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Two Cards for Keep It Clean and Simple

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I have two cards today for the Simon Says Wednesday Challenge:  Keep It Clean and Simple. Most of my cards would fit this challenge, but these latest two—one for a friend’s birthday and the other for a friend whose husband entered hospice are definitely CAS.

First the birthday card. I bought a new stamp set by Penny Black , “Blooming Garden,” while we were away. When I first started stamping years ago, I owned a few wooden stamps by Penny Black, but this is my first acrylic set. It’s all florals. I’m taking a watercolor card class that starts next week, and I think the images will be perfect for watercoloring.

ForYou

I love these poppies, and this time I colored them using Copic markers. I added a little Wink of Stella glitter to them as well, but try as I might, I could not get it to show up in a photograph. The sentiment is also from a new stamp set I found in Chicago by Avery Elle called “Oh, Happy Day.”  The font for these sentiments if very different from anything else I have.

The next card was inspired by this one Cristina created for last August’s Papertrey Ink release of “Mum’s the Word. “I started with an embossed flat card by Paper Source, and masked the border to stamp inside.

HoldingYOu

The mum was stamped once, and then again without reinking. The sentiment which seemed perfect for this sad occasion is combined from “Boutique Borders: Sympathy” and “Winter Hills.” All three sets are by Papertrey Ink.

HoldingYouClose

When I heard about our friend entering hospice, it occured to me that we always seem to have at least one friend or acquaintance with serious health concerns. It’s probably a function of our age, but too many of them are younger than we are. I count my blessings every day, and continued good health is top on the list.

Storytelling Sunday: Better Late than Never

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This is my second post of the day, but I wanted to get this episode of Storytelling Sunday up before the link closes on Sian’s blog. I missed last month, and there are only two months left for this year’s theme of “Pick Your Precious.”

Spines

When the year began, I made a list of some precious things I knew I wanted to write about. These books were on that list, but I couldn’t find them. This weekend we pulled out a huge box from the attic of the books I saved from my classroom library when I retired. I don’t ever recall using these books at school, but I must have taken them there for some purpose. I’m delighted to have found them.

E. B. White has been a favorite author since I was a child. Stuart Little was published three years before I was born, but my copy was purchased in 1953. My mother’s inscription indicates it was bought in Chicago, probably on one of the many trips we made between Kansas (where we lived) and our relatives in Ohio.

InscriptionStuartLittle

I was four years old when Charlotte’s Web was published. Four seems a bit young for Charlotte’s Web, but my father read The New Yorker every week, and E.B. White was regularly published there. Thanks to my father, I have a first edition copy.

FirstEdition

My parents inscribed my name and often the date in every book they purchased for me, and I have tried to do the same for my children and grandchildren.

InscriptionCharlotte

I wish I had inherited my mother’s beautiful script handwriting! As important as these books are to me, what they represent more than anything is the love of reading my parents instilled in me. My father read aloud to us nearly every night, and continued to read articles and short stories aloud to me even when I was in my forties! 

Here’s a scrapbook page I made a few years ago that celebrates that love.

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And here, on this Christmas Journal page from 2008, is a photo of my father reading to my brother and me at Christmas time in our apartment in Hays, Kansas.

Binding

It’s clear that Charlotte’s Web needs a bit of repair and I need to investigate how to do that without ruining the value of the first edition, but it’s never going to be sold. I know for sure, Sarah will be happy to acquire it for her already large collection of children’s books. She’s a more avid reader than I am, and Caleb’s first phrase was, “read book.” It’s a good sign.

Another Bit ‘O Green

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I don’t usually post more than one card for a challenge, but here’s another one for Simon Says’ Bit ‘O Green Challenge

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We have a St. Patrick’s Day birthday in our house, so this is the perfect color for a birthday card. The sentiment came from the stamp set included in the January card kit from Simon Says. and the patterned paper was in the scrap folder. I hand-cut the smaller sentiment and bumped it out a bit with 3-D tape.

Special

We’re off this morning with our friends to Niagara-on-the-Lake. We’ll purchase tickets for a show at the Shaw Festival for our annual fall weekend there, have lunch at The Irish Harp, and most likely, visit a couple of our favorite wineries. It will be good to be away for a day, and the forecast is for sunshine and warmer temperatures! Yay!

Pass the Book

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It’s been very busy here, and I have lots to share, but first I want to send on the next installment of Pass the Book. Melissa sent it on to me last month, and it’s definitely time to send it on its way. You can read more about the Pass the Book project here.

I have thoroughly enjoyed Sharing Your Story: Recording Life’s Details with Mini Books by Ali Edwards, and it has provided me with some amazing inspiration though not for mini books. As soon as I saw the front cover, I had an idea for a card. It didn’t take long to create, and I was quite happy with. That prompted me to go through the book looking at design ideas for cards. I ended up with quite a few new cards, and over the next few days I’ll be sharing them with you. I remember Mel did something similar with one of her Pass the Book reads.

Here’s the cover and the card it inspired:

Cover

WishYou

On page 9, I found this:

P9

Which inspired an anniversary card for dear friends:

Happy

I liked the word overlayed on the text paper and repeated the polka-dot pattern as well. Here’s the inside:

InsideHappy

And one more for today. On p. 14 I found this:

P14

And created this:

6Squares

I’m quite sure this is a design I’ll use again and again when I need a quick card. Typically I list all my supplies, but both my kids are here this week so I’m going to cut this short. I do have a list of the supplies, so let me know if you’re curious about anything I used.

I’ll have more to share, but I’m ready to pass the book along. If you’re a fan of mini books, I’m quite sure you’ll enjoy the book. (I have jotted down ideas for several mini books as well.) And even if you’re not, you may find inspiration for layouts or other creative endeavors from the designs you’ll find here. If you’d like a chance to peruse the book, leave a comment here, and I’ll do a random pick on Monday, October 24th, and send it on its way.

Book Reviews

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Ever since Rinda published her summer reading list, I’ve been meaning to do a book review post. Over the last several months, I’ve read several excellent books and thought I’d share them. I’m not going to write a long summary of each, but I will add the links to the Amazon reviews. If you click on the book it will take you there.

ParisWife

I didn’t read this on my Kindle but I posted that image since it was the cover of the one I read from the library. When I was in my 20’s and 30’s I read most of what Ernest Hemingway wrote. I especially loved A Moveable Feast about his years in Paris. This is a fictionalized account, most of it told in his first wife’s voice, of their marriage and the years in Paris. It was a quick and enjoyable read with lots of little details about Paris in the 1920’s and the literary greats who lived there.

Breaking night

I did read this on my Kindle, and my requirement for an e-book is that it be compelling and easy to pick up if you don’t read it every day. This certainly fit the bill. If you’ve read The Glass Castle, this book is the same gene, a story of beating the odds when you are born into a truly disfunctional (but nonetheless loving) home. I heard Liz Murray interviewed on PBS and knew right away I wanted to read this book. I wasn’t disappointed.

Boy

This is our current book group book. We’ll be discussing it next week. It’a memoir about a boy who grew up in Malawi. His fascination with physics and the great needs of his village compel him to build a windmill from spare parts he finds over time in a junkyard. But the story is more than that; the description of the famine in Malawi is heartrendering. This is another book about the resilance of the human spirit as well as one of a very inventive mind!

Maisie

Sarah recommended this series of mysteries to us. I’ve read just the first in the series. I think Sarah has finished four of them and my husband has finished the first three. Maisie is a dectective in London. The series begins just after the first World War, and much of this book is Maisie’s back story that takes place during the first World War. This was a very quick read. I like mysteries, but I especially liked this one because of the historical background and details of the time.

Faith

Jennifer Haigh will be one of the speakers at the 2011-2012 Arts and Lectures series here. I needed a book for the Kindle for our flight home last month and this was perfect. I could barely put it down. It’s fiction, and the narrator is the sister of a priest in Boston who has been accused of child molesting. It’s a riveting story of a blue-collar family from South Boston as well as a look inside the workings of a Catholic church and diocese.

RoomI

I finished this book yesterday afternoon. It was one of the most profoundly moving books I’ve read in a long time. Little Bee comes to mind as the last book I read that was so moving (although some of my friends did not like that novel at all). Both books had sections that were very disturbing and hard to read. This book has a more hopeful ending, however. This is another author I heard interviewed on PBS, and it’s worth listening to if it’s on podcast somewhere. The narrator is a five year old boy who has been living since birth with his mother in captivity. The captor is a mean-spritied, evil man who abducted the mother at age 19 and has kept her locked up in a room he built in a shed in his backyard. It’s based on a true story (but totally fictionalized) that took place in Ireland, but there are too many stories like this woman’s here as well.

So what’s on my list for the summer? It’s a short list. We’ll be away again this summer, and yesterday we signed a contract for a new kitchen. If all goes well with the local planning board, the demolition will start late this summer as well. I started Caleb’s Crossing last night. I already know I’ll like this book. It’s by Geraldine Brooks; her People of the Book is one of my all-time favorite reads. I have Cutting for Stone on my Kindle, and I’ve read about 150 pages of the 688 pages. My friend, Peter, who we visited in Tucson (a former member of our book group) said it was the best book he’d ever read. It’s been on my radar for a long time, but I never put in on my short-list because of its length. I’m glad it’s there now; it will take me awhile to finish it, but it’s exceptionally well-written and fascinating. Our book for July’s book group is Freakonomics, not a book I would choose to read, but that’s why I love my book group. I’m guessing that will be it for me this summer, although I do have a cross-country flight again for our summer trip. That’s always good for a lot of reading time.

 

Card Patterns Challenge and a Heads Up!

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I really enjoy sketch challenges. They give you a direction, but don’t dictate too much. Once I saw the current sketch challenge on Card Patterns I knew what I wanted for the focal image, and I knew I wanted to use my new paper pad “Butterfly Garden” by Pinkpaislee. I love the soft colors and they just say “spring” to me. Here’s the sketch:

Sketch110

And here’s my take on it:

CardPatterns110

The focal image is from the Delightful Dahlias set by Papertrey. I colored it with Copic markers on the new X-Press Blending cardstock that Copic put out this year. I love this paper for coloring; it’s very smooth, very white, and the colors blend beautifully. I’ll be keeping a folder of it in my drawer. I stamped some text on the patterned paper cut from the Big Scalloped Circles die by Spellbinders with Background Basics: Text Style (Papertrey), stitched the patterned papers together and cut the scallop with Papertrey’s medium scallop border punch. The gingham ribbon is from my stash.

And a head’s up! This Sunday the fabulous Mel is hosting a blog hop! Be sure to come back and check it out.

Alphanumeric hop badge

I’m off with a friend tonight to hear Alice Hoffman speak. I love her novel “Story Sisters,” despite the fact that magical realism as a genre has never appealed to me. Nonetheless, I had a hard time putting the book down, and I’m anxious to hear her.

Some Photography Fun and a Winner

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It’s rare that I post twice in one day! Tracy decided the whole downstairs of our house needs to be painted. I don’t disagree, but I know it will take way longer than I want it to. He started with the china closet that is built into our dining room. He pulled all the dishes out of it, boxed up what he could and put the rest on the dining room table. I thought I should document his project. The first photo looked like this.

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Then I decided to stand on his new stepladder.

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And finally I thought it would be cool to take a photo of the inside of one glass. Let me just say I took many photos before I came up with this one.

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I’ve owned these wine glasses for over 20 years and never realized that the cut glass forms hearts on the inside. I wonder how many other surprises lurk in my china closet?

The winner of the Pass the Book is:

Kirsty

I’ve sent you an email. As soon as I have your address, the book will be in the mail. Enjoy!!

Book of Inspiration

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InspirationBook

Thanks to Sian, this book has been traveling about the world for nearly five months. You can read all about Pass the Book right here.

It’s past time for the Where Women Create: A Book of Inspiration to move on. I received it from Amy just before the holidays—not a good time for reflective reading. But since the holidays, I have spent some quality time with it. Like Amy, I have mixed feelings about the book. I loved the photography and spent a good amount of time analyzing how the photographers composed their shots.  I enjoyed reading about the different artists and found some of their tips and exercises of interest. I was also interested in the Color Inspiration boxes as I am always on the look out for new color combinations. There were several artists that intrigued me, and I spent some time exploring their blogs and web sites.

Almost none of the artists interviewed in this book are papercrafters so there was not as much practical information here as I hoped there might be. If you are a multi-media artist, I think you will find much more of interest. Since I require a neat and tidy space, I found most of the studios featured here cluttered and very “busy.” It would be hard for me to create in most of these spaces.

 I’m ready to send the book off now to anyone who’d like to spend some time with it.  I was the fifth recipient of the book, and the first in the States. If you’d like to be considered to be the next reader, leave a comment before Sunday noon. I’ll draw a name on Sunday afternoon, wrap up the book, and get it in the mail on Monday.  

Books

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I love to read, but often don’t give myself as much time as I need to keep up with the many books that are on my list, shelf, and on our book group agenda. Vacations always seem to be a great time for reading, and our trip to California was no exception. Two cross-country flights provide extended reading opportunities to say nothing of the layovers on the way. I’ve finished six books in the last several weeks, and enjoyed most of them.

Six Books
My favorite was Little Bee. Sarah had a library copy on her table that she had not yet started, but after reading the back of the book I was intrigued. It is beautifully written and thought-provoking. I can’t wait for Sarah and some of my friends to read it so we can talk about it.

The Help was also a compelling and interesting read. It was one of the fastest reads I’ve done in quite some time. I heard a very interesting discussion of this book on the Diane Rehm show a couple of weeks ago. I would characterize Love and Other Impossible Pursuits as a better than average “beach book.” The story was not one that will stay with me, nor do I think it would be fodder for a good discussion, but it was an enjoyable vacation read.

The Middle Place has been on my shelf for over a year. Kelly Corrigan’s You Tube video was sent to me by several friends, and I had seen a Border’s interview with her as well. It’s a memoir, one of my favorite genres, and well-written. I gave a lot of thought to father-daughter relationships as I read this book. My relationship with my father was certainly very different than Corrigan’s, and I wondered how Sarah would describe her relationship with her dad which I see as much more like Corrigan’s than mine.

The last two books are both books for our couples book group. Replay is a sci-fi, time travel book (definitely NOT my genre). I found it easy to get into, but mid-way found the plot a bit tedious. Tracy (who had already listened to it) encouraged me to keep going, and it did improve. Nonetheless, it’s not a favorite, and I wouldn’t recommend to anyone unless they enjoyed that kind of book. (I did like The Time Traveler’s Wife, however.) The Saint on Death Row is another thought-provoking book. This was definitely worth reading, though I didn’t find it as moving as
Picking Cotton
or True Notebooks (one of my all-time memorable books), two other prison stories that have
stuck with me over time. It’s a remarkable story of resilience and
courage in the face of American injustice. A fair trial is something we
think we all have a right to; this story proves otherwise. In a courtroom,
money and power are far more important factors than your rights as an
American. Sad story.

If any of these are familiar to you, I’d love to hear your thoughts about them.

Books

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I finished two books this week. The first is a novella, A River Runs Through It, that our church read for Lent. Many of my friends had read it earlier, but it was a new read for me, and I loved it. The language is beautiful, the metaphors thought-provoking, and the story was compelling. We met with a group on Tuesday night to discuss it, and after the allotted hour could have continued well on into the evening.

Picture 1
Yesterday, the church rented the neighborhood cinema, and I saw the movie which I think I did see when it came out in the 90’s. Brad Pitt was so young! I really enjoyed the movie as well, but the book (as usual) was so much richer.

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I also read Unfinished Desires by Gail Godwin. I’ve read several of her earlier novels; Father Melancholy’s Daughter was my favorite. Although it took me awhile to get into it, I ended up enjoying it. The story is set in a girls’ parochial school in the mountains of North Carolina and goes back and forth between action set in the 1950’s and reflections of the headmistress looking back from the early twenty-first century. It’s a book about friendship, memories, tangled relationships between classmates as well as mothers and daughters, forgiveness, and guilt. It would also make for good discussion, although not in my book group which is a couples’ group. I don’t think it’s a book that would appeal to most men.

Next on the list is The Help as soon as I finish my book for Lent.

Weekend Projects

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First of all, the Weekly Gratitude pages for the last two weeks. I’m not sure why last week’s never got posted.

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And this week’s–I used just the journaling part of the Weekly Gratitude template so I could put it on the back of last week’s page. I’m liking how flexible this album is turning out to be.

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Now for my favorites from this week’s Project 365. Despite my “note to self,” once again I didn’t take as many photos as I’d wished. I’m taking “Moving into Manual” at Big Picture Scrapbooking now. There are just two assignments this week, both of which I’ve done previously to help you evaluate the light in different settings and to see the effect of changing the ISO in a setting with the same lighting. I’ll do both again because every time I work with the photographic triangle of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO I learn a little more. 

February3Collage
1. I finished two books this week. Both were memoirs, one of my favorite genres. They couldn’t have been more different, and I really enjoyed reading both of them. 2. A vintage-style phone at Donut Delite. 3. Ice Dancing during the 2010 Olympics. 4. Shrimp and vegetable chowder from a new Crock Pot cookbook.        5. The beautiful sky taken from inside my car as I drove down the street one night. It’s hard to see in the collage but there’s a sliver of a moon just above a tree in the middle of the photograph. Taken with my point and shoot through the windshield. I’m always amazed that this works.

And last, but not least, two scrapbook layouts, neither of which photographed straight. Sigh.

DonutsDelite
 I did get my hot cross buns, and they were delicious!

MacGregorsLO
Tracy and I spent the afternoon on Friday with his best friend and his wife in the Finger Lakes. We had a wonderful lunch in Hammondsport, and visited three of our favorite wineries.

I’m finally getting the hang of the hybrid layout. The first uses a digital template from Cathy Z. I used only four of the layers before printing it out. The second uses Katie Pertiet’s clustered frames. I’ve seen Paula Gilarde use these over and over on her blog and decided to give it a try myself.

Lent

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I grew up as a Presbyterian (and still am), but I don’t recall any traditions from my family involving Lent. When I got older, many of my Catholic friends gave up something for Lent. I tried it a few times, but it didn’t seem to hold any spiritual or religious significance to me. In 1999, Sarah was attending Boston University, and we were lucky enough to hear Peter Gomes preach at Harvard Chapel on several occasions, once during Lent. Gomes suggested (and I have since heard other preachers suggest the same), that instead of giving up for Lent, that you take on something on.

I picked up his pamphlet “How to Keep a Good Lent,” and have used it every year since. He suggests you organize your observance of Lent (if you do, in fact, observe Lent) around three S’s:  Silence, Study, and Service. His plan is very doable. Although I find this the most difficult of the three, Gomes proposes that you “secure fifteen minutes of absolute silence during at least one day each week in Lent.” One day a week I can do, and I usually try for two or three. Study is easier for me, and I typically choose a book I want to read during Lent. Again Gomes suggests reading or studying just one day a week for fifteen minutes. I definitely spend more that fifteen minutes a week on this, and my goal is to finish a book. This year I’ve chosen Barbara Brown Taylor’s An Altar in the World

Altar

I’ve previously read her book Leaving Church as well as a book of her sermons. She writes beautifully and always raises important questions for me about my faith. In addition, I’ll try to get to some of the Thursday Lenten Sermon discussions at my church. I went to most of them last year. The discussions were lively and thoughtful. This year our church is focusing on a theme of “water” during Lent, so each of the sermons chosen for discussion incorporates that theme. We’re also doing an all-church read of “A River Runs Through It.” I have a library copy on my shelf to read.

Gomes’ third “S” is Service. He lists a series of questions to answer: “Where can you do some good? Who needs your help? What might you do if, for instance, you have spare change? Is there some person or place waiting for your particular skills and graces? Thinking soberly and creatively about these things for fifteen minutes each week is time well spent, and very well spent indeed if it leads you to action.” I try to add to my volunteer commitments during Lent. In the past, I’ve taken on some that remained longer term, but this year I’m looking to do some shorter term projects. One that I’ve already started is to devote some time each Saturday helping to pack boxes at church for storage during a major renovation project that begins in March.

And one more frivolous intention for Lent is to get to Donuts Delite for their hot-cross buns. They are reputed to have the best in the city, but I’ve never had one. Tracy and I are planning to go to the public market tomorrow, and I’m hoping for a stop there on our way home. Since I’m the only one who eats them, making them or buying a whole pack at the grocery store (Wegmans’ are not bad) is not a good idea. One will do.

Weekly Gratitude

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A friend of ours recommended a travel agent to us, and I am so grateful to have found her. Gretchen Rubin talks about the importance of anticipation in enjoying a happy event in her book The Happiness Project. A few weeks ago, I  purchased The Unofficial Guide to Disneyland (we used the same guide with great success years ago in Disney World), but when I got to the section on hotels I was totally overwhelmed. Finding affordable accommodations for five adults seemed daunting. And frankly, it was keeping me from enjoying any sense of anticipation. Our travel agent found a two-bedroom, two bath suite with kitchenette and a sofa-bed which will allow all of us to be together, but everyone will have their own space for sleeping. The hotel and tickets work as a package, so we have some very nice benefits (including free parking) as well. Last night, I started reading about the park and getting excited about whole trip which will take us to San Francisco, Livermore, Disneyland, and Sacramento. Best of all, the whole family will be together for a week.

Tips for Reading More

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Gretchen Rubin posted Twelve Tips for Reading More on her Happiness Project Blog. Interestingly, I have already adopted nearly all her tips. Since reading more is one of my Intentions this year, I was happy to see that I am already doing some things that will help me read more. Another tip I’ve learned as well, is to set aside some time during the day or early evening to read, especially if I am reading nonfiction and want to remember what I’m reading. If I wait until bedtime, it’s too late for that kind of concentration.

The Happiness Project & Weekly Gratitude

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I loved this book. I’ve been following Gretchen’s blog of the same name for over a year. I thought, perhaps, the book would be a repeat of what I’ve been reading over the year, but after reading an online review of the book, I decided to check it out. I’m so glad I did.

Gretchen decided to spend one year studying happiness and trying to apply what she learned to her own life. Her reading covered genres from children’s literature to philosophy to biography to research studies in positive psychology. I saw myself  (sometimes to my chagrin) so often as I was reading. I laughed; I put lots of post-it tabs on pages, I typed up notes. I loved her voice, her self-deprecating humor, and her unfailing honesty. So many of her resolutions, goals, and ideas resonated with me. It was a great read and very thought-pr0voking. In the few days since I finished the book, her ideas have come back to me time and again as I listen to conversations, read, and go about my everyday life.

This week for my Weekly Gratitude page, I used one of the pages from the original journal.

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