So Good To Be Back Home Again

Jan. 5th, 2026 09:06 pm
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[personal profile] eiffel_71
Over the Christmas season I checked out the Instagram of Atlético London - the women’s team formerly known as London Seaward, formerly known as Leyton Orient WFC - and spotted that Rea Laudat is still at the club and that Jo Butler-Williams returned in November.

So yesterday there was only one place to head for. Barkingside, for Atleti’s match with Dussindale & Hellesdon Rovers Women.

Oddly, Atlético are kicking off their home matches at 3pm these days. I’d set off bright and early to be on the safe side, so it was a bit early for lunch when I reached Waterloo. I got the tube on to Stratford, deciding to have a look around (since I lived there many years ago) and get a bite to eat there.

Exiting the station the first thing you see is the giant Westfield shopping centre. Reaching the Stratford Centre, my old haunt, meant a walk across a bridge. For the first Sunday in January, there were masses of people about. On the bridge a busker was playing ABBA’s I Have A Dream on a hand-held keyboard. I went over and put a pound in his paper cup, but sadly although he thanked me he stopped playing immediately and was still silent when I reached the other side. I hadn’t paid him to stop.

The Stratford Centre had quite a few people walking around, though it’s now very much second fiddle to its bigger, upstart younger sibling. A few of the shops are the same ones as in the 90s; most are different of course. I found the entrance that leads out onto the Broadway and cast a quick glance at the church and, beyond it, the old familiar frontage across the main road. There’s a branch of German Doner Kebab just by the entrance to the Centre; I almost went there for lunch but spotted a Romanian street food stall across the pavement so gave them a try. Had Romanian sausages - very tasty. They came with a bowl of mash with an oily sauce, with some cubes of meat in.

I meandered back through the Stratford Centre to the tube and travelled on to Barkingside. There was nobody staffing the turnstile or the entrance to the ground; the metal gate was just open for me to walk straight in. The only people in sight were a man with a Southampton FC backpack and three young women, all behind the goal.

In the clubhouse, of course Groundhopper Dave was there and I went over to wish him a Happy New Year. I got a Kopparberg from the bar. Gary and Richard arrived, both happy to see me back. I noticed the girls come out onto the pitch and headed outside. I made my way to the far side of the pitch just as they arrived by the dugout. I called out hello to Rea and Jo. They both came over and high-fived me, Rea thanked me effusively for coming and Jo said “We’re going to get a clean sheet today.”

Dussindale had a couple of early chances; Amber Provan made a superb block to thwart the first, and, joy of joys, Jo cleared the second off the line. On 25 minutes, from a corner the ball fell to Brooke Haylock 25 yards out and she volleyed home a rocket. Five minutes later Poppy Hartwell recovered the ball after a clearance from a corner, and threaded the ball through to Rea who fired home another screamer.

The second half was all Atlético and Rea added a third from a goalmouth scramble. Dave had offered to introduce me to the management team after the game, so after saying goodbyes to Gary and Richard I waited with him by the corner of the pitch. We congratulated the girls as they drifted towards the tunnel after warming down. Rea warmly thanked me for coming again and she and Jo both fist-bumped me.

The management team hung around the dugout for a while after the players had gone in. Eventually they came over, and Dave introduced me to Jason the manager and Billy the general manager. They were both delighted when I told them “I live in Gosport but I’m an Atleti fan”. Jason had to head for the dressing room but I got a bit more of a chat with Billy. I told him I’d been following the team since 2018, when they were known as Orient and playing at Mile End, so I know Jo and Rea to say hello to, and that this was my first visit this season. Billy said he was glad Rea was back from injury and that Jo had come back and that both had been impressive today.

And I knew I was back were I belonged. Atlético para siempre.

Dave walked part of the way from the ground with me. In the car park he said how the club indeed don’t charge for admission now and that they don’t issue programmes. He added “Not paper ones, at least”, but when I asked if they do online ones he said yes but didn’t seem to understand my further queries. The only social media the club’s active on nowadays is Instagram and I’ve never seen links to online programmes on there, so I doubt it. On the bridge over the Tube station Dave said he’d found the name change bizarre. He pointed out that, as well as now playing in red and white stripes, the team’s new badge is clearly based on Atlético Madrid’s. I asked if there were any Spaniards involved in the club but again he didn’t comprehend. Then Dave turned off to walk home while I rounded the corner towards the Tube station.

Travelling home an hour later than previous seasons thanks to the 3pm kickoff, I hoped that would mean a less crowded train. Well, there at least weren’t people standing in the central aisle this time. The train was busy enough for me to have to share my bench between Vauxhall and Woking but after that it wasn’t too bad. Just a delay of nearly a quarter of an hour thanks to a late-running train in front of us.

Snowflake Challenge: day 3

Jan. 5th, 2026 09:51 pm
shewhostaples: image of a heart with text 'you'll write the better poetry' (flippant)
[personal profile] shewhostaples
Write a love letter to fandom. It might be to fandom in general, to a particular fandom, favourite character, anything at all.

It's late and I'm tired and badly in need of some gentle quizzing on the telly and then bed, but:

For too much of my life I've felt faintly embarrassed by my own enthusiasms. I appreciate the reminder that it doesn't have to be like that. Thank you, fandom, for being so loudly, unapologetically, gloriously enthusiastic.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text
owlmoose: (kh - xemnas)
[personal profile] owlmoose

In hopes of bringing more structure to my life of continued unemployment, let's see about bring this series back, today with some media highlights of 2025. My writing is terribly rusty, but in the interest of starting somewhere, here we go.

Books, TV, movies, video games, not nearly comprehensive )

Books

Jan. 5th, 2026 03:35 pm
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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] newcomers
JANUARY 2026 BOOK: THE SPELLSHOP

[community profile] bookclub_dw has chosen The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst as our book for January.

I'll make the discussion post on January 31, 2026. If you have any discussion questions you'd like to be considered, please comment to this post
.


Looking for something new to read? This community works just like a facetime book club -- members pick a title per month, read it, and talk about it. \o/

NYE 2025

Jan. 5th, 2026 04:06 pm
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[personal profile] superborb
It was soooo helpful to be able to look back at notes from last time, so here are my NYE party notes for 2025! Now that I have recovered a bit from the sleep deprivation of being in a noisy house with a toddler...

Read more... )

Overall, I thought the food was pretty successful! Even though I was very sleep deprived, having the schedule did keep everything on task. I guess the real concerns for next time are trying to time hot food better (not really sure if that's possible with this style of food), and maybe I should consider more complicated dishes? I think it would've been easy to do a red braised pork, since that reheats well. I always want to have lots of little snacks before because that was My Job for ages, but it might be too much and detract from the meal...
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[personal profile] badfalcon
Dear fandom,

I don't think I'd have the life I have without you.

That's not hyperbole.

You've been one of the most consistent threads in my life, even when everything else has shifted around you.

I found you young, in my teens, when being intensely passionate about fictional worlds and Australian pop stars was all I knew. At school, I had basically no friends - I was into the wrong things, the things that marked you out as odd rather than interesting. I listened to the wrong music, watched the wrong TV shows, and wore the wrong clothes, and I liked reading.

I know now that I'm autistic and non-binary, but I didn't know it then - I was just... weird. I wasn't like the girls, so they didn't want to know me, and the boys who liked sci-fi wouldn't talk to me because they thought I was a girl.

But online, I found you. And I found people who cared about the same things I did, in the same way. You were where I learned how to talk to people, how to connect, how to build relationships around shared enthusiasm instead of small talk. You gave me community when I didn't have one.

Honestly, I don't think I'd have any friends without fandom. I met everyone in my life either through bands or TV shows (mostly Good Charlotte, Supernatural and Leverage) - all of us blogging our fears, our hopes and dreams on LJ.

I even met my partner through fandom, via commenting on her kinky SG-1 fanfic on AO3 - which has somehow, five years later, turned into a whole life together. It still feels slightly unreal when I stop and think about it. We're having a civil partnership ceremony in April, which we affectionately call “not getting married”.

You've been there through so many versions of me. Younger me, who needed you desperately. Older me, who wanders off sometimes and then finds their way back. You've changed shape over the years - different platforms, different cultures, different rules - and not all of those changes have been easy. Sometimes you're messy. Sometimes you're exhausting. Sometimes you're sharp in ways that hurt.

And yet

You've given me joy that doesn't need to justify itself. You've given me people who get it, who speak the same strange shorthand, who understand why caring deeply about fictional characters or real-life athletes can matter so much. You've taught me that enthusiasm is not something to grow out of, and that loving something - openly, thoughtfully, obsessively - can be a form of resilience

These days, fandom looks like tennis feelings and fic, like small, niche corners of the internet where a handful of people care just enough about the same things I do. It looks like late-night rabbit holes, shared jokes, collective gasps, and moments of tenderness I didn't know I needed until they appeared on my screen.

I don't love you uncritically. I know your flaws well. But I love you honestly, and I'm still here. You've shaped my friendships, my writing, my sense of self - and even my romantic life.

Thank you for growing with me. Thank you for waiting when I wandered off. Thank you for still making room for me now. Thank you for the people. Thank you for the connections. Thank you for still being here, and for letting me still be here too.

Snowflake Speed Run (Challenges 1-3)

Jan. 5th, 2026 12:22 pm
muccamukk: The edge of an intricate pink snowflake. (Snowflake)
[personal profile] muccamukk
PSA: LiveJournal may be about to geolock to Russia. If you have shit there that you like, and want to see again without visiting Russia, now's a good time to save it. (ETA: Not sure if the terminology is entirely correct, but the sentiment is.) Here's a long bluesky thread about it by [staff profile] denise, which includes ways to export LJ to DW and/or to your drive. IDK how people are saving LJ scrapbook.

I'd say pass it along, but I think it's pretty widely broadcast by now. Pass it along to spaces where one can find LJ people are who aren't on DW?

Anyway, on with the show.

Two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1 - 31


Challenge #1: The Icebreaker Challenge: Introduce yourself. Tell us why you're doing the challenge, and what you hope to gain from it.

Hi! I'm Muccamukk or Mucca. You may know me from Age of Sail, Stargate, Babylon 5, Marvel Comics, Band of Brothers or Top Gun fandoms, plus an extremely random selection of others across twenty plus years in online fandom spaces. I used to write fic and comment quite a bit, though I've been less active the last few years.

My pinned post and profile seem to be in good order, and I do still post link lists, book reviews and music from time to time.

I helped mod Snowflake for a few years there, and am taking this year off (mostly), so I'm looking forward to slightly lower-stakes participation, and maybe digging up some old memories/meeting new friends.

If you want to play an ice breaker game, check out my 2025 Media Tracker and ask me for a hot take on any albums, movies or shows on there (I think I've reviewed all the books up to December, which I'll cover in the next few weeks, but other media not as much).


Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom: Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!

Somehow, the only pet I can now think of is Darwin from seaQuest: DSV, who isn't strictly speaking a pet. The talking robot dolphin was a lot of fun, though.

Instead: here's a list of fic I've written that include significant pets (canonical or otherwise), because writing pets is really fun, given they're often (very cute) chaos goblins designed to throw plans awry. (Presented in order written):

Unstinting
Fandom: Marvel 616 (Captain America)
Summary: Sam Wilson, downtime.
Pet Content: Sam Wilson's canonical cat, Figaro.
Read on DW | Read on AO3

Found Sleeping
Fandom: Band of Brothers
Summary: After Replacements, Bill and Johnny look for Bull.
Pet Content: Original mama cat and kitten characters.
Read on DW | Read on AO3

To Say Nothing of the Tiger
Fandom: Hornblower (TV)
Summary: Admiral Pellew wants a favour. Horatio wants to do anything to help. William just wants to spend time with Horatio.
Pet Content: Admiral Pellew's [historically] canonical tiger.
Read on DW | Read on AO3

A Dog's Eye View
Fandom: Band of Brothers
Summary: How Trigger sees the events of "Crossroads."
Pet Content: The dog that Tab probably stole found in Holland.
Read on DW | Read on AO3

Also, here's a picture of my cat, who is a fandom pet insofar as she's named after Kaylee from Firefly.Read more... )


Challenge #3: Write a love letter to fandom. It might be to fandom in general, to a particular fandom, favourite character, anything at all.

I have a vague memory of a History of Psychology class some twenty years ago, where the professor was talking about the uncertainty of knowing if the world you perceived with your sense and senses was even remotely similar to the world anyone else perceived. He described philosophy (which is more or less what psychology was for most of history) as being like creating an image of the world, and holding it cupped in your hands, then opening your hands to show it to other people, and inquiring if that matched their image of the world, a process which bagged a number of questions for future philosophers to attempt to unpack. (Some of all of these details may be incorrectly recalled, with apologies to Professor C.)

This is how I feel about art in general, and fandom specifically: that need to articulate how one understands the world, and see if anyone else feels the same. And, yes, that does often involve a lot of pornography, but the point of transformative works as a form of philosophical communication remains.

I see a story out in the wide world, and it sparks something in me: resonates with a life experience, and emotion, something I want and don't have, an aspirational or cautionary way of moving through life, a new idea, something that just really pisses me off. The story speaks to me about how I perceive the world, and I wonder if that's true for anyone else, too.

So I take that story, and say to a friend and peer, "Hey, did you see that? Did it inspire/intrigue/inflame you too?" And someone else comes back and says, "Yes, but also..." or "Yes, and this too..." or "No, because..."

(or they don't, ask me about being in a fandom of one...)

And that communication can take the form of edits, or discord conversations, or meta posts, or pic spams, or setting the story to music, or rewriting it into a new story, or making a picture, or... or... or.... (In some ways, those reaction fic, that just retell a scene in a show or movie from the PoV of the author's blorbo are the most immediate form of this.)

As a form of philosophy, it's imperfect, and often shallow, and inherently biased, but holding my fannish heart between two cupped hands and showing it to others has gone a long way to formulating how I interact with the world, and often made me feel less alone.

And for that, I'm grateful.
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

Things are tough out there. Money is tight, groceries are expensive, and day by day products are getting worse and worse. These days, you get far less bang for your buck.

You go on Amazon or Etsy to buy something, and everything is from a “brand” called QvorTply, and they sell the most suck-tastic dropship items. More and more often people tell me they’re buying things from Temu and Shein and that it’s all crap and a complete waste of money.

So, what is worth buying? Which brands can you trust, what products are worth buying, and which brands aren’t total bastards? Well, I don’t have all the answers, but I did buy a lot of stuff in 2025 with some mixed results. Today, I’m here to share some products and brands that I really like, and what I felt like was worth my money and a good purchase.

This will be a pretty interesting assortment of stuff, and while they’re in no particular order, I will be mostly trying to keep things of the same category together, like a big section of fabric/clothing items, then a section of food items, etc. Anyways, I hope you find something you like!

I’m going to start off with a brand I’ve actually talked about on the blog once before: Geometry. That’s right y’all, I liked it so much that I’m telling you all about it again just in case you missed it the first time!

Geometry is a home goods brand that specializes in towels, but has also recently branched out into blankets, linens, table cloths, things of that nature.

I never thought that I could love a dish towel so much, but Geometry’s Kitchen Tea Towels are the quite literally the greatest dish towels of all time. And to think, I was so hesitant to buy one of their towels because of the $18 price point, but now I can’t stop recommending them to all my friends.

So, what makes Geometry’s tea towels worth eighteen bucks a pop? Well, without even getting into the brand’s sustainability efforts and partnerships with artists, the towels themselves are huge in comparison to a regular dish towel. They are extra thin, making for quick drying time and way less musty-ness. They wash and dry so easy, and are even super wrinkle-resistant. I never knew how much I hated wrinkles in my dish towels until I saw Geometry’s come out of the dryer wrinkleless.

Whatever vibe you’ve got going for your kitchen, there’s a towel to fit it. You can filter the towels by styles such as retro, coastal, floral, abstract, or by color if you’re trying to stick to a specific color scheme. There’s so many different prints to choose from, and all of them are from real artists.

One of my favorite designers they have partnered with is Julianne Haness. They even have a little article over her and her art! I also quite like Ceyda Alasar, Rebecca Bobko, and Janna Sue Design. In a time of AI “art” and brands not wanting to pay artists for anything, it’s so nice to see a brand that respects the artists’ they partner with and provides tons of different designs from artists all over the world.

Aside from their tea towels, the only other product I’ve tried is their table runners. I bought three back in November or so, all of them in their large 16″ by 120″ size. I really like them! They’ve got a real nice heft and thickness to them that makes them feel like a quality product. I got two for the holidays, this Cedar print one, and this Doodles for the Holiday design. The third is for the summer, and is called Summer Air. I especially love this one because of the baguette.

So, I love the products of theirs that I’ve tried, and I love that Geometry partners with real artists. For my final trick, I’ll tell you about their sustainability efforts that really seal the deal on them being a cool brand. All of their products are made from recycled materials, and they say that a tea towel saves 3.5 water bottles from going into the landfill.

Geometry also has a recycling program called the Take Back Bag. Basically, you purchase this bag from them for $20 (stick with me here), you fill the bag with your old (clean) towels, linens, other textiles you no longer want, send it back to them, and you get $30 to use on Geometry products! A whole free ten bucks to spend on great tea towels just for recycling and making a positive impact on the environment.

So, yeah! Try a tea towel or two. Let me know what you think. In a perfect world, their membership program wouldn’t be full right now, and I’d be in it, but alas.

Continuing with fabric type goods, the next brand on my list is Fresh Clean Threads. How many times have you seen a shirt company advertising that their shirts are different? How many claim to be more comfortable, softer, and fit better on bigger bodies, so you take a chance on them, only to realize they’re not really as special as they claim to be? For me, the answer is a lot! There’s a lot of brands that had big claims, but only Fresh Clean Threads has delivered.

I absolutely love Fresh Clean Threads shirts, hoodies, crew sweatshirts, and joggers. To be clear moving forward, they have a women’s collection but I have only ever bought from the men’s collection. I’ve not tried any of their women’s stuff.

Anyways, a standard t-shirt is $23 and a long-sleeve is $25. The hoodies are just under $60 and the crew-neck sweatshirts are about $50. To me, this all seems pretty standard pricing, but they do have sales like, all the time. They even have a whole tab for just sale items if you’re feelin’ frisky. Like usually a pair of joggers is almost $50 but this two-pack is $30 right now?! Crazy deals to be had, I tell you what.

You can also build a bundle of five items and get a discount and it doesn’t even have to all be the same type of item. Pretty cool.

Their sizing is from S-3X for guys and XS-3X for women, and they have a “tall” option for men, too. I personally wear the 2X in men’s for all their tops and bottoms.

Fresh Clean Threads has, in my book, made the most comfortable shirts of all time. Like they actually nailed it. Even though I wear the men’s shirts and hoodies, everything fits so comfortably and no part is too tight on me. Especially the sleeves, I hate when sleeves are too tight or too short on my arms. They have perfected the sleeve game.

Plus, the hoodies are actually hefty and warm! Very soft inside. And best of all, none of their products come with scratchy tags. You don’t have to rip off any plastic tags or have anything itchy inside your shirt. I really value that in a shirt.

I swear every single shirt I own has shrunk in the dryer, but I’ve washed and dried my Fresh Clean Threads items a hundred times and they don’t shrink even a little bit and they haven’t worn out at all even through constant use. These are just really solid shirts, y’all!

You can wear them out and about as is, use them as a comfortable base for layering, and honestly the t-shirts are so comfortable I actually sleep in them on an almost nightly basis. They’re just really versatile, excellent staples, and I highly recommend them.

I’m also in their membership program, which is $19 a year and gets you 20% off every purchase, free shipping on every order, and early access to sales and new product launches. I can’t tell you how worth it it’s been for me to be a member, because I have ordered over twenty-five items from them (about half of which were gifts).

Finally, you know I have to mention their sustainability efforts. Fresh Clean Threads is partnered with the Coral Reef Alliance with a $50k minimum pledge each year, all of their factories are WRAP certified, and their packaging is 100% recyclable. Solid stuff!

For our next clothing brand we have the ever-popular Bombas. It took me far too many years to realize that the quality of your socks actually matters. I used to think that any ol’ sock was just as good as any other sock, it was of no importance to me the fabric of the sock or how thin it was. Well, now I know better! And Bombas are the best socks I’ve ever owned.

I actually didn’t buy Bombas for like, a solid year because I could not get past the price point. Between $15 and $20 for a pair of socks?! Who has that kind of money for socks? Well, after years of buying cheap packs and running holes through them and having to buy more cheap packs, turns out I do spend that kind of money on socks, so why not redirect it towards actually quality ones so I can stop buying the cheap packs?

I have been wearing the absolute heck out of my Bombas and they are literally just as intact and just as comfortable as day one of having them. I’ve not gotten any holes or threadbare spots or anything, and they feel nice and thick without being constricting or making my shoe too tight.

Personally, I really like their women’s half calf socks with this cute retro stripe design.

Bombas whole thing is that they donate an item for every item bought. Whether it’s underwear, shirts, or socks, they have given over 150 million items to 4,000 different community organizations in all fifty states. I honestly had a hard time believing they were really giving away a pair for every pair bought, but a couple months ago someone I know told me that her family member goes to a low-income dentist in Dayton, and they have a big basket of brand new Bombas free for the taking in their lobby. Turns out, Bombas was impacting my community and I didn’t even know it!

If the price point is really getting to you like it did to me, you can use code COMFORT20 for 20% off your first order, and there’s free shipping when you spend $75. Trust me, it’s a good investment long-term.

Moving on from textiles, I’d like to briefly mention AppyHour! The reason I say briefly is because I have already done three posts over AppyHour this past year (which you can see all three of here), but I just wanted to mention that I liked them enough to put them in this recommendation list.

AppyHour is a subscription based service and purveyor of fine meats, cheeses, and accoutrements that are shipped to your door so you have everything you need to make a yummy and impressive snack spread for you and your guests.

I think they’re a really nice small business with good customer service and are providing good quality products for a good price! I would say really the only thing to keep in mind is if you get the boxes long-term there do tend to be some repeats of items. Honestly this isn’t too much of an issue for me because the repeats I’ve gotten are some of my favorite items, like the Prairie Breeze Cheddar, and I’m plenty happy to put them on a board again.

And of course I’m still super grateful that when I posted about them in the past, y’all used my referral code for twenty bucks off your box, and all these months later I’m still working through the credits I got from that. I have enjoyed many a box paid for entirely by y’all signing up.

So if you’re in the market for some charcuterie goods to entertain visiting friends and family, definitely check out AppyHour! They’re pretty cool.

Branching out into jewelry, this next brand is the most new to me on this list, as I only found out about them during their Black Friday sale in November.

Nominal is a jewelry brand founded by a Palestinian Muslim Arabic-speaking woman and her husband, and each piece is inspired by the rich culture of the Middle East. Every order donates to Palestine relief aid, with over a million dollars donated so far. My favorite of all their jewelry is in their Palestine Collection.

I bought the Olive Leaf Earrings, the Palestine country map necklace, a super cute dainty watermelon bracelet, and watermelon studs.

All of their gold-plated jewelry is 18k gold with hypoallergenic stainless steel underneath. They say you can wear your pieces in the shower, sweat in them, wear them daily, and not worry about them tarnishing, fading, or causing skin irritation. I think Nominal has so many beautiful pieces for an affordable price, and has an amazing cause behind it. It’s something I feel good about purchasing and wearing on the regular.

Finally, I’d like to feature Le Creuset, as I am truly a ride or die customer for Le Creuset products.

Le Creuset is probably best known for their enameled cast iron Dutch ovens. While there are many brands that also make these types of products, Le Creuset is truly the cream of the crop. Yes, they are expensive, but if you have the money, you won’t find anything better.

Le Creusets are beautiful, come in a wide array of colors, and are going to be your new favorite pot to cook in, whether it’s on the stove-top or in the oven. Hefty, reliable, beautiful, their Dutch ovens are the best of the best.

But what about their other products? Well, aside from owning four of their Dutch ovens (one in Sea Salt, one in Marseille, a red heart shaped one, and one smaller one in White), I also have one braiser (with a glass lid (in Sea Salt)), a tea kettle (white with pink and red heart print), a set of mugs (in Shell Pink), two of these square baking dish sets (one in Sea Salt and one in Marseille), a heart shaped spoon rest (in Chiffon Pink), a baking sheet, this salt crock, two mini coquettes (one purple with a flower lid, one white and pink/red heart print one), and a pink pepper and salt mill set that I can’t find in their pepper and salt mill section so you’ll just have to use your imagination.

love Le Creuset. So much. Their products are so wonderful and beautiful and you’ll be proud to showcase them on your stove or serving up soup to your guests at a dinner party. My wishlist of items from this brand are never ending. My self control is at a breaking point around these damn Dutch ovens. Plus, they have some crazy sales going on right now.

So, there you have it. Six brands I bought from in 2025 and think they’re worth recommending to others. Brands that supply you with actual quality products, and that are worth your money. Because there’s a lot of stuff that isn’t worth your money out there, and I am personally sick of wasting money on bad products.

I hope you found something you like amidst my recommendations! What’s a brand you’ve recently discovered that you’re a big fan of? Let me know in the comments, and have a great day!

-AMS

juushika: Drawing of a sleeping orange cat (Default)
[personal profile] juushika
Title: Beasts
Author: Joyce Carol Oates
Published: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2002 (2001)
Rating: 4 of 5
Page Count: 140
Total Page Count: 556,575
Text Number: 2088
Read Because: ??, borrowed from Open Library
Review: In the 1970s, at an all-girls college, a naive 20-year-old falls in love with her professor, but, "if you love a married man you exist in a special, secret, undeclared relationship with his wife." Fascinating to read this soon after Jackson's Hangsaman; which could be how it ended up on my TBR, I can't remember. Regardless, much the same premise, very different treatment. Oates, unsurprisingly, forgoes the subtlety of subtext for the horror of text. And I don't mind; I've had poor success with Oates in the past, finding her tryhard, style over grace; but the writing here really worked for me, punchy declarations and an effective use of repetition. Layered levels of unreality, the experience of early adulthood and being in love, of open secrets, of being taking advantage of in increasingly overt ways, builds an effective atmosphere within this brief, surprisingly dense novella. It makes me want to give Oates another try.