Trying to get more even stitches, I ventured out for a second piece of needle point work. Cotton embroidery floss is what comes in most kits for about ten bucks, so I really could not complain about the quality of the fiber, but cotton floss is not near the quality that wool gives in stitching. My continental stitches are beginning to show some improvement in tension.
Anyhoo, here is another 5" x 5" piece of needle point, again from a kit, but this time from overstock.com for a low price. Who can argue with a happy red ladybug wanting to be a mouse pad?
The computer mouse did not glide over the stitches so it was encased in plastic, which works much better. Plastic is from a bag, recycled and repurposed for this use. It was fun.
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Monday, January 26, 2015
Shrinky Dinks for Earrings
Back in 2012 I worked with shrinky dinks laser print pages to make charms and earrings. Those Downton Abby and Frieda Kahlo earrings are long gone, having been given away to family members in Texas and a new friend in Colorado who wrote of Kahlo in one of her poems.
After the writing retreat when our talented author Sandy Dorr expressed appreciation for Ursula Le Guin, it made sense to make her some earrings of an image of Le Guin, along with one of her quotes.
Steps for making shrinky dink earrings:
After the writing retreat when our talented author Sandy Dorr expressed appreciation for Ursula Le Guin, it made sense to make her some earrings of an image of Le Guin, along with one of her quotes.
Steps for making shrinky dink earrings:
- Find an image you like and tone down the colors (I used 30% on the gamma scale in Photoscape).
- Select a second image (optional) for the back of the shrinky dink paper.
- Select 10 per page of the image and print on a laser ink jet printer, using the special paper available at hobby stores
- Cut off all white edges on the image.
- Use a hole punch and punch a hole in the top of the image about 1/8 from the top. Make sure you cut the hole twice the size of the cutter because both the image and the hole will shrink to about 1/4 of its original size.
- Line a cookie sheet with foil and place the images on it.Bake in a preheated 275 degree oven for four minutes, until the image has both shrunken and flattered.
- Either paint on varnish or polyurethane, several coats will do, allowing the objects to dry between coats of finish.
- Remove from oven and cover with paper or foil and put a heavy book on it for 30 seconds.
- Make earrings or knitting markers using beads and findings.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
A New Venture
Over the past ten days, I have committed to try learn to write in a more conscious manner. This new desire has been spurred on by meeting eight women who write in a manner that makes me think in different directions, expanding my spirit, exercising my mind in styles that I embrace. I want to do that, too! This new venture came about from participating in the women's writing retreat held in Redstone, Colorado last weekend, directed by Sandy Dorr. Then I signed up for her writing class "Path to Writing," eight sessions extending through April.
Homework for the pathway to writing has consisted of reading and discussing other writers and their work. So far, we have read from Ursala Le Guin, Jane Hirshfield, Sara Teasdale, Rebecca Lee, Claire Keegan, Jamaica Kincaid, Robert Pinsky, Sharon Doubaski and Ellen Bass. Many more authors were discussed but I was so full of words and pages of writing that I cannot hold them all together in one hand right now.
If you are interested in my pathway to writing, hop on over to my new blog, Path of Writing. Please comment and give constructive criticism. I value your thoughts.
I leave you with this image and verse shared by Katie who also attended the women's writing retreat.
Homework for the pathway to writing has consisted of reading and discussing other writers and their work. So far, we have read from Ursala Le Guin, Jane Hirshfield, Sara Teasdale, Rebecca Lee, Claire Keegan, Jamaica Kincaid, Robert Pinsky, Sharon Doubaski and Ellen Bass. Many more authors were discussed but I was so full of words and pages of writing that I cannot hold them all together in one hand right now.
If you are interested in my pathway to writing, hop on over to my new blog, Path of Writing. Please comment and give constructive criticism. I value your thoughts.
I leave you with this image and verse shared by Katie who also attended the women's writing retreat.
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
Needlepoint: A First
Sitting on the floor by my mother back in the early 50's, I remember her separating strands from a skein of dark grey wool yarn into single threads. The single thread was then slipped through a large needle for her project. It was a rose she stitched around, and I recall that I did not think it was very "pretty" in my child's eye, but neither was it ever questioned that it would not be beautiful simply because she needle pointed it. The back was full of threads and tangles, and I have since learned that a true needlepoint artist does not leave a thread unattached on the back of a piece.
Fast forward to a few weeks ago when I started needle pointing my first piece, simple, small, but I knew I had to accomplish this task of a 5" x 5" piece to place on an address book. Yes, while working on it, I was reminded of my mother doing this same type of needle art while living in that simple dry land farming ranch house all those years before. It also pulled me back to consciousness that I was also performing the same craft, now more than twice my mother's age when I was on that wooden floor at her feet.
Needle point has certainly changed over the years. Mother performed one stitch, endlessly, the continental stitch. Now my current book shows over 250 different stitches that can be used to create beautiful canvases. If you are so inclined, go here to see some of my favorites that others have stitched.
My first finished piece from a simple kit provided by Dimensions. This was the kit picture.
It was fun to sew this little piece and now I am starting a more ambitious project, a Klimt painting, The Serpent, on canvas 15" x 20", that will be sewn onto the front of a shoulder bag when completed.
SEG de Paris Needlepoint - Medium Needlepoint Canvases - Le Serpent (d'apres Klimt) Canvas
Have you tried needle pointing? Where do you find your materials? What is your inspiration?
Fast forward to a few weeks ago when I started needle pointing my first piece, simple, small, but I knew I had to accomplish this task of a 5" x 5" piece to place on an address book. Yes, while working on it, I was reminded of my mother doing this same type of needle art while living in that simple dry land farming ranch house all those years before. It also pulled me back to consciousness that I was also performing the same craft, now more than twice my mother's age when I was on that wooden floor at her feet.
Needle point has certainly changed over the years. Mother performed one stitch, endlessly, the continental stitch. Now my current book shows over 250 different stitches that can be used to create beautiful canvases. If you are so inclined, go here to see some of my favorites that others have stitched.
My first finished piece from a simple kit provided by Dimensions. This was the kit picture.
The koi piece was worked and then attached to an address book, embellished with findings, gold cording and magnetic poetry words. All objects were adhered to the address book with a hot glue gun and only a few fingers were burned in the process.
SEG de Paris Needlepoint - Medium Needlepoint Canvases - Le Serpent (d'apres Klimt) Canvas
Have you tried needle pointing? Where do you find your materials? What is your inspiration?
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Our Dog Mercy
She has a need to be alone. It is her
primal nature, for she was bred in the north, Calgary, where the cold
wind blows. She was meant to stay in solitude for hours in small
spaces and to keep quiet, the perfect condominium animal, bred over
twenty generations for solitude and minimal barking. Keeping still
and silent is necessary for some animals, the owl, the snake, the
wolf. Now it is in her genetic makeup as well.
In her essence: a she-wolf. She
observes, focuses, and is a watchful waiter when human food is
being consumed. Patient, patiently watching and waiting until that
last bite, knowing it is saved for her, is gratefully taken with
intense poise into her gentle mouth. It is almost a kiss she gives
when taking her small treat. Her mustache is smoothed down with a
light human touch, and she is told she is loved.
This is her day: a short walk led by
the man of the house, a bit of play time, kibble and water, and then
sleep. For sleep consumes the majority of her day. Snuggling down
into the pillows on the bed, uncovering the bolster if necessary in
order to reach her master's down pillow, her favorite, she takes time
to make her day nest. Here she will stay for hours, only nature's
call for elimination of fluid urging her out of this nest that only
she inhabits. The others in the house, her sister animal friend and
the humans, do not inhabit this space of hers called the peoples'
bedroom. Those others stay in their own dens doing whatever it is
they do during the daytime hours...reading, knitting, cooking,
talking. But here, on this bed and on the once forbidden pillow, she
stays.
Occasionally, when dreaming, a slight
whimper will come from deep within her throat. It is not unlikely
that she yelps. Perhaps a play date with her sister dog is in her
dreams, or maybe it is one of those pesky UPS men ringing the
doorbell and making her jump to attention, shaking her from that
sleepy lethargy. Whatever the cause, those yips and slight low growls sometimes can be heard from farther rooms when she is deep in
slumber. Her distant presence is made known.
Now the night comes. The people in the
house retire to this, her place, at night. At first she welcomes
them, and snuggles down, this time at the foot of the bed, into the
old down comforter throw that is kept just for her, although the
feathers are slowing disengaging from the seams, and little white
fluffs can be found on the bedspread beneath her silky throne. With the
lights off, now surrounded by these human masters of her universe,
she again settles and sleeps.
After two or three hours of this
nighttime darkness, she awakens and feels the presence of the humans
and realizes she is, indeed, not alone. She jumps from her downy
nest on to the wooden floor, her toenails making a soft, padded
sound. She yips, awakening her masters. They interpret the yipping
noise to mean that she wants out to pee, and the one called Gene
cooperates, reaching for his flashlight at the headboard of the bed,
pulling himself up and out of slumber, releasing her out into the cold
night air. Upon command, she performs her duty, and both the human
and she return into the room.
Circling round just the right number of times, she replaces herself on the nest. She again sleeps. But I
often wonder if what this canine really craves is to be alone,
again, on the bed she calls her own. Sometimes, when the owners correctly interpret throaty call, her name is sternly called out in the
darkness to return to bed. Reluctantly, she comes back to her rumpled place at my feet. Perhaps she woke to realize she has others in her
space. Her primal need was again calling her to solitude. All
she really craved was to be alone.
Monday, January 12, 2015
Redstone, Colorado in Winter
There was yoga (Susan, our esteemed teacher practitioner)
At the ice skating rink, skates ready for fun
Chrome Hubcap Sculpture in front of Redstone Inn (by O. Louis Wille, obituary here)
A few of the group
Friday, January 9, 2015
Initial Writing Exercise
Directives given in first assignment:
Think of an object
What is its shape? What is its texture? What color is it? What does the object evoke in you?
Write about this object. Timed for thirty minutes maximum.
Green Man on the Shed Door
He lives on in the cold January exterior. His face is a yard wide, painted on rough cedar planking in acrylics of burnt sienna, thalo green, color of lemons and limes interwoven in the giant leaves of his face. Stark black outlines his wreath of greenery making up his features. Green Man's wide mouth, though worn down and made more faint by five harsh summer sunbeams and the like number of winters and cold rains coming down on his weathered cheeks, is nonetheless visible in a malevolent moue. His brows are painted veins of leaves twined between foliage.
Frozen boards below him are stiff with winter chill and the skiff of ice on the shed entranceway gives warning of careful entry into his kingdom of plastic chairs and worn pots. He guards entrance to the lawnmower, now stiff from disuse, with his silent stare. Guardian of the tool shed, he is a symbol of earth, of all things green and growing. He is a mystical creature, a keen observer of creatures moving in the garden, animals gambling on the lawn. In day, his countenance is obvious, but at night, he keeps close count of stealthy foxes and raccoons, always on the lookout for night creatures of mice skittering through tall buffalo grass.
The Green Man smiles, at least his painted-on moue perhaps grimaces at some unknown secret not yet revealed. Maybe he is contemplating his future of soon-to-be warm days when perhaps yet even more undiscovered observations will occur under his benevolent, hooded eyes.
Is that smile on his face? Or maybe it is I who sees a generous future harvest of wild flowers, showy zinnias, blue iris, herbs, all welcoming a much anticipated spring, and his face is reflecting my wishful gardening thoughts.
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Writers Weekend Coming Up
Tomorrow and over the weekend fifteen women will be attending a writing workshop in the mountain of Colorado at the Redstone Inn, a quaint hotel originally built as a boarding house for coal and marble miners at the turn of the nineteenth century. I am delighted to be included in this group of women.
One of our readings in preparation of the workshop, in case you might want to take a further look at an author with whom you might be unfamiliar, is entitled The Tiger in the Grass by Harriet Doerr. Born in 1910, Doerr began writing at the age of 67 and made a splash of a debut with her novel Stones of Ibarra at the age of 74.
excerpted from The Tiger in the Grass:
Updating information from the workshop next week.,,
One of our readings in preparation of the workshop, in case you might want to take a further look at an author with whom you might be unfamiliar, is entitled The Tiger in the Grass by Harriet Doerr. Born in 1910, Doerr began writing at the age of 67 and made a splash of a debut with her novel Stones of Ibarra at the age of 74.
excerpted from The Tiger in the Grass:
Updating information from the workshop next week.,,
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Heralding our 25 Years of Marriage
A quarter of a century we have been married.
Gene and I have seen several family and friends' marriages occur over these years. A few births in the family have happened, several pets acquired, and we have helped more than a few people through their last months on earth. My husband and I have traveled a bit together, I was away in North Carolina for a graduate degree, and we both have since retired from our economic careers. We have been through sickness and health. There has been a small lifetime of tragedies and triumphs through the years.
So I made a movie for Gene as an anniversary present. (Journey supplies the lyrics and music.)
Gene and I have seen several family and friends' marriages occur over these years. A few births in the family have happened, several pets acquired, and we have helped more than a few people through their last months on earth. My husband and I have traveled a bit together, I was away in North Carolina for a graduate degree, and we both have since retired from our economic careers. We have been through sickness and health. There has been a small lifetime of tragedies and triumphs through the years.
So I made a movie for Gene as an anniversary present. (Journey supplies the lyrics and music.)
Through the Years
A faded wedding photograph.
You and me in our first dance.
Our eyes are closed.
We're lost in one sweet embrace.
Since those days the world has changed.
But our love remains the same.
God knows we've had our share of saving grace.
And I'm proud of all the blessings you have given me.
The mountains we have climbed to get this far.
We've learned to take the laughter with the tears.
After all these years.
You make it feel brand new.
After the fires that we walked through.
Against the odds we never lost our faith.
In a house we made our home.
Where our children all have grown
Precious moments time cannot erase.
Make a living up and down the gypsy highways.
The seasons that we had to share apart.
Somehow in my heart I always keep you near.
After all these years.
After all these years.
You stood by me the days and nights that I was gone.
After all these years.
You sacrificed, believed in me, and you stood strong.
Cause with our love there's nothing left to fear.
After all these years.
After all these years.
You stood by me the days and nights that I was gone.
After all these years.
You sacrificed, believed in me, and you stood strong.
Cause with our love there's nothing left to fear.
After all these years.
Saturday, January 3, 2015
There is Just No Explaining
There is Just No Explaining 2014
Dave Berry says it all here. I laughed out loud. Go the the link if you want to be amused or bemused at the state of our union.
Justin Bieber? The White House having security not as tight as a Dunkin' Donuts'? a state dinner for French President François “Le Muffin de Stud” Hollande, who arrives at the White House driving a red scooter with two women riding on the back and three more chasing on foot? And those are just the highlights of the first eight weeks in 2014.
Really, just read it. The cartoons are great.
Dave Berry says it all here. I laughed out loud. Go the the link if you want to be amused or bemused at the state of our union.
Justin Bieber? The White House having security not as tight as a Dunkin' Donuts'? a state dinner for French President François “Le Muffin de Stud” Hollande, who arrives at the White House driving a red scooter with two women riding on the back and three more chasing on foot? And those are just the highlights of the first eight weeks in 2014.
Really, just read it. The cartoons are great.
credit for illustration goes to Charlie Powell seen here
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
New Year's Eve
As seen here:
A picture above of revelers from the past making merry in their own way. For us, champagne at home and asleep way before that ball descends in Times Square.
What are your evening plans, if I may ask?
Detail of people drinking, from a treatise on the Seven Vices, Add MS 27695, f. 14r
A picture above of revelers from the past making merry in their own way. For us, champagne at home and asleep way before that ball descends in Times Square.
Three loads of fabric including linens and clothing in the trunk of the car for a Good Will run, house cleaned, and soup about to be cooked. That is my New Year's Eve, in a nutshell.
This is a five star recipe from Alton Brown from Food Network. I am hungry already. Lunch soon.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Thread Painting, Needle Painting
There is nothing new under the sun. That Old Testament saying definitely applies to what I though was a "new" technique of painting with thread. And here I thought that drawing my pup with embroidery stitches was going to be a state of the art gift for my husband.
Several years ago I painted our nine year old shih tzu Mercy, and the husband has been asking for a companion piece of our eight year old dog Libby Sweetpea to hang up in his office over his computer.
Mercy in Oils, 2006
So I decided to try and embroider the second dog using just threads to make her portrait (as a surprise Christmas present).
Half way through the project of stitching Libby Sweetpea's face in white wool threads, I found all sorts of references to thread painting. Even an e book is available free from Quilting Daily entitled The Art of Thread Sketching: Free Thread Drawing and Thread Painting Techniques. Just join Quilting Daily and you can download the book without charge (no charge to join Quilting Arts, either) Excerpted from that e book:
Think of thread as you would paint: you can make dots, smooth strokes,or long, sinuous curves. Like paint,you can apply thread sparingly or very heavily. Going over an area with several layers of thread can create wonderful texture, but you need to make sure our surface is sufficiently stabilized to support these layers without puckering.
Here is a half baked version of Libby, and no, it was not completed in time for Christmas. Still need to work on her eyes, nose and little buck tooth.
Wonder if Libby approves so far?
Updated December 30, 2014 (yes, after Christmas)...
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Fair Isle Knit Socks and More
Phew. Those fair isle socks (only two yarn colors per row, knit intermittently while holding the opposing color in the back of the knitting) are complete.

What with all the self striping sock yarns now available, I doubt if anyone other than an experienced knitter could tell that the technique used in whipping up these socks was indeed "fair isle" knitting.
Alas, one of the women from the Shetland Fair Isle Knitting Guild (link here for information and pictures) (link here for more pictures) (and also here for a knitting workshop blog post) would be able to differentiate and critique this knitting. They could right away spot my errors.
But I continue working on the technique and do have a bit of prior fair isle knitting under my belt:

What with all the self striping sock yarns now available, I doubt if anyone other than an experienced knitter could tell that the technique used in whipping up these socks was indeed "fair isle" knitting.
Alas, one of the women from the Shetland Fair Isle Knitting Guild (link here for information and pictures) (link here for more pictures) (and also here for a knitting workshop blog post) would be able to differentiate and critique this knitting. They could right away spot my errors.
But I continue working on the technique and do have a bit of prior fair isle knitting under my belt:
(Our Mercy)
Wolf in Sheep's Clothing kit by Sandra Manson and Kate Davies, using all nine shades of 2 ply Shetland Supreme wool yarns from various types of sheep on Shetland) .. kit available here
Now I have the bright idea of trying to create a portion of this picture in fair isle knitting, along with reference help from the Book of Fair Isle Knitting by Alice Starmore.
Giovanni Battista di Jacopo (Italian Mannerist painter, 1494–1540), known as Rosso Fiorentino (meaning the Red Florentine in Italian) Angel with Lute Madonna dello Spedalingo
If I can graph this out correctly ensuring the shading on the cherub, it should be a year long knitting project taking a lot of patience and many shades of yarn. Pinterest has some graphing aides, along with Starmore's book. There are very few Renaissance needlepoint kits with angels, and none that I could unearth on the internet linking angels, Renaissance and knitting. If you know of any such kits, including needlepoint, please leave me a comment as it would save lots of time if I could find a kit readily available.
Linking with Ginny's Yarn Along this Wednesday.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Now is the Third Sunday in Advent
One of my favorite Christian authors, Fredrick Buechner, writes of the advent season in a personal manner that sets me pondering on thoughts sometimes outside the usual realm of a spiritual Christmas. He writes about the ugliness in me (yes, I personalize that ugliness for it is in me, not necessarily in you).
Buechner talks about our faults, our sinful ways, our selfishness, our arrogance. He has a way of revealing all our human flaws, yet reminding us that God actually loves us. And that every fault in our beings that is wrong, just wrong, is most certainly known by God. But He keeps on loving us because grace is there, a present, a real Christmas present, that He gives us just for the asking.
Buechner talks about our faults, our sinful ways, our selfishness, our arrogance. He has a way of revealing all our human flaws, yet reminding us that God actually loves us. And that every fault in our beings that is wrong, just wrong, is most certainly known by God. But He keeps on loving us because grace is there, a present, a real Christmas present, that He gives us just for the asking.
With over thirty books written by Buechner (link here to his website), he has a way of unveiling grace to us, making it alive even in our somewhat sin-disguised and tawdry lives.
Episcopalian Rev. Barbara Taylor Brown said in a speech what fans of Buechner have always believed about his writings:
From you, I have learned that language itself is revelatory, with power to ignite hearts, move mountains, and save lives.
From you, I have learned that the good news is not the cheerful news but the dismantling news of what it is like both to love and to betray the Holy One who has given me life, only to hear the saving question asked anew, for the umpteenth time, “You, you child of mine, Do you love me?”This is what Christmas is about: the opening up of God's love to me, even me. Such a powerful present, and it is there just for the asking. Imagine.
From Whistling in the Dark:
The house lights go off and the footlights come on. Even the chattiest stop chattering as they wait in darkness for the curtain to rise. In the orchestra pit, the violin bows are poised. The conductor has raised his baton.
In the silence of a midwinter dusk there is far off in the deeps of it somewhere a sound so faint that for all you can tell it may be only the sound of the silence itself. You hold your breath to listen.
You walk up the steps to the front door. The empty windows at either side of it tell you nothing, or almost nothing. For a second you catch a whiff in the air of some fragrance that reminds you of a place you've never been and a time you have no words for. You are aware of the beating of your heart.
The extraordinary thing that is about to happen is matched only by the extraordinary moment just before it happens. Advent is the name of that moment.
The Salvation Army Santa Claus clangs his bell. The sidewalks are so crowded you can hardly move. Exhaust fumes are the chief fragrance in the air, and everybody is as bundled up against any sense of what all the fuss is really about as they are bundled up against the windchill factor.
But if you concentrate just for an instant, far off in the deeps of you somewhere you can feel the beating of your heart. For all its madness and lostness, not to mention your own, you can hear the world itself holding its breath.It is Advent. I am enjoying my candles, my Mother and Child icons, and perhaps holding my breath, just a little. And opening up that present called "grace".
Join with Angela and others in blogging about Advent. Here is the link.
Labels:
Frederick Buechner,
Pause in Advent,
Spiritual
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
December Happenings
One of the blog feeds that comes to me daily is that of BJWS. Her blog is entitled "It's About Time," a reference to the many essays and pictures she posts from various historical eras.
BJ posted a picture several days ago that I will try to paint in oils for future Christmas display. It is from the 13th or 14th century, and depicts angels and lutes. The colors are vibrant. It just "feels" like Christmas.
We shall see if I can do it any justice. It may be personal hubris to even try to recreate this angelic scene, but if seeking to paint with humility, realizing one's small talent, and/or simply trying to make a spiritual feel in one's home is hubris, so be it. The quest continues.
Other than trying to keep down a persistent cough and struggling with viruses in both body and computer, I have been knitting intarsia socks. Have you tried TOFUtsies sock yarn? It is partially made from wool, soysilk and Chitin (made from shrimp and crab shells, a marketing gimmick that tells the fiber has naturally antibacterial properties). It sold me. And the price point is practically a give away. After waiting with bated breath over the weekend, this came in the mail yesterday, The TOFUtsies yarn was even packaged in a little happy net bag with a silk ribbon drawstring.
More history and lovely photographs of The Redstone Inn, an historic mining community built in the late 1800's, can be found here. Come join in the wilderness experience!
BJ posted a picture several days ago that I will try to paint in oils for future Christmas display. It is from the 13th or 14th century, and depicts angels and lutes. The colors are vibrant. It just "feels" like Christmas.
Mariotto de Nardo (1394-1424) Virgin and Child, Detail Angel musicians
We shall see if I can do it any justice. It may be personal hubris to even try to recreate this angelic scene, but if seeking to paint with humility, realizing one's small talent, and/or simply trying to make a spiritual feel in one's home is hubris, so be it. The quest continues.
Other than trying to keep down a persistent cough and struggling with viruses in both body and computer, I have been knitting intarsia socks. Have you tried TOFUtsies sock yarn? It is partially made from wool, soysilk and Chitin (made from shrimp and crab shells, a marketing gimmick that tells the fiber has naturally antibacterial properties). It sold me. And the price point is practically a give away. After waiting with bated breath over the weekend, this came in the mail yesterday, The TOFUtsies yarn was even packaged in a little happy net bag with a silk ribbon drawstring.
This is one Salsa Sock in progress, found on Ravelery here.
Next month, I am looking forward to attending a women's writing retreat taught by Sandra Dorr and Susan Crosby. If you google Sandra in Grand Junction, you will find out that she is an author, teacher, artist, and all around Renaissance woman. Susan, a yoga teacher, likely has similar credentials. All the information about the retreat can be found at this link. It will be held at the Redstone Inn in mountainous Colorado.
This is a teaser on the above link that caught my eye:
“You are perfect just as you are. And you could
use a little improvement.”
use a little improvement.”
Suzuki Roshi
More history and lovely photographs of The Redstone Inn, an historic mining community built in the late 1800's, can be found here. Come join in the wilderness experience!
Labels:
Knitting,
socks,
Tofutsies,
women's writing retreat
Sunday, November 30, 2014
First Sunday in Advent: Questions for Angels
A pilgrim on a pilgrimage
Walked across the Brooklyn Bridge
His sneakers torn
In the hour when the homeless move their cardboard blankets
And the new day is born
Folded in his backpack pocket
The questions that he copied from his heart
Who am I in this lonely world?
And where will I make my bed tonight?
When twilight turns to dark
Questions for the angels
Who believes in angels?
Fools do
Fools and pilgrims all over the world
If you shop for love in a bargain store
And you don't get what you bargained for
Can you get your money back?
If an empty train in a railroad station
Calls you to it's destination
Can you choose another track?
Will I wake up from these violent dreams
With my hair as white as the morning moon?
Questions for the angels
Who believes in angels?
I do
Fools and pilgrims all over the world
Downtown Brooklyn
The pilgrim is passing a billboard
That catches his eye
It's Jay-Z
He's got a kid on each knee
He's wearing clothes that he wants us to try
If every human on the planet and all the buildings on it
Should disappear
Would a zebra grazing in the African Savannah
Care enough to shed one zebra tear?
Questions for the angels
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Thank The Lord
It now being the early morning of Thanksgiving Day in the USA, it came to mind the phrase "thank the Lord". I can clearly hear my grandmother saying those words even though it has been three decades since she has gone to her eternal reward. Mom usually said that phrase in an off-the-cuff manner and, most often, in such a quiet tone that only she was meant to hear.
So now, thank the Lord, I am sitting in a warm house, in front of a cozy fire, hot coffee nearby, hoping you are looking at your day ahead with a grateful heart and praying you are counting your blessings, as well.
We gather together to ask the Lord's blessing;
He chastens and hastens his will to make known;
The wicked oppressing now cease from distressing,
Sing praises to his name: He forgets not his own.
Beside us to guide us, our God with us joining,
Ordaining, maintaining his kingdom divine;
So from the beginning the fight we were winning;
Thou, Lord, wast at our side, All glory be thine!
We all do extol thee, thou leader triumphant,
And pray that thou still our defender wilt be.
Let thy congregation escape tribulation;
Thy name be ever praised! O Lord, make us free!
Amen
Traditional Thanksgiving Hymn
(A translation by Theodore Baker: 1851-1934)
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Eclectic Linking Around the Web
Some interesting links over the past week have given me pause and wonderment. Perhaps you might like to investigate.
Annemieke Mein and her intricate needlework, with a full presentation of her artistry celebrating the natural world through textiles, and this photograph courtesy of MrXStitch, Also take a look here for more of the background on Ms. Mein. That website says
A quick holiday pumpkin mousse pie with excellent taste and little effort, found here courtesy of Crunchy Creamy Sweet. Such a happy little surprise created from this recipe, and I even put a dollop of the mousse in my coffee this morning for an autumnal taste.
For legwarmers, Purl Soho gives a pattern that I liberally modified to make a striped pair similar to the ones shown on Pinterest. Except I used only one shade of red and four shades of grey and blue/grey to make these:
Felicity Ford has a series of articles about designing a yarn, accessed here.
Also, Sounds of Wool, courtesy of Felicity Ford. I met Felicity on a fiber tour to England with Heather Ordover and the crew of Craftlit in 2010 while we visited London, Bath and Wales. All those photographs of that trip are here on the Google Plus Album.
And speaking of Heather Ordover, she said this yesterday:
Take a look at Cape Candle. This company makes scented candles that do not lose their aroma even after hours of use. The Swan Creek candles last a long time and are worth their purchase price.
That is enough for today regarding the web. Did I tell you the husband made a delicious french onion soup last night to go along with that pumpkin mousse pie? Now I did. (He used the method of layering six sliced onions along with salt between the layers of onions, sweating them in an electric skillet for twenty minutes, caramelizing the onions, with hint courtesy of Alton Brown of Good Eats.)
Annemieke Mein and her intricate needlework, with a full presentation of her artistry celebrating the natural world through textiles, and this photograph courtesy of MrXStitch, Also take a look here for more of the background on Ms. Mein. That website says
The book The Art of Annemieke Mein: Wildlife Artist in Textiles illustrates more than thirty major fabric sculptures she has worked on in exquisite detail, and her art has appeared in galleries all over the world.
A quick holiday pumpkin mousse pie with excellent taste and little effort, found here courtesy of Crunchy Creamy Sweet. Such a happy little surprise created from this recipe, and I even put a dollop of the mousse in my coffee this morning for an autumnal taste.
For legwarmers, Purl Soho gives a pattern that I liberally modified to make a striped pair similar to the ones shown on Pinterest. Except I used only one shade of red and four shades of grey and blue/grey to make these:
Felicity Ford has a series of articles about designing a yarn, accessed here.
Also, Sounds of Wool, courtesy of Felicity Ford. I met Felicity on a fiber tour to England with Heather Ordover and the crew of Craftlit in 2010 while we visited London, Bath and Wales. All those photographs of that trip are here on the Google Plus Album.
And speaking of Heather Ordover, she said this yesterday:
CraftLit starts a new book!
Busy? Miss your reading time? Wish you’d read the classics but found them dull in school? stick a book in your ear!
Audiobook with Benefits. For the remainder of each episode the host, Heather Ordover, will talk you through the tricky bits of these classic books so you don’t get flummoxed. After the heads-up you’ll listen to the chapter.(I began listening to Heather and her classic books about ten years ago. All books are read by volunteers. Heather gives information along the way, making it fun to listen and learn. All readings are archived for easy access.)
Take a look at Cape Candle. This company makes scented candles that do not lose their aroma even after hours of use. The Swan Creek candles last a long time and are worth their purchase price.
That is enough for today regarding the web. Did I tell you the husband made a delicious french onion soup last night to go along with that pumpkin mousse pie? Now I did. (He used the method of layering six sliced onions along with salt between the layers of onions, sweating them in an electric skillet for twenty minutes, caramelizing the onions, with hint courtesy of Alton Brown of Good Eats.)
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Monday, November 10, 2014
Scrabble Update
Our 19 day Scrabble tour, cruise and tournament ended aboard the Celebrity Equinox yesterday while sailing past Nassau. Can you figure out who was the third place winner acting truly surprised? I even won money!
Sunday, November 2, 2014
From Tenerife in the Canary Islands
Tour bus taking our group around the island stopped and could not start again, so am taking this chance while at McDonald's to post a picture from this island where mangos, avocados and bananas grow in abundance. A banana grove is on the lower right hand side of the picture behind the trees. Beautiful place!
Saturday, November 1, 2014
Palma De Mallorca
Palma De Mallorca, Spain
A three dimensional sculpture on the 14th floor of the Equinox ship, Celebrity line.
We visited La Cartusa monastery in the mountain town of Valldemossa. The monastery is said to have been constructed in 1399. The monks had their own pharmacy of healing herbs. It was dark in the monastery, and the pharmacy was lit by candles. There was a smell of mustiness. The ancient potery and glassware on wooden shelves held the monks' medicines.
Then on to Valencia, Spain
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




.jpg)



.jpg)









%2B%2BVirgin%2B%26%2BChild%2C%2BDetail%2BAngel%2Bmusicians%2C%2Bca%2B1400.jpg)








