37 Beautiful Love Songs…

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© Owen Buenaventura

As in the movie, High Fidelity, it can be very tricky coming up with just the right playlist to set the stage for L-O-V-E on Valentine’s Day. My list (a work in progress) is somewhat ecclectic, but I hope it will set the mood just the same!

1.  When a Man Loves a Woman – Percy Sledge
2.  Falling Slowly – Glen Hansard
3.  Kiss – Tom Jones
4.  Marie – Randy Newman
5.  Michelle – Beatles
6.  L’Amour existe encore – Celine Dion
7.  It had to be You – Rod Stewart
8.  Say that you love me – Loudon Wainwright
9.  Besame Mucho – Diana Krall
10. One Fine Day – Natalie Merchant
11. Mon Mec a Moi – Patricia Kaas
12. Jersey Girl – Bruce Springsteen
13. Southern Cross – Crosby, Stills & Nash
14. Back at One– Brian McKnight
15. Bring me to Life – Evanescence
16. Can’t Help Falling in Love – Andrea Bocelli
17. One – U2
18. Me & Mrs. Jones – Billy Paul
19. You are so Beautiful – Joe Cocker
20. Beauty and the Beast – Peabo Bryson & Celine Dion
21. Somebody to Love – Jefferson Airplane
22. Unforgettable – Natalie and Nat “King” Cole
23. More than Words – Eric Clapton
24. Addicted to Love – Robert Palmer
25. Strangers in the Night – Frank Sinatra
26. The Power of Love – Huey Lewis and the News
27. I Can’t Make You Love Me – Bonnie Raitt
28. Love Story – Taylor Swift
29. Love Me Tender – Elvis Presley
30. Love the One You’re With – Crosby, Stills & Nash
31. On Bended Knee – Boys II Men
32. Moon River – Audrey Hepburn
33. Ma Cherie Amore – Stevie Wonder
34. Stop! In the Name of Love –  The Supremes
35. Love is the Drug –  Roxy Music
36. L-O-V-E – Nat “King” Cole
37. Lady in Red – Chris de Burgh

Models: Lauren DiMarco & Tobi Klanner

The Month of Love…

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© Lauren DiMarco Photography by Slavic

When you smiled you had my undivided attention. When you laughed you had my urge to laugh with you. When you cried you had my urge to hold you. When you said you loved me, you had my heart forever. Anonymous

February is my favorite month! I am an incurable romantic and although my expectations for Valentine’s Day have never been fulfilled, I still hold onto my fantasy that one day they will!

Models – Lauren DiMarco & Oleg Galagan

Skipping Stones…

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© Joan Currie

I don’t know if I can do this alone
Oh after all our sweet love is flown
I’ve been a running
I’ve been skipping like a stone
And I don’t know if I
I  can do this all alone.
Amos Lee (Skipping Stone)

I have finally mastered the art of skipping stones. I used to think that the secret lay in the selection of the perfect flat stone (and perhaps the speed the stone is thrown), but I have come to discover that it is the angle of release that matters – the optimal angle that keeps the stone rotating in and out of the water several times before finally sinking below the surface.

It turns out, as well, that the stones do not have to be perfectly flat to be considered good skippers. Combing the beaches and shorelines for the best-shaped stones all these years has been for naught.

It is interesting that a tiny adjustment in technique was all that was required to achieve skipping success, and I wondered if I might apply the same principle to other, more important, areas of my life. It may make all the difference.

Tiny Teardrop…

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© Joan Currie - Teardrop

A typical teardrop is 4′ wide, 4′ high, and 8′-10′ long. Some are as big as 6-1/2′ wide, 5′ high, and nearly 12′ long. – www.teardrops.net

This Teardrop trailer spotted in Capitola, complete with surfboards, is reminiscent of my favorite Airstream Bambi Travel trailers. This trailer sleeps two and the hatch in the rear can be used for storage or an eating area.

Berkeley…

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© Joan Currie

I captured this reflected photograph sitting outside a coffee shop at the University of California at Berkeley campus today.

© Joan Currie

The pollarded London Plane trees at Sproul Plaza fascinated me. Here is a reverse image detail of one of the trees.

Pagan Purple: 54 Beautiful Words Beginning with the Letter “P” (Part 2)…

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© Novi Angelomio

Part 2 of my favorite words that begin with “P” …

28. Poetry
29. Pastel
30. Parasol
31. Pirouette
32. Primordial
33. Peony
34. Peacock
35. Promise
36. Pensamiento (means thought in Spanish)
37. Paprika
38. Pizazz
39. Panache
40. Parisan
41. Pulsação (means pulsation in Portuguese)
42. Parchment
43. Papaya
44. Perspective
45. Pink
46. Princess
47. Precious
48. правда (“pravda,” means truth in Russian)
49. Peppermint
50. Paraphernalia
51. Paradox
52. Paradise
53. Popsicle
54. Passion

Model: Lauren DiMarco

Pagan Purple: 54 Beautiful Words Starting with the Letter “P”…

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© Carly Larsson

I love reading and using beautiful words. Below is a list I have compiled beginning with the letter “P.”

1.  Pagan
2.  Purple
3.  Phosphorescence
4.  Persimmon
5.  Periwinkle
6.  Pas de deux
7.  Prism
8.  Peony
9.  Pianissimo
10. Pashmina
11. Pearl
12. Pristine
13. Porcelain
14. Portuguese
15. Palette
16. Pleasure
17. Pure
18. Petrified
19. Papillon
20. Provocative
21. Pleasure
22. Positive
23. Paradigm
24. Parachute
25. Provocative
26. Piquant
27. Pirate

To be continued…

Model: Lauren Currie

Bitten by a Beautiful Bug…

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© Joan Currie - Newly found photo of my grandfather.

Isn’t it strange that princes and kings
And clowns who caper in stardust rings,
And common people, like you and me
Are builders for eternity?
R. L. Sharpe

About two years ago I was bitten by the genealogy bug. It left me with an incurable desire to add more and more branches to my family tree.

One of the best things about having this condition is that I will never be bored at family functions again. Every relative is a potential gold mine of information. For instance, I might discover that my great aunt has saved every Christmas letter and card she ever received, my uncle possesses the immigration records and passenger lists of our transplanted European ancestors, and my second cousin once removed has a collection of wedding photographs along with my grandmother’s wedding dress in her cedar chest that she had not looked at in over forty years.

After six months of searching on the internet and in archival libraries; I traced both my maternal and half of my paternal family trees back to the early 1600s, reconnected with relatives all over North America, and discovered new relations in Europe.

Days before last Christmas, a cousin, with whom I had not talked in over fifteen years, telephoned me to say that she had found our grandmother’s bible. Within its pages were three items; my grandmother’s marriage certificate, a letter my cousin had written to her, and a postcard that I had sent to her many years ago.

I was moved to tears by the news. The confirmation that my grandmother had, indeed, a special place for me in her heart meant the world to me and I thanked my cousin for possibly the best Christmas present I have ever received!

When the postcard arrived in the mail, I placed it in a silver frame alongside a photograph of my grandmother, and it rests for now on my bedside table.