CG Turns 3! Upcoming: 1st Redo Week!

Happy Birthday to Crooked Glasses, first of all! Back on Jan. 26th, 2011, I began posting here…can you believe it’s been 3 years already? Wow!

And you’re probably wondering what I mean by “Redo Week,” right? Well, going along with yesterday’s post about revising and revamping, I’m going to take on a new project here at Crooked Glasses: redoing some older posts!

The main reason I’m doing this is because I want all my content to be of equal quality, and some of my older posts are a little rawer and less polished than I like. Thus, I’ll be combing back through older articles, tightening up the writing, adding images, all sorts of things.

However, “Redo Week” will not be a one-time occurrence; for the foreseeable future, I’ll be doing one week of new posts and one week of redone posts. This will hopefully help reduce some of my anxiety about constantly crafting new content, while also doing much-needed improvements on already-published articles.

I hope you’ll stay with me and keep reading! This isn’t just retread content…this is me making my blog better and better. ๐Ÿ™‚

Scraping the Bottom of the Ideas Pot? Try This!

Sometimes the flow of creativity just STOPS, for whatever reason. It feels suspiciously like scraping the bottom of the pot for the last bits of dinner (thus the title of this post)–you hope and hope you’ve got enough in there to feed you, but you fear you’ve run out.

For instance, I’m running into a lot of problems coming up with new topics for this blog, especially for my Monday and Saturday posts. For almost every idea I have, it feels like I’ve already done it (or I can look back through my posts and prove I’ve already done it).

So what’s a creative blogger girl to do, when it’s time to come up with a new week of posts but there’s no more ideas? Simple–revisit and revamp! And that’s what I suggest to you, if you’re stuck in a similar creativity rut:

#1: Look Back through Old Ideas

Whatever creative project you’re stuck on, look back through your completed projects, especially the ones you’re most proud of. This alone may be inspiration enough to start a new project or to get you going again on your “stuck” project, but if you’re still stuck, pick out 2 or 3 completed projects you’re not quite as proud of, and move on to step 2.

(Example: I’ve looked back through my old blog posts and found a few that, well, aren’t my best work.)

#2: Think: “How could I do this better?”

Study those completed projects. Even though they’re complete, is there anything you would like to go back and do differently? Are there any choices you regret making during the creative process last time? Review your creative project with a critical eye, and really try to see what could be done differently. You don’t have to tear up the completed project–just make notes about what you see that could be done better.

(Example: While reading through my not-so-awesome blogs, I started thinking, “Hmm, I could make that paragraph shorter and more expressive…ooh, I could add in a bit more research to make this point stronger.”)

#3: Make An Old Project New Again

Using your completed projects as guidelines, start reworking and reshaping those ideas. Like I said, don’t get rid of the completed work–use it as mental scaffolding to build your new creative project. Try new things with old ideas; the old dogs might just have a few new tricks you didn’t see before. Bring in some research or some other people’s opinions as well…whatever helps!

(Example: After discovering I could write these blog posts better, I drafted new versions of them and read them aloud to myself, seeing if the words flowed better this time, or if the posts were stronger this time.)

Result: Better Quality Work, Happier You!

Once you start grappling with actual ideas instead of having anxiety about not being creative, your mental creativity factory can begin to work again–or at least, mine has! You may not finish your revising/revamping work right away, especially if you get energized to work on your new project again, and that’s perfectly okay. Let the creativity flow as it will, and I promise you that you’ll be happier with it!

First Love, PointerPointer, Boats on Crystal Clear Water, and 9 More Uses for Toothpaste

First Love (image poem)
Maybe this is why none of us can ever forget the person we first loved.

PointerPointer.com
Hover your cursor over this website and wait…then be pleasantly surprised!

Boats on Crystal Clear Water (Pics)
WOW the water in these images is SO clear! Literally! Kinda otherworldly how the boats look to be floating…

9 Uses for Toothpaste (Other than Brushing Your Teeth)
Prepare to be surprised by this list! :O

Awesome 1-Mana Creatures, part 6: Artifacts

You might have thought the “Awesome 1-Mana Creature” series was over last week when I profiled Black, but it’s not! This week I’m profiling the few 1-mana Artifact creatures that are more than worth their salt (plus a few 0-mana Artifact creatures that just can’t be left off the list).

As always, if you know of a creature I missed, let me know in the comments! All card images came from MagicCards.info.

arcboundworker
It’s a 1/1 for 1, and the +1/+1 can move to another artifact creature when it dies!
chronomaton
Build this 1-mana bad boy up over several turns (or less, if you’ve got a way to untap artifacts or creatures :D)
heapdoll
Handy for getting rid of that pesky card you never want coming back to haunt you in a game.
myrmindservant
Because sometimes, you just gotta shuffle. (Refraining from obvious Party Rock Anthem joke)
myrmoonvessel
Get your mana investment back when it goes to grave…nice!
myrservitor
This is a hilarious classic in one of my boyfriend’s decks–plays well with Soul Warden and the like, plus functions as “Annoying Blocker Extraordinaire.”
razorgrassscreen
A wall with 2 power? It’ll probably kill most of the little things that run up toward it!
roterothopter
At worst, it’s an Ornithopter for 1 more mana. But pay a little mana into its ability, and it can become a 2/2!
signalpest
Its battle cry ability, plus its ability to evade most things that would block it make this a good attack booster!
steelwall
A personal favorite–a 0/4 blocker for 1 mana, and no color commitment!
vectorasp
1/1 for 1 colorless is already good, but the option to gain infect for 1 black mana is POWERFUL. Many artifacts can generate black mana when needed, so this creature doesn’t have to operate just in a Black deck.
 

And here are the awesome 0-mana Artifact creatures I referenced earlier:

ornithopter
A classic–a 0/2 flying blocker for no mana. WOOT!
phyrexianwalker
A 0/3 blocker is always nice, and especially for no mana cost–it means your opponent has to waste time punching through it or dealing it direct damage!
shieldsphere
And for sheer ridiculousness, how about a 0/6 wall for 0 mana? Sure, it gets -0/-1 counters on it when it blocks, but it’ll be around long enough to protect you!
 

We May Feel Powerless, But God Isn’t!

1 Samuel 13:19
19 Not a blacksmith could be found in the whole land of Israel, because the Philistines had said, โ€œOtherwise the Hebrews will make swords or spears!โ€

This single verse describes the tyranny with which the Philistines menaced the Israelites in the Old Testament. By this time, the Philistines had grown so powerful in the region that they even kept tight controls over potential weapon-makers (blacksmiths), so that the Israelites could not rise up against them with any serious force. At the time, Saul had been named the first king of Israel, but had already proven himself more self-focused and impulsive in his leadership; needless to say, it was a scary time for the average Israelite!

Yet even then, as chapter 14:1-23 proves, God was still with His people. Though the Israelites were unarmed and seemingly defenseless, caught between internal political strife and external military threats, God was still working, bringing confusion to the Philistines and helping the Israelites to rout them. The overall struggle was not yet over, not by a long shot, but this battle, which had seemed so hopeless at the outset, was utterly changed with God’s help.

The lesson here? Even when we feel powerless, defenseless, completely without what we need, God can and will provide. He will bring a fitting resolution to your problems, one you might never have been able to imagine; it may not come right away, but when it does, it will be perfectly timed to God’s plan.