Friday, January 22, 2016

Jourartlery Avez-Vous un Cuppa?

Hi Dear Folk,

Ideas where do they come from?  Well this was motivated by a Trader Joe's Tea Box and an old Brooke Bond tea add, which I think has stood the test of time forty five years and I still remember the tag line Avez-Vous un Cuppa. Now that's a good tag line.  Do you remember it?  It always made my dad laugh.  There were many adds done in that series including a take off on James Bond, Brooke Bond.


Worked in pastels and pens.


The cover of my first American edition Greengates and some quotes.

Worked in acrylics and pens.

Christy

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Greengates by R. C. Sherriff a Persephone Book

Hi Dear Folk,

Greengates by R. C. Sherriff 1896 - 1975  He wrote several novels including Greengates and a Fortnight in September, both on the Persephone Book list, and screen scripts including The Invisible Man and Goodbye Mr. Chips



I do like Sherriff's style of writing and can quite see why he went out to Hollywood and worked on such screen scripts as Goodbye Mr. Chips, it is just his style to capture the acute nuisances of a quiet life.

Greengates paints such a picture of change in the 1930s moving out from the more built up edge of old London suburbs, to the new commuter belt around London that had been woods and open farmland.  The detail in description of both houses their furniture and the period of time they adhere to is minutely described and here we see Sherriff at his best.

In Greengates Mr Baldwin has just retired at fifty-nine after forty years in a London insurance office.   He lives in the suburbs in an old house with his wife Edith and Ada their servant for seventeen years.

Retirement does not turn out to be the picture he had in mind.

Freedom - leisure:  they were words for inspiration and he was like an old canary with its cage door open, crouching on the furthest end of its perch.  He had made no planes.

The retirement gift from the office a clock.  I remember my family members on retirement always receiving a clock.  Here Sherriff is at his best on describing the mundane.

"Isn't that awfully nice! - it's so neat and simple."
She put it on the table and stepped back to admire it.  the old walnut-wood pendulum clock on the mantelpiece, with its round, keyhole eyes, stared in mild curiosity at the little quick-ticking newcomer - reassured itself and continued its placid beat without further interest.  It was a doleful clock at the best of times, but it looked at its worst at twenty-five past six, when its hands gave it a dreary, drooping mustache.

Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin eventually decide to put the new clock in the bedroom.

Tired though he was, it took him some little while to settle down, for cheap clocks, like crickets, chirp stronger as the nights wears on.  First he had to get up to cover his new present with a towel.  A little later he had to get up again to put the clock, towel and all, into the wardrobe cupboard.

As an insurance clerk in Cornhill area of London, it had been his schedule to get up at 8:00AM breakfast and catch the train to work.  All I can say about that is that back in the 1930s they lived a more leisurely work schedule than we do today.  Also Ada would serve them breakfast, and I think it's amazing that he can afford a live in servant on an insurance clerks wage.

As with many married couples on retirement, adjusting to long periods at home together puts a strain on their happy marriage.

Their supply of conversation, like a battery that quickly exhausts itself, needed a long period of daily rest for recharging.  there would be a desperate squeezing of the battery in the long, winter nights ahead.

Week-ends came to mind, when the weather had kept them indoors, inactive and together for hours at a stretch:  she remembered how perilously close they had come to a dead end:  moments when both felt themselves groping for something else within each other's minds - never finding it - and wondering whether anything else was there to find.

As one ages your mind has been trained to run along certain tracks and its very hard to get it onto another track.

He had wondered why so few of them used their freedom to do anything big, and a grim three months' struggle had shown him the reason.  A brain that has been hungrily aware of life for sixty years is stored to its capacity:  a man may draw from it lavishly and refill it with the kind of goods that he has fashioned it to hold, but he cannot clear it out and fill it with new stock of a different shape and size.  The old fittings are simply not made to take them:  they either reject them or collapse under the strain.

This passage took me back to a vision of old Mrs Radcliffes' house, she lived down the road from us when I was a child.

Sometimes, in unguarded moments, his mind had sunk into a dark vision of hopeless, endless, terrible days, suffocated by a drooping pair of faded velvet curtains - a nauseating brown carpet patterned with clusters of bloated grapes and pergolas ...

This is how their neighbors only on nodding terms, view The Baldwins.

"Sort of old boy who'll drown himself one day," said Mr. Potter from the large corner house.  "there was a case in the paper yesterday.  Fellow like that with nothing to do ought to be put into a home."

Life has come to this.

There were times when he was pitifully anxious to please her.  One evening he went out alone and returned with a small jade brooch that she had admired while shopping on the previous evening;  at other times he would return with a bag of cakes for tea.  But these were tiny oases in a desert of petty quarrels - nagging over money - futile arguments that would die away, fester and break out again and drag on for days - rising at time to terrible bursts of temper:  "Why don't you read the papers properly and find something sensible to talk about!"

Edith furtively scanning around the recesses of her mind casts it back to happier times when they would take the train out to the country and walk into Welden Valley, after which they would take afternoon tea in the village teashop and catch the train home.  This is what they decide to do.

"Thank goodness nobody's tried to spoil it, " said Mr. Baldwin as he reached the summit a little ahead of his wife.

And then he stopped dead.  She saw his jaw drop and heard his exclamation of astonishment.

A new housing development is sprouting up, they walk down into the valley to see what is going on and a young eager salesman asks if they would like to take a tour of the sample house, they explain that they are not looking for a new house, but he says he would still like to take them around so that he can try his sales speech out on them.

He was beginning to enter into the fun.  It was a good joke to go around a house like this;  to be one of the actors in a sort of dress rehearsal.  He nearly said:  "I knew this valley before you were born, my boy,"  but checked himself for fear of putting the young man off his stride.

This event will change the rest of their lives.  Now the seed has been sown.  Wasn't that house so lovely and bright, so new, not old and dull and damp.  No damp kitchens in the basement, no cold foggy bathrooms with a window that will not close.  They are quiet and ponderous on the train journey home each in their own world.  Now comes the tug of war between the careful, thrifty insurance clerk and the new shiny house in the country.  Could they possibly afford this?  Was it even right for them at their age.

It needed younger, stronger arms than those of a man of sixty to lift the latch.  And now - a year later, when another door had revealed itself and enticed him to its entrance, a single day had proved it too narrow for the lorry load of cares that follow a man in middle age.

She only knew that never in her life, until this moment, had she felt the happiness and excitement that life was ready to give to those who did not fear its shadows and uncertainties.

It was awful how the devil of ambition could get a cautious man by the ears and turn him into a spendthrift.

Mr. and Mrs.  Baldwin go over their finances and find out with Edith's little legacy of debentures they can indeed just afford the house.  And will make a clean sweep of it with all new furniture too.

If old receipts had been attractive to collectors he could have made a fortune at Sotheby's;  there was a complete set of Water Board receipts from 1899 in perfect condition, and the stamps upon them covered three reigns.

Shame he didn't know about Art Journals, people make a small fortune on eBay with that stuff.

Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin go down to Welden Valley to check on the building of their new home.

It seemed a little squat and crouching - the window frames were at present a bright startling pink and against the pale, unfinished plastered walls they made the house look like a surprised white cow with inflamed eyelids.

Such a simple thing as choosing a name for their new house became very divisive, but so simple in the end.

"Green," said Mr. Baldwin, "green gates."
"And that's the name of the house!" said Edith.  
"Green Gates."
"No," said Mr. Baldwin, by force of habit.  And then, after a pause:  "Edith, you're right.  'Green Gates' is right
And "Greengages" it became.

Their last dinner in their old house.

The salt cellar, the pepper pot and the mustard jar stood huddled in their usual corner like three little fugitives upon a desert island.

Most long-looked-forward to events are worn out before they happen.  The best times of all sweep down upon us so unexpectedly that anticipation gets no chance to water down the pleasure of reality:  and they pass so swiftly that even reality never gets a chance to bore its ugly holes into the memories that remain.

So true.

Walking away from their old house.  Sheriff would have had a vivid image of the following as I am sure this is something he had seen during WWI, the Flemish peasant women driven from her home.

She walked in tight-lipped, stricken silence, like some old Flemish peasant woman driven from her home by war.  she clutched her bag in a way that told him that she had smuggled some secret relic away.  In better truth they were refugees in that dark moment:  refugees dragging themselves to the shelter of a strange, hard building in a strange, uncertain country ...
"Two singles - Welden Valley," he mumbled through the ticket-office widow.

It lacked nothing:  it was a perfect home - but its very perfection called upon him to achieve the impossible:  to live ravenous in the present and to blot out past and future.

An evening walk and a chance encounter with a new neighbour set the pace of his future life.  The setting up of a Country Club.  No longer will they have time on their hands.

For general purposes he divided the human race into three broad categories:

a) Men who referred to their wives as "my wife."
b) Men who referred to them as "the wife."
c) Those who called them "my old lady."


He sadly placed his new acquaintance in category (b)

A riotous crowd of thoughts began to race each other round and round his brain, missing the curves and bouncing off the inside of his skull.  For a little while he tried to control them:  to cut down their pace and to sort them into order.  He tried to begin his plans for the Welden Valley club, ...

He wondered whether he was a bigger snob than he had suspected.  The long and short of it was that van Doon was not good enough.  class counted for nothing and character everything:  old Henslip, the Messenger at the office, was in conventional terms a common man, but he was a gentleman with whom Mr. Baldwin had many an evening played dominoes in the office basement.  He would welcome Henslip as a member of the Welden Valley Club because he was modest and simple and unaffected and had a jolly sense of fun.  Mr. van Doon was far cleverer than Henslip:  far better off and better educated., but Mr. Baldwin had no desire whatever to meet him socially:  he was perky - he was bogus:  he was not genuine.

Mrs. van Doon was tall and plump, with startling blue eyes and beads to match.  She had bright pink cheeks, full red lips and was in every way the kind of lady men married when they came home from Rubber Plantations.

I expect you would need to live back then to understand that thought about the rubber plantation wife.

At a meeting to set up the club.

Mrs. McKinney hemmed Mr. Baldwin into a corner and began in a rapid, high-pitched voice to tell him everything she knew about everything.

The last chapter is set ten years later.

"Funny how long ago that seems," he said.  "As you grow older your memory seems to twist right round and point the furthest end at you.  I remember my father's old house in Colchester much clearer now than I remember 'Grasmere.' (the name of their old house)  The Grammar School's much clearer to me now than the office.  Come down and have some tea!"

And doesn't that ending almost remind you of Mr. Chips?

Such a cozy read for winter and in summer read a Fortnight in September.

Christy.

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

The Lighting of The Fire

Hi Dear Folk,

Another day at home, with a pounding head, runny nose and a wet tissue.  So I am appreciating light and heat.

Light and Heat the key essentials of winter that keep that cozy feeling in ones home.  Little creatures appreciate this, although maybe they're more into the heat than light.

After Tink died it seemed that Tuppy had a personality shift, as if she felt a need to step up to the plate and take the position vacated by Tink.  Spending more time around us and taking a great interest in all we do especially related to her comfort.  The clink of a cup on the saucer, denotes that milk will come out of the fridge.  The bringing up of wood from the basement, denoting the ritual of starting the fire in the wood stove.



Tuppy taking a great interest in the lighting of the stove, she's a very intense cat.  If anybody could levitate her dry food off the top of the fridge into her bowl, she could.  She sits on the very edge of the kitchen stool just looking at it, no doubt as to her meaning.  Since I bought her a new china cat bowl she can no longer bang it up and down like she used to with the plastic bowl.


You have to wonder what is on their mind.


 

Christy

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Weekend Walk On The Wild Side

Hi Dear Folk,

It has been a long weekend for me as I had off MLK day, but now is even longer because I'm home with a head cold.  I think The Boy brought it with him from Ithaca, then it went to Mr.B. so it was just a matter of time before it got to me.

On the weekend we got out for a family walk and then onto a Vietnamese Restaurant which The Boy found right in town here, and guess what they had Bahn me sandwiches.  I love these sandwiches, remember I had one when in Brooklyn, they are a fusion Vietnamese/French cuisine.  We will definitely go there again.

There are several entrances to the park on different sides we call this the top end, park the car walk by the dairy buildings and down this path to Stoney Creek.  I love the avenue of tree, it reminds me of the drive up to my old school Hadham Hall, although that was twice as long.



This made for such a good photo moment, lady with three huskies.


She said they are waiting for a good snow, when huskies of course come into their own.


My Boys,  Mr. B. wears this Nepalese hat that I bought for the boy years ago but he never wore it, and now Mr. B. wears it all the time and to be honest needs a new one.


Here I am standing on the path down to the creek.  We didn't go all the way because The Boy had not put on appropriate walking attire even though his mother told him to.  The cowl I made, I'm just trying it out, made with a chenille type yarn and I think I will definitely make some more of these in different colors for gifts.  My Irish Aran hat and mitt set a gift from a friend and my alpaca jumper, which is so warm and was a brand new find at a consignment shop originally sold for $300.00, I would never pay that, try 10% of that plus a discount.




Natures tree decorations.


One of my favourite views to the old dairy.  They have the long milking room which they recently put in all new windows, it's empty, but I think it would make a lovely building for afternoon teas or wedding receptions, it has views down across the fields.


Lots of deer in the park.



Our weekend walk on the wild side.

So here I am on the sofa , medicated up, with a cuppa, BBC 4 is playing and the fire.  Hope I feel better tomorrow morning or my work will pile up.

Christy

Friday, January 15, 2016

Young Girl With Basket by Berthe-Marie-Pauline Morisot

Hi Dear Folk,

Young Girl with Basket.


Bertha Marie Pauline Morisot January 1841 - March 1895

Was a member of the circle of Paris impressionist painters.  She married Eugene Manet, Edouard Manet's brother, they had one daughter Julie, who she frequently used as a model.  She was know as one of the "les trois grandes dames" alongside Marie Bracquemond and Mary Cassatt.

Christy



Thursday, January 14, 2016

Journartlery

Hi Dear Folk,

I treated myself to this set of pens by Sakura, they flow very easily and there are others I have my eye on.  My fountain pens have all been gathered together and put in the Canadian tin with the Mountie on it.  Fountain pens need to be loved all the time and do not like sitting cast away in a lonely drawer for long periods of time, so they are protesting at being brought out to see the light again.  Two are protesting a little less than the others, but interestingly they have a different style nib.

When I was about ten: even back then I had a total appreciation for very good pens: I was given an expensive Parker pen.  It was found by a friend of my father's who was a porter on the railway and his name too happened to be Porter.  In any case it was black and had a gold nib.  Unfortunately no top and I had to keep it in a plastic bag in my pencil case, but it was a great pen and I loved that pen.  Can't remember what happened to it, but I know I had it for several terms at school.


So eventually I decided on the Japanese print book to turn into my art journal.  It has art pictures already in there and I think I will just work around them because they are rather nice. I'm calling it my Jour n art lery. Of course "jour" is French for day, and "die" is the Latin for day, the beginning of the words journal and diary, but I do not have the time for journartlery on a daily basis,

It is very interesting because you have to find your own style and I think I am more of a words person.  I'm going to keep going and see where it leads me creatively, tap the other side of my brain.



These pages I washed in gesso, it fades out what is underneath and gives you a good surface to adhere to.

Gesso (Italian pronunciation: [ˈdʒɛsso]; "chalk", from the Latin: gypsum, from Greek: γύψος) is a white paint mixture consisting of a binder mixed with chalk, gypsum, pigment, or any combination of these.


I noticed that others too are taking up art journals this year, so should be fun for us all.

Take care,
Christy

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Two Girls by Pierre-August Renoir

Hi Dear Folk,

We had a sprinkling of snow last night but nothing much.

Mr. B. has these Magnepan speakers which are like panels at least six feet high. He bought them back in the eighties and they were not new then.  Since we bought them the price has gone up six fold.

The tweeters have needed to be replaced for at least the last fifteen years. So as an anniversary gift to him we decided to spend the money and send them back to Minnesota to be repaired.  And on shipping them back to us, guess what, yes they were dropped and damaged.  Now we have to sort all that out, and they were in pristine cosmetic condition and who knows whether they still work, so have to wire them all up and see what has happened to the inside.  Such is life in the Hi Fi world of my Boys.

I came home to find two early sixties speakers sequestered in my studio room, to make way for other speakers, which seem to come from the thrift and either get cleaned, repaired, used for a while and recycled on, or are kept for a later date.  These particular speakers with a hessian/linen type cloth screen at the front, very late fifties, early sixties, now sit on top the the book shelf between that and the ceiling.  I think they might be up to seven pairs of speakers and a giant sub woofer the size of a refrigerator.  It's nice they share a hobby together and speak the same lingo.

A Renoir from PMA.  Have to love those hats.




Hope your day is good.

Christy

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Colonial American and The Olde Curiosity Shoppe - Royal China, USA

Hi Dear Folk,

Isn't it fun to set a lovely dinner table, but how often do you have the time for it, because it does take time.  So here is a set I found which was discontinued by 1950.  I was going to say it is so very American, but actually Royal China, USA made two sets that I know of in the green, one Colonial Homestead and the other The Old Curiosity Shoppe.  Since the shades of green are similar and the style I mix and match the pieces I have. Also a Currier and Ives picture set in blue. Now looking on Replacement China I see that there are all sorts of wonderful pieces to the set.

Colonial Homestead by Royal. and The Old Curiosity Shoppe by Royal



My new cutlery set got put to use to carve the chicken, see above.


I do like the dinner plates for the Colonial Homestead aren't they lovely?  With the old hearth.  Do you see the little bowls with the bellows for the hearth and some small plates have spinning wheels on them?  I also have a set of cups and saucers which go with this.  All collected over time at the thrift.


The Boy on his way to the gym, anticipating a dinner to come.


So I served a traditional English roast chicken with stuffing and Yorkshire puds, you must have Yorkshire pudding.

Christy

Monday, January 11, 2016

Sunday, January 10, 2016

The Bookmark

Hi Dear Folk,

You might ask what is so special about a bookmark that I would make that my title for a post.

Over the years I have used all the possible combinations of bookmarks.  Card bookmarks made for that use with tassels, photographs on them or with me, quite often tea sayings, or a very special bookmark from a friend made of handmade lace from Suffolk.

I have used old envelopes, or cards, postcards that have been mailed to me, pieces of folded paper or even a receipt.  Sometimes a rubber band, a paperclip, a piece of yarn or string, I think the list could go on further, yes a dried leaf and so on, you get the picture.

Metal bookmarks have also appeared in my books over the years, ones that nip the paper, never my favourite.  But now I have a metal bookmark that is absolutely my favourite; it is from Japan and is metal with a little vase in white Japanese/Chinese ceramic made in the old Japanese/Chinese style.

It sits in a book so perfectly, hugs over the top and down the spine, does not slip, move, or drop out, I am in love with this bookmark.




It came in a little box and I acquired it at the thrift shop, possibly it came from a museum shop, who knows, but I paid just a little amount for it and paid so little attention when I bought it, just thinking that I liked the old Japanese/Chinese blue and white ceramic, and who would have thought I would write a gushing post about a very mundane little object, a bookmark.

And here it is.


Christy

P.S. Reading Greengates, such a great read, by the fire



Friday, January 8, 2016

Portrait of a Woman by Gustav Klimt

Portrait of a Woman by Gustav Klimt born 1862 died 1918


Frauenbildnis (Portrait of a Woman) 1917-18

Oil and charcoal on canvas

Klimt began his painting in 1917, but it was left unfinished in his studio at the time of his death in February 1918.  It is the death bed portrait of Maria (Ria) Munk, the daughter of a prominent Viennese family.  In line with temporary elite fashion the family commissioned the portrait in her memory after her suicide over an unrequited love.  This picture evokes its subject through a wash of bold, Asian inspired patterns.

This is the last of three paintings that he painted of Maria Munk.

If you have not seen the film Woman In Gold, staring Helen Mirren you should; about Maria Altmanns quest and claim on family paintings especially the paintings of her aunt Adele Bloche-Bauer, painted by Klimt.  It was stolen by the Nazis and residing openly in a key Vienna Art Gallery.  It took ten years of legal battles to reclaim the families stolen paintings.

Christy

Thursday, January 7, 2016

View of The Bay of Marseille with the Village of St. Henri, by Paul Cezanne

Hi Dear Folk,

Many museums do not allow photography but at the Philadelphia Museum of Art they do.

View of The Bay of Marseille with the Village of St. Henri by Paul Cezanne.


Christy

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Avenue du L' Opera, Morning Sunshine, by Camille Pissarro

Hi Dear Folk,

Avenue du L'Opera, Morning Sunshine, by Camille Pissarro.  1830 - 1903 Danish/French Impressionist.


Camille Pissarro was born on the island of St Thomas, US Virgin Islands, it used to be the Dutch West Indies


For a while he lived in Norwood a village at that time on the edge of London.  This is a painting of the Bath Road, Chiswick 1897, which I rather like.  This is not at the PMA

Most of his life he lived in France.

Christy

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

The Japanese Footbridge and Water Lily Pool, Giverny, by Claude Monet

Hi Dear Folk,

This is just one of the Monet's at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

The Japanese Footbridge and Water Lily Pool, which Monet painted numerous times.

Several years ago The Boy and I got to visit the house and gardens at Giverny and I have always been so happy that we were able to make that trip.


Christy

P.S.  The temperature today is 12 f and with a wind chill of -4 f.  Dropped from 62 f last week, that is a temperature roller coaster ride.

Monday, January 4, 2016

Departure of The Folkestone Boat, by Edouard Manet

Hi Dear Folk,

Departure of The Folkestone Boat, by Edouard Manet at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.


This painting by Manet of the steam ferry that carried passengers from Boulogne, France to Folkestone, on the Channel coast in England, is one of two paintings that Manet made of the subject. The painting conveys the bustle and excitement of international travel in the early days of the steamboat's operation. 

Christy

Friday, January 1, 2016

May the - Apache Saying

Hi Dear Folk,

Freedom a day to oneself, endless possibilities, what to do?

May the sun bring you new energy by day,
May the moon softly restore you at night,
May the rain wash away your worries,
May the breeze blow new strength into your being,
May you walk gently through the world,
And know it's beauty all the days of you life

Apache saying

I think this is so beautiful and reminded me of a scripture in the Bible

 - you and your son and your grandson 
- all the days of your life, so that you may live a long time

Deuteronomy 6:2 latter part

The section where it says "all the days of your life"

Christy

New Leafs, Art Journals and Crochet

Hi Dear Folk,

I am looking forward to using my new diary that I bought at the Frick House in NYC, there is such a variety of artwork in there that each page will be fresh.

Something I have long wanted to have a go at is an art journal. So that's a go for the new year. I have a book all written in Japanese and Japanese writing in itself looks like artwork to me.  It must have been sold at a museum, because of the pictures.  I think my hardest problem is defacing a book, seems to go against my upbringing.  I've had this book for years, so I'm raking out pens and fountain pens, stamps and other ephemera.  I'm going to keep them all in my Amish basket, it seems right.

Many Journal Art people seem to use a Moleskine, then I found a comparison between a Moleskine and a Leuchturm, which I had never heard of before.  This particular art journal keeper preferred a Leuchturm, so interesting.  I have a small lined Moleskine I keep in my handbag at all times for notes on anything, so it is a hotch potch of information.  I think I might get a Leuchturm, probably order it online, that could be the way to go as well.

At the thrift I ran across on old Franklin Covey ring binder, quite small but huge rings for great depth,  so now my mind is running in all directions and I need to narrow it down.  I noticed that old ledger post binders go for upwards of $30.00 or more and I had several of those when we ran a small business in the eighties, who knows what was the going of them.  Who would think you'd ever find a use for them and all that ledger paper after computers came in.

The Art Journal will definitely be a work in progress as I think I will need to think out of the box for this, be more free flowing and that is a thinking I will have to develop.

I've almost finished a hat, scarf and mitt set, in what they call "Spring Brook" which aptly describes the colour, muted shades of greens and blues, it has a sheen like looking through water. The patterns are by Nicky Trench.  Funny thing was I was working on the fingerless mitten pattern from Cute and Easy Crochet, when I thought this seems familiar, pulled out a crochet book I had bought at the thrift and sure enough it was the same author and pretty much the same pattern, that book is called The Cool Girl's Guide to Crochet.




When Jean and I were in Ithaca at the craft fair, I saw a hat crocheted out of that thick, chenille, soft, blanket yarn, so I'm having a go at that, I even bought the same colour as I saw the hat in "Plum Fields".  Mostly people knit this yarn into Afghans, but I really liked the hat.

I do not like all the colors in that Bernat range, other colours I do like are "Harvest" and "Silver Steel" which is more neutral.  I did buy "Plum Chutney"  but I'm taking that back if I can, because I have unwound some of it, I'm not crazy about that colour.  Bob likes the color (maybe it's the chutney bit in the name) he says can I make him a Nepalese style hat in it.  Let me tell you it would look totally outrageous, but maybe I will.  I'm looking at another Bernat colour in that range "Sailor's Delight", that does look nice, muted shades of peaches and blues like a sunset, but I don't think I've seen that for sale in the stores.  I do like the colour names, so important don't you think?

So just a little for the new year,  obtainable and fun, no pressure.

Christy


Thursday, December 31, 2015

Tea Time

Hi Dear Folk,

Thought you might enjoy this from Tea Time Magazine

Tea Time's Favourite Recipes from 2015



Plus a Victoria Sandwich sponge cake from Downton Abbey; my mum's go to cake.

Mum's recipe is simple weigh the three or four eggs, and measure out the castor sugar/super fine sugar, same weight as eggs and the self raising flour same weight as eggs and the butter same weight as eggs, plus the usual other ingredients.

My mum was speaking to an old friend who had been in service in the kitchen as a cooks assistant and mum was lamenting that her Victoria Sandwich never rose that much, "Oh the trick my dear is to weigh the eggs."  Of course makes total sense because egg size and weight can vary considerably and all ingredients must be room temperature.

Christy

P.S.  Yesterday they had thirty percent off at our local thrift and I picked up seven Chinese dinner size plates, with wonderful hand painted flowers and lots and lots of gold, I thought they would look so pretty on a tea table.  You know I can't resist pretty china.

Friends, Food and Fun


Last dinner before Jean returned back to England.

Christy

The Years by Virginia Woolf

The Years by Virginia Woolf

I read this from the first American edition 1937, published by Harcourt, Brace and Company, Inc., just gotta love my library, old shelving yet again.

You will never read VW for a thrilling plot, or a story that reveals itself over time, no her stories are the everyday people, or I should say everyday people of her social strata.  The more you read her books and the more you read about her life you can see how she captured so much of it in her stories.

The Years is a story about one family the Pargiter's and their life over the years.  It starts in 1880 and caries onto present day which was actually in the 1930 s., so fifty years and closely spans VW lifetime.

The Colonel has retired from the Indian Army and lives in a suburb of London with his invalid wife and children, also a mistress in the background.  The children grow up, Martin takes up an army career, Morris law at the bar, Edward a scholarly course to Oxford.  Delia marries and is the hostess par excellence, Milly marries into the landed squire gentry and horse world with children.  Rose is the militant suffragette and Eleanor will not marry, stay at home and look after father.

Our opening scene is set, everyone returning home to Abercorn Terrace for tea. Millie takes her mother's place and pours tea, the kettle never pours properly.  All return the Colonel from his mistress, Martin from school, Eleanor from being good to the poor, Morris from his law office.  Such scenes VW excels at.

1880
"It's not boiling,"  said Milly Pargiter, looking at the tea kettle.  She was sitting at the round table in the front drawing room of the house in Abercorn Terrace.  "Not nearly boiling,"  she repeated.  The kettle was an old-fashioned brass kettle, chased with a design of roses that was almost obliterated.  A feeble little flame flickered up and down beneath the brass bowl.  Her Sister Delia, lying back in a chair beside her, watched it too, "Must a kettle boil?"  she asked idly after a moment, as if she expected no answer, and Milly did not answer.  They sat in silence watching the little flame on a tuft of yellow wick.  There were many plates and cups as if other people were coming; but at the moment they were alone.  the room was full of furniture.  Opposite them stood a Dutch cabinet with blue china on the shelves; the sun of the April evening made a bright stain here and there on the glass.  Over the fireplace the portrait of a red-haired young woman in white muslin holding a basket of flowers on her lap smiled down on them.  Milly took a hairpin from her head and began to fray the wick into separate strands so as to increase the size of the flame.

Walking in London.

1908
It was March and the wind was blowing.  But it was so cruel.  So unbecoming.  Not merely did it bleach faces and raise red spots on noses;  it tweaked up skirts;  showed stout legs; made trousers reveal skeleton shins.  There was no roundness, no fruit in it.  rather it was like the curve of a scythe ...

In fact the whole paragraph which is one page long should be savoured.

Eleanor.

She leant back in her chair.  How terrible old age was, she thought; shearing off all one's faculties, one by one, but leaving something alive in the center;  ...

Rose a cousin.
1910
"All talk would be nonsense, I suppose, if it were written down," she said, stirring her coffee.

1911
As Eleanor bent to give her the customary kiss, life once more took its familiar proportions.  So she had bent, night after night, over her father.  she was glad to stoop down;  it made her feel younger herself.  she knew the whole procedure by heart.  They, the middle-aged, deferred to the very old;  the very old were courteous to them; and then came the usual pause.  they had nothing to say to her; and she had nothing to say to them.  ...

... the liquid call of an owl going from tree to tree, looping them with silver.

The ending is a large family party, not unlike the ending of Mrs Dalloway.  Cousin Peggy -

Present Day
Thinking was torment; why not give up thinking, and drift and dream?  But the misery of the world, she thought, forces me to think.  Or was that a pose?  Was she not seeing herself in the becoming attitude of one who points to hes bleeding heart?  to whom the miseries of the world are misery, when in fact, she thought, I do not love my kind.  again she saw the ruby-splashed pavement, and faces mobbed at the door of a picture palace; apathetic, passive faces; the faces of people drugged with cheap pleasures; who had not even the courage to be themselves, but must dress up, imitate, pretend.  and here in this room, she thought, fixing her eyes on a couple, ...  But I will not think, she repeated;  she would force her mind to become a blank and lie back, and accept quietly, tolerantly, whatever came.

There the words lay, beautiful, yet meaningless, yet composed in a pattern - nox est perpetua una dormienda.

Delia's husband Patrick an old man now

"And it's just the same with the Irish,"  he went on.  North saw that he was bent on treading out the round of his familiar thoughts like an old broken-winded horse. ...

"North must go and talk to his friends," she said.  Like so many wives, she saw when her husband was becoming a bore ...

He overheard scraps of talk.  that's Oxford, that's Harrow, he continued, recognizing the tricks of speech that were caught at school and college.  

North thinking about his uncle Edward who became on Oxford Don.

Why's it all locked up, refrigerated?  Because be's a priest, a mystery monger, he thought, feeling his coldness;  this guardian of beautiful words.

The Years is not a thrilling story to be revealed, not a book that you can't put down, but rather it's beauty lies in the fact that you can put it down and pick it up and put it down over and over because you want to ponder on each bead on the string of the necklace; individual and perfect in themselves; strung together by a little piece of string; not silky just the life of a family, friends and generations. The Years a vehicle to express deeper thought.

Christy
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