Wednesday, July 31, 2013

I'm on my Way





Hello Little Ones,


If this doesn't charm you, I don't know what will.  Today there is also this lively blog, and another song.

For your visual pleasure, a drawing Harvey made some years ago- this drawing illustrates "everything you need for photography."









C'est tout!



Saturday, July 27, 2013

100 frocks



Dear Busy Ones,








     Do you know The Hundred Dresses?  By Eleanor Estes?  It's been on my mind because I have wanted to show you this wonderful project,  100 Acts of Sewing.  I had the pleasure of meeting this fine person at the Maker Faire a few years ago.  You can purchase her dress pattern here, on Etsy.

     When you aren't sewing up a dress in homage to Sonya Philip, you can read Eleanor Estes books.  I expect you might think that you don't have time for reading children's authors.  To this objection, I quote another great author,  Kate Douglas Wiggan, from Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm:  "When joy and duty clash, let duty go to smash." 

     Feeling a little less busy yet?  Here's something related, I think, and quite possibly my favorite youtube video.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

sound and vision



Dear Those Who Would,



 





     Today's little treats are loosely associated and  absolutely necessary to the project.  The first is a fine auditory adventure- do you know, my friends, of the glass harmonica? 

Listen on...

 and on...

Isn't it delightful?  If your appetite for unusual instruments is merely whetted, try a brief introduction to the ondes Martenot and the cristal Baschet.



     Now, a little feast for the eyes.



 













These contemplative and formal pieces were painted by Pegan Brooke-  I hope you will, what do they call it?  Internalize;  I hope you will internalize their beauty.  Ms. Brooke is having an exhibit this month at the Friesen Gallery.  Please look at more if you have the time.


Au revoir,

 

Sunday, July 21, 2013

the Joyce is yours





Dear Ones,


Today, a pun to groan at- and some links to marvel over.  Try this little triplet of Joyce:

 beautiful script

 lovely alliteration, assonance and consonance

 a pome pennyeach


This other Joyce gives us a wonderful project and a poetic marking of time.



If you need me, I'll be in the backyard, with my camera and my notebook bent towards the sky.




Friday, July 19, 2013

a taste of honey
















Marion Cunningham writes in her Marion Cunningham's Good Eating that these biscuits are "...so ridiculously simple, you don't even have to be awake to make them."  I have left out her charming prose and further condensed her easy instructions in the following adaptation:


Cream Biscuits

Oven: 425 f.

Combine in a bowl:

1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons sugar
3 teaspoons baking powder
2 cups flour

Add, stirring as your pour:

1 to 1 1/2 cups heavy cream

It will come together in shreds and shags; if it is too dry, add more cream.  Once you have a fairly cohesive lump, knead it 3 or 4 times and pat it out to a thickness of 1/2 to 3/4 inch.  Cut it up into 12 pieces of similar size, and then coat each side by dipping it into:

1/3 cup melted butter

Put them onto an ungreased baking tin and bake them until lightly browned; 12 to 15 minutes.
Have them hot, with a taste of honey.  Be sure to watch this video, it is delightful!








For a little more reading, try this.  Also, Marion Cunningham's cookbook is a perfect gift- for anyone, anywhere, anytime.  We got it as a wedding gift, and it is still in regular and treasured use after 14 years.  It isn't for coffee tables, there aren't a lot of silly pictures of eroticized food; it's just good, easy to follow and sweet.  Ruth Reichl (another great author, cook and all-around quality person) tells a nice tale of her friendship with Marion Cunningham in this terrific book:  Tender at the Bone.




Tuesday, July 16, 2013

words and what to do with them



Dear Ones,



Today, some things you can do with words. 







This is what Jonathan Feinberg calls a 'word cloud.'  Explaining just what this nifty gadget can do for you and your words is much easier done than said, so visit www.wordle.net and try it for yourself.


Here is another message:  Fate hooted howdy.  Which, o cleverest ones, is an anagram of  'the way of the dodo.'  Make great heaping piles of anagrams with this terrific tool. 


Have some more words- including a word of caution:  don't watch too much of these, just listen.

word up

word up one

word up two

word up three

word up four

word up five

word up six

word up seven

word up eight

word up last



The last word?

Farewell.





Monday, July 8, 2013

It's a crying shame





Dear Anachronistic Ones,

Hurry, I implore you, to your nearest roller skating rink.  Is it still there?  Tell me something good.    If it is still there, please keep it for me; I plan to skate it.  The rink in my town closed two years ago.

They have just closed another one I had hoped to visit:  Los Angeles' s World on Wheels.







 
 





Skating is even more fun than list-making.  Here's a list of rinks I got to in time:

Moonlight Rollerway, Glendale, CA.
Skate-Mor, Paso Robles, CA.
Skating Plus, Ventura, CA.
Redwood Roller Rink, Redwood City, CA.
Sunrise Rollerland, Citrus Heights, CA.
Rollertowne, Visalia, CA.
WaterCity, Marina, CA.
Skateland, Bakersfield, CA.
Cal Skate Clovis, Clovis, CA.
Family Fun Center, Sandy, UT.
Central Coast Sports Arena, Santa Maria, CA.
Deleta, Pocatello, ID.
Roller Kingdom, Reno, NV.
Rollerama 34th., Bakersfield, CA.
Roller Paladium, Santa Cruz, CA.
San Diego Skateworld, San Diego, CA.
Skateland Northridge, Northridge, CA.
San Jose Skate, San Jose, CA.
Crystal Palace, Las Vegas, NV.
Rollero, Phoenix, AZ.
Skate Country, Tucson, AZ.
Humble Family Skating Center, Humble, TX.
Rainbow Roller Rink, Conroe, TX.
Playland Skate Center, Austin, TX.
Paradise Skate, Antioch, CA.
Cal-Skate, Rohnert Park, CA.
The Golden Skate, San Ramon, CA.