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Satin & Sand

~ Reflections on Beauty

Satin & Sand

Tag Archives: beautiful

Lost and Found…

05 Tuesday Jul 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Design, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Blue pitcher, Blue roses, Photography, postaweek 2011, Rudyard Kipling

© Joan Currie

Roses red and roses white
Plucked I for my love’s delight.
She would none of all my posies–
Bade me gather her blue roses.
Rudyard Kipling

I was delighted to find this cobalt blue-tinged pitcher today while unpacking. I may fill it with tiny blue roses…

Sidewalk Gum Art…

03 Sunday Jul 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Lauren DiMarco, Oakland Bay Bridge, Photography, postaweek 2011, Sidewalk gum art

© Lauren DiMarco

It is the function of art to renew our perception. What we are familiar with we cease to see. – Anaïs Nin

 As I walked along the sidewalk today, I was captivated by the peculiar patterns of flattened dark globs of chewing gum embedded in the pavement. Continuing along my route, I started noticing black dots everywhere!

London artist, Ben Wilson, embellishes such discarded gum with colorful images.

Model: Lauren DiMarco

Ten Beautiful Things My Father Taught Me…

19 Sunday Jun 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Photography, Reflections, Relationships

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beautiful, Father, Father's Day, Photography, postaweek 2011, Ten things my father taught me

Fish hooks3

© Joan Currie – My Father’s Tackle Box

Growing up, my father spent every Father’s Day weekend fishing in the wilds of northern Quebec, but he would return just in time for Sunday dinner with his quota of rainbow trout!

Here is what he taught me during my formative years:

1.  How to catch and release a fish.
2.  How to win at cribbage and ping pong.
3.  How to play golf and badminton, throw horseshoes and a football, jump waves, fly a kite, waterski, pitch a tent, and paddle a canoe.
4. How to work a drill, lawn mover, outboard motor, telescope, water pump, and drive a car.
5. How to paint a room, stain a dock, and polish shoes.
6. How to spot the Big and Little Dippers, Venus, Jupiter, shooting stars, and satellites in the night sky.
7. How to live one day at a time and not trouble, trouble.
8. How to be a Renaissance man/woman and have a passion for lifelong learning that included classical music, art history, astronomy, pottery, gardening, foreign languages, and travel to distant lands.
9. How to enjoy the company of good friends, give a speech, tell a joke, shake a hand, tie a Windsor knot, break an apple in half with your hands, balance a checkbook, cut a deck of cards, and use a yo-yo.
10. The value of hard work, exercise, volunteerism, and going to church.

Thanks, Dad! Happy Father’s Day!

You may also like:
Ten Beautiful Things My Mother Taught Me

Sea Glass…

12 Sunday Jun 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Photography, Reflections, Writing

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beautiful, Owen Meredith, postaweek 2011, Sea glass, sea treasures

© Joan Currie

I could not help but love him, love him,
Till my love grew pain to me.
And to-morrow he weds the Princess
In that palace beside the sea.
from The Mermaiden by Owen Meredith

The sea offered up these treasures for me today.

Beach House…

10 Friday Jun 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Design, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Blue cottage, Photography, postaweek 2011

© Joan Currie

The loneliness you get by the sea is personal and alive. It doesn’t subdue you and make you feel abject. It’s stimulating loneliness. – Anne Morrow Lindbergh

I often wish that I lived in this charming blue cottage by the sea.

Hands of a Man…

07 Tuesday Jun 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Photography, Reflections, Writing

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activities men do with their hands, beautiful, hand, Photography, postaweek 2011

© Joan Currie

The light, flowing out from under the edge of a parasol of bluish crystal, spilled up against the hand, and made every contour of the skin apparent, exaggerating the powerful knuckles and the veins engorged by the pressure of the arm.
The Hand by Colette

Unlike the protagonist in Colette’s short story, who is repulsed by her new husband’s hand, I find a man’s hand to be very appealing – especially when holding an early morning cup of coffee.

I am also fascinated by the hands of a man when he is chopping wood, hammering, building a fire, baiting a hook, tying a fly fishing lure, braiding dock lines, knotting a tie, putting on cufflinks, shaving, changing a tire, waxing a car, steering an outboard motor, flipping hamburgers on the grill, gripping a golf club, skipping stones, strumming a guitar, painting a fence, petting an animal, and taking my hand.

Curious Cupid: 80 Beautiful Words Starting with the Letter “C”…

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Photography, Reflections, Writing

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80 Beautiful Words, beautiful, Beautiful words, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, Photography, postaweek 2011, Writing

© Lauren DiMarco

On my walk this morning, I thought of these beautiful words starting with the letter “C”…

1.  Caboose
2.  Cachepot
3.  Cachet
4.  Calcification
5.  Calico
6.  Calligraphy
7.  Calliope
8.  Camera
9.  Campanile
10. Canadian
11. Canterbury
12. Canyon
13. Capillary
14. Cashmere
15. Cassiopeia
16. Castle
17. Cayenne
18. Celebration
19. Celsius
20. Celestial
21. Celtic
22. Cinnamon
23. Chalet
24. Chameleon
25. Chamois
26. Champagne
27. Chandelier
28. Chapbook
29. Chapel
30. Charcoal
31. Charmeuse
32. Chastity
33. Chenille
34. Chevrolet
35. Chiaroscuro
36. Chiffonier
37. Chignon
38. Childhood
39. Chiffon
40. Chime

To be continued…

Model: Lauren DiMarco

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Ten Beautiful Children’s Story Books…

25 Wednesday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Design, Photography, Writing

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beautiful, Children's books, Children's reading, Photography, postaweek 2011

© Joan Currie

To read more
get better in math
make more friends
 more good manners
clean up my room more
get better at sports…
This printed list of resolutions fell out of my daughter’s ballet book (#5 below).

There was a teary moment when I discovered this grade one list today, however, my daughter did accomplish all the items on it – including becoming an architect, bibliophile (especially of Jane Austen books), cross-country runner, and having many, many wonderful friends.

Here are ten of our well-loved, beautiful children’s books:

1.  The Balloon Tree by Phoebe Gilman
2.  Corgiville Fair by Tasha Tudor
3.  Amy’s Goose by Efner Tudor Holmes, illustrated by Tasha Tudor
4.  Masquerade by Kit Williams
5.  Of Swans, Sugarplums, and Satin Slippers by Violette Verday, illustrated by Marcia Brown
6.  Little Grey Rabbit’s Storybook by Alison Uttley, illustrated by Margaret Tempest
7.  Ox-Cart Man by Donald Hall, illustrated by Barbara Cooney
8.  Beatrix Potter The Complete Tales by Beatrix Potter
9.  The Eleventh Hour by Graeme Base
10. Who Goes To The Park by Warabé Aska

Poetry Revisited…

23 Monday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, modern poetry, Photography, poetry books. victorian poetry, postaweek 2011, Writing

© Lydia Hudgens

that which we are, we are;
One equal-temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak  by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
from Ulysses by Lord Tennyson 

I recently discovered my high school Victorian poetry book that featured the works of Browning, Tennyson, Arnold, Swinburne, and Rossetti. I could tell from my multiple margin notations that I had no clear understanding about what the poems were about. How could I? What did I know about love, life, and loss at such a tender age?

Over the years I gravitated to the works of the modern poets and when, finally, I revisited the the Victorian giants’ work, I found them to be deeply moving and indeed transformative.

My favorite poetry books:

1.  Ariel by Sylvia Plath
2.  The Colossus and Other Poems by Sylvia Plath
3.  Sailing Alone Around the Room by Billy Collins
4.  Nine Horses by Billy Collins
5.  Collected Poems by Jane Kenyon
6.  To Be The Poet by Maxine Hong Kingston
7.  Modern Poetry edited by Maynard Mack, Leonard Dean, and William Frost
8.  The Best American Poetry 1994, edited by A. R. Ammons
9.  The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson, Introduction by Billy Collins
10. Robert Frost Poetry & Prose, edited by Edward Connery Lathem and Lawrence Thompson
11. Selected Poems by Pablo Neruda, edited by Ben Belitt
12. The Poetry of Lucy Maud Montgomery by Ferns McCabe
13. The Major Victorian Poets, edited by William H. Marshall
14. William Carolos Williams Selected Poems
15. Dinners and Nightmares by Diane Di Prima and Terry Carr
16. Selected Poems of Erza Pound
17. a selection of poems by e. e. cummings, introduction by Horace Gregory
18. The Essential Haiku, edited by Robert Hass
19. The Penguin by John Lennon
20. The Complete Poetry of Edgar Allan Poe by Edgar Allan Poe, Jay Parini, and April Bernard

Your favorite poets?

Model: Lauren DiMarco

Needlepoint Books…

22 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Crafts, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Claire Murray, Craft, Elizabeth Bradley, Kaffe Fassett, Needlepoint, Needlepoint books, Photography, postaweek 2011

© Joan Currie

Fassett has successfully challenged the idea that knitting and needlepointing are dull, restrained, and limited to certain subjects or patterns. – Catherine Reurs

I have a penchant for Elizabeth Bradley’s exquisite needlepoint designs and two of her books top my list of favorite pattern books:

1.  Needlework Antique Flowers by Elizabeth Bradley
2.  Decorative Victorian Needlework by Elizabeth Bradley
3.  Kaffe Fassett’s Glorious Needlepoint
4.  Flowers, Birds, and Unicorns: Medieval Needlepoint by Candace Bahouth
5.  In Splendid Detail – Needlepoint Art by Catherine Reurs
6.  Donna Kooler’s Glorious Needlepoint
7.  Glorafilia The Ultimate Needlepoint Collection by Carole Lazarus and Jennifer Berman
8.  Erica Wilson’s Needlepoint (The Metropolitan Museum of Art adaptations)
9.  Jill Gordon’s Needlepoint – Glorious Tapestry Designs
10. American Country Needlepoint by Jim Williams
11. Designer Needlepoint edited by Hugh Ehrman
12. Floral Needlepoint by Melinda Coss
13. Nantucket Inspirations by Claire Murray
14. Victorian Needlepoint by Beth Russell

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