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I'm juuuuust about done listening to Emily St. John Mandel's novel Station Eleven, read by Kirsten Potter. The story bounces through about 25-40 years, fleshing out backstories in flashbacks of most of the present day characters surviving in a post-pandemic apocalypse. I checked it out both because my oldest kiddo is currently reading this in her English class, and because it's popped up a few times in my news feeds due to the flu-like pandemic that pivots the characters' lives.

Hello world... uh, again. I'm still here. Still cutting paper, taking custom requests, filling wholesale orders, and still loving that I get to call all of this "my job." While Crafterall the business hasn't slowed down at all since getting off the ground over 14 years ago, Crafterall the blog is, ahem, pretty dusty. Back in 2007, the blog started as a way to keep my friends and family up to date on this crazy idea to start a business, and then in 2012, it was geared to gain more viewers and (hopefully) more buyers.

This is so cool. I was recently approached about contributing a photo for the cover of a new book, and I jumped at the chance to do this. It's paper art meets literary art. This book is being re-released, and to give it a fresh, new look, the publisher chose my slanty, macro photo of the eastern Great Lakes piece to entice folks to give it a read. It's wonderfully fitting since the book is about a journey around each of the three eastern lakes -- Huron, Erie and Ontario. And I think it looks awesome! Check it out!

Here's another new, local Minnesota piece: the lovely Forest Lake. This lake sits above the northeastern corner of the Twin Cities metro area, and is included in the top 100 largest lakes in the state. In my research of the lake, I learned that it is the source of the wee, Sunrise River, and is home to Minnesota's biggest black ash tree. Neat-o! To see more about the new Forest Lake piece, just visit my Etsy shop.

I've recently extolled the beauty and magic of the San Juan Islands here for you. Just south from there is the magnificent Puget Sound -- once a deceptive maze for explorers to find a way inland from the Pacific Ocean, and now a spectacular jumble of bays, fjords, and valleys. The Puget Sound design is now available in the shop in two sizes (8 x 10" and 12 x 12"), and you can click the photos below to take you to their respective listing. The design includes the Seattle and Lake Washington area on the east, to the Port Angeles area on the west on the Olympic Peninsula. And it stretches from the Strait of Juan de Fuca on the north to the state capital, Olympia in the south. In between, it catches most of the major islands in the sound, and the other port cities that call the area their home.

Another of the largest bodies of water in the greater Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area is the lovely set of Prior Lakes. Most folks probably just refer to the entire body of water as Prior Lake, but there really are two lakes: the Upper Lake to the southwest that flows northward into the Lower Lake. Lake chains and rivers that flow northward can throw you for a loop, until you remember that it's all about gravity and topography, and that sometimes, you have to go "up" to go downhill. Maybe it's a metaphor for life's challenges... or maybe it's just the lay of the land. Either way, this lovely, curvy body of water is now available in the shop for you! Click on the photo below to go directly to the listing.

Quick change of topic from my recent artful additions, to bring you a story about our recent canine additions.

If you follow me on Twitter or Instagram, you know that the only thing I share more about than my artwork is my dogs. However, the last time I blogged here about my dog, was three years ago, in a post about Jack. Our dear Jackie-Boy, our first retired-racing greyhound, our black and white cow-dog, our heart dog, passed away in November of 2012 at the ripe age of 14.