Another laptop bag

30 03 2009

When I made a quilted tote bag for my laptop a week or so ago, my good friend Char from Boston was very taken with it and asked how much it would cost for me to make one for her. Well, as anyone who’s tried to price craft knows, the cost is horrendous if you include labour (and as one of these bags takes 4 to 5 hours to make, that’s not a cheap exercise). So we left it at that…

Meantime, I decided to make her one anyway as a surprise! I’m actually writing this blog entry on March 19, some 10 days before it will appear. I want to make sure that it doesn’t get published before I have a chance to hand over the bag and surprise her! I’ll be meeting Char at Seattle Airport on March 28 (our flights arrive within 45 mins of each other) and we’re rooming together for the conference we’re both attending and speaking at. I’ll give her the laptop bag then — along with the Dragonfly quilt that she knows she’s getting.

I did ask her the size of her laptop and what colours she likes, in case I had some time to make her a bag… with no promises of course! She said she likes all colours (that makes it hard…), but preferably not pink. We have a mutual friend who is a pink person and she knew that our friend — who is also going to the conference — would want it if it was pink!

I hunted through my stash looking for something appropriate. Japanese navy and maroon? (classy and subdued) Celtic brown/gold and brown? reds? yellows? (too garish for an office environment — Char regularly travels to client offices and meetings), greens? Then I saw it… the blue Aboriginal fabric I’d purchased over the internet some time back just over a year ago. Char’s been to Australia and I’m pretty sure she’s been to the Great Barrier Reef (she’s been to Queensland, at least), so I thought it would be perfect — a little touch of Australia every time she uses the bag. I found a matching blue with green spot fabric and put it together for her.

Here’s how it turned out:

Char's laptop bag

Char's laptop bag

Free motion quilting and lining

Free motion quilting as shown on the lining

Fabric detail and free motion quilting

Fabric detail and free motion quilting

Free motion quilting - metallic and rayon threads

Free motion quilting - metallic and rayon threads





Room with a view

30 03 2009

I mentioned that we were in this massive suite and that we’re 40+ floors up in space. What I didn’t mention is that the view from the room extends from downtown all the way across the harbour and Puget Sound (?) to the Space Needle. I took a few photos and tried to ‘stitch’ them together for a panorama — it’s not very good, but it will give you some sense of the view we have!

Seattle panorama

Seattle panorama

You can view this photo in a bigger resolution, and all the photos I took for it here:
http://community.webshots.com/album/570720633iLYKLJ?start=24





Not sleepless in Seattle

29 03 2009

I slept through the night! yay! First time since I landed on Wednesday… Maybe the jet lag has gone now???





Seattle’s weather

29 03 2009

When I arrived in Seattle late yesterday it was grey, low clouds and bucketing down with rain. And cold — like 38F cold. This morning it is clear blue skies and sunshine! I have no idea how warm/cold it is outside, but right now the weather looks great from 40+ floors up!





None of us are getting any younger

29 03 2009

…so I was impressed by an initiative that I saw at my uncle’s. He had a flyer from Blue Shield offering free membership to ‘The Silver Sneakers’ for all those 60 and over (I think it was 60 — no matter). There was a long list of participating fitness clubs and gyms, all of whom allow people in this age bracket free membership so they can keep fit.

What a good idea! A health insurance fund trying to keep its long-term costs down by providing the means for the aging segment of the population to keep as fit as possible and thus keep them out of the health system for as long as possible.





It’s as big as a house

29 03 2009

Char and I got upgraded to a suite at The Westin in Seattle. It’s massive, and it’s a long way up… above the 40th floor!

Here are a couple of photos to give you some idea of the scale of the room; more photos are here ( the photos start at the bottom this album page in the link and go on to the next two pages of the album).

The Westin in Seattle -- main bedroom

The Westin in Seattle -- main bedroom

The Westin in Seattle -- looking from dining area past the Murphy bed in the wall and the office desk to the living room

The Westin in Seattle -- looking from dining area past the Murphy bed in the wall and the office desk to the living room





Friends

29 03 2009

My good friend Char was waiting at baggage claim when I arrived in Seattle late this afternoon. Her flight from Boston (via Denver) had got in about 15 to 30 minutes before mine and we’d agreed ages ago to share a ride into town. What we didn’t expect until a few days ago, was that the ride would be provided by Chuck, the conference’s official photographer and all round nice guy!

Chuck’s number plate is great “User1st” (user first); he drove up from San Francisco yesterday and was happy to wait in the cell phone carpark for us both to arrive (they have a car park just off the SeaTac airport for those picking up loved ones; as far as I know they don’t charge for it and it keeps the access points from being clogged by people circling looking for their party — an EXCELLENT idea). Chuck dropped us off at The Westin in town which is where the conference is being held.

Thanks Chuck!





I’m impressed with Alaska Airlines so far!

29 03 2009

This morning I flew American Eagle (American Airlines commuter airline) from Orange County to San Francisco (SFO). Before the flight, I checked in and was pleased that I could check my luggage all the way through to Seattle, which means I didn’t have to collect it in SFO and re-check it into Alaskan Air. I was also able to get a boarding pass for the SFO to Seattle flight too, so that was good. What was not so good was the fact that EVERYTHING (except soft drinks and pathetic nibbles) in the Admirals Club lounge have to be paid for, and the free wireless is NOT available to Qantas Club/OneWorld card holders, only American Airlines people.

The flight to SFO left a couple of minutes late, but it was a very acceptable delay, and arrived some 10 minutes early which was good. We flew along the Californian coast, past Hearst Castle (I could see it ‘cos I knew what I was looking for), Big Sur, Monterey Bay, etc. It’s a beautiful day with clear blue skies and no fog banks, so the view from the plane was just gorgeous. Photos here.

It was a TINY plane — about 60 seats (seat > aisle > seat > seat) and my laptop bag wouldn’t fit in the overhead locker so I had to use “Valet Check-in”, which means you leave your bag on a cart outside the plane and it gets loaded into the hold. Problem: I have all the chocolate snacks in the laptop bag and it sat in the hot sun for at least 15 minutes, so I expect the chocolate to be spoiled 😦

We deplaned (I hate that word!) at Terminal 3 and Alaska Airlines is in Terminal 1, which meant I had to leave the security area in Terminal 3, walk a LONG way to Terminal 3, and go through security again (that’s the fourth time!). On the walk I found a $20 note lying on the ground — not a soul was in sight, so that was a lucky break!

When I got to Alaskan, I re-checked that my boarding pass from American Airlines was OK and that the gate was still correct, and asked directions to the lounge. I got to the lounge and found that being a member of the Qantas Cub has no value with Alaskan (even though they are a subsidiary of American Airlines which is part of the OneWorld alliance and where my Qantas Club membership usually gets me into their lounges). However, the lovely Mike at the Alaskan lounge counter said that only Qantas Business Class travellers could gain access. Guess what? 😉 The catch was that they had to be travelling Qantas Business that day — which I wasn’t. But a sweet smile and showing him my itinerary with all the Business Class flights that I’ve already done, and that I’ll be doing in the next week sold him 😉 He let me into the small lounge (but there was almost no-one there, so it was no big deal).

But the big plus was that Alaska Airline’s lounge has COMPLIMENTARY drinks, and decent snacks (well, cheese and bikkies, but not those horrid bar snacks like American’s lounge), and best of all, COMPLIMENTARY high-speed wireless access — they have these little table cards everywhere with the username and password! Cool! So that’s where I’m typing this from.

So far, I’m impressed with Alaska Airlines. The guy at the check-in counter was very helpful; Mike at the lounge was equally helpful and friendly.  The flight to Seattle this afternoon (which is fairly short) and my flight next Thursday on Alaska Airlines to Vancouver will be the ‘proof of the pudding’. But so far, I’m impressed with them. It’s much more like Qantas (not that Qantas is a benchmark, but compared to most US airlines, Qantas is positively luxurious with both the meals and drinks on all their flights and their lounges). Alaska is looking good…

Update later the same day: The flight to Seattle was fine — a little turbulence, but nothing major. The hosties had fun with the passengers in their announcements etc. especially when they were singing Seattle’s praises as the Emerald City, then told us the expected weather on arrival (38F and wet) and suggested we turn around and go to Cancun (Mexico)! Nibblies were free as were the soft drinks — and according to the hostie I spoke with, they’d like to keep it that way. I don’t know if you had to pay for beer, spirits or wine — I suspect so. And light meals were charged for. I liked their attitude and would happily fly with them again based on today’s experience (which is lucky seeing as though I’m flying with them again on Thursday!)

Alaskan Airlines tail

Alaska Airlines tail





The cost of a bra baffles me

28 03 2009

Back in October when I was in Sydney for a conference, I decided to purchase a new bra. It cost AU$99, which is way more than I expected. For several years now I’ve helped out the US economy by buying bras and underwear at factory outlet stores like Jockey and L’Eggs Hanes…

Yesterday I went into a L’Eggs Hanes outlet store in Carlsbad, California. Not only did they have some bra styles that fitted, they also had a HUGE  range of styles and sizes — a much bigger range than you see in Australia. And the prices were pretty darned reasonable — US$30 recommended retail, reduced to US$20 at the outlet store PLUS a ‘buy two get one free’ offer. I bought 4 and got 6 all for US$86 (including tax). Converted, that’s AU$124 for SIX. And I paid AU$99 for ONE in Sydney.

You’ve got to wonder why. The brands were the same, they’re all manufactured outside the US and Australia in places like Indonesia, China, etc. So how can the Americans sell bras at a reasonable price (even the US$30 recommended retail only converts to AU$43, less than half the price I paid in October) yet in Australia we pay an exhorbitant amount for the same piece of cloth likely manufactured in a country geographically closer to us?





Impressed with my laptop bag

28 03 2009

I must say I’m impressed with the laptop bag I made. When I was going through security at Perth and Melbourne airports, it made it really simple to take the laptop out. And on the flight from Melbourne to LA, I just slid the bag out with the laptop and the bits and pieces, put it into the seat pocket in front of me until I needed to use it, and it was all ready and waiting for me without having to deal with the heavy roll-on laptop case in the overhead locker.

So it’s ‘fit for purpose’, works exactly as I wanted it to, and will get quite a bit of use in the coming years, I expect!