Category: Lifestyle

Friday Finds for 11 February 2022 | Superbowl & Valentine’s Day | The Best of 2 Worlds

Friday Finds for 11 February 2022 | Superbowl & Valentine’s Day ..

Friday Finds for 11 February 2022 | Superbowl & Valentine’s Day | The Best of 2 Worlds

Welcome! This week I’m combining Superbowl celebrations with Valentine’s Day in the Friday Finds. Check out the fabulous Books, Superbowl Food, Valentine Recipes & Crafts. There is also a get to know each other section today. See ya in the chat, my friends!
@TheQuickandthe4 @theartsyreader1 @srbetler #SuperbowlParty

Friday Finds for 21 January 2022 | Books, Comfort Food, Needle Felting, Giveaways, & Blog Roll

Friday Finds for 21 January 2022 | Books, Comfort Food, Needle Felting, Giv..

Gina’s Friday Finds for 21 January 2022 | Books, Comfort Food, Needle Felting, Giveaways, & Blog Roll 
Read this week’s Friday Finds for book suggestions, taco bake, veggie pasta casserole, chocolate earthquake cake, and all about needle-felting.
Did your favorite blog make the round-up this week? Open up for all the goodness!

Final 2021 Friday Finds Wrap-up: Books, Party Food, Giveaways, Hats, & Fun

Final 2021 Friday Finds Wrap-up: Books, Party Food, Giveaways, Hats, &..

2021 Friday Finds Wrap-up

This week’s Friday Finds is full of New Year’s hopes, dreams, books, recipes, and hats! You’ll find book suggestions, book reviews, giveaways, charcuterie, Mediterranean dip/salad, knit & crochet hat patterns for personal use or donations. Join in the fun and leave a comment on the post to interact even more. I need your input.

My Best Genealogy Tips: Quick Keys to Research Ancestry by Robin R. Foster | Review

My Best Genealogy Tips: Quick Keys to Research Ancestry by Robin R. Foster ..

My Best Genealogy Tips: Quick Keys to Research Ancestry by Robin R. Foster | Review

My Best Genealogy Tips: Quick Keys to Research Ancestry will assist beginners and researchers who feel they need to start over. This is the first in a series of books that will walk you through getting an oral history interview, using historical records rather than family trees for proving research and making sure you remember to include the things expert researchers have admittedly forgotten.