Janet's thread

A weblog, mostly about knitting but other topics appear

Rock of Ages Musical December 30, 2009

Filed under: Family,Family history,Knitting,Music,Seasons,Weather — Janet @ 12:17 pm

Rock of Ages Musical – this Broadway Show sounds like a lot of fun.  Back in the 1940’s after the Second World War, my father commuted each week between our home in Boston and his office in New York.  It used to be a big treat to go down to New York with my mother and be taken to a Broadway Show – sometimes to the Radio City Music Hall to see the Rockettes.  Now one of my sons and his wife, living in Glastonbury Connecticut, have treated themselves to a trip to New York to see the Rock of Ages Musical.  I hope they enjoyed this present day equivalent – I can still picture the Rockettes, all those years ago.  And in searching the internet, I find that the Rockettes are still going strong today.

Update on the weather – today I found a site that gives a lot of information about weather conditions worldwide.  A topic of much discussion and fascination.  Here’s a snippet for today – in Dublin there will be 7 hrs. 33 min. of daylight.  Tomorrow the day will be 1 min. 6 seconds longer.

Knitting update – here is another blanket finished -that makes 5, counting the one that sold.

Blanket no. 5 is on the right.  Note the remainder of the stash in the background – it’s definitely going down.

 

The Year 1969 in Review December 29, 2009

Filed under: History,Ireland,Irish History,Memories — Janet @ 3:56 pm

National Geographic Cover September 1969      photo by Jim Sugar

Last night there was a very interesting programme on Irish Television RTE 1.  It was about a photographer, Jim Sugar, who came to Ireland from the U.S. in 1969 on a photographic assignment for the National Geographic.  He took 1000’s of photographs, only a few of which were actually published in the September 1969 issue of the magazine.  One of his photographs was used for the cover – an accolade indeed for a young 21 year old student.  The girl on the cover was a 16 year old student normally resident in Churchtown (near where I lived) at the time and she was visiting the Aran Islands while Jim was there.

Jim returned to Ireland during this past year, 2009, to see how Ireland had changed and to try to find the people and places he had photographed when he was here before.  It was a particularly fascinating programme for us because 1969 was the first summer we were here.  (We came to Dublin from Kenya in October 1968, preceded by a two month stay in Belfast.)

Among other subjects whom Jim photographed 40 years ago, he found the 1969 cover girl who is now the Director of the National Concert Hall.

I would like to obtain a copy of the September 1969 issue of the National Geographic.  Jim’s photographs really are a treasure, particularly his photo of a funeral procession in the Aran Islands.  My textile friends would be especially interested in what the men and women were wearing.

 

Blogs I Like To Visit December 28, 2009

Filed under: Authors,Blogs — Janet @ 11:31 pm

We moved house about 6 weeks ago.  When we were reconnected to broadband in our new house, I eventually realised  that my favourite blogs were not being updated in the list of RSS Feeds that I subscribe to.  I can still use the Feeds List to look up my favourites but I no longer know when they have been updated, which rather defeats the idea of having the list.  Instead, I only get the blog entry that was made on the date I subscribed to that particular feed.  And this becomes rather tedious as I have to scroll through the blog to find the blog’s home page and then I see if there is a more current entry.  I tried to make a list of these blogs in my side bar but I couldn’t get that to work either.

So to make a long story short, I’m going to just make a list of the blogs I like to read and then refer back to this post when I want to look up that particular blog – that is if I can’t just pull the name of the blog out of my head.  (Sometimes when I do that with telephone numbers I get the wrong friend.)  The list is in somewhat alphabetical order.  Here’s a start.

Seattle Now and Then    seattle now and then

Emily Carr mystery name    the other emily blog post

Norwegian knitter     norway

Victoria Daily photo

Audrey     Eclectic Art

Annie    Knits O Facto

Lillehammer     Toriortot mittens

Art of the Landscape     art

Annie   aspinnerweave

Astronomy picture of the day    NASA

Entomologist who likes to knit     knitting in wales

no name    shipspotting

Beth    geology and family

Bettina   woolly bits – everything textile

Birgitta    Birgitta’s blog

Boston      photos of Boston

Carol    carol’s blog

Cat Down Under      in Australia

Catherine    Dispatches from the Deise

Cathy      sketching in South Africa

Charlotte     atelier 70N

Cindy   the best hearts are crunchy

Cliffe      Vintage Seattle

Dave      Old Paper Art

Dorothy    Lockerbie Scotland

Dot    Yarnmaker

Elin      Northern Norway

Evelyn    Textiles and Stamp Collecting and Drawing

FiberQat      FiberQat

Fleegle        Fleegle’s blog

Franklin    The Panopticon

Freyalynn    Freyalynn’s Thoughts

Freyalynn    Freyalynn’s Dyepot

Gabrieli     Urban Sketchers

Gale     She Shoots Sheep Shots

Harry     Harry in Athens

Helen     chronic knitting syndrome

Holly     The Literary Assassin

Ingrid      Ingrid’s blog

Jack    hartford daily photo

James    Crucibulum

James   fibrealive

Jared   brooklyn tweed

Janna    Knitting Relaxes Me

Jean     Jean’s knitting

Jean    Jean From Cornwall

Jeanne    A Bluestocking Knits

Jenny Dean   wild colour

Jo       North Africa

Joanna    Joannamauselina

Joe    Queer Joe

Julie    samurai knitter

Karen    the frugal girl

Kate      needled

Kerstin   from Sweden

Kerstin    Getting Stitched on the Farm

Kim      Historic Seattle

 

Kristie  in BC    North of 49

Leigh    Leigh’s Fiber Journal

Leigh    5 acres and a dream

Lene     Danceswithwool

Lesley    Devon Fine Fibres

Linda      Bookwords

Liz      Northern Lace

Swedish Liz in Ireland    swedish and english

 

Lynne     Sockladyspins

Ma Ingalls    What would Ma Ingalls Do

Mariann    in Holland

Martin     An Englishman in Eugene

Marina     Art and things

Mary Jo   Travel and knitting

Mary Lou    Yarnerinas

Matt    Just Wondering

Mel   vet in Maine

Meg    unravelling

Midori     in the labyrinth

Nyondo   Road Blog Ahead

P. J. Taylor     Dublin Daily Photo

Roger and Helen     connecticut

Rosemary     Rosemary’s blog

Renee    Art=Life

Ruth     Knitting on Impulse

SaRi      SaRi’s Mindful Knitting

Seattle P-I     archive photo blog

Savita      an awfully big blog adventure

Seattle bike blog    biking

Shandy     Cheviots

Sharon    Sage Creek  Nevada

Strath     Pacific Standard

Sue     Life Looms Large

Sue     travel fibre

Susan    thrums

Susan      SusanF Handmade

Susan      Emperor Penguin

a     Fed by Birds

Suzanne     herborium

Tracey    Dublin Sketchers

trapunto    trapunto

Ward Cunningham    state license plates

a     spinningfishwife

b       knitting linguist

c      quilt tales from Finland

d    tangletale

e     aland finland 365

e     historic fibres

f   from Kerstins Extras to Rag Rug Day in Sweden

g    vintage art illustrators

Unlike the Tree Stumps this list will keep growing.

 

Erin Go Bragh

Erin go Bragh

There was a fascinating article in the Irish Times today by Donal McMahon in An Irishman’s Diary.

The photograph in the article shows a little girl sitting on her young soldier father’s knee.  Her father was killed not long afterward when that little girl was just over 15 months old.  It took over 80 years for that little girl, Ina,  to find out the truth about his death.   At the age of 10 that little girl Ina lost her mother and she grew up with cousins and was sent to boarding school.  When she asked about her father, all she could find out was that he had been shot during the Troubles.  She eventually married and had a family who, in turn, grew up ignorant about their grandfather.  Ina knew her father had served with the British Army during the First World War but after that there was a blank.  In actuality, after her death her son Donal found out that his grandfather had served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force.

Now with the resources of the Irish Times archives, Donal has found that his grandfather, Sergeant Thomas Enright, RIC, had been shot dead on December 14th, 1921.  This took place at a turning point in Irish history.  The Anglo-Irish Treaty had been signed eight days previously and was to be ratified by overwhelming majorities in both houses of the English parliament two days later on December 16th.   

Sergeant Thomas Enright, of the Royal Irish Constabulary, and a Constable friend were attending a coursing meeting at which Thomas had entered two dogs.  They wore plain clothes.  They visited the hotel where the draw was made for the following day’s coursing.  They left the hotel (the establishment) shortly after 11 p.m., and as soon as they appeared on the street a volley of revolver shots was fired at them by a group of men who were standing near the post office.  Thomas was age 31.

Donal shared his findings with his mother.  He speculates that it is quite possible that reading the account of her father’s death brought some sort of closure to Ina.  She passed away scarcely 2 weeks later.

Donal goes on to write that happily we now have an Ireland where it is possible at last to break the silence surrounding those who served in the police and army of pre-independence times.  The men who shot Thomas, and the reporters of the time, were not to know that Thomas carried a tattoo on his right arm:  “Erin go Bragh”

Reflections – 74 years ago today,  December 28, 1935, was my parents’ wedding day.   My father-to-be had 3 children, age 11, 9, and 8.  My sisters-to-be were flower girls, and the ceremony was held in Winchester Massachusetts in the parental home of my mother-to-be.  I suspect that her sisters, my aunts, were her bridesmaids.   I must ask my sisters, now 83 and 82, and my 96 year old aunt for more of the details.  Or maybe I can search the archives of the Boston newspapers.

I blogged a few days ago about The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher.       Many questions were unanswered in the investigation of this case – many family secrets still remained.   After reading it I thought about the probability that most families have secrets, some quite innocent but will never be uncovered, others that will be revealed in the course of time if we know the right questions to ask.

 

Christmas Reading December 27, 2009

  Lillian Beckwith is one of my favourite authors.  When we were up in Bangor Northern Ireland earlier in December I was browsing in a 2nd hand bookshop and came across this one by her.  It was  first published in 1986.  I didn’trecognize the title or the cover.  I suspected that I had read it before but I decided that even if I had, it was worth reading again.  And sure enough it was.  Lillian Beckwith is better known for some of her other books about life in the Hebrides.  More famous ones include The Hills is Lonely and The Sea for Breakfast.  In the front of the book there is a small list of phrases in the Scottish form of the native languages of the British Isles.  These phrases are similar to Irish Gaeilge.  To quote Wikipedia, there are  “three Goidelic languages (Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Manx)”.

 

As the sun shone in to our conservatory I took great pleasure in reading another Haruki Murakami book, After Dark.  This was a splendid book, possibly my favourite so far.

 Haruki Murakami – After Dark

Shortly before Christmas our Book Group met and we had a quiz.  There were a possible 26 points, I think.  My winner got a score of 17.  I think I came dismally last with a score of 6.  This was very bad – usually I like quizzes.  The only consolation to me was that I might have tied with the quizmaster’s wife, who also would normally do very well on her husband’s quizzes.  I was really envious when I saw the prize for the winner.  A book authored by the quizmaster himself and just published.      The Irish Post Box by Stephen Ferguson.   Over the past few months I have been taking pictures of post boxes and wondering about their history – here was just the book for me.  Stephen very kindly sent me one for Christmas.  In another entry I’ll show you some of my pictures of post boxes and tell you some of the history as gleaned from Stephen’s book

   

 

Will I Ever Be Discovered? December 26, 2009

Filed under: Ageing,Art works,Longevity — Janet @ 5:20 pm

A while ago I read an article in the Irish Times about a woman artist in Northern Ireland who was not recognized as an artist of merit until she was age 84.  Her early life as a painter remained a secret until her son uncovered hundreds of her paintings in an old barn.  The discovery of the works lead to her first one-woman show in 1985 when she was 86.  Eleven years later, shortly before her death in her 97th year,  a retrospective of her work was presented at the Ulster Museum.  Her son and a journalist/art collector have written a book in tribute to her – Kathleen Isabella Metcalfe Mackie by Eamonn Mallie and Paddy Mackie

Similarly I read recently about a Cubanborn artist, resident in the U.S., who has been painting all her life but  only sold her first painting at the age of 89.  According to an article in the New York Times, Carmen Herrera, at age 94, is the hot new thing on the art scene.

A while ago I did a blog about Louise Bourgeois, born in 1911, and still being very creative.

Reading about these people is very inspiring to me.  I hope I will still be painting and knitting and weaving for many years to come.  I love those activities – and it is a thrill when friends and others admire my work.  I don’t aspire to such fame as the people mentioned above but I hope I am still able to get satisfaction from such work if I am fortunate enough to reach the higher decades – and possibly to feel I had made some sort of a mark on the art and craft world. 

I have framed the watercolour painting I completed recently in my Art Group.  Up until recently I have only been doing sketching but in the past month I added a bit of line and watercolour to my sketch of my knitting stash.  Here is the result.    

 

Nature’s Patterns and Merry Christmas December 24, 2009

Filed under: Christmas,Patterns — Janet @ 9:18 am

  

Two or three years ago I posted this Happy Christmas message to the Online Guild of Weavers Spinners & Dyers.  Now I want to send the same message to all the readers of this blog.  I’m too rushed to figure out how I put that text on one of my photographs but I would like to extend the Happy Christmas wishes to all my readers, near and far.  Merry Christmas to you all.

 

 

Knitting Progress December 23, 2009

Filed under: Blankets,Knitting,Yarns — Janet @ 11:53 pm

  Just a quick note on my current knitting project, another blanket.  This is to show the yarns I am using and the progress to date.  In the first 5 inches I’ve used 3 of the irregular striped yarns, the brown alpaca yarn, and the blue and brown  Icelandic Einband.

                    

 

Detective Stories

Filed under: Books,Longevity,Social history — Janet @ 3:02 pm

    The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher or The Murder at Road Hill House by Kate Summerscale

What a good book this was.  If you want to follow the development and early days of detective story writing this is the book for you.  This book is about a murder case which happened in 1860 in England.  The case was most bizarre and was never solved to the 100% satisfaction of all concerned.  But I leave it to you to read the details.  I found it absolutely fascinating.

 

Mist and Cloud at Newgrange

Filed under: History,Ireland,Winter Solstice — Janet @ 8:34 am

The Winter Solstice is now “yesterday’s news”.  There was disappointment at Newgrange on the official day of the Solstice, the morning of the 21st.  According to the article by Eileen Battersby in the Irish Times, there was general disappointment as eager watchers gathered and there was no sighting of the rising sun.  It was just cold and damp and misty.  People gradually put away their cameras and just exchanged greetings and comments.  Nevertheless, behind all that cloud and mist the sun was rising and nature’s cycle continues, the end of winter has begun.  And you can note the progress of the path of the sun by checking the times of sunrise and sunset each day and note the gradual lengthening of the days, in the Northern Hemisphere that is.

  not Newgrange on Dec. 21 – just a December morning view from the upstairs window of our house – the angle of the sun is so much further south than on a morning in June