Wednesday, 15 April 2026
A to Z Blog Challenge: M is for...
Monochrome
Tuesday, 14 April 2026
A to Z Blog Challenge: L is for...
Laboratory
With all the posts I have done so far, I have focused on my creative and blogging endeavours. Today my post is about my engineering work.
I work in a test laboratory as a senior safety certification engineer. I, and two younger engineers, test and certify high-tech equipment against international safety standards, before the products are submitted to the regulators for approval to sell. I also test industrial and specialised equipment for safety, and am systematically training my younger colleagues to do the same work.
Working in a laboratory environment suits my personality. The work requires extreme focus, every job is different, and I mostly work by myself. All three of us do, but we do consult each other when challenging products or tests need to be figured out.
Yes, I love my job. And I love that the work we do contributes to the economy of the country. I also have my own business where I assist companies to comply to the requirements for export. But that is a whole different story! 😉
Until tomorrow!
🇿🇦💜 Linzé
Monday, 13 April 2026
A to Z Blog Challenge: K is for...
Keeping a record
Sunday, 12 April 2026
CreativeLife update: art, the novel, and that pesky geyser problem
Our pesky geyser problem has finally been fixed, and I have started work on repairing the ceiling in my studio. It's mostly scraping off the flaking paint, and then repainting it. Most of the water damage was inside the cupboard, which made it awkward for someone who doesn't like ladders, to reach. But I managed.
Of course, I could ask Hubs, but it's my studio and I like painting walls and ceilings, which he certainly doesn't. And if you don't like something, you either postpone it, or you do a crap job. Since a crap job was not an option, it meant that I had to do it.
Reorganising is still a challenge. Since I want to move some furniture around, it is taking time with unpacking and moving and storing stuff again. Also a good time to get rid of things. I have already put aside a lot of pencils, and other materials, but they are still in the house. I want to put everything up on a website maybe in two or three batches to sell. I thought of donating everything, but advertising it might interest someone who actually needs a few things and don't live in my area. I will share where and when everything is available.
At least now I can get into my studio and work on some larger panels again. The tiny watercolours are still fun, but the big brushes are calling and those are the most fun to play with.
My 10th novel's editing is going well. The final edit is in progress, then it needs to be proofread and formatted for publication. The cover still needs some work, but I will have a chat with Hubs since he is my cover guy. This means I could actually make the new May deadline! Woohoo!
The A to Z blog challenge is underway if you want to have a look at the other kind of stuff I am up to in April. The next post is tomorrow.
Until next time!
🇿🇦💜 Linzé
Saturday, 11 April 2026
A to Z Blog Challenge: J is for...
Art Journal
or Lifebook in my case
>>> My March Lifebook interpretation of the theme, done with acrylic brush markers and metallic gel pens.
Friday, 10 April 2026
A to Z Blog Challenge: I is for...
In the Dollhouse We All Wait
by Amanda M. Blake - a book feature
“In the dollhouse, if you don’t play with Annie…she plays with you.”
Sam Frain thinks she’s found the perfect a live-in nanny position in a sprawling mansion owned by one of the wealthiest families in the country.
The job seems simple: Take care of Annie Lange.
Annie may look like a grown woman, but she lives inside a world built for a little girl—frilly dresses, scripted games, rigid rules, and what seems like every doll in the world.
As Sam learns the true nature of Annie’s games, she’s forced into a waking nightmare of psychological domination, grotesque excess, and carefully curated cruelty. In this gilded cage where money erases morality, survival means choosing whether to resist—or become part of the performance.
Blending the social unease of The Nanny Diaries with the ruthless brutality of Hostel II, In the Dollhouse We All Wait is a harrowing work of extreme horror that explores power, complicity, and the terrifying truth that the rich really are different.
Excerpt
The mannequins came to a complete stop, skirts rustling like woods in a light wind. Sam stepped closer to the display case to get a better look at the details, the elaborate collar framing red ringlets and ‘Queen of Hearts’-painted lips and eyelids. Sam wondered if Annie had made the pearl headdress, too.
The quality of mannequin in the Dream House exceeded that of any boutique or department store. Most places deliberately tried to make mannequins look more stylized to keep them from entering the realm of uncanny. Either these mannequins had already been uncannily human or Annie had made them so to better display the quality of her gowns, similar to what she’d done with the altered Barbies.
Sam took another step closer. She didn’t want to leave prints on such beautiful art displays, but she wanted a closer look at that diamond brooch to figure out how real it was, how it caught the light…
The mannequin blinked.
Sam jerked back, just as another waltz started. She didn’t know the name of this one, and she barely heard it as the turntables spun the mannequins once more. She struggled to follow, trying to see if she’d seen what she thought she’d seen. A trick of light, maybe from the turntable starting, or maybe Sam herself had blinked, or maybe there’d been one of those stealth power surges that made her wonder if she or the lights had dimmed.
Sam ran around the spinning turntable, daring herself not to blink if she could help it. Maybe it was just her panic and disorientation in basement sunlight, but it seemed like the mannequin’s face was sadder, brows low over the dark eyes. Was that a tear running down the mannequin’s face, or had the tear always been there, or was it just another trick of the light?
A mass of tentacles and rose vines masquerading as a person, Amanda M. Blake is the author of horror titles IN THE DOLLHOUSE WE ALL WAIT, QUESTION NOT MY SALT, and DEEP DOWN, dark poetry collection DEAD ENDS, and the Thorns fairy tale mash-up series.
Thursday, 9 April 2026
A to Z Blog Challenge: H is for...
The 100 day project
and 100 Tiny Treasures
A to Z Blog Challenge: O is for...
Overwhelmed If you have visited my blog in the past, you would have found this theme several times. It is the one thing that I often strugg...
-
It's been a while since I have taken part in the blog challenge. The problem is always coming up with new ideas so it isn't boring...
-
BOOK FEATURE THE GREAT DICK: AND THE DYSFUNCTIONAL DEMON by Barry Maher BUY the book: Amazon SYNOPSIS It’s 1982. His name, Steve Witowsk...
-
Hey there creative friends! This past week I finished the Creative Reset course with Louise Fletcher. One of the exercises we had to do...