This trio of scissors is not a matched set. They are all pinking shears, those zig zag edging tools which at one time were in the sewing basket of every serious seamstress because using them helped keep the edges of seams from raveling and fraying. The pair on the left belonged to my Mother, those on the right were my grandmother's. My own pinking shears are the ones in the middle. Now they all belong to me, and I haven't used any of them in years. But recently, I took them to be sharpened. I was not surprised when the scissor man told me Grandma Terrell's pinking shears could no longer be sharpened enough to make a difference in the way they cut. He was able to sharpen the other scissors, however, so they will be ready if and when I decide to choose fabric and pattern, lay out the tissue pieces, and cut the garment sections before stitching seams.
It is strange to think that an art I once practiced regularly has become only occasional for me. In fact, the only times I plug in my electric sewing machine are when I want to mend or alter something, or stitch up a doll's dress for my granddaughters. I only know of one or two women who still make their own clothes.
Because fabric and sewing accessories are expensive, off the rack clothing is often less expensive and less time consuming. But I miss honing that skill. My 10 year old granddaughter has asked me to teach her to sew. I think I had better practice before I do. The pinking shears are sharpened and ready!
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Marriage in a Model T, a Love Story
My parents were married on December 27, 1931, sitting in the front seat of Daddy's
Model T! My mother said their first kiss involved the car, too. She described Daddy standing there in his overalls, getting ready to light a cigarette. When he started to strike a match on the car's windshield, Mother told him he could not strike a match on glass. He bet her a kiss that he could, and he won!.He wanted to wait until she was 18 to ask for her hand in marriage. Three days after Christmas in 1931, they decided while eating Sunday dinner after church to
ring up their best friends (Gertrude and Herod Bickerstaff) who were at Gertrude's
family's home feeding the preacher his Sunday dinner. They told them
they were coming over and would like Brother Shuttlesworth to marry
them.
Gertrude and Herod had tied the knot a couple of weeks before,
with Mother and Daddy (Opal and Howard) standing up with them. So
when they heard the Model T coming on the red dirt road, the preacher and
the friends headed out to the car and started the ceremony before Opal
and Howard could even get outof the front seat! Maybe Preacher Shuttlesworth
couldn't wait to get back to his fried chicken!
In 1927, after selling over 15 million Ford Model T's, the Henry Ford Motor Company replaced the Model T with the Model A. In 1928, the song, "Henry's Made a Lady Out of Lizzie" was about the new Model A. Its lyrics make the Model A into a female, and make much of the car's attractiveness: "Have you seen her, ain't she great? she's something you'll appreciate." The song made fun of the rough ride of the Model T, and the bruises you'd get from driving one, then went on to favorably compare the Model A's features to the old Ford standard. The photograph below is of the piece of sheet music owned by Mother that became mine, so in 1931, others were already singing the praise of a newer kind of Ford. But Opal and Howard never talked about the old car or the rough ride. After all, that car was their wedding chapel.
Friday, February 8, 2013
The Journal Keeper
When I read a book which I know from the beginning I will read again, I like to encourage others to read it, too. I have chosen not to advertize or monetize my blogs, so this is not a pitch to go out and buy The Journal Keeper, but it is so worth reading. I think your public library will have a copy. I know that I identify strongly with Theroux because I value journaling, and have done so for many years. I admire her journey of faith and smile knowingly at her adventures with her aging mother, remembering my own and our long farewell with Alzheimer's. Of course, there are many elements in her life far different from mine, but I really do think Phyllis Theroux and I could sit down with a cup of tea and pick right back up even though we have never had the beginning of the conversation.
Labels:
books,
journaling,
journals,
Phyllis Theroux,
reading,
remembering,
The Journal Keeper
Saturday, February 2, 2013
New Orleans
Street cars. St. Louis Cathedral. Jackson Square.Canal Street. Lacy wrought iron gates. Beignets. Coffee with Chicory. Boiled Shrimp.
Before you decide this will be another blast of Superbowl hype, let me correct your impression by adding another item to the list - Lizardi Street, where my parents and I lived after moving from Texas around 1942 for Daddy to work in the shipyards during World War II. Located just north of the Mississippi in what is now the Lower Ninth Ward, the tiny house was owned by Mrs. Castaine, who rented part of it as an apartment for us. Two years old at the time, I have memory only of what I was told about the way we lived there.
Daddy worked the night shift at the shipyards. Mother took care of me and cooked the shirmp he bought from shrimp wagons bringing in fresh harvest on his way home - his supper, my breakfast! Then she dressed me in a pretty dress or striped overalls and took me out to play or walk, anything to keep the little rooms quiet enough for Daddy to sleep before heading off for another night shift.
My Texas grandparents missed me and wrote long letters telling my mother so. Phone calls were a luxury and limited to brief exchanges only when necessary. Once for a birthday present they sent me new house slippers, filled with orange slices. Rarely, we made the return trip to East Texas, always a glad reunion.
Years later, I would visit New Orleans on business trips and enjoy wonderful meals at Antoines, Glatoire's, and Commanders' Palace. I would walk down Bourbon Street and explore antique shops in the French Quarter. I would photograph wrought iron balconies and gates, and once again ride the St. Charles street car. We would stop for beignets, coffee, and shrimp po-boys. I would fall in love with he foods and learn to cook them. My mother never wanted to return to New Orleans after they left.
Katrina changed the city forever. I am glad to see the rebuilding and restoration of neighborhoods and many of the city's treasures although I am unable to discover whether Lizardi street has recovered much. I am glad for the attention New Orleans is receiving from being chosen for the location for Super Bowl 2013. I won't be watching the game, but I have enjoyed my view of the city.
And I still love shrimp, any time of the day.
Dressed in a grass skirt to model the shell jewelry and rattan bag brought back as a gift for me from my Uncle Travis, who served in the Navy in the Pacific Theatre during WWII.
Before you decide this will be another blast of Superbowl hype, let me correct your impression by adding another item to the list - Lizardi Street, where my parents and I lived after moving from Texas around 1942 for Daddy to work in the shipyards during World War II. Located just north of the Mississippi in what is now the Lower Ninth Ward, the tiny house was owned by Mrs. Castaine, who rented part of it as an apartment for us. Two years old at the time, I have memory only of what I was told about the way we lived there.
Daddy worked the night shift at the shipyards. Mother took care of me and cooked the shirmp he bought from shrimp wagons bringing in fresh harvest on his way home - his supper, my breakfast! Then she dressed me in a pretty dress or striped overalls and took me out to play or walk, anything to keep the little rooms quiet enough for Daddy to sleep before heading off for another night shift.
Years later, I would visit New Orleans on business trips and enjoy wonderful meals at Antoines, Glatoire's, and Commanders' Palace. I would walk down Bourbon Street and explore antique shops in the French Quarter. I would photograph wrought iron balconies and gates, and once again ride the St. Charles street car. We would stop for beignets, coffee, and shrimp po-boys. I would fall in love with he foods and learn to cook them. My mother never wanted to return to New Orleans after they left.
Katrina changed the city forever. I am glad to see the rebuilding and restoration of neighborhoods and many of the city's treasures although I am unable to discover whether Lizardi street has recovered much. I am glad for the attention New Orleans is receiving from being chosen for the location for Super Bowl 2013. I won't be watching the game, but I have enjoyed my view of the city.
And I still love shrimp, any time of the day.
Dressed in a grass skirt to model the shell jewelry and rattan bag brought back as a gift for me from my Uncle Travis, who served in the Navy in the Pacific Theatre during WWII.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Playing Dolls
I went with my daughter in law and granddaughter this week to a newly opened store in Houston, the American Girls doll store. Skye's doll, Molly, went along because she was going to get her hair done - the doll, not the girl! The store was packed with little girls carrying a variety of American Girl dolls. It was a beehive of girls, complete with shrieks and giggles. We watched as the doll was strapped into a miniature salon chair and covered with a shampoo cape. A stylist (one of several) spritzed and brushed out all the tangles that several years of play had created, then braided Molly's hair and tied on new ribbons. I was proud of Skye. The huge store is filled with tantalizing dolls and all their pretty outfits and accessories, everything from teepees to canopy beds and garden tea sets. So many things to ooh and ah over. Skye's mom and I did our share of admiring. But Skye stuck with the budget and left with only the new hairdo for Molly. It was tempting, and maybe someday we will go back. But there is a lesson here for many of us much older than 10 years: delayed gratificaton, sticking to a plan, and enjoying what we can afford without complaining. Good for you, Skye!
Labels:
American Girl dolls,
budgets,
dolls,
grandchildren,
grandmothers,
Molly
Friday, January 18, 2013
Celebrating Beginnings
Two weeks ago, those in our family who live in this part of Texas gathered to enjoy the hospitality of our son, Sean, his wife, Teion, and their daughters Lauren and Skye. We enjoyed the traditional New Year's Black Eye Peas and Cabbage (with a twist of Indian seasoning) as we welcomed the beginning of another year and thanked God for the blessings we share as a family. Forty-five years ago, Joe and I celebrated the beginning of 1968 in San Antonio as we waited for Sean's birth. The morning of January 13, 1968 was blustery and cold as I struggled into a coat I had made for myself that no longer would meet in the front to button! Our lives changed forever with his birth, and we celebrated it with joy. There is even deeper joy as we celebrate his life after these years shared. Each year, New Year's thoughts and plans will always include our pride and gratitude for him.
Labels:
2013,
beginnings,
Birthdays,
family,
family meals,
remembering,
San Antonio
Friday, January 11, 2013
In recent years, I have seldom put away our Christmas decorations before Epiphany, which has now come and gone. I even leave a couple of little trees up and add red tissue paper hearts so they become Valentine trees. This year, I was late getting to the rest of "all things Christmasy". As I stripped the big tree in our family room, I held each dear old ornament for a second and savored the stories they tell. My camera helped. We don't limit the tree adorning to things we have bought for that purpose; these items hanging near each other here are a good example. The glass ball in the center hung on our family tree when I was growing up, so it has graced decades of trees. Many of those trees stood at the window of the small living room at 1128 Sunset Ave. in Jacksonville, Texas where my parents moved in 1944, and was still in use for many years after I grew up and left home to start my own family. Daddy died in 1982, shortly after their 50th wedding anniversary. Mother eventually stopped putting up a big tree and passed some of the tree decorations on to me, so they have traveled far and outlasted any number of trees! This ball and its peers hold dear memories of my childhood and my parents, but it also speaks endurance to me!
On the left is a small torn piece of paper with a tiny handmade Christmas tree. It arrived one year as a card from dear friends. I love it perched on a branch as it reminds me of friendship and how much it means to make something for a friend.
On the right, the small cross-stitched banner is my own handwork. I love the little carolers. I love more their song. So, as I go back and forth to the garage with my boxes packed with Christmas heirlooms, they leave behind their message. Joy to the World, the Lord has come!
On the left is a small torn piece of paper with a tiny handmade Christmas tree. It arrived one year as a card from dear friends. I love it perched on a branch as it reminds me of friendship and how much it means to make something for a friend.
On the right, the small cross-stitched banner is my own handwork. I love the little carolers. I love more their song. So, as I go back and forth to the garage with my boxes packed with Christmas heirlooms, they leave behind their message. Joy to the World, the Lord has come!
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