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Satin & Sand

~ Reflections on Beauty

Satin & Sand

Tag Archives: memory

Beautiful Blue Velvet Ribbons…

30 Tuesday Jun 2026

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Drawing, Painting, Reflections, watercolor

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Tags

Fashion, Art, Poetry, watercolor, memory, Childhood

© Joan Currie – Art from my camp truck.


Blue Velvet Ribbons by Joan Currie

I came across
my old summer camp trunk
in the attic.

Inside were thick folders,
tied with sky-blue velvet ribbons.

I knew what lay within:

pencil crayon drawings
of my blond cocker spaniel,
seagulls at the beach,
ducks on the pond,
and my younger brother
in his Mountie costume.

But my favorites
were the paper doll fashions–

wedding gowns
painted in soft watercolor,
headdresses
with sunbursts and roses,
crowns and tiaras,
and Della Robbia wreaths
laden with flowers and fruit.

I made them
on rainy Sunday afternoons.

They were shown
to no one.

I wasn’t waiting
for praise or advice.

The making
was enough.

Each dress
belonged to an imagined life
I carried quietly,
as tenderly
as a child carries
a small secret.

Years later
I showed them
to my daughters.

Already,
they were better artists
than I had ever been
.

They smiled,
admired them,
but declined
to add another dress
to the collection.

Perhaps,
one day,
a grandchild
will untie
the blue ribbons,

lift out the folders,

and begin again.

Beautiful Mother’s Day Tulips…

08 Friday May 2026

Posted by Satin & Sand in beautiful, Flowers, Love, Mother, Mother-Child, Poetry, Reflections, Relationships

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Tags

Delftware, Flowers, memory, Mother's Day, Poetry, still-life, Tulips

© Joan Currie – Watercolor of pale pink tulips in my mother’s Delft vase.


Mother’s Tulips by Joan Currie

My mother loved flowers–
tulips most of all.

I never asked why.
It was in her Dutch blood,
her Calvinistic sense of simplicity–
upright, unadorned.

On Mother’s Day
there were always tulips:
pale pink,
set in her Delft vase,
its blue-and-white surfaces
catching the light,
holding it quietly
beneath the stems.

I tried, sometimes,
to improve upon them–
those lavish arrangements–
variegated tulips,
blue hydrangea, white roses,
small bright globes of yellow–
but she would only smile,
as if to say:
not this.

She wanted the tulips alone.

Now, after many years
and other flowers–
peonies, lilies, anemones,
even the careful making
of paper petals–

I pass a market stall
and stop.

I bring home tulips,
pale pink,
and set them in her vase.

In the quiet of the room
they open,
and she is there.


For my mother.

Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers!

Beautiful Touch Typing…

08 Wednesday Apr 2026

Posted by Satin & Sand in Aging, beautiful, Poetry, Relationships

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Tags

Aging, Body, Halda typewriter, Love, memory, observation, Original poetry, Poetry, touch, touch typing, typewriter

© James Currie – Swedish typewriter. The designer’s father was the Royal Surgeon.


It seemed a small thing then, learning by touch. – Joan Currie


Touch Typing by Joan Currie

I first learned to type
on a machine with blank key caps,
working through a manual
until I knew exactly
where every letter and number lay.
That early fluency

has served me well.

Your body, too, I first
touched–memorized
blindly, in the dark.
Exploring each contour,
as if it were a map
I could follow by feel alone.

From your thick, curling hair
down the slope of your forehead,
to each familiar landmark–
the aquiline nose, the square jaw,
the wide sternum, the strong arms,
the soft pads of your fingers,
the smooth plain of your belly,
the steely band along your outer thigh,
the steady weight of your feet.

Over the years
you have shown me
how your body has changed,
but I still see it
as I first learned it–
certain, enduring,
and, to me,
handsome still.

My hands remember.

Beautiful Easter Dinner…

04 Saturday Apr 2026

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Baking, beautiful, Easter, Family, Poetry, Reflections

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Tags

domestic life, Easter, Easter dinner, family traditions, memory, Original poetry, Pieter Claesz, Poetry, still life painting

Pieter Claesz – Dutch Breakfast Still Life (17th c.)


Easter Dinner by Joan Currie

I think of Easter dinner
when my mother was alive.

The sideboard bowed
under its burden.

We came to the table,
hungry from Lent,
and ate.

Ham glazed with maple,
potatoes in cream,
asparagus with Hollandaise,
eggs split and filled,
ambrosia–too sweet,
with coconut.

There was lemon pie
with its high, wavering crown,
carrot cake thick
with frosting,
and the small bright candies
we carried away in our pockets.

I am grateful
for that appetite,
for the unthinking pl
enty.

Now my guests call ahead–
no sugar, no dairy,
no this, no that.

I pause at the counter,
hand on the phone,

and say,
perhaps we’ll go out.

Wishing you a very Happy Easter!

Memory overload…

16 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Design, Photography, Reflections, Relationships

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Tags

Art, Collage, memory, Poetry, Relationships, Tennyson, The Idylls of the King

Lauren in Vancouver at ferry docks

Lauren DiMarco in Vancouver © Joan Currie

Her memory from old habit of the mind
Went slipping back upon the golden days
In which she saw him first,…
from The Idylls of the King – Guinevere by Tennyson

I remember first seeing him standing in the doorway of the dockside restaurant.

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