Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Bad Photo

Sooooo....I didn't have a lot of time today to take a photo to use with Kim Klassen's  texture, Rejoice. Nope, it was a rushed affair.  I've been taking a photo everyday rather than delve into my stash. Anyhow...the photo turned out bad and it didn't fit with the texture at all. No matter which way I tried to spin it I had problems getting the look I wanted.

Bad photo, that's what it is.

So what to do... hide it in the trash, tell everyone a stranger grabbed my camera and shot this hideous photo, or go ahead and stick it on the blog saying to the world....  Hey I'm not perfect!  I chose the latter.

So without further adieu let me introduce to you the Charlie Brown Christmas tree of photos...
Eeeeewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww......

Now if you want to see photos that really make Kim's textures pop head to her website blog.



kimklassencafe
 
PS You will not find this photo on my flickr photostream.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Christmas Greens

The fresh smell of pine wafts through the house when the tree is brought in to be decorated.  It was an exciting time when we went off to find the Christmas, whether it was cut-fresh from a tree farm or selected from a local Christmas tree vendor it's what I imagine the bringing in of the yule log must have been like from the Christmases of long, long ago.  The stories of ancient Christmas traditions fascinates me.  I prefer to use fresh greens over artificial.  Fresh white pine that reminds of me of spidery fireworks in shades of green creates a base.  The legendary holly bearing plump red berries is so lovely to set upon window sills and add to garlands, wreaths, and in arrangements.  And then, English ivy, the little evergreen with so much spunk that it will grow up stone and brick walls.
  
Christmas Greens

So I gathered a few greens and those bright berries that wink at me outside my window. Placed in an English trug the greens and berries could be from the Christmases of Eleanor of Aquitaine or Anne Boleyn.  I love that about Christmas...the tradition, the legends, the lore, the memories.

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The textures used on the photo are Kim Klassen's new one for today, Providence layered twice, and then Edward to add a timeless look.  You'll find more tantalizing textured treasures at....

kimklassencafe

Monday, December 19, 2011

More Texturizing

I'm collecting each of Kim Klassen's textures, but I've not had time to put them into action so I'm behind.  Here's a couple photos I with a couple of her textures.
 
The first one, Snow Globe, has been textured with first storm and then more magic scratches.
snow globe

The second photo has a layer of storm also and then a layer of wonderful magic scripted, another charming texture created by Kim Klassen. 
Bird

I hope each of you are making merry as the holidays approach on a fast sleigh of time. 

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Day 2: Mom's Recipe Box

One of the happiest holiday memories I hold deep in my soul is baking with my mom and siblings. What fun we had frosting cookies and each other.  Oh my the glorious smells that wafted through the house during the holidays...sugar cookies, gingerbread men, peanut butter blossoms, and many more.  She was a passionate candy maker, too.  Chocolate fudge, peanut butter fudge, penuche fudge, divinity, peanut brittle, buckeyes, caramels and taffy filled tins. 

As we grew up and moved on with our own lives, we still came together to make candy. By the time each of us arrived the recipe box was open with a stack of recipes at the ready.  We got busy kneading, mixing, dipping, and creating.  Sisters and sister-in-laws came and went as life sent us in various directions, but the tradition continued for those who could make it until my mom became too ill to open her recipe box.

Day Two: My Mother's Recipe Box

Now when I hold those recipes in my hands and admire the lovely handwriting that was my mom's I can hear the music of her kitchen; the deep, rich sounds of Bing Crosby singing White Christmas, the laughter of the ladies in my life, and for a moment she is right here once again.

*Blowing a kiss to the heavens above*

This is day two of Kim Klassen's 12 Days of Textures.  Each day she's sharing a texture that can be downloaded for free.  Here's your chance to give textures a try on your photography.  Follow the cookie crumb trail here.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Celebrate Them Home

I've not done so well capturing 25 days in December, but maybe I can get in Kim Klassen's Twleve Days of Texture.  She's giving away a texture each day for the next 12 days.  It's amazing how a texture tells a different photographic story. 

The ornament hangs on my friend MJ's tree.  It's one of those lovely retro ornaments that we hold dear and inspires to recall Christmas past. Each year as I decorate I am reminded how I got this ornament, where that Santa came from, and mostly of those that are no longer near by. Oh how I wish I could celebrate them home. 

Celebrate Them Home

I fell in love with today's texture, Lily, by Kim Klassen.  Find more texture love here.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Holiday Shopping & Stuff

There's something going on around here. Little shops are springing up and it's exciting! Last Saturday, MJ and I galivanted about Williams County visiting shops. To give you a bit of background...Williams county lies in the very northwest corner of Ohio bordered by Indiana to the west and Michigan to the north. With a population of less than 38,000 you just know there's room to stretch. The county was hit hard by the economic woes the country faces and as of October 2011 the unemployment rate continues in double digits at 10%. 

So what's a rural area that relied on Detroit to do?

Get creative!  Set up shop! And oh how imaginative entrepeneurs are grabbing on to the possibilities and making them work...

Our first stop was at a holiday shop in West Unity.  You'll hear more about that shop in a later post, so let's travel down the road to Stryker, Ohio and...

The Green Awning

Yep, I've given you a bit of insight into the Green Awning in a previous post,but let me tell you...Kathy & Tom Short do it up right for the holidays.  Everything was bright, cheerful, and beautiful from antiques & old stuff in the window...

to the clove-studded oranges beneath an old stove...

After catching up with old friends and laughing at Kathy's Christmas hat, with a wave we were on way to Bryan and the...

East Mulberry Gift Cottage


What vintage love is found within the whimsical vignettes of Sharon & Gary Gyurnek's shop.  Birds in purses, perched on iron farm implement seats and everywhere creates a natural ambiance that pulls browsers and buyers into Sharon's world.  Look up....
  to find teacups hanging from twiggy branches on soft, silken ribbons.

Look down...
and there it is... a vintage suitcase just waiting to come home with me and be filled with dreams of far away places and crazy adventures.

Across the square sits Special Ocassions,one of my favorite stores in the area.  I'm saving this little gem for another post, so let's hurry out of town and to...

Fox Farms Christmas in the Barn

A clutch of hens and roosters greeted us as we walked toward the big barn.  Just outside the barn, a whimsical arrangement bid welcome and enter

Within the barn everlastings hung in huge bundles, ready to be crafted into wreaths, swags, garlands, and more. 
A loft circled with tiny white lights held more drieds

Karin Fox takes the everlastings and fashions one- of-a-kind-wreaths-and-designs. The Barn is open every Saturday through December 10th.
The Green Awning Gallery
Tom & Kathy Short
106 Defiance Street
Stryker, Ohio  43557
(419) 682-7432

E. Mulberry Gift Cottage
Sharon & Gary Gyurnek
847 E Mulberry Street
Bryan, Ohio  43506
(419) 630-0100
Hours: Tuesday - Friday 10-6  Saturday 10-4

Fox Farms
Jerry & Karin Fox
09 319 Rd 750
Edon, Ohio  43518
(419) 272-2278
Open every Saturday through December 10th 10-4

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A December Photo Challenge: 25 photos in 25 days

 December 1 Berries & Bokeh

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I'm not quite finished.  Don't forget about the Holiday Planner under the Gift for You page. You're welcome to download, copy it, print it, and share it anyway and anywhere you like. 

Have a delightful December Day!

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Gratitude & a Gift

 I found memories and creation dreams left behind in a box that remained closed for nearly 15 years. Tucked inside were mounds of fabric, lace, ribbon, and  of all things jingle bells.  The luxurious sheen of a pastel brocade, the sweet fleurs on a French ribbon, and the delicate beauty of cream lace made my heart delight in simple things.  I'm thankful that I found that box filled with such lovely textiles, but I'm even more grateful to be on this journey of finding those things I left behind, rediscovered, and still they bring so much joy. 


This photo, taken in my homemade lightbox, has two textures adding a bit more vintage and age. I used Kim Klassen's Portrait & And then Some textures on the photo after using a sepia tone, faded a bit to bring out the color.  If texture is your thing, check out more textured photos at Kim Klassen's cafe. 


kimklassencafe
 

What's a Light Box?
If you're as curious as I was after reading this post at You'll Shoot Your Eye Out, then go ahead and follow the trail to Leavesnbloom Photography and just when you think you're there...follow me down the rabbit hole to Ramblings and Photos   Enjoy the journey! 
A Gift for You
I love messing about on the computer and I also love planners.  So I came up with the idea to create a Holiday Planner.  Time is flying and getting organized for the holidays just makes sense. So...you can download the entire planner in pdf form.  Pick up a folder with pockets and voila! You'll have everything at your fingertips from gift list to menu planner to a calendar. You'll also find the websites of angels who offer some wonderful free images and recipe cards. I've included a sugar cookie recipe that is a family heirloom.  These are the best sugar cookies ever!  Just click on the Gift for You page and you'll  find the planner.  
Happy Holidays! 

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

A Christmas Card for You

Dear Friends...thank you for all the support and love shown me as I muddled through this year of confusion. I appreciated each and every one who visited the Cottage. I found inspiration and much food for thought within the comments left behind. Thank you, thank you, thank you...

I hope you enjoy my version of a Christmas card just for you...

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Cranberry Inspiration


"Christmas waves a magic wand over this world,
and behold everything is softer and more beautiful." 
~ Norman Vincent Peale

Try as I might, I cannot take a decent photo of the Christmas tree, so I looked elsewhere for inspiration. Last summer I read about placing items in the bottom of a glass canning jar and photographing the contents. So I thought...



I wonder...what if I frosted the cranberries and placed them in stemware?  One egg and a bit of water mixed together and brushed on to cranberries became the glue for sugar.

Frosted cranberries look so elegant. *snap*

I wonder...what if I put  a few frosted cranberries in the bottom of a martini glass...  *snap* 

I wonder...what if I dipped the lip of the glasses into water and then sugar to create an icy edge...*snap*


Hmmm...there's silver dragees waiting to be added to cookies.  What if?  *snap*

I had such fun experimenting and snapping photos.  I ended up making a centerpiece using the clear glass stemware with edges sugared. One glass even has drips that look like ice melting.  I filled the glasses with frosted and unfrosted cranberries.  Silver dragees line a flute and hold a candle in place.  The look is elegant and quite lovely on a creamy white placemat.  I'm thinking the same could be done using crushed hard candies and candy canes. 

I hope everyone is enjoying this last weekend before Christmas day!     

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Snow on the Dandelion & Sharing

It's snowing...white, pirouetting flakes, sometimes ladies in big flouncy skirts, other times tiny bits of lace falling from the sky.  Yesterday it was 54 degrees and today...well it's shivery cold.  I  noticed a lone dandelion blooming like a golden kiss in the browning grass and smiled thinking, surely this is the last bloom of the year.  This morning there it was...snowflakes clinging to fragile petals no wider than a thread.  Out I went,camera in hand, laid on the cold, wet ground and shot a few photos. 

How often do you see a dandelion sporting a winter snowflake cap?  

A snowflaked dandelion seed head. 

I superimposed a dandelion photo from last summer to create..
A Dandelion's Dreams of Summer

Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle and the life of the candle will not be shortened.
Happiness never decreases by being shared.
~ Buddha
Do you know Se'lah?  If you don't, you should.  She has a generous heart and comes up with wonderful ideas for sharing and casting light in shadowy places.  She's once again opened her heart to others and is asking anyone and everyone to join her in making Christmas for children from four families a magical day.  You can get all the details here.  Pay her visit and become part of 'Let's be the village."


Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Eclectic Views

Flowers for Five
Last winter I purchased flowers for five dollars and snapped hundreds of photos satisfying my penchant for the view through the lens.  These golden lovlies created a Thanksgiving tablescape along with glass cubes, filled with cranberries and water for five plus two. Oh what can do be done for a couple bucks. 

Textrued Holiday Spices
I used one of Kim Klassen's textures to add some vintage wear & tear to this photo.  I admit it...I love baking, the smell of whole spices, especially freshly grated nutmeg.  Kim Klassen Cafe is amazing and if you like textures you'll find lots of love there.


Oh the lovely, fruity ways to use cranberries...
As sauce, in a relish, chutney, salad, string on thread for a garland, inside glass jars, on wreaths, in arangements, the smile of a snowman, to photograph.

120 Gallery   Bryan, Ohio
Dear Santa,
We stood waiting outside Kathy Fundersburg's art gallery in Bryan, Ohio, while waiting for Santa's arrival last Friday night.  Oh what wonders to behold within the walls.  Visions of pastel painted fairies, just like the ones we looked at, dance in my head.  Just thought you'd like to know.  
                                                                                                Teresa O
  

   

Friday, November 12, 2010

Some Kinda Wonderful

I can't wait for the weekend to begin.  Tomorrow my dear friend, MJ is coming for a visit.  My daughter's friend from Dayton will arrive in the afternoon and we're all going to make holiday wreaths from fresh greens.  We did this last year and had such fun we just had to do a repeat.

We can't JUST create...oh no we're also planning to take in one or two local Christmas shops.  If there's time Special Ocassions in Bryan is filled with wonderful gifts and more ways to say it's the holidays than Santa has elves.

Another shop on my list of places to go is the East Mulberry Gift Cottage also in Bryan.  It conjures up visions of the past with vintage goodies. I wish the shops had websites to share, but alas they don't at this time.  I'm hoping the proprietors will allow me to snap a few photos to post.

We must stop by the Candy Cane Christmas Shop outside of Archbold.  The store is located in a defunct elementary school and filled to the rafters with everything needed to create the Christmas decor of your dreams.  The shop also carries charming toys not found in big box stores.     

Dinner and wine at Stella Blues, one of the swankiest restaurants in nw Ohio, is the plan for Saturday evening.

I'm brimming over with smiles and anticipation.  This is gonna be some kind of wonderful weekend!   
  
"A good friend is a connection to life -
 a tie to the past,
a road to the future,
the key to sanity in a totally insane world."   
                                                                           ~ Lois Wyse

Wishing you a wonderful weekend, too! 

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Dreams for a New Year




“I learned this, at least, by my experiment: that if one advances confidently in the direction of [her] dreams, and endeavors to live the life which [she] imagined, [she] will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.”                ~ Henry David Thoreau


I’m going to take Mr. Thoreau’s advice and march in the direction of my dreams trying to live the life I’ve imagined. And when I do I too shall meet success when least expected. Before I begin this new journey, I must take stock of the year that flew by on swift wings.

I shall consider where I’ve been, where I’m going, and where I want to go. I must review the year in my mind, embracing the memories of family, friends, laughter, and sometimes sorrows. I ask myself…Did I treat every person I met with respect and a gentle smile or was I too busy living that I forgot to be grateful, to be humble, to be loving? Did I sow some seeds of friendship along the way or disenchant old friends that deserve the best I have to offer? Did I plant a garden of flowers and tend it with fortitude mixed with joy or did I allow weeds and ill winds to choke the beauty? These are the questions that must be answered so I can begin the story anew on a clean slate




Once I have come to terms with 2009, I can begin my journey toward 2010 dreams. Whether you dream of gardens, flowers, vegetables, family, a life-change, a new love, or a new location, may you capture your dream in the New Year and hold it fast.



Mark Twain reminds us, “Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.




So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails.





Explore.



Dream.


Discover."

                                                                                                                                  

Happy New Year!



Monday, December 21, 2009

Christmas Fairies

Christmas Girl from Graphics Fairy
I needed a bit of Christmas magic this morning and the mystical ways of unknown good fairies delivered. One of the wonderful gifts of blogging is discovering blogs, websites, and creators that might never have been found, if it were not for stopping by an oft-read blog only to be pulled away by one in the blog list. I’m ‘rawther’ like Eloise skittering here and there, popping into rooms and the blogospohere is ‘rawther’ like the Plaza Hotel and as Eloise herself claims, “There are absolutely nothing but rooms in the The Plaza.”

Here is the path I took this morning:
I always start with the Ohio blogs, I’m a loyal Buckeye. This morning I couldn’t bring myself to comment, due to the mean reds. (If you’ve read Truman Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s or seen the movie you’ll know what I’m talking about.)

Next come the latest entries on my Other Garden Blogs list.

Finally, I peruse the Because I Like them Blogs searching for a new post to read. The World Examining Works blog is an absolute favorite that I read faithfully. Looking at the wonderful photos of New York always make me sigh. A post I’d not yet read was up, so off I went.

Now… I found this blog through, From the Desk of Bee Drunken, another favorite blog that always leaves me with something…a recipe, a smile, or a literary find. After reading the latest post on The World Examining Works I read the comments and clicked on Rochambeau. I’ve never been to this blog, so I scurried over to take a peek. Gorgeous photos of Christmas displays around the world lit up the page, but one in particular knocked my wooly socks off…San Francisco from Fae Nation. Rochambeau’s creator is indeed a good fairy…she inserted a link and off I went to the Fae Nation Website, which in turn linked to Kat Soto’s site where I could steal a few precious moments and lose myself in enchanting Christmas fairies. These are the fairies of my child-like imagination with lovely faces, ethereal wings and period gowns surrounded by whimsical trappings of fairyland.

As a grown-up, I put away my wings so long ago that I sometimes forget that I can still fly. It takes a gentle nudge from adults who still fly with fairies to remind me that it’s ok to take a moment or ten and rediscover the child within…wide-eyed, curious, and so very tender.

Thank you good fairies, everywhere.

Graphic from Graphic Fairy

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Gingerbread Men Day

Cut outs 2
The calendar said December 12th and because gingerbread was written plain for all to see it must be Gingerbread Men Day, indeed. Red woke, scurried to the kitchen, and grabbed the footstool. Dragging it to the calendar on the wall, he had to make certain, “Yes, today’s the day.”

“Wake up Mimi!” the brown –eyed boy said while patting my arm. “Today is gingerbread men day!” Enthusiasm coursed through his limbs as patting turned to pulling, until I finally got up.

Before gingerbread making could begin, I had to have my coffee. The little boy stood close-by, patiently waiting for Mr. Coffee to gurgle and give one final gulp so I could fill my cup with the magical morning elixir that forces my blurred eyes to open wider and begin the day. We were sipping our favorite drinks when Manda joined us, rubbing the sleep from her eyes before filling her favorite mug with lightly creamed coffee. Redding chattered the lively talk of a six year old, while Manda and I pondered the clouds in our coffee.

Next, came a quick breakfast, getting dressed and oh my we must run to the store and pick up a few things. The patience of a little boy amazes me sometimes. Redding crawled into the car with only a barely audible mumble, “…but what about the gingerbread men?”

Fill the cart with this and that, stop and talk to acquaintances, stand in line, pay, and now the tummy is grumbling again and it’s time for lunch. More waiting, eating lunch, and away we go again. Passing a store, I suddenly remembered the wrapping paper I’d had my eye on for a couple weeks.

Out we all tumbled and into the store we went like a small band of merry makers. Who can go into a store and not browse? Time floated by as we “oooed and aahhed” over ornaments, toys, ribbons, and bows, but only the wrapping paper in red and cream came home with us.

Back at home canvas bags filled with ‘stuff’ were unpacked and put away. The wrapping paper joined the colorful throng in the closet and two ladies sat down for a breather.

Redding gave me a nudge, “What about the gingerbread men?”

“Soon,” I replied with a deep sigh. And he walked to his bedroom where he quietly played with figures of medieval knights battling Star War Jedis.

Redding’s mama was the first to make a move. Out to the kitchen she went, she found the recipe, and took from the cupboard flour, baking soda, molasses, ginger, sugar, measuring cups, and spoons. A big, crockery, mixing bowl and the beaters stood at the ready.
Gingerbread Dough
. Redding heard the commotion and came to the kitchen with wings on his feet. He found the cookie cutters and placed them on the counter as sugar poured into the bowl turned dark from the thick molasses. Flour flew as the beater whirred and mixed the batter. A quick finger gathered a bit of cookie dough and Red tasted the gingered batter. With a smile, he declared the cookie dough fit for gingerbread men, but there was more to do.
Kneading in Flour
Beaters can go only so far when it comes to gingerbread men, hands must take over. With the flick of a wrist the surface was covered in flour. Manda plopped a pile of soft dough into the middle of snowy white powder. More flour poured over the top of the mound, readied it for kneading. With gentle fingers, she mixed the flour into the sticky dough until it reached just the right firm consistency. Rolled into a circle, it was time to cut.
Rolling Dough
Redding floured the gingerbread man cutter and carefully placed it on the rich brown dough. With a push, the first gingerbread man was born. Red Cutting Out Cookies
A few more touches and he’d be ready to go into the oven. Raisin eyes and a row of buttons put life into the spicy man.
Placing Eyes
Time went by so slowly while the cookies puffed and grew into delicious gingerbread men.
Cooling Cookies
Finally, after waiting all day, gingerbread men marched from the oven to the cookie towel to cool.

Later, Redding nibbled off one leg, and then the other, his lips smacking with the spicy flavors of ginger and molasses washed down with a mug of cold milk.

This is a very special recipe to my family. It comes from my Grandma B, to my mother, to me and my siblings. I have no idea how far back the recipe does go, but I like to imagine that it’s been handed down for many generations. The recipe is unusual; no eggs are used. The recipe calls for shortening, but I’m sure Grandma B used lard. I’ve never tried it with butter for fear it would change the cookie.

My mother used a basic recipe of ingredients, which was exactly how my grandmother did it, too. This recipe must be learned through trial and error. Over time, you learn what the dough should look like, but most importantly, how it feels in your hands as you knead in the flour. For me it’s a tactile baking experience filled with the love of generations of women who came before, repeating the process, feeling the gooey dough between fingers and turning it into childhood memories.

Grandma B's Gingerbread Men

2 cups sugar
1 cup molasses (dark)
1 cup shortening
1 tablespoon ginger
1 tablespoon soda dissolved in 1 cup water
Flour to make a soft dough (Approximately 3 cups)plus 2-3 more to stiffen dough

There are no directions for gingerbread men, but over the years I’ve come up with my own way of making them that has proven to work out well.

Mix sugar and shortening together until fluffy. Stir in molasses and ginger. Dissolve soda in water and set aside. Measure out one cup of flour and pour into mixture. Add 1/3 of soda and water. Continue in thirds until all ingredients are blended.

On a smooth surface place 1/2 cup of flour. Spoon half of dough onto the flour. Measure out another 1/2 cup of flour and sprinkle on the top of dough. Carefully begin kneading the flour into the dough. Continue adding flour (1-2 cups) until the dough is stiff enough to cut.

Roll out dough and cut out gingerbread men and women. Grandma used raisins for eyes and buttons, but a butter cream frosting adds delicious details. Chocolate chips make yummy eyes and buttons, too.
Holiday Baking 2

Thursday, December 10, 2009

These Things I Love...

In the spirit of Rupert Brooke’s poem, The Great Lover, where he lists “These things I have loved…” and from the inspiration of Christina’s gentle lists on Soul Aperture, I offer these things I love…

Cold, blustery days with snow skittering into patterns

Big snowflakes that pile on the ground just waiting for a metamorphosis

The smell of gingerbread men baking in the oven
Copy of Gingerbread Cutouts 2
The tinkling sound my grandson’s laughter makes as he slumbers

The pink cashmere scarf I saw in Boston and still yearn for

Twinkling lights on a Christmas tree

A violin rising and falling in a lilting phrase

Rapid-fire wit from a dear friend

Frost-etched lace on the window
Frost on the Window 3
Expressive fingers that create, soothe, and dance

A lavender sky that melts into violet twilight

Hot tea in my favorite Christmas mug
A cup of Christmas Tea
A pyramid of wood glowing in a brick fireplace

A merry turn across the living room

Dreaming of you

What things do you love today?