Pooped!
Today, I went to the gym with Catherine and Claire. We joined the "Triple Challenge" class: step aerobics, weight training and conditioning. It was a good class, but I am worn out now! It was a nice way to forget about the crap that goes on daily in the classroom! I came home, worked on some school stuff, and just finished an online conversation with Laura. I haven't spoken with her since the trip to Wales, so it was nice to catch up.
Everyone is getting ready for Thanksgiving there. Here, it's just another week. Of course it's one week closer to Christmas... one week closer to a break... one week closer to my trip to Belguim... one week closer to my trip home. Someone asked me if I was homesick, and really I'm not, I just miss my old life (the social one) and am ready for things to pick up a little around here. Plus, school is stressing me out and I am ready for a break. This work-thing is getting in the way of my having a good time...
Kids exhaust me!!
Saturday, November 20, 2004
Time to Look for a New Place to Live...
Every weekend I walk into town and every weekend I see the same four year 10 students. They are sweet girls, but they really drive me nuts in class. Every time I see them in town, they always say "hello." Then I say "hi" and Monday I get to hear, "Miss, we saw you in town on Saturday." It's always the same routine.
Today, in addition to seeing my four regulars, I got to see two of my year 7 students (who are not at that embarrassed-in-public age). I heard "Hi Miss" from the older girls, then "HI MISS!!!" from the two younger ones who insisted on RUNNING up to me. One little darling decided to follow me down the street and attempt a conversation. I indulged her for a while, until she just became silly and wouldn't leave me alone. I'll say it again, what ever happened to being embarrassed to see a teacher in public? Instead, I was the one feeling embarrassed... Can't a woman be left alone to shop???
I need to get out of this town!! I need to live somewhere closer to the city where there is a nightlife and where I can walk the streets on the weekend and not fear harassment from an 11 year-old child. Ugh!!
Tuesday, November 16, 2004
Plans, plans and more plans
Thanksgiving Menu:
Turkey (duh!), Cranberries, Cornbread Dressing (my grandmother's recipe that rocks! Plus, no one here knows what cornbread is...), Sweet Potato Casserole, Campbell's Green Bean Casserole (not my favorite, but very American Turkey Day tradition) and Homemade Pumpkin Pie (they don't have the canned stuff here, so it will all be from scratch).
Nothing spectacular, but I tried to keep it very traditional considering my "guests" have never enjoyed a Thanksgiving meal. Have I mentioned how little I actually cook/bake? This could get interesting...
Christmas Holiday:
Things are starting to come together for my trip home. When I originally booked my ticket to the UK, I could not get a hold of anyone at the school to get specific holiday dates, so I assumed that they would be out for the week of Christmas (it being a Catholic School and all)... Nope. I was wrong. So, I have been approved to miss the last two days of school (without pay) so that I can fly home to the States... Whatever! I will arrive in New York late on the 20th, spend Tuesday with my sister (who is off from work that day!Yea!), then fly to Tennessee on Wednesday to spend the holidays with the family. I am trying to plan a little trip to Charlotte on the 27 - 29 to visit friends and maybe get my RiRa Trivia fix for another 4 months. Then, it's back to the island where the skies turn black at 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
February Half Term Break:
The plan is to visit Paris and AliCante, Spain. So far, I have found that Eurostar is too expensive, so I have been looking at flights. I have found a flight from Paris to London for 9.49 Euros (£7.90/ $14.22) and a flight from London to AliCante for £47.99 ($86.38), but no flights from AliCante to Paris... By train, it will be 11 hours and we could travel overnight, but I haven't been able to confirm a price (website difficulties). It's still early in the planning stages, so there's other options to research. This is much more fun that grading papers or planning lessons...
March Break:
This is the break that I'd hoped to be touring the Mediterranean, but fate had its way with me and I had to find colder places to visit. So, I've narrowed my choices to two tours. The first lasts for 12 days and explores 8 countries. The second (which I would love to do if I can pull together enough cash) lasts for 16 days and explores 10 countries. These are my options: Tour One - Amsterdam, Rhine Valley (Germany), Munich, Tyrol (Austria), Venice, 2 nights in Rome, Florence, Lucerne (Switzerland), 2 nights in Paris and back to London; Tour Two - 2 nights in Amsterdam, Rhine Valley (Germany), 2 nights in Engleberg (Switzerland), Innsbruck (Austria), Venice, 2 nights in Rome, Florence, 2 nights in Nice, Avignon, Lyon, 2 nights in Paris and back to London. They are similar, but the second spends more time in France. :)
Guess I should really make an attempt to get some work done... I'm out of things to plan. Of course there's always lists to make: Thanksgiving shopping list, things to pack for the States, etc... I am the queen of procrastination.
Sunday, November 14, 2004
Poppies Make an Impression
I went to see a movie with Catherine and some of her friends Thursday night. We saw "Alfie." It was good, but I'd really like to see the original so that I can compare. The group that I was with consisted of three French girls, one German boy and one boy from Chile (I say boy/girl because they are all 21). They were all very nice, but I don't think they completely understood the film. That's gotta be hard to sit in the theater for two hours and not really understand what is going on... The three girls kept talking in French all night, which is cool - I know it is their first language and is much easier for them to communicate, but it left the rest of out of the conversation. When I am with Catherine and Claire, the same thing happens, but Claire makes a point to translate everything and keep me included. It's just a nice thing to do.
Anyway, a couple of interesting things about my two trips to the cinema: 1) they really do assign you seats in the theaters here, 2) every trailer I saw was for a Hollywood (i.e. American) film, and 3) I learned that American English is easier for international people to understand. They say that the British accent is hard to understand (I agree to an extent - especially the area that we are all working in is tough).
Today is Remembrance Day, A day to honor all of the people who have died in war. About a month ago I started to notice all of the red Poppy Appeal signs appearing around London and on the train. I didn't realize the significance the Poppy had in England, until I heard that they only grow in distressed earth and that after WWI areas (that saw lots of fighting and lots of death) were completely covered in poppies (and again after WWII). The Scarlet Poppy is the symbol of this day. On Thursday, November 11 (11/11) the school (along with the rest of the nation) has a two minute moment of silence. This weekend there have been parades in London. Today, churches had special ceremonies. The BBC some some great information about Remembrance Day, if you're interested check it out: http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/remembrance/history/index.shtml
Thursday, November 11, 2004
1. My lesson for Geography sucked... I planned to show a video, but the recording was horrible and you couldn't hear it at all.
2. So, when I taught Geography for the second time that day, I had nothing planned and my "wing-it" lesson sucked...
3. In that class, my students were absolutely horrible...
4. In that class, the classroom assistant decided to "take over" by writing things on the board, giving students answers and doing one girl's homework for her (the homework that she hadn't turned in two months ago and was reprimanded by the Head of Dept to have it in TOMORROW!!)
5. I didn't get to eat lunch because I was tutoring...
6. I didn't get to eat breakfast because I was running late...
7. I didn't get a break because I was running around between the two buildings...
8. It's time for grades and everyone is in a panic...
9. I've got a TON of stuff to mark (stuff that I have been told to wait and test them this week), so its not even like I've had it and have just been lazy about grading it...
10. My week ones are rough, anyway...
If you add to it the fact that the computer network died two weeks ago and I have not been able to use my laptop since before I left for Wales. The guys came out Tuesday to fix the problem, and it was working fine when they left, but somewhere between 5:30 and 9:30, my laptop connection pooped-out!
Then, I found out yesterday that the Mediterranean Highlights trip has been cancelled by the company that runs it. I'm sure I can find something else to do, but I was really looking forward to that trip!
It was a very disappointing day all around, but I survived. I layed on the couch and watched "Sex and the City." And today, I still have plenty of marking to do, but my computer is up and running (for the time being) and I don't have to teach any classes tomorrow!! Yea!!
Saturday, November 06, 2004
Good Week at School
- My year 10s actually behaved themselves long enough for us to have a "proper lesson" on Wednesday - I was completely amazed!! Then they were little shits again on Thursday.
- The classroom assistant called in the special forces on Thursday for a unit test I had with my year 7 class (the one that has lots of special needs children in it). There's usually two, sometimes three of us in there. I had approx. six extra teachers in that class - it was wonderful!
- I was asked to cover a lesson for a science teacher that was out on Friday. The class was a low-ability year 9 class that only had about 12 students in it (and two assistants). We did the work given, I made a few adjustments to the lesson, made it more my style... It was a rough class, but we made it through without any major problems. At the end of the day, I was passing an administrator's office and he complimented me on how I handled the class. He said he poked his head in twice during the lesson and was impressed. YEA!!!
I'm feeling much better about the things that are going on at school. The teacher that I was continually comparing myself to has made some really serious mistakes (some REALLY serious mistakes) and I no longer feel the need to compare myself to her. I can only do so much and just continue to try... Good news is that it is getting easier and I am feeling much better in my (many) classrooms.
I am coming home for Christmas. I looked into extending my airline ticket and just traveling around Europe for Christmas, but it would be less expensive to fly home. I may try and fit in a visit to Charlotte while I am in the States. I also booked a 13 day tour in March called "Mediterranean Highlights" which goes through Spain, France, Monaco and Italy - along the Mediterranean Sea. That should be fun!
Thursday, November 04, 2004
Wales...
The trip to Wales was awesome! The countryside is absolutely breath-taking and the people on the tour were a blast! I caught the 6:30 train on Friday (that's AM) into London and met up with the rest of the tour participants at 8. Everyone was talking and laughing and I knew right away that this would be a good time! We boarded the bus and I sat beside a nice Australian named Anne. Our tour guide, Frazier, insisted that we all go to the front of the bus and introduce ourselves, and lucky me, I had to go first. I gave my little spheel, then had to tell an embarrassing story. I told about my first month teaching, when I had a HUGE split in the back of my pants and I didn't know until I went to the loo about half-way through the day. No one had said a word and I had been walking all around school with bright red undies showing for half the day!! (I figured that would be a safe "I barely know you" embarrassing story for the group) Anyway, as soon as I mentioned Tennessee, Frazier said that his favorite place he'd been in the States was Knoxville, TN. First, let me say that Frazier is Scottish and has this wonderful accent. Then, he tells me his favorite place is Knoxville... I was instantly smitten. Everyone else did their intro. song-and-dance and their embarrassing stories were lame! Not that mine was great, but one girl said "I walked to the wrong car in a parking lot!" There's gotta be better embarrassing stories than that!! Anyway, from everyone's intro. I found out that the majority of people on the bus are from Australia/New Zealand. There were two people from Canada, two people from South Africa, two Scotsmen (Frazier being one of them), one Italian and five Americans. Four of the five Americans had ties to Tennessee. I can't get over the fact that everywhere I go, here, I meet Tennesseans!! There were a handful of 19 year old girls. Most people were 22 to 26. I was on the upper end of the spectrum at 28, but there were a couple of others that were older than me. There were also a good handful of people living and working in London, and everyone else was doing the backpacking-across-Europe-thing.
Frazier announced that our Saturday night hostel is attached to a nice little pub that will be having a Halloween party, so sometime before Saturday night we had to pull together a Halloween costume. Our first stop was Stratford-upon-Avon, where most of us found Halloween duds - thankfully, because we really didn't spend much time in a place where we could have bought anything after that. We all split up, but somehow found each other at Shakespeare's house and a group of about 10 of us when to search for Anne Hathaway's cottage. Anne (the Australian) had her Lonely Planet: Britain and told us it was only a mile away. We were given an hour and a half in this town and by the time we finally made it to Anne Hathaway's cottage we had about 15 minutes to high-tail it back to the bus (plus find some lunch on the way). I was not smart enough to use the loo before getting back on the bus. However, I was smart enough not to be the last person on the bus. Poor Reagan and Olivia had to sing to all of us their favorite 80's song.
Three hours later we stopped at the Pontcysyllre Aqueduct. At that point I was absolutely dying, and before he let us off the bus, Frazier announced that the toilets are on the OTHER side of the aqueduct. I tried to enjoy the beautiful scenery, but gave up and power-walked the rest of the trail to the loo - which ended up being a port-a-john in the parking lot. Every once in a while I would stop to take a quick picture and then start walking again. Not the best way to enjoy the beautiful Welsh scenery!
The first day was our longest day on the bus and we were all getting restless. Frazier stopped at Conwy Castle and gave us a little while to walk around. In the town of Conwy there is the "world's smallest house," so we walked down to take some pictures. One girl, Jo, wanted her picture taken with the sign. She's probably 5' and she was as tall as the door. Then, Mark (the 6'8" Australian) wanted his picture taken with the sign - THAT was hilarious! We got back on the bus, heading to [the city with the longest name] to watch the sun set when we got stuck in a horrible traffic jam. Two hours later, when the traffic started to move again, we decided to bypass the town and head straight for our hostel in Caernafon.
By the time we reached the hostel we were all starving, so we quickly unpacked our bags from the back of the bus and found our rooms. The landlord just counted us off into groups of 4 or 6 for the bedrooms, so I ended up in a room with Anne, Olivia, Mark (three Aussies) and Brent & Austin (with myself that makes three Tennesseans). We spent most of the night laughing - I feel sorry for the other rooms, we were quite loud! Olivia and Anne decided that they loved Austin's southern accent and went on and on about it. They were pretty damn funny about it, too! Both nights I ended up in a room with the three guys. Two nights in a row I got to see a HOT 6'8" Aussie in his tiny boxers, I was in heaven!!
I won't bore you with details of everything we saw on Day 2 or Day 3. I will say that Northern Wales is beautiful and that Snowdonia National Park is breath-taking! Saturday was a gorgeous day and we hiked part of Mt. Snowdon that morning, then spent time at Castle-y-Bere that afternoon. The ruined castle was especially cool because of its location. It sits in a valley and the view from the castle is amazing. Day 3 we hiked in Brecon Beacon's National Park (in Southern Wales), but it was rainy and hazy. Just wasn't as nice as the day before. With everything we did, there was a chance to talk to the various people on the tour. It was nice to meet all sorts of people from all over the world. I wish I would have been one of those people that just packed a bag and flew to Europe when I graduated from high school or even college. The stories these girls had were amazing!!
Our second hostel was in a town called Abergavenny. The pub was literally "just down stairs" so most of us started drinking as soon as we put down our bags. At 9:30 three girls on the tour had to perform for us (they were late getting back to the bus in Dolgellau and this was Frazier's punishment). They had choreographed this whole skit to "It's Raining Men" - they were great!! Then the pub started kareoke and that was it for the rest of the night!! Anne was the kareoke queen, she had everyone up with her at least once during the night - including me. (It's a good thing that you can't hear yourself sing with kareoke... I'll never know exactly how bad it was!) Frazier and Mark sang a duet - they were great - imagine a cute, nearly bald Scotsman dancing like he's in the 80's - I wish I had taken pictures!! At midnight, the bar closed down, so a group of us went wandering into town to see what we could find.
This is usually my favorite thing to do: wandering around at night, looking for trouble. We found Abergaveny's Castle and the kebab shop (only thing open in town after midnight). We noticed security sensors in time to not scale the castle walls (getting arrested in Wales would have been a bad thing). We met a couple of "locals" - two Belgium men who were drunk and trying to find their car. Oh! And we flashed a few cars driving down the main road...
Sunday was another long day on the bus, but we exchanged email addresses and the London group exchanged phone numbers. Not really sure if anything will come of it, but it was a great time!! I am ready to sign up for the tour of Scotland, maybe Frazier will be the guide...
Thursday, October 28, 2004
Two months to the day...
Wednesday, October 27, 2004
France
Once we arrived in France, we drove to St. Omer (approx. 45 km) to wander around the town. Driving was neat, we mainly passed small villages and lots of farms. In a lot of ways, it reminded me of back roads I've been on at home. However, at home they do not have fresh game - rabbits - hanging outside of Butcher shops! Agg! That was a shock!! Once in St. Omer, we walked through the Cathedral and had lunch at a nice little café. Then we drove to Arques, to the glass factory, ARC International. There were so many beautiful pieces and all I could think was,"I wish I could carry these home with me!!" Of course everything I liked was either too big or too heavy to take on a plane - grr!! After Arques, we drove to Boulognes for some grocery shopping at Achaun (think Super Wal-Mart, only bigger) and then into town for dinner. I bought some beer and some stuff to make Taco Salad for dinner (I've been craving Tex-Mex and that is the only thing that I know how to make). The town center in Boulognes was beautiful, I wish we had time to explore. There is a wall around the city and cobblestone streets. :) The streets were dark and they had soft yellow bulbs in the street lights - it was amazing, I felt like I was in a movie.
On the way back to Calais (for the train) we drove along the coast. The moon was almost full and the sky was clear- you could see everything!! We stopped at this one spot, had to drive up a hill to get there. There was a monument, a large cross, and you could see England across the Channel. I can't remember the name of the place, but I am sure it had something to do with WWII. I'll have to look into it more...
I enjoyed the day-trip to France. There is so much more I wish I could have seen - guess that means I have to go back... :)
Sunday, October 24, 2004
Not your typical Sunday afternoon...
I took my time getting out of the house this morning (the sky was gray and the streets were wet), but as soon as I walked out the door, the sun started to come out. Of course, I was dressing in full wet-weather gear (including a warm sweater under my parka and a scarf in my bag - in case it got even cooler). I knew I had made a huge mistake when I passed several people in town wearing t-shirts, but I had no interest in turning around, so I shoved the parka in my messenger bag and rolled up the sleeves of my cotton sweater. I was determined to get out of this town today!
Camden Market is an absolutely wonderful place - crowded, but wonderful!! Where else can you find fetish booths right next to hand-knitted sweaters and jewelry that spells out your name? It is this huge market of absolutely EVERYTHING and caters to every sort of client imaginable. If I took my grandmother and the Goth kid next door, we'd all be happy campers, finding all that our different tastes desired. Oh! And the food was amazing, imagine every ethnic cuisine you could possible think of - Mmm!! I don't really know how to describe it other than UNCC's International Festival meets hippy festival meets any UK town market and multiply it by 1000. Needless to say, I was in heaven. I didn't really buy much, just a few Christmas presents, but I loved the atmosphere and the people-watching. There were moon boots and purple hair galore, and scattered between the London postcards and "Mind the Gap" t-shirts were fuzzy handcuffs and crotchless panties. My favorite product was the "Magic Mushroom." There were several booths that were selling these fungi. They had varieties from Thailand, Hawaii, and many other exotic places, but they were packaged like the mushroom you'd buy in the grocery stores and all I could think was, "What poor sucker bought the magic mushrooms, hoping for something 'exotic' and got the fancy pizza variety?" Because they can't really sell the 'exotic' kind on the street corner, or can they? A place like that, they probably could, maybe... I'm really not giving this place justice - it really just blew me away!! The ONLY draw-back was the crowd. It reminded me of Adams Morgan (remember Robert & Ashley?), just massive amounts of people everywhere!!!
When I left Camden Market, I found my way to Covent Gardens (which I have been trying to find for some time now). Covent Gardens was much quieter than Camden and not nearly as quirky, but I have a feeling (considering it is so close to the Tube Station that I frequent) I will be making it a permanent "when-I-go-into-London" stop. There were many street performers, as I have been told there would be, and most of the shops were of the Bluewater variety, but it is still a WONDERFUL place to visit.
I made it home in time for dinner. A German assistant that stayed in my room last year when she was here, was in town and had dinner at the house. She invited a friend that is teaching at one of the other schools in town. Both girls were extremely nice and I REALLY enjoyed meeting both of them!! We've exchanged numbers, so (for those of you that are worried that I have no friends here) my social life may actually start to pick up soon.
If you get a chance, check out this artist's work: Tina Maas. I saw her booth at Camden Market and her photographs are really amazing! I especially liked her polaroids and the effect she uses - it almost looks like the image is projected on a silk scarf or a piece of fabric - really cool!!


