i started my own little apple trees in tiny cups this week. i think everyone should try to grow a little of their own food not just for reducing cost at the store but just for back up- to not depend on factory farms 100% and also for better health.
i am emily and...
there is no theme here. this is just a summary of what i see/think about. important posts you HAVE to see are tagged "important". sometimes this blog is pretty weird/gross.
Posts tagged saving money
here’s to impatient assholes
i’ve been watching this repeatedly for the last 3 minutes and it’s still perfect
let’s have a toast to the douche bags
OMG
i drove like this for the first year i had my license, but then i stopped being aggressive to save gas.
(via lip-chap)
no one was out early this morning for black friday where i live. i guess everyone goes in the middle of the night now but my family refuses to do that which is cool. we went just because of tradition. (we started going like 20 years ago to see santa in the memphis mall or something.) i saw some cool things but i’m not spending money on anything i don’t really need until i get better work.
this is late but we had this ghost in our yard on halloween and i think this is also a cool pic of it
we got really festive this year because we had a decorated pumpkin/cat face and bat lights and this thing
i bought the decorations the saturday just before halloween at 40% off
HUT “Hermitage” by Ethan Hayes-Chute
Artist Ethan Hayes-Chute lives and works in Freeport, Maine & Berlin, Germany. Through paintings, sculptures, large-scale installations and artist’s books, he explores the ideas of self-sufficiency, self-preservation and self-exclusion as models for living. Hayes-Chute’s hut is an accumulation of stuff, the ephemera of the every day. Its materials are found, stitched together, hand-assembled – chair, desk, table, shaving mirror, and coffee mug furnish the cabin’s primary function to house and sustain.
The Loft House designed and built in Alabama by Ryan Stephenson, Joey Fante, Kait Caldwell, Aimee O’Carroll for $20,000 as part of their Rural Studio curriculum.