Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Gale's Gallery XXV: Six More Random Cards + Giveaway!

Hello!

Simon Says Stamp (SSS) Large Scripty Greetings stamp, Versafine Black Ink-clear embossed.  Circle cut from Lawn Fawn (LF) circle stack, center circle on black fun foam, to raise image.  Distress inks:  Salty Ocean, Peacock Feathers and Tumbled Glass, blended then sprayed with water.  Pretty Pink Posh (PPP) droplets.


I am slowly making my way to the craft room, determined to put it to use!  Recently, Wanda, Elesa and I went again to the Stampaway convention in Cincinnati, OH.  We bought some things, there weren't a lot of new products and most things were full retail.  So we walked around and looked for interesting techniques.  Comment below on which technique you like best and be eligible for a random drawing for 25ish unmounted rubber stamps and a sheet of E-Z Mount to get you started!  If you are industrious, you can fit a ton of stamps on just one sheet:)  I will announce the winner on Labor Day, so check back!




SSS Vented Star die, LF Scripty Hello die, black cardstock spattered with Copic Opaque White Ink on top of Ellen Hutson Gold Vellum. Card base is Neenah Solar White 110 ib. Tiny gold stars from PPP.




Neenah Desert Storm 11lb. cardstock base.  Layered Lily by Altenew Stamps.  Versamark ink on red card stock with Hero Arts Unicorn White Pigment Ink.  Spectrum Noir clear glitter marker, border from My Favorite Things (MFT) Die-namics, twine and Nuvo White Drops.



SSS Ice Cream Cone Plush die, various Distress die shaded backgrounds, PPP sequins





MFT Die-Namics Stitched Rectangles, Galaxy watercolor painted background, silver thread, PPP gold stars,  stamp unknown.



Neat and Tangled Heart of Gold die cut from alcohol inked glossy card stock and purple card stock with inset technique.  White Nuvo drops and Hello stamp from Ellen Hutson.  Wink of Stella clear colored on heart for shimmer.


If you have any questions, please feel free to click on the comments link below saying which technique is your favorite so you'll be entered in the drawing!!!!

Until next time,

Gale

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

The Wizarding World of Harry Potter: "Wizard" Version

Hello Potterheads!


Entering Platform 9 3/4

You should read the "Muggles" version for the basic park info and tips, especially the restaurant ones.  


But if you are a true fan, I know you would like to know details of that part of the trip.  


As the Muggle version will tell you, the Wizarding World sections of the parks are more crowded then the rest.  So we recommend going back to Hogsmeade first as the crowd looks like it hits Diagon Alley as they first walk in.  So, the rides at Hogsmeade have little to no wait times first thing in the morning (8:00 a.m.)  


The Forbidden Journey ride queue winds through Hogwarts and is really neat.  The line actually went so fast that I think we missed some of it.  Note the talking portraits and all the stuff they have packed in there.  It would be nice if one could just tour Hogwarts on their own and not necessarily ride the ride.  I guess you could just bail at the end though.  The ride is jerky and not necessarily for everyone, but it is cool.  You feel like you are flying with them.


The wait time for the Gringott's ride said 20 mins, but it was at least double that, so don't rely on the signs.  It also had things for you to see in the line which is mostly inside a building.  While I'm thinking of it....


I know the desire to shop is a strong one, but really that should all wait until you are done with the rides.  They do have 1 hr free lockers at each ride, but they are tiny and really only meant for stuff like cellphones, glasses, etc.  The locker areas are crammed with folks entering and exiting.  They use fingerprint technology so the same person has to get the stuff out.  

Since the Potter areas are in two parks, it makes it a pain to use their free package storage service.  We were thrilled to send the stuff up front, but at the end, we found out we had to go back to the other park to pick up things too.  Now there is a huge area called City Walk in front of both parks.  Why didn't they just have one main pick up place there?  Just buy what you must in one park, pack it to the other via the train, then add it to whatever you buy there and send it all up front at once.



The exact replica of the Hogwarts Express.  This is a nice, but short ride between the parks with a video through the windows that makes you feel as you are actually traveling through the English countryside with wizard students.

The one thing folks might want to pack around is their interactive wand.  Taylor and I decided against it at the last minute as it was more money $53w/tax for an already silly purchase:) Audra wanted to use the map and try the interactive spots.  Not all of them worked or took more effort to learn then the time one had with the crowd waiting.  BTW, Taylor got Dumbledore's wand, I got Professor McGonagall's and Audra got Professor Snape's.  They are neat looking, but made of resin, so not only breakable, but meltable if left in a car, etc.  I have to say that I was actually more interested in having the Ollivander bag:) They have a show next door where "the wand chooses you," but we just chose our wands and got out of that crowded store.





Most of the stuff we purchased.  We had very limited space to carry stuff home on our flight.  Clockwise from L:  Remberall--just lights up, about $20, Dumbledore's wand, chocolate frogs with trading cards $11, McGonagall's wand, a popular candy "Fizzing Whizzbees" $9, caldron coffee mug $17, feather (ballpoint) pen $11, filled Honeyduke's jar $12 (unfilled ones are in black/white lettering), pumpkin juice $8, in the blue box-mint frogs $8, Snape's wand, then Hogsmeade postcards $10 for 10.

I purchased some postcards and sent from the "Owl Post."  I took my own postage stamps (they charge an outlandish price for stamps) and saved some time by pre-addressing labels.  I jotted a little note, took them to the Post and they postmarked them with a Hogsmeade mark.  Then I dropped them in the mailbox that was right there.


The prices they can charge for stuff and still actually sell it in droves amazes me!  I bet the markup on some things is 1000 percent!  



They tried to mimic the food and drinks--there was butter beer in all forms (regular, frozen, ice cream, hot.)  I think it tastes like cream soda with a lot more foam.  The pumpkin juice tastes kind of like apple/pumpkin pie--the bottle is cute though.  I had a cauldron cake for $6 which was like a fudge-filled cupcake.  The large chocolate frogs come with a two-dimensional trading card of one of the house heads or Dumbledore.  The most popular candy with the staff seemed to be the Fizzing Whizzes.  They are basically chocolate covered pop rocks and are pretty good.

We missed one wizard ride, the Flight of the Hippogriff.  It's a moderate roller coaster, but apparently the line queue goes past Hagrid's hut.  It was either closed or a long wait every time we were by.

Fizzing Whizzbee
The famous Chocolate Frog--solid chocolate.  Good, but not great--the trading card is fun though!



Close up of Snape's wand and the interactive wand map.

Dumbledore's wand on left, McGonagall's on right.  I especially like the wand shopping bag!


Well, that's it for now...please feel free to comment or email me with any questions/comments!  It's a necessary "Pottered Pilgrimage" if you love the books!  Here is a video of Taylor walking through Platform 9 3/4...




Until next time!

Gale

PS:  Please excuse the multiple colors and fonts....I have no idea why I can't change it.  Must be the wizards messing with me!




Sunday, August 7, 2016

The Wizarding World of Harry Potter--"Muggle" Version

Hi!

Audra, Taylor and I recently took a really quick trip to Universal Studios Orlando.  I would like to tell you a bit about it and some things we learned along the way.  There will be another "Wizard" Version that details the Harry Potter side of things for folks who want more in depth info on that aspect of the trip.

We got a "Big Pink" donut and split it with a ton to spare.  It was one of the more reasonably priced things of the day at only $5.  To give you some perspective, this donut below is in a cake box.  This baby is 1,700 calories if you could eat it all.

It started out with buying a trip package from Allegiant Airlines.  I hadn't heard much about them, but I knew they specialized in travel to FL and were kind of a bargain airline.  Well, I'm not sure I saved a ton of money as the fees kept mounting, but I probably did.  However, we had very nice, uneventful  flights both ways.  The planes are new, the staff polite, checking in was easy--I really wouldn't have had to buy the priority checkin, but for $8 a person, it was nice to put your stuff away and be seated before the hoard.   I really liked flying out of Rickenbacker Airport as my jeep was parked in the front row and it was a short walk to the terminal.

The snacks and drinks weren't outlandishly priced, but you could bring your own on board as long as the drink was purchased in the "sanitary zone"--meaning after security check.  When landing in Orlando-Sandord, the crew was a little giddy as it was their last stop.  All of the sudden what looked like white smoke started rolling out from behind the overhead bins.  Really, it was refrigerant, but still a surprise as I hadn't flown in a long time.  The head attendant put music from "Thriller" on the P.A. system and we laughed.  Taylor said "I thought this was a non-smoking flight!"

We just had carryons, so we took another brief walk across a covered street and picked up the Alamo rental car.  It took maybe 3 minutes to check in and another couple to go find the car.  They didn't have the car I ordered, so we got a free upgrade.  It was a Ford Focus and very nice.  We hit Orlando rush hour traffic, but still made it to the Doubletree by Hilton in 45 minutes or so.

Check in there was a breeze as well.  I asked for a room with a view of Universal Studios.  Three warm cookies and three free shuttle passes later, we went up to our room.  Now, the room could've maybe used a makeover, but it was clean and on the 7th floor.  We watched the lit-up roller coasters and later, the fireworks both nights right from the window.

View from our room!
As we were walking through the lobby there was the usual cabinet with tourist trap brochures.  One that caught our eye was the "Titanic Gala Dinner" dining experience.  As we were trying to imagine what that might entail, Taylor said "they probably feed you dinner, then fill the room with water..."  That kid has his mom's sick sense of humor!  I watched the Republican Convention while the kids took a swim.

We were up bright and early the next morning because we had two parks to cover.  You see, they judiciously built "Diagon Alley" in Universal Studios and "Hogsmeade" in Universal's Islands of Adventure which are completely separate parks.  So, in order to see both places, you have to buy one-day, two-park tickets at $160 plus tax each adult.  You take the "Hogwarts Express" train to shuttle between them.  They asked for your ticket and fingerprint every time you got on the train and their machines don't always work well.

I decided from all my homework that the meal plan might be a good deal for us.  I got the one with unlimited Coke products, which includes a mug with a computer chip.  You can only fill once in 10 mins.  But later we found out it isn't really unlimited, there are only two places in each park you can get drinks, and they don't really service them so midday on there is no ice and way fewer choices.    The $28 meal plan said 1 meal with non-alcoholic beverage and 1 snack.  We thought that would cover the goofy drinks and snacks in Wizarding World but it doesn't.

For breakfast at Three Broomsticks the sign said eggs, bacon, croissant, hash browns and I think drink for $16.99.  Holy cow!  I told the kids not to use their meal thing because usually breakfast is the cheapest meal.  I was wrong.  However, I asked the witch directing the line and she told us we could get a la carte stuff and make our own breakfast sandwich.  We did that and saved around $40!  For me the trip was getting to be one big cash hemorrhage though.

When we ordered our dinner at the Leaky Cauldron we were told that the non-alcoholic drink was not included because they consider the Coke thing the drink.  What?  It doesn't say that on their promotion materials anywhere!   It very clearly states that drink is separate!  So we had water on principle and sought out the Coke machines. (which has non-pop choices, sort of)  Then, the snacks can only come off street carts and not in "Wizarding World."  We wound up wasting one because we were too hot and tired to care.

View from the spot where we waited for Taylor to get off the Transformer ride.  Very pretty!

The American Express card is supposed to get you a boatload of benefits, but that is all smoke and mirrors.  I did get 10% off the meal plan rip off and a set of coupons that were absolutely worthless unless you wanted to spend yet another fortune.  Plus, we were only spending one day.  You are also supposed to get 10% of shopping, etc, but not in any Harry Potter areas.  If you spend $70 at the Universal Store it allegedly counts.  The kids wanted to buy their stuff in Harry Potter shops like Ollivander's Wand Shop, etc.  However, when I signed up for the card there was a $250 cash back if you spent $1000 in 90 days.  No problem there! (and the cash was instantly deducted when I hit the $1,000.)

Did I tell you it was hot????  Hotter than Bill-Be-You-Know-What and humid.  This was the only time I could take vacation days because I was covering for someone's leave of absence at work.   I knew it would be hot, but this was beyond imagination!  Not only was it hot, really hot, but we had a rainy period and it was so crowded there was very little room to get out of the rain.

We rode the creepiest, most idiotic Dr. Seuss ride ever (a weird "It's A Small World" type but riding on sofas) just to get out of the rain and into air conditioning.  We were there on a Friday and when I say crowded, you could hardly move in either Harry Potter section.  Now the rest of the park was average to kind of empty.  We rode all but one Harry Potter ride first thing in the a.m. and the lines were shortish.  But come afternoon they were hitting 90 minute waits.  Ain't nothing worth that wait to me!

You could go through single rider lines quicker and we did a couple times.  Men-In-Black was fun as you get to shoot at aliens.  But with the rain, several of the big attractions shut down for a bit, so we gave up.  The heat was getting to me...Did I tell you it was hot and muggy??  Our clothes were sticking to us!  However, it appears Ohio had the same weather so I guess suffering was unavoidable.

The next morning we hopped in the car and drove around a bit, stopping at a nice Harley dealership.  We headed back to the airport kind of early, but it was nice to not be in a hurry and we were home by 8 p.m. that night.



Stay tuned for the "Wizard's" Version coming soon!

Gale