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Posts from the ‘The Daily Post’ category

The Baubles Are Ready: The Tree is Not

Christmas Ornaments

Christmas Ornaments WAITING!

This year I wanted a much bigger Christmas tree.  What was I thinking?

We came home with a beautiful VERY, TALL, 10-foot, fluffy fat TREE purchased from the fire department. We placed it in the stand we have had for years. Good.  We tested the light strings and they all worked. Good. We got out the ladder and started in wrapping and draping and snugging up the lights just so. Beautiful! We plugged in the lights. There was a big POP and then darkness. OH DEAR! We got more lights and started all over again. Ah, that looks nice! We  stood back to admire the tree and attempted to plug the lights into the wall socket.  We had placed the lights on the tree with the plug-in at the top and the connector at the bottom! Off came the lights again. Maybe we should have a glass of wine?  Watch some football and take a break? No, we start AGAIN. I turn on Christmas music, maybe that will help? Tada! Re-wrap, re-drape, place just so. Of course, my job is supervisor! SB is on the ladder AGAIN.  The lights work! Tada! We place a few baubles on the tree. Not all. It takes me a while to unwrap all of the older ones, the special ones. But, we did put on the glass Egyptian bulbs I love. Now we will take a break. We will go back to tree decorating shortly. WHAMP!! Tinkle, Tinkle! The noise came from the entryway. OH NO THE TREE HAS FAINTED!  Can we even get it UP? Stay tuned and enjoy!  

December 1st: My Favorite Non-Holiday

 

Pere Noel

Pere Noel

The advent calendar is a special calendar used to count or celebrate the days in anticipation of Christmas. Many take the form of a rectangular card with 24 “windows,” one for each day of December leading up to Christmas Day. The windows open to reveal an image,  a portion of a story or a small gift, such as chocolate. Some calendars are strictly religious while some are just for holiday fun.

What is Advent?
Advent is the four-week period beginning on the Sunday nearest the feast day of St. Andrew the Apostle (November 30) through the following three Sundays. Historians estimate that Advent, which derives from the Latin word for coming, has been celebrated since the fourth century. The period originally began as a time for converts to Christianity to prepare for baptism, but is now more commonly associated with the anticipation of the anniversary of Christ’s birth on December 25th.

The First Printed Advent Calendars
Gerhard Lang is widely considered the producer of the first printed Advent calendar in the early 1900s.

Around the same time, a German newspaper included an Advent calendar insert as a gift to its readers. Lang’s calendar was inspired by one that his mother had made for him and featured 24 colored pictures that attached to a piece of cardboard. Lang modified his calendars to include the little doors that are a staple of most Advent calendars today and they became a commercial success in Germany. Production stopped due to a cardboard shortage during World War II, but resumed soon after, with Richard Sellmer emerging as the leading producer of commercial Advent calendars.

Today we live in a digital, computerized world.  The advent calendar has taken on a new look! About six years ago a friend sent me an online Christmas card produced by Jacquie Lawson, an artist living in the UK. It was beautiful and so different! I quickly became very fond of the assortment of cards she had for various holidays and non-holidays too! Then in 2010 the Advent Calendars were introduced! They are magical! Every year the advent calendar is set in a different animated background with music.  The first year the calendar was set in London. Last year there was a Victorian “Downton Abbey” look. This year we are visiting a Christmas Market! The calendars come out in mid-November with puzzles and games and decorating to do while you wait for December first. There are two parts to the calendar: an indoor room and then the street scene where the “windows” are opened. It is so much fun for children and the young at heart! It is my favorite non-holiday of the year, opening the first day of the advent calendar! To check out the array of cards and calendar see the Jacquie Lawson site here!

 

Photography 101: Day 20, Triumph

This is the last day of the Photography 101 Challenge. It has been fun and I have learned a lot! Today’s theme is Triumph, to create a dramatic effect of some sort by using contrast. Here is my last entry!  These are pictures I took in Orvieto, Italy, a city of contrasts, from the cobbled lanes, the abundance of beautiful woodcuttings, to the underground city!  Enjoy!

The Streets of Orvieto, Italy

The Streets of Orvieto, Italy

Underground Tuscan City, Orvieto, Italy

Underground Tuscan City, Orvieto, Italy

Woodcuttings on Walls, Orvieto, Italy

Woodcuttings on Walls, Orvieto, Italy

 

Photography 101: Day 19, Double

Two old friends in conversation and relaxing with wine in Charleston, South Carolina! The Double Duo! Today’s assignment twosie’s! Notice the bottle tree? It is believed that the spirits are dazzled by the colors of the bottles in the sun. Once they enter the bottle, they can’t find their way out, much like flies. Legend had it that empty glass bottles placed outside the home could “capture” roving (usually evil) spirits at night, and the spirit would be destroyed the next day in the sunshine. Enjoy!

Two Old Friends, Charleston, SC

Two Old Friends, Charleston, SC

Photography 101: Day 18, Edge

Edge, is today’s focus for Photography 101. These pictures of the Castle at Cesky Krumlov has lots of edges, every which way! The castle was built in 1240 by the Witigonen family, the main branch of the powerful Rosenberg family. These large blocks that make up the exterior of the castle are fake! It is a smooth exterior with the blocks and reliefs painted on! That painter must have had a very straight edge!  Enjoy!

The Castle at Cesky Krumlov, the Czech Republic

The Castle at Cesky Krumlov, the Czech Republic

The Castle at Cesky Krumlov, the Czech Republic

The Castle at Cesky Krumlov, the Czech Republic

 

Photography 101: Day 17, Glass

Today’s theme is Glass, for Photography 101. I love to take pictures of shop windows, but alas when I get too close to the glass all I get is glare! Or a rather strange picture of me!!!!  Any tips to remedy this?  Anyone?

So here we are outside the Christmas Shop in Broadway, UK. Enjoy, looking through the glass! From far way!

The Christmas Shop in Broadway, UK

The Christmas Shop in Broadway, UK

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