diana f+ instant kit giveaway!
Hello beautiful people!
No, I still don't have a home, but I'm braving the library again (a funny old lady just came up to me and said "hello madam" and then ambled away) to offer you the chance to win a Diana F+ as well as the instant back and two packs of Instax film.
Amanda of Little Tranquility has gathered together some incredible bloggers to host a little giveaway for our lovely readers. I thoroughly recommend you have a look at each of their blogs, because this is a seriously inspiring bunch of ladies.
Amanda from Little Tranquility // Sarah from The Laughing Medusa // Lena from Tiny Painter // Michelle from Creature Type // Lorelai from Lorelai Sebastian // Jessie fromCreating Happy // Tara from Tara Victoria // Rosa from Hello Martian Girl // Georgia from Wherever We Find Ourselves // Jess from Copper Hollow // Maddie from Maddie Richardson
I'm so excited to be able to give you all the opportunity to get your hands on this little beauty!
The giveaway is open internationally, which to an Aussie such as myself is a rare and wonderful thing, and you can enter daily! The winner will be announced on the third of April! Best of luck to you all. xx
Wednesday, 26 March 2014
One Week in Darwin
I’ve fallen in love with this tiny, humid, world-of-it’s-own city. Darwin is a mixture of Australia and South-East Asia and something else all of it’s own. During those nine days between Tom getting the job and us hitting the road, I was given a lot of crappy advice based on a lot of crappy Darwin stereotypes. From what I’ve experienced thus far, people ‘down south’ give Darwin and it’s locals an entirely unfair rap.
Darwin is the welcoming, open-minded and multi-cultural city that Australia likes to pretend is it’s national culture. I didn’t know what to expect, but I don’t think I was expecting this. I was concerned that I wouldn’t handle the heat, that this city would be too small and confining, that the culture here would be as bogan as I was being told by friends and strangers alike. I’ve certainly learned that you have to experience something for yourself and take what you are told with a grain of salt, because nothing I was told to expect was the city that I found here. Instead I found delightful people, friendly strangers and an incredible mix of cultures.
Going to the Rapid Creek Markets on Sunday was like walking right into Thailand or Malaysia (which are admittedly the only countries in Asia I’ve actually had the pleasure to visit thus far). The markets were overflowing with trestle tables full of delicious, locally-grown produce, home-made curry pastes in a mishmash of margarine boxes and Vegemite jars, eskies boasting mangoes frozen from back when trees all over Darwin were heavy with the weight of delicious fruit. I will take photos when we return this weekend.
Darwin is unlike any other Australian city and not merely because the weather is so unlike that which is typical of this country. Darwin is laid back; I’m certain that if the Rapid Creek Markets were to set up in Adelaide they’d be so overrun by pointless regulation that they’d lose the warmth and charm that emanated so clearly to Tom and I last weekend.
All of that said, Darwin is expensive. Our original rental budget, double what we were spending in Adelaide, now seems ludicrously naive and we’re having to increase our budget and readjust our ideas of what is reasonable.
Tom has now been at work for a week and he loves his new job and company. I had an interview and hope you’re all keeping your fingers crossed for me, but I’ll look for a cafe job for the interim (whether I get this job or something else) because I have far too much time on my hands and no studio to work in. I can’t spend all of my time waiting for real estate agents to get back to me - I need to be doing something.
Hopefully next time we speak it will be from our new home and I can get back to regular posting! x
Darwin is the welcoming, open-minded and multi-cultural city that Australia likes to pretend is it’s national culture. I didn’t know what to expect, but I don’t think I was expecting this. I was concerned that I wouldn’t handle the heat, that this city would be too small and confining, that the culture here would be as bogan as I was being told by friends and strangers alike. I’ve certainly learned that you have to experience something for yourself and take what you are told with a grain of salt, because nothing I was told to expect was the city that I found here. Instead I found delightful people, friendly strangers and an incredible mix of cultures.
Going to the Rapid Creek Markets on Sunday was like walking right into Thailand or Malaysia (which are admittedly the only countries in Asia I’ve actually had the pleasure to visit thus far). The markets were overflowing with trestle tables full of delicious, locally-grown produce, home-made curry pastes in a mishmash of margarine boxes and Vegemite jars, eskies boasting mangoes frozen from back when trees all over Darwin were heavy with the weight of delicious fruit. I will take photos when we return this weekend.
Darwin is unlike any other Australian city and not merely because the weather is so unlike that which is typical of this country. Darwin is laid back; I’m certain that if the Rapid Creek Markets were to set up in Adelaide they’d be so overrun by pointless regulation that they’d lose the warmth and charm that emanated so clearly to Tom and I last weekend.
All of that said, Darwin is expensive. Our original rental budget, double what we were spending in Adelaide, now seems ludicrously naive and we’re having to increase our budget and readjust our ideas of what is reasonable.
Tom has now been at work for a week and he loves his new job and company. I had an interview and hope you’re all keeping your fingers crossed for me, but I’ll look for a cafe job for the interim (whether I get this job or something else) because I have far too much time on my hands and no studio to work in. I can’t spend all of my time waiting for real estate agents to get back to me - I need to be doing something.
Hopefully next time we speak it will be from our new home and I can get back to regular posting! x
Friday, 21 March 2014
A new city to explore
Long time no speak - and so many adventures to share with you! They may have to wait, though, because we're still homeless and I'm using hotspot from my phone to access the internet and I really need to be using it to hunt down some sort of home situation. Rent up here in Darwin is so outrageously expensive that we've had to readjust our expectations and ideas of what is 'reasonable'. We're lucky that Tom's uncle and aunty moved up here a little over a year ago and are graciously opening their home to us while we settle since the move was so quick we really couldn't organise anything from Adelaide.
Tom starts his new job on Monday and is full of nervous energy and I'm acclimatising to the humidity in this tropical climate whilst applying for work and preparing for my first (hopefully last, since this is the perfect job) interview on Wednesday. Life is pretty crazy, but I'm loving exploring a new city. Darwin is so unlike any other Australian city, mostly due to the tropical climate I suspect, and I feel kind of like I'm on a permanent holiday in Thailand with the monsoon rains and the crazy Sunday morning markets. I love it here. I was worried before we left, but this is definitely where we need to be at this point in our lives and I'm so excited to find a place and start feeling like locals.
I'll share our road trip another time, but here's a taste to tide you over:
1 back bumper bar missing somewhere along the Stuart Highway
2 shredded tyres
3 swimming holes
8 sunrises
3,766 kilometres travelled (2,340 miles)
4 climates (Mediterranean, Arid, Sub-Tropical, Tropical)
Sunday, 16 March 2014
thoughts on moving
Friday
Our house remains a labyrinth of boxes and garbage bags. Navigating my way from the front door to the kitchen is surprisingly challenging and I am convinced that our possessions are multiplying while we sleep. We've got two days to pack up the house, but it looks like a month-long project at best. Nervous energy is beginning to creep up; I cannot imagine being ready to leave by Monday. I know it will come together somehow, though, because it must.We're taking our sweet time to drive up. Two weeks setting up a swag in a different tiny town every night and watching the landscape change. I declared this the year of "explore", and this time next week we'll be exploring the classic Australian outback on our way to build a new life in a new city.
Monday
Everything has happened so quickly. I've been so caught up in the logistics of the move that it really only hit me yesterday that we are leaving. Claire drove away and I was left sobbing in the street, finally realising what our moving actually means. We're leaving everyone we love and we're building a new life in a new city. Skype can never replicate those nights at the pub with my best friend, those mornings where Claire would bustle around the kitchen making tea in her ugly mug after crashing on our couch. She was right, this is the end of an era. And though I know it is an exciting adventure that lies before us, right now I'm grieving all that I will lose.It's a chilly morning, perhaps the last for a while, so I don't mind shivering a little as I sit outside and write this. I'm trying to bring back that excitement I felt twenty-four hours ago, but it's mixed with sadness finally and these last few hours are fraught with to-do's that I can't imagine being able to complete.
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I'll be out of internet range for most of the trip, so I doubt I'll be able to post until we are in our new Darwin home (assuming we have one by then). Follow me on Instagram to keep up with us as we trek across the desert.