Latest Posts

Hybrid Hub: Card # 60 – Little Greeting

130808-IMG_8587I‘m ready to share my next card with you. This actually was a really really simple to make card. All I had to do was cut a bunch of flower shapes (with my Silhouette), cut the leaves, stems from green and the flower centers from yellow card stock. Using a stamp and punch from Stampin’ Up I created the little sentiments, added a ribbon, and voila! A card to hopefully delight someone’s heart some time!

 

 

 

Here’s a look at some detail:

130808-IMG_8590

Inspire Me: EllenT

I can never get enough inspiration. In fact, sometimes it’s a page I see that actually motivates me to get to scrapping again. Today, therefore, I’d like to introduce you to another great scrapper whose pages continue to inspire me: EllenT. Her gallery at sweetshoppedesigns.com is full of great layouts, and if you haven’t ever checked out her pages, I recommend you do so!

130807-ZPD_BeachBum

 

Bye Bye Switzerland

130804-IMG_9263

It’s sad, but it’s true: it’s time to move on. That means, it’s time to say bye bye, Switzerland! After a week full of adventure, of hiking, celebrating, of resting, eating chocolate fondue (yes, with 4 kinds of Swiss chocolate, what greater indulgence could there be?), for one last time we went to see the mountains (which we ended up not seeing from the little hill we drove to, because they’d decided to hide behind the clouds), and then the call was back to the road. Bye bye Switzerland! I’m going to miss your beauty and your charms!

130804-Photo-Aug-04,-11-26-02

scrapbook layout, outdoor

P2D: Hell’s Valley

I’ve found another page I thought would be fun to turn into a digital scraplift. Check out this page by WaiSam:

I loved the paper strips behind the photo about this page. But also the placement of the big title, the tiny little elements and the photo collage. So, I went ahead and tried to incorporate these things on my own page …

Sula-130831b

Survival at the Eiger

They call it the “murder(0us) wall” – the Eiger north face, one of the six great north faces of the Alps. When we made the Eiger our hiking destination for today, we had no clue yet, how close we’d come to experience this mountain’s treacherous reputation for ourselves.

You see, everything started out just lovely. All we’d wanted was a fun day in the mountains, with a bit of hiking, and a lot of grand views of the mountains and the scenery around. And with dear cousin living so close to the famed mountains of Eiger, Monk, and Virgin (Eiger, Mönch, Jungfrau), our day’s destination was pretty clear to start out with: the Lauterbrunnen valley, from where we would decide what and where we would hike. (Last year, I’d hiked the mountain ranges across from Eiger and its two companions.)

So, we parked the car in Lauterbrunnen, and decided to hike up to Wengen (more like walk, because there’s no trails; just follow the road). The weather was glorious (warm, the sun shining happily all around), and we arrived in Wengen after about an hour’s walk. Seeing the mighty peaks around, however, we got tempted. Tempted to see a bit more, and so quickly the decision was made that we’d take the train up to the mountain hotel “Kleine Scheidegg” (a real tourist magnet), from where we would hike back down the mountain, all the way back to Lauterbrunnen. Nothing adventurous about that, really. Tons of tourists do that every day, people who’ve otherwise never hiked a yard in their lives. The mountain is littered with trails all up and down, and all trails are pretty easy walks, really.

Soon enough, the train arrived, and we set out, up, up, far up the mountain. At the foot of the famed Eiger north face, we got off the train, and soon had found us a pretty place for a little picnic. Glorious view. Everything perfect. But then, as we turned to actually begin our hike back down the mountain, we noticed something. Clouds. Lots of them, and very low … they came streaming in, up from the valley. Still, the weather had be so happy that I didn’t think much of it. Until it began to drip. Soon it was pouring and we found ourselves in a mighty thunderstorm – wondering which way to turn to be safe from all the lightning that struck all around. (It was probably a good thing that we didn’t know that on this very day, on the same mountain, another mountaineer died – struck by lightning.)

At any rate, we pretty much ran all the way down that mountain, hoping that the trails we chose would help us escape the lightnings, and still we all got soaked long before we reached Wengen and Lauterbrunnen again.

How good, we realized, that due to the perfect weather conditions at the time we started out, we’d left all our rain protection gear in the car … so now we had at least something dry to change into!

Photo-Aug-03,-11-50-59

 

Lauterbrunnen

IMG_9173

Starting out from Lauterbrunnen

IMG_9174 IMG_9183 IMG_4190

Lauterbrunnen, deep below …

IMG_4204

Arriving in Wengen

IMG_9193 IMG_9195 IMG_4218

Train station in Wengen

IMG_4225

Wengen (with train station) … already far up the mountain

IMG_4231 IMG_4249 IMG_9199 IMG_9200

Mountain hotel “Kleine Scheidegg” at the bottom of the Eiger north face


IMG_4258

A place for a picnic (view down to Grindelwald)

IMG_9205 IMG_4259 IMG_4268 IMG_4270 IMG_4274 IMG_4281 Photo-Aug-03,-14-50-35

Eiger north wall (left)

IMG_9209

Clouds are moving in

IMG_4301 IMG_9213 IMG_9214

View to Mürren (from where we started our hiking tour last year)

IMG_9216 IMG_9218 IMG_4322 IMG_9223 IMG_9225 IMG_9228 IMG_9229 IMG_9232 IMG_9237 IMG_9242 IMG_9247 IMG_9248 IMG_9250 IMG_9252

After the hike

Photo-Aug-03,-18-45-11 Photo-Aug-03,-18-45-26

You can find more reports of my previous hiking tours here:

2012 – Day 1
2012 – Day 2
2013 – Day 1
2013 – Day 2