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Satin & Sand

Author Archives: stanfordblog

On Recognizing Love…

05 Sunday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections, Writing

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Emily Dickinson, Frederik Rubin, Love, Memoir, Photography, Pia Ulin, Writing

© Pia Ulin

Beauty is not caused. It is.
Emily Dickinson

Prompted by a discussion about the female romantic poets’ lives, my English professor told the class about an offer of marriage that she had received some years earlier. Her suitor had sworn his undying love and devotion  – saying she was the first woman he had ever truly loved. He was utterly devastated when she said she could not marry someone with such a limited capacity for love.

I wondered why she dismissed him on a quantitative versus qualitative measure? A person may fall in and out of love all the time – does that make him more predisposed to form a lasting relationship? I think not. Surely the depth of a love, the recognition that the person you love is the one is some predictor for a lasting relationship, I just do not know how one would measure it.

© Pia Ulin

Singer – Frederik Rubin

Belly Dancing…

05 Sunday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Dance, Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Beauty, Belly Dancing, Fashion, Hip Scarf, Martha Graham, Photography

© Joan Currie

Great dancers are not great because of their technique;
they are great because of their passion.
Martha Graham

Classical Egyptian belly dancing is an activity that I have embraced for the music, choreography, tradition, community of women, and the costumes. It is important to shake and listen before choosing a hip scarf as each one makes a different sound depending on the number and characteristics of the individual coins and other embellishments. The black scarf has a heavier sound and is better suited to more percussive, tribal rhythms.

© Joan Currie

Model – Lauren Currie

Half Moon Bay…

04 Saturday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Travel

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Anna Landa, Beach, beautiful, Beauty, Fashion Photography, Half Moon Bay, Heart, Isak Dinesen, Kelp, Lauren DiMarco, Photography

© Anna Landa

The cure for anything is salt – water, tears, or the sea.
Isak Dinesen

When I arrived in Half Moon Bay this morning it was shrouded in fog.

© Joan Currie

Model – Lauren DiMarco

Lower Photos – Joan Currie

Beautification…

03 Friday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Beauty, Fashion, Kevyn Aucoin, Lauren DiMarco, Make-up, Photography

© Lauren DiMarco

Beauty is about perception, not about make-up. I think the beginning of all beauty is knowing and liking oneself. You can’t put on make-up, or dress yourself, or do your hair with any sort of fun or joy if you’re doing it from a position of correction. – Kevyn Aucoin

I spotted a construction sign that read, Beautification in progress. Thank you for your patience! Although I know we are in a constant state of beautification both inside and out, I thought it would be a good idea to make a similar sign to carry with me when I go about my activities of daily living. It could explain, for example, why I do not look my best when I roll out of bed and dash into Starbucks at 6:30 for my morning latte in track pants and a T-shirt, tousled hair, and no make-up.

I remember an Oprah makeover segment in which Gayle King discussed the woes of being single.  She confessed that on Sunday mornings she, too, ran in for coffee and a newspaper in her tracksuit without benefit of makeup or coiffed hair. Oprah and her makeover expert exchanged knowing glances and said, “That’s why you’re still single.” Gayle retorted that if she ran into a potential date, she would simply say, “this isn’t what I really look like!” With a sign, she wouldn’t have had to say a word…

First Cars…

02 Thursday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Design, Photography, Reflections

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Beach Boy, Camaros, Ford Thunderbird, Industrial design, Karmann Ghia, Photography, Troy Paiva

Mid-60s Ford Thunderbird © Troy Paiva http://www.lostamerica.com

Fun, Fun, Fun
Well she got her daddy’s car and she cruises through the hamburger stand now
See she forgot all about the library like she told her old man now
And with the radio blastin’ goes cruisin’ just as fast as she can now
And she’ll have fun, fun, fun ’til her daddy takes her T’bird away.
Brian Wilson and Mike Love 

The first car I drove with a learner’s permit was my father’s gold Thunderbird (V8 with suicide doors), in the middle of a snowstorm. I hit some black ice and skidded into the intersection just as the light turned red. My mother’s quick reflexes and steering from the passenger seat saved us from certain death.

Next I learned how to drive my best friend’s cherry red Volkswagen Karmann Ghia. It had a great radio and was a dream to speed shift!

The first car I owned was a spiffy silver Camaro with a standard transmission and a very stiff clutch. It did not handle well in the city, but on the highway it could really move and I put a lot of miles on it driving up and down the East Coast from Toronto to Fort Lauderdale. Looking back, I associate that car with being young, free, and fiercely independent – I loved it!

© 1962 Ford Thunderbird - Troy Paiva http://www.lostamerica.com

© 1960 Ford Thunderbird - Troy Paiva http://www.lostamerica.com

Fishing…

02 Thursday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Beauty, Fishing, Georgian Bay, Memoir, Photography, Thoreau

© Joan Currie - Fishing

Many men go fishing all their lives without knowing that it is not the fish that they are after. – Henry David Thoreau

My father loved to fish! At least once a year he ventured into the wilds of Quebec in search of rainbow trout. He always came home with his limit and many a tall tale about the fish that got away.

Dad first taught his two daughters and son to fish in Georgian Bay, Ontario. We learned the finer points of bait selection, casting, and how to remove the hook by holding the fish firmly in one hand and carefully extracting the instrument of death with the other. Often we released the fish back into the water and then worried about the creatures swimming around with holes in their mouths – the fish equivalent of a cleft lip.

Father bought fishing rods for his grandchildren as soon as they could walk. I was amazed to see my three daughters reach for minnows to bait the hook, reel in the catch, and unhook with such confidence and more ease than I ever had.

Bonfire…

01 Wednesday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Art, Photography, Reflections, Writing

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beautiful, Beauty, Bonfire, Capitola State Beach, Dante, Memoir, Photography, Writing

© Joan Currie

Heat cannot be taken from fire, or beauty from the Eternal.
Dante

During the day few people stop to notice this bonfire, but at night it takes center stage for many types of gatherings. This weekend, the annual Burning Man event will take place in the Black Rock Desert, Nevada. The event notice prompted me to think about the bonfires of my youth.

My first exposure to bonfires was at a girls’ summer camp in northern Ontario, Canada. I remember the darkness of the night and being lulled into a dreamy state by the cinders dancing up and around in the hot flames – broken only by the occasional cracking sound, like that of a ringmaster’s whip. The counselors sang and played on their steel string guitars the melancholy tunes of Joni Mitchell, mostly from the Blue album. I’m Leaving on a Jet Plane was also a favorite that they played over and over again. Those sessions were pure magic and the lyrics of the songs are emblazoned in my memory forever.

Just as we are drawn to the bonfire, so are the beasts. There is a certain vulnerability when seated in a ring facing the fire with our backs exposed – an uneasiness about who or what is lurking in the shadows. Ghost storytellers know this and so did an older boy when, at a local bonfire pit, he delighted in recounting a gruesome tale about a green-eyed monster. To this day, the monster has a habit of rearing its ugly head when I am alone at night – walking along deserted streets, in the woods, or going down to the cellar. Sometimes the imagination fuels the fire even more…

Beauty & the Sea Beast…

31 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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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

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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

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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

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