Drive Thru Holiday Lights (Vicariously)
/My husband and daughter drove through two light displays recently and sent me pictures --- another chance for me to enjoy the Springfield, MO area’s holiday decorations vicariously.
Candy Cane Lane at Rutledge-Wilson Farm Park can be experienced as a regular light display or with special glasses that make points of light into candy canes! My daughter is bringing the glasses she purchased when she comes to visit before Christmas; it will be fun to see how they work with the lights on the wreath and reindeer in my parents’ house.
Ozark’s Festival of Lights at Finley River Park is becoming a family tradition. We drove through it last year too. Kudos to Ozark for continuing the display.
(Gardens Aglow Vicariously post)
Holiday Decorations
/This December is going to be a unique one for me…away from home….focused on other priorities…somewhat stressed by the situation. I am savoring the decorations two of my sisters arranged at my parents’ house:
The reindeer and poinsettias on the mantle…
The big wreath on the wall…
These are all decorations that have been used in previous years…associated with pleasant memories of past Decembers, prompting us to prepare for celebrating an anniversary, a birthday, and Christmas that are all part of our family celebrations in December. The month has always be an emotional high…and this year there is the overlay of realizing that it is probably the last one for my parents in this house.
Decorative Arts Before WWI eBooks
/James Ward was an Irish artist known for his murals in Dublin City Hall. It turns out that he was also a writer of textbooks including two books about decorative art and ornament…including the use of color published in 1909 and 1914 respectively.
Historic ornament: treatise on decorative art and architectural ornament
The books present the history of decorative arts and are also a snapshot of how that history was viewed/applied at the time the books were written. I wondered how the field was impacted by the war, the roaring 20s, financial depression and WWII. These books were written in a ‘calm before the storm’ – before the faster and faster pace of the modern world was acknowledged.
Both books are available on Internet Archive.
Ten Little Celebrations – October 2023
/Continuing deeper into fall…celebrating the seasonal changes!
Fall days – sunny and cool. A great time of year to get outdoors…perfect temperatures and blasts of color.
American White Pelicans. Seen in two places: Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge (Texas) and Sequoyah State Park (Oklahoma). It’s migration time. These are big birds that are fun to watch on the water and in the air. I always celebrate seeing them.
Apple Crisp. One of my favorite ways to use the fall apple harvest. It’s a little splurge on my diet…but well worth it.
First chili of the season. Another seasonal favorite.
Getting registered for an early winter birding festival. We signed in on the first day of registration and found that one of the sessions we wanted was already full; we picked an alternative and celebrated our itinerary when the registration process was complete. We are anticipating a wonderful week in December!
Butterflies and milkweed at Lake Springfield boathouse. Migrating monarchs and pipevine butterflies on thistles….milkweed seeds spilling out of pods…some favorite fall sightings.
Successful cleanup of my daughter’s fall yard (part 1). This is the second year I have offered to help my daughter do some fall yard cleanup. Our first work session was in October this year. I celebrated how much we got done in just few hours….we work well together! I am anticipating a second session in November.
Virginia creeper turned red. I let the Virginia Creeper grow in my front flower bed…spill over the low rock wall….and am celebrating that it has now turned red! Hurray for native plant fall colors!
Company and fall cleaning. I had company twice during October and am celebrating their visits AND that the visits acted as an incentive to get my house cleaner and picked up going into the coming holiday season.
Decorating for the Holidays – Part 2
/Once we made the decision to not have a tree this year (see part 1), there was only a little more decorating to do before we declared it ‘done.’
I continued to add decorations to my office: a garland of silver bells around pinecones from the tree in our back yard, some red glittery swirls in a tall vase on the hearth, old Christmas cards attached to the frame of the fireplace with magnets, and a garland of red bells on the door to the outside!
Gleanings of the Week Ending December 3, 2022
/The items below were ‘the cream’ of the articles and websites I found this past week. Click on the light green text to look at the article.
Drought hit large portion of the globe in 2021, state of water report says – Bad news for water: the negative trends are stronger than the positive ones.
Bloating common among Americans – I am so glad I discovered that I was lactose intolerant; it’s been relatively easy to change my diet to avoid bloating completely!
Do students really eat that badly? – Yes and no…and alcohol plays a negative role.
Fungi that cause lung infections may be spreading across the US – Infection causing soil fungi Histoplasma, Coccidioides, and Blastomyces – evidently the diseases are more widespread now than in the 1950s!
White House unveils its holiday décor, including 77 trees and ‘We the People’ theme – Getting in the mood for December celebrations!
From Patches to Pies, Illinois Knows Pumpkins – A little pumpkin history…and a satellite image (NASA’s Landsat 8’s Operational Land Imager) from after the pumpkins are harvested.
Cranberry bogs in Plymouth County – A satellite image of production of another seasonal food: cranberries! Massachusetts supplies about 25% of the cranberries grown in the US (outpaced only by Wisconsin). The cranberry bogs look pink/red in the natural-color image at the beginning of the article.
We’re told to ‘eat a rainbow’ of fruit and vegetables. Here’s what each colour does in our body – Love the colorful foods!
Effigy Mounds National Monument Becomes a Tribal Sister Park To Ioway Tribal National Park – A new type of agreement….hoping it is a good one for everyone.
How to be a sustainable parent – It’s hard since the most easily obtained products are obviously not and there are no pre-defined alternatives that are more sustainable…aside from buying second hand (i.e. reuse) whenever possible.
Decorating for the Holidays – Part 1
/Decorating the house for December has been different this year. It’s our first season in our Missouri house (old decorations in a new situation) and keeping the kittens safe is causing us to reconsider some of our decorating.
I decided that the pinecone wreath one of my sisters made for me more than 20 years ago needed to be refurbished; it was beyond my skills, so I took it to Carrollton and my sister stabilized the cones with wire and hot glue. We opted for simplified additions beyond the pinecones; I bought a new bow, and she attached it. When I got it back home, I realized I didn’t have any place to hang it that would be safe from our 3 kittens (the glittery bow would be too tempting them to chew).
My daughter and son-in-law helped us set up the tree on Thanksgiving. We didn’t decorate it right away…waiting for the cats to get bored with it. The kittens never got bored with it…climbed up through the center of the tree dislodging some of the branches. We took the tree down after 6 days when it appeared that the kittens were nibbling on the white plastic.
On the plus side, the old Christmas cards are not drawing the kittens’ attention. I have giant scrunchies with cards on the pantry door, the door to the basement, my office door, and one of the upstairs bedrooms.
There are also cards (with magnets taped to their back) on the two metal doors in the house (the doors to the garage and front).
Since we’ve turned off the gas fireplace completely, I put cards around the metal frame of the upstairs fireplace as well.
There are still a few other places to put old Christmas cards. I am glad I collected cards over the past 30 years…realizing that there won’t be many new ones; few people send cards any more…including me.
We have a wreath that we’ll put on the front door. My husband bought a magnetic hook as soon as we realized the door was metal! More on our decorations in a week or so…..when we decide to declare them ‘done.’
Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration
/There are 45 volumes of Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration (German Art and Decoration) magazine available on Internet Archive published from 1897 to 1929. They were edited/published by Alexander Koch in Darmstadt, Germany. Below I provide links and sample images (click on the image to see a large version) for the 45 volumes grouped by decade.
Some observations:
There seemed to be more color in the earlier volumes….more photography as time progressed.
World War I did not seem to impact the publication very much.
Lots of ideas for Zentangle patterns.
In the early 1900s, there were many of examples of making a room into an entire living space…hiding the bed behind curtains, screens, or boxing it in.
Sometimes lampshades seemed to be made of light weight fabric. This migh be more practical than ever with LED bulbs.
The art and decoration in the magazines were not limited to German-made. There were examples from around the world: Japan and China, Africa, North America, and the rest of Europe.
Enjoy a bit of history…and maybe some ideas worth reusing in 2022!
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V1 (10/1897-3/1898)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V2 (4-9/1898)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V6 (4-9/1900)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V7 (10/1900-3/1901)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V8 (4-9/1901)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V9 (10/1901-3/1902)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V10 (4-9/1902)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V11 (10/1902-3/1903)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V14 (4-9/1904)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V12 (4-9/1903)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V15 (10/1904-3/1905)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V16 (4-9/1905)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V17 (10/1905-3/1906)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V18 (4-9/1906)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V19 (10/1906-3/1907)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V20 (4-9/1907)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V21 (10/1907-3/1908)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V22 (4-9/1908)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V23 (10/1908-3/1909)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V27 (10/1910-3/1911)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V29 (10/1911-3/1912)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V31 (10/1912-3/1913)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V33 (10/1913-3/1914)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V34 (4-9/1914)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V35 (10/1914-3/1915)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V36 (4-9/1915)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V37 (10/1915-3/1916)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V38 (4-9/1916)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V39 (10/1916-3/1917)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V40 (4-9/1917)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V41 (10/1917-3/1918)
Deutsche kunst und dekoration V42 (4-9/1918)
Decorating for December – Part 1
/We have made a slow start decorating for December. The evergreen swag I hung on the front door before Thanksgiving will last through December. I got out the Christmas cards from years past to display on door scrunchies and under plastic on our table. There were other cards backed with small magnets strong enough to hold them securely to metal doors (between the laundry room and the garage...the breakfast area and the deck). I like the holiday scenes in places we see them frequently.
The cards hold pieces if our history…getting older every year; we haven’t sent cards in recent years and are receiving fewer every year. People are more likely to communicate in other ways that don’t involve snail mail at all. Still – I savor the beauty of Christmas cards as part of the season…maybe even more that giving and receiving gifts…and certainly more that realizing I’ve eaten way too much!
Will I do more decorating? I’m still thinking about it…
Thanksgiving
/My family staying healthy through the pandemic
My daughter coming for Thanksgiving – the first time she has seen her Dad since before the pandemic
So much good food for the day – some traditional and some new this year (strawberry rhubarb pie and orange corn meal muffins)
Weather good enough for a walk after the big meal
A decoration for the front door that can be composted after the 2021 holidays
Happy Thanksgiving!
Snapshots of Indigenous Decorative Art in the early 1900s
/This week the two books-of-the-week are about decorative art published in the early 1900s about native cultures on opposites sides of the world: The Huichol in Mexico and the Amur tribes in Russia/China (along the Amur River). Both have a relationship to clothing ornamentation.
The sample image from Decorative art of the Huichol Indians by Carl Lumholtz (1904) has a pattern called ‘double water-gourd’ in a ribbon and girdle.
The Decorative Art of the Amur Tribes by Berthold Laufer(1902) also included designs in metal and ceramics. The designs are common in the broader Chinese decorative arts showing the long-term exchange and cultural linkage with these tribes to the rest of China…at least in the early 1900s. The sample image I chose includes a boot – showing how clothing items incorporated decoration.
I like browsing the books and letting the designs prompt Zentangle tiles. I am reminded that art is not static. It is a representation of the moment it was created – a communication through material culture into the future – different but as potent as the written word.
7 Months in COVID-19 Pandemic
/
Today marks the 7th month since the WHO declared the COVID-19 pandemic. I started a monthly post taking stock of the impact on my day to day life back in July (previous posts: July, August, September). Here’s the one for the 7th month!
There were few ‘new’ activities for us in the past month:
Propane taxi. We are using our gas grill again! We were glad the service to get it delivered was available in our area since the pre-pandemic process required a lot of contact with other people to trade in the old tank and get the replacement.
Voting. We would have been voting at this time even without the pandemic but we requested a mail-in ballot and put it in a Maryland drop-box at a nearby early-voting place rather than voting in person. We are checking the ‘status’ online; right now they are listed as ‘received’ and we anticipate that they’ll be ‘accepted sometime after the 12th when our country begins counting.
Conowingo field trip. We ventured out on a short road trip to Conowingo Dam which is a little over an hour from our house. It was the first time since February for an outing like this. It was good to get outdoors in a place other than the immediate neighborhood where we live….and we did some bird photography. It turned out to be very easy to wear our masks the whole time we were out of the car and we had plenty of hand sanitizer. The visitor center was open; everyone wore masks, and the bathrooms were clean/well supplied (as they were pre-pandemic too).
Gathering a pile of stuff to donate…to be picked up from our front porch. Charities are beginning to pick up donations again in our area. I have accumulated a pile of stuff and realize there is a lot more that I am willing to part with. The key decision questions for me are:
Have I used it in the past year?
Does it give me joy?
Overall the ‘new’ activities, have continued our strategy of choosing low risk ways to go about our lives. There are things that we’ve continued -
Cape May Fall Festival (virtual). The fall is full of birding festivals that have gone virtual. The Cape May event was intense and we learned a lot….are all ready to go in person sometime in the future. There are others coming up that we are looking forward to. These have become our alternative to travel during the pandemic.
Groceries every other week and CSA pickup every week and curbside pickups. The routines of replenishing our supplies are functional and also provide us an opportunity to leave the confines of our neighborhood. Sometimes I use the opportunity to photograph a sunrise or the plantings at the CSA. As the weather has cooled, wearing a mask has become even easier.
It’s always good to have plans. We’re assuming that the pandemic will be the status quo at least through the end of the year (and probably beyond) and we plan to continue our strategies to reduce our risk. We are also assuming that the area of Maryland where we live will continue to adhere to CDC guidance as well as is happening now.
We’ll probably take a few fall foliage road trips like the trip we made to Conowingo – maybe to Catoctin/Cunningham Falls or Dan’s Mountain.
At some point we might get a POD container to load up with non-essential furniture and boxed items to make it easier to re-carpet our house as soon as COVID-19 is controlled.
And then there are the holidays….with special food and creative ways to enjoy our family even though we will not be in one location.
A Few Decorations
/My husband and I decided to go light on Christmas decorations this year. We didn’t drag out the tree and ceramic Santa that always holds the candy canes. I did put Christmas card from years past under clear plastic on our table.
We have opted to savor experiences this season rather than presents that we wrap. The few presents that are accumulating from others are packed into a sleigh that is on the hearth of the fireplace.
Those few decorations are enough for us this year!