Tag: Kitchen Costuming
FCBD: Fan Photos at Hero Comics
by Cookster on May.05, 2010, under Blog Shorts, Costumes
Thanks to all the fans that came out to Hero Comics last Saturday for Free Comic Book Day. Here are just a few of the photos taken that day. More pictures are on the way so if you don’t see yours posted today, check back later. I have lots and lots of images to go through and I am diligently working on them.
Click on any of the thumbnails to see the full picture.
Free Comic Book Day at Hero Comics
by Cookster on May.02, 2010, under Blog Shorts, Costumes
This is only a preview!
Wow! Free Comic Book Day was a blast this year! I just want everyone who I took pictures of to know that I am trying really hard to get your pictures up on this blog. But over 400 pictures were taken on Saturday so please have patience with me as I sort through all of them and make sure I have at least one good picture of everyone. I should have the next post with all the pictures by the end of this week. Until then, I hope you enjoy this look back at the great cosplay characters that volunteer their time to make your day more fun.










A shoe of a different color…
by Cookster on Sep.09, 2009, under Blog Shorts, Non-fiction, Stories
Celebrities are splashed all over the internet with wardrobe flubs. They are either unaware of how they look or are seeking attention for their insecurities. I could very well fit into one of these categories with the exception of not being a celebrity.
Yesterday was my day for errands. Although it is September, here in Glendale the temperatures are still hovering around 104 degrees. A couple of everyday practices, such as keeping the blinds closed to keep the house cooler and getting out early before it got too hot, collided with my intended fashion sense. Having used the headboard lamp in order to see the grocery ads in my bedroom, I was temporarily blinded when I flipped the light off and grabbed my shoes. I wandered the house for a few minutes while I gathered up my essentials for my outing and headed out the door.
I had to make a couple of quick stops, so I decided to have my prescriptions filled at the local pharmacy first. The drug store was busier than I had normally encountered it because it was now lunchtime. After turning my prescription over to the pharmacy technician, I decided to cruise the store and price some items. Eventually I wandered my way out to my car and drove to the next stop. As I was leaving, I noticed a young man looking at me with a slight smile on his face. (continue reading…)
Help me! Help me!
by Cookster on Jul.15, 2009, under Blog Shorts, Non-fiction, Stories
Flies are some of the most disgusting pests I can think of in the insect world. Although in some cultures, the presence of a fly can be a sign of good luck. I had been dodging flies outside since the end of May, but I hadn’t seen any good luck come my way in my effort to refinance my house. Actually it was just the opposite. Since St. Patrick’s Day, I had been working with my local bank loan officer to get my monthly home payments reduced. Considering the state of the economy, the banks, and the real estate market, it was amazing anyone at the bank was even talking to me. Without going into a lot
of detail, let’s just say that there were a few set-backs in getting this thing moving. Finally after many delays, a title company officer came to my house to have papers signed. Unfortunately, she left me with the impression that there was still an “if” about the loan closing. Geez God, just send me a sign already, I thought.
Two days later, I noticed a couple of my indoor cats hovering around the back end of the arcadia door. I shooed the cats away to see about ten flies flitting around on the inside of the glass door. I grabbed the can of insect spray and blasted them. The cats had now found something else to grab their attention in the nearby window. As I pulled the blinds away, there were several more flies. What is going on here? Where are all these flies coming from? There were lots of flies outside, but how are they getting into the house? With this many flies in the house, I would think I would have seen one buzz by me.
When my son, Todd, came home later that day, I told him the creepy story of the flies before I went to lie down. My head never hit the pillow when I heard, “Hey Mom, come here and see this!” As I rounded the corner, I could see my son over by the arcadia door. I couldn’t believe my eyes! There were about twenty more flies crawling on the glass. As the last fly succumbed to the insect spray, I cautiously moved towards the living room window. The wooden shutters were closed with a couple of slats open. A scene from Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds crept into my mind as I slowly opened the shutters. I slammed the shutters closed and ran for the bug spray. When the toxic fumes cleared, I had annihilated over thirty flies just in the living room. We estimated the body count was somewhere around sixty plus altogether.
So are flies lucky? Well obviously not for them, but the next day I received the papers in the mail telling me the loan that I had tried for over fours years to refinance was now paid in full. Somehow through all the goofs and delays, I managed a five percent interest rate. My monthly mortgage payment has almost been cut in half. Along with the papers was a big check I wasn’t expecting. A week later, I got another big check from the escrow account. Where did all the flies come from? We never found out and they never came back. Be careful when you ask God for a sign, you just might get one (or sixty).
A Haunting Tale
by Cookster on Jun.09, 2009, under Blog Shorts, Non-fiction, Stories
Strange occurrences at the places I live have become the norm in the last thirty years. I recently came across a book that I hadn’t seen in twenty-five years. It was one of those things I should have gotten rid of years ago, but yet here it was thrown in a forgotten box collecting layers of dust.
In September 1977, there was a book published called “The Amityville Horror.” I wanted to read this book, but with daily care of a young child, that seemed impossible so I passed on buying it. By 1981, my oldest son was two years old and I was pregnant with the second one. I found myself often tired and not wanting to get out of bed much, but it was around the holidays so I eventually needed to go shopping for Christmas items. It was now a couple of years since the book was published in paperback and it was no longer prevalent on the store shelves, so I had quite forgotten about it. As I was standing in line at the cash register, I caught a glimpse of the book on a bottom shelf and decided to buy it.
George and Kathy Lutz moved into the house in Amityville on December 23, 1975. This was close to the time I had actually bought the book…just a coincidence perhaps.
With my son playing quietly beside me in the bed, I was able to find some time to read. As I was making my way through the chapters, I thought about the unusual stuff that had happened to us in our own house. I kept thinking that if this Amityville story was true, then these people went through some weird experiences. One chapter talked about the house being plagued by flies despite the winter weather; another, about the Lutz’s five year old daughter who developed an imaginary friend, a demonic pig-like creature with glowing red eyes; and then, the priest who blessed the house would run a high fever whenever he would think about the house.
Naturally, these incidences made for an interesting story, but they didn’t really make an impression on me until the crisp December morning when I walked into my kitchen and found dozens of flies congregating on the inside patio doors. It freaked me out to say the least as I managed to swat to death the last fly, only to come back an hour later to more flies. A week or so later, my two year old told me he saw a pig looking in his bedroom window. I never talked about this book to my young son. By now, all I could think about were the strange demonic happenings in the Amityville house. I began to run a fever and got very sick with flu-like symptoms. This lasted about 24 hours and no one else in the house got sick. I wasn’t sure at this point whether I wanted to finish reading the book, but continued on.
One of the last lines of the book read, “On January 14, 1976 George and Kathy Lutz, with their three children and their dog Harry, left 112 Ocean Avenue leaving most of their possessions behind.” As I closed the book, I realized that the day’s date was January 14, 1982.







































