Monday, October 15, 2012

Thigh Cookies!


I have a number of projects that I've been meaning to post, but I'm just so excited about what I made this weekend, I can't wait to share it!

The other day I was in Anatomy lab looking at MRI images of the thigh, like this:



The Fellow who teaches my section jokingly described these axial views as "thigh cookies." From this I was inspired.  Using a recipe for Pinwheel cookies often found at Christmas (http://allrecipes.com/recipe/christmas-pinwheel-cookies/) my roommate Hannah joined me and we set to work.

We made 2 red-based shades to make the different muscles, white for the bone, and yellow to make the nerves and skin.



Here's the part where I practice my anatomical knowledge, so feel free to skip ahead to the photos if you don't want to study with me. I started by forming the femur, complete with medial and lateral condyles. I then realized it would work best to build from the bottom up, so I formed the superficial posterior compartment, including the biceps femoris, semitendinosus, and semimembranosus. I then used the yellow dough to form a simplified version of the adductor canal, representing the saphenous nerve, femoral artery and femoral vein. I then placed the adductor muscles, including the adductor magnus which originates from the linea aspera on the femur. I added gracilis on the medial side, and then paused to take a picture.



Then I formed the anterior compartment including the vastus medialis, intermedius, and lateralis, added rectus femoris, which I attached to a patella, and finished it off by forming sartorius. With the remaining yellow dough I added a layer of skin to complete the entire thigh. Huzzah!


You can see the condyles of the femur and the patella sticking out here. Then I popped that sucker in the fridge and went back to studying for a couple of hours.

When sufficiently cooled, I sliced up the thigh and set each cookie out to bake.



It looks pretty close to the real thing, if I do say so myself!



Then Hannah and I packed them up and gave a bunch to the Anatomy Fellows, a bunch to our classmates, and a huge pile to the 2nd year students who are taking their intimidating Neuro final as I type. Good luck, Class of 2015!

Monday, May 14, 2012

This is what I wear when it's really important

Guess what! I got accepted to medical school!!! 

YAY YAY YAY YAY! Come August, I will be joining the ranks of the University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine's class of 2016. In four short years, I might just change the name of this blog to "Dr. Hollybee Makes Stuff."

But this post is not about that. This post is about a lovely blouse that I just happened to make for my interview to said university. In the last few days before the MCAT I needed something to get my mind away from freaking out too much about the exam, and so I devised and implemented the design for this wonderful addition to my wardrobe. 


Why pale green? Why, to match my eyes of course!

I made a standard button-down slightly fitted blouse, and came up with the idea of adding the pleated detailing to the front in a kind of tuxedo-top style to add a bit of uniqueness to an otherwise normal design. 

Ohhhh my gooooodness --- those pleats took a lot of fabric!!


It took me hours to get those things right, and a number of minor burns on my hands and fingers from the iron (and pokes from the straightpins!). But I got those pleats looking gorgeous. I decided to add a flat edging to them to make them easier to deal with, and flipped one edge over to give a kind of twisted style to them. That way they were even more 3D and amazing. 



Here I am on interview day at the campus! I had just finished all the events for the day when I remembered I needed to snap a photo of myself in all my stylishness. Needless to say that grabbing a picture of myself in high winds by holding my phone backwards while juggling a full purse and a fountain soda was a bit of a challenge. But you can see me, a bit of the blouse, and even a bit of the campus in the background!


Lessons learned: I cut the sleeves a good inch longer than the pattern called for, which didn't even end up being long enough. This pattern requires a good 3 extra inches to be safe (am I that much taller than the average woman? Somehow I doubt it.). This was fixed in this case by adding another set of twisted pleats in between the sleeve and the cuffs. 

Fun fact: while working on the pleats for hours, I caught the movie "No Strings Attached" on Netflix, which just happens to feature Natalie Portman as a nerdy girl from MIT who goes to med school and becomes an awesome doctor! And then she has lots of sex with Ashton Kutcher! Good thing Demi Moore's out of the way, because it looks like I have a great future ahead of me!


Sunday, January 15, 2012

Shoving another sibling down the aisle

Another year, another wedding!



Last October my older sister Ellie married her longtime boyfriend Travis, and I was lucky enough to be maid of honor for their nuptials. As one may likely guess, I enjoyed another chance to get a bit crafty (and thereby spent all my creative energies for last fall, exhausting myself in the process such that I've had little motivation for anything else since then). I have been regretting my laxness in posting lately, so I intend to document the one major project I've worked on over the past six months, which was of course comprised of a million small and large projects.

Ellie of course did the majority of the planning and execution, but I enjoyed my own ideas. So where shall we start? Ellie decided upon candy favors, and picked a cute origami box design to hold them in. I suggested the wrapping, and voilĂ !


I also designed the programs shown above, including sketches done by my mother for decoration. They folded at the top, with the inside text printed on translucent vellum, a series of seashells at the bottom.

Ellie assigned me the task of figuring out the centerpieces, so with the closing sale at our local Joanne's last summer, I put a little something together. An example of which can be seen here:



I found hurricane lamp-shaped vases, which I filled with crushed quahog shells we had harvested from the bay (after eating the meat! yummy!). I grabbed a bunch of nice-looking accessories from Joanne's as well, and together one of the other bridesmaids, Ellie and I decorated about a dozen, each a unique work of crafty art. Then I assigned my cousins to put them on the tables, float tea candles inside and light them. Lovely!

We had planned on the formal photographs being taken at the old front entrance of the house. My mother did a great deal of work on landscaping, making a beautiful backdrop. It's hard to see, but I put together a couple of black and red ribbon arrangements that you can see hanging from the porch and blowing in the breeze. They took a lot more work than they look, so I've been sure to save them in case of the unlikely event I can find another use for them.


My sister had the idea to order a large selection of variegated flowers and arrange the bouquets ourselves, so you can see some more of our handiwork there. It was my mother's idea to include the long, flowing ribbons, and I think they turned out splendidly if I do say so myself!

My absolute crowning glory, however, was my mother's dress. I picked out the pattern and the fabric myself, and my mother never thought it would become her as well as it did. But I knew, so I charged ahead, even when I realized the pattern was undoubtedly the most difficult garment I have ever made.


The. Hardest. Garment. Ever. Well, it was worth it!

Was there anything else? But of course! It may not be considered crafty, but I did get around to doing...

Bridesmaids' hair


And Bridal makeup


Was there anything else? Oh well. After having recounted all of that I'm a bit too exhausted to remember!


Happy weddings!