Dozens of suggestions for decorating eggs, complete with pictures and directions, are offered during the weeks before Easter. I am glad my granddaughter agreed with me that the old fashioned water, vinegar, and food coloring in a cup method is still the best. Skye spent Good Friday with me, so we added egg coloring to our time in the kitchen. She enjoyed doing all the mixing and color concoction and so did I.
Every cup held magic and every egg was unique. Even the vinegar smell shouted "Easter!"
We boiled extra eggs to have plenty for deviling.
I am pretty sure we will be having other egg dishes too: maybe egg salad, spinach salad with boiled egg slices.
Perfect! (Tiny cracks don't spoil the pleasure.)
All sizes welcome! Beautiful.
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Thursday, March 28, 2013
All the Easter Dresses
One of the many things I love about this time leading up to Easter is the re-emergence of color as seeds sprout and flowers return to bloom. When I was growing up in East Texas, the dark wintertime evergreen woods began to dot with dogwood and redbud trees. Daffodils and narcissus and azaleas drifted across front yards. And little girls and their mothers planned Easter dresses! I am not sure the above photo was the Easter dress the year I was three, but it might have been. And it would most certainly have been made by my mother on her Singer sewing machine although I suspect the crocheted lace on that collar would have been crocheted by my grandmother.
Stitches in Time
at Christmastime I hang a wreath, braided circle of cloth
made almost half a
century ago from scraps found in my fabric stash
one strand of the braid is green velvet
bits left from creating a dress
with beaded cummerbund that circled my then tiny waist
a second strand cut from scraps of snow white brocaded cotton
my high school graduation dress
woven with the green
and white is red corduroy,
my first maternity dress
there would have been nothing left to make the wreath if not
for first
you,
the sewing
and the clothes.
I remember sundresses, circle skirts with petticoats, pleated
skirts,
tucked blouses, mandarin jackets, peter pan collars,
puffed sleeves, vests, and weskits
a squaw dress and a poodle skirt
all made after I helped pick a pattern
Simplicity, McCall's, Vogue
you even collected last year's pattern books
from fabric shops where we bought
yards of gingham, calico, organdy, dotted swiss,
eyelet, dimity, poplin, corduroy, worsted and flannel
I remember plaids, checks, polka dots and stripes
pin-wale, herringbone, and tweed
one of a kind made just for me
a red checked dress for a play
always a new dress for first day of school
pink eyelet with ruffles for my piano recital
black suit with red velvet bow for my ride
in the parade as a
duchess
school dresses and play clothes
Sunday clothes, Easter outfits, nightgowns
I remember prom dresses -
clouds of billowing scarlet chiffon,
net the color of hyacinths, shiny satin
pale pink organza, and creamy peau de soie
bolts of rustling taffeta and black velvet
sacks of heavy ribbon and lace
measured with a yardstick on a cutting table
in a shop that was more fun than a candy store
by then I could sketch my dress and it happened!
I remember hours you spent preparing cloth, spreading it
with tissue patterns, cutting with pinking shears
the love that bent you over the humming Singer
with its one tiny bright light
when you said “let's try this on” and tucked
at my waist or lengthened a hem
I don't remember smiling and saying “thank you”
I hope that I did
I did learn to sew
I remember when I
designed and made my wedding dress
you were proud to help me sew on pearls
I remember writing letters to tell you how my 3 little boys
played when I tried to sew
one standing behind me with his arms
around my neck
And when my granddaughter wanted a princess gown
we picked out a pattern and she helped me cut and sew
I remembered how you made me feel like a princess.
Sad only because you could no longer remember any of it.
Mary Ann Teal Parker
March 23, 2013
Written for my mother, Opal Auntionette Terrell Teal
who suffered from Alzheimer's the last years of her life,
and died in 2006, one
month short of her 93rd birthday
Labels:
Easter,
Easter dresses,
grandmothers,
memories,
mothers,
sewing,
Spring
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Tea, Tree, and a Tooth
Maddie celebrated her seventh birthday at our house last Saturday with a tea party, complete with butter cookies and lemon tea served in tiny china tea cups that were mine when I was seven! She knows how to dress up in a pink swirly dress and drink from dainty cups but she spent more time climbing trees and helping in the garden than sipping tea while she was here.
Look at her smile in the top two photos. Then notice what is missing in the next picture...
She pulled her own front tooth to finish a big day of celebrating!
The evening she and her mom and sister left to go home, Maddie released some ladybugs in the garden. The ladybugs are still hanging around on the roses and mint. Maybe they miss her. I do!
Labels:
Birthdays,
family fun,
grandchildren,
granddaughters,
ladybugs,
teacups
Friday, March 8, 2013
Good Times
We spent the night at Maddie and Jordann's house last week, and they modeled their new tops for me. Maddie will celebrate her 7th birthday next week while they are here for Spring Break. We have a list of things we want to do that includes planning a birthday Tea Party, having fashion shows from the dressup box, pressing flowers, doing leaf rubbings, making cookie press cookies, having a picnic in our Secret Place, going ice skating, picking strawberries, planting new herbs in the garden, going to the American Girl Doll Store, and having lots of play time with cousin Skye. I can't wait!
Labels:
American Girl dolls,
Birthdays,
family,
family fun,
grandchildren,
granddaughters
Thursday, February 28, 2013
I'm Here!!
Each year, one of my favorite harbingers of Spring is the sudden appearance of Redbud blooms on the gray scraggly branches of what has been an almost unnoticed small tree in someone's backyard or the woods along the road. In the Piney Woods of East Texas where my husband and I spent our growing up years, the first blooms seemed to signal to dozens of other early blooming trees that it was Spring again. The woods lining the highway between Jacksonville, Texas and my grandparent's smaller town of Bullard seemed to come alive in a patchwork of wild plum, dogwood, and various shades of purple from the Redbud trees. We see fewer here south of Houston, but the fact that they bloom even earlier in the slightly balmier climate makes them stand out even more. The first blooms bring my biggest smile. I like being reminded of the joy they brought me as a child. And they bring fond memories of my mother and daddy and grandparents who first taught me to watch for them.
The Redbuds are blooming. Easter is on the way.
The Redbuds are blooming. Easter is on the way.
Labels:
Easter,
grandfather,
grandmothers,
memories,
mothers,
Redbud,
Spring,
Texas,
trees
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Trio
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!
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!
Labels:
granddaughters,
grandmothers,
mothers,
pinking shears,
sewing
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.
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