• About…

Satin & Sand

~ Reflections on Beauty

Satin & Sand

Monthly Archives: August 2010

Beauty & the Sea Beast…

31 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Baudelaire, beautiful, Beauty, Charles Baudelaire, Fashion, Juan Zambrano, Mollusc, Octopus, Oleg Galagan, Photography

© Juan Zambrano

…the unexpected, the surprising, the astonishing, are essential to and characteristic of beauty. – Charles Baudelaire

There is a beauty in the grotesqueness of the octopus draped over the model’s skin – the mythological masculine form juxtaposed with the slimy, fetid mollusc. Both share a damp pallor.

Model – Oleg Galagan

Brunettes…

30 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

≈ Comments Off on Brunettes…

Tags

beautiful, Beauty, Blond, Brunettes, Carly Larsson, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, Natalie Imbruglia, Photography, Taryn Christy

© Karly Larson

It was only cool to have blond hair and be a surfer chick [in Sydney]. I could learn how to surf, but I still looked Italian. It took me a long time to realize that was a good thing. – Natalie Imbruglia

As a blond, I’ve always been fascinated by the sensuality and sultriness of the brunette stereotype. The ponytail shown above has a luxurious, almost sateen quality to it.

The image below of my brunette daughter and another blond model reminds me of the Grimm’s fairy tale of Snow White and Rose Red.

© Scott Taylor

Models – Lauren DiMarco and Taryn Christy

Sea and Sky…

29 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Travel

≈ Comments Off on Sea and Sky…

Tags

Beach, beautiful, Big Basin State Park, Kiteboarders, Photography

© Joan Currie

Don’t grow up too quickly, lest you forget how much you love the beach. – Michelle Held

I was captivated by the kiteboarders at Big Basin State Park – the speed, the colors, the raw energy! The closest I have come to this excitement is using a trapeze and spinnaker on an International 14 sailboat and waterskiing with a Delta Wing kite.

© Joan Currie

Garden…

29 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Garden, Photography

≈ Comments Off on Garden…

Tags

Garden, Photography, Pumpkin, Wreath

© Joan Currie

A garden is a delight to the eye and solace for the soul. – Sadi

I lingered in the garden this morning under the watchful eyes of the redwood giants before driving back to the San Francisco area.

© Joan Currie

Art Objects…

28 Saturday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Art, Crafts, Photography

≈ Comments Off on Art Objects…

Tags

Art, Beauty, Objets d'art, Photography, Pottery, Sculpture

© Joan Currie

Art does not consist of making a living or producing an object d’art or in self-therapy, but in finding a new soul.  Henry Miller

I spied these charming pieces of art in my Santa Cruz bed and breakfast room today.

© Joan Currie

© Joan Currie

© Joan Currie

Tassels…

27 Friday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Design, Photography, Reflections

≈ Comments Off on Tassels…

Tags

beautiful, Beauty, Interior Design, Laura Ashley, Photography, Tassels

© Joan Currie

Tassel (noun)

A tuft of loosely hanging threads or cords, bound at one end and hanging free at the other, used as an ornament on curtains or clothing.

The Laura Ashley Home Decorating books taught me how to make draperies. Using the company’s lovely cotton fabric, I sewed traditional lined curtains with valances and tie-backs, and softer Festoon blinds for my Boston home. The decor is much the same in my West Coast home, but my fabric choices now include brocade, silk, and velvet for a more luxurious look. In addition, tassels have replaced simple cotton tie-backs, and serve as inspirations for other decorative elements such as throws, pillows, and wall art.

Tutu and Tulle…

25 Wednesday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Dance, Design, Fashion, Reflections

≈ Comments Off on Tutu and Tulle…

Tags

Ballet, beautiful, Beauty, Boston Ballet School, Fashion, Photography, Royal Academy of Dance, Swan Lake, Tulle, Tutu

© Joan Currie

Tutu (noun)
A short projecting skirt worn by a ballerina.

Tulle (noun)
A fine, often starched net of silk, rayon, or nylon, especially used for veils, tutus or gowns.

My parents took me to my first ballet – the National Ballet of Canada’s production of Swan Lake at the O’Keefe Center in Toronto. My love affair with the tutu began on that evening. I was drawn to the midnight black tutu of Odile more than the white tutus of Princess Odette and the corps de ballet –  Tchaikovsky’s powerful musical score may have influenced my preference.

The ballet classes of my youth were based on the Royal Academy of Dance’s rigorous curriculum and strict dress code – tutus were not worn in class. However, my daughters’ early ballet classes were quite whimsical in nature and, until the older girls started taking lessons at the Boston Ballet School, they were able to dance in pink, blue, and even purple tutus – some embellished with lines or starbursts of sequins in the many layers of tulle.

Homeward Bound…

24 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography

≈ Comments Off on Homeward Bound…

© Joan Currie

Well, I’m going home, back to the place where I belong…

Chris Daughtry (song)

Just before sunset, north of Pyramid Lake on Interstate 5, I came upon a wildfire that had been burning for nearly four hours.

The ash in the air made for a beautiful sunset.

Photos by Joan Currie

Road Trip…

22 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections, Travel

≈ Comments Off on Road Trip…

Tags

beautiful, Photography, Road Trip, Truck, Willie Nelson

© Joan Currie

On the road again,
Just can’t wait to get on the road again…
Willie Nelson (song)

Today I set out for Southern California from San Francisco armed with maps, compilation CDs (Howlin’ Wolf  – Built for Comfort, Stevie Ray Vaughan – The Sky is Crying, and Johnny Cash – Walk the Line), and a cooler packed with fried chicken, buttermilk biscuits, and lemonade.

The photograph of the biomorphic undulations near Bakersfield is reminiscent of Gottardo Piazzoni and Arthur Mathews’ landscape paintings. The other images were shot at Pyramid Lake where I would have liked to water-ski!

Bittersweet: Love Letters…

19 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections

≈ Comments Off on Bittersweet: Love Letters…

Tags

Lauren DiMarco, Love, Love Letters, Marc Virata, Memoir, Patty Griffin, Writing

© Marc Virata

How hard would it have been to say some kinder words instead… Patty Griffin

Every now and then when I find myself alone on a Sunday afternoon I settle into my favorite wingback chair and place a jewel-encrusted box in my lap. In a ritualistic fashion, I reach inside and withdraw a bundle of letters held fast by a pale pink satin ribbon, untie it carefully and gently press open the pages of the first read.

Some of the letters are penned on elegant gold-edged stationary while others are on thin blue airmail sheets. They are manifestations of a sweet, naïve young love. Within the pages are poems of shameless yearning, devotion and imaginings of a world where all things seemed possible.

My fingers trace the tender words whose power has not paled over the years on reading after reading, rather they pull at my heartstrings more now than on first consideration. I truly appreciate the sentiments, knowing how rare and lovely a feeling it is to feel valued, prized – even worshipped.

I wonder how different my life today would have been if the spell of a particular suitor had not been broken. But broken it was and it is a pity that the lovely words memorialized here had been confined to these pages alone.

© Joan Currie – My Love Letters

Model – Lauren DiMarco

← Older posts

Archives

Copyright © 2010 – 2026 Joan Currie/Satin & Sand. All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce without permission. Thank you!

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Satin & Sand
    • Join 352 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Satin & Sand
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...