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Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Bergdorf's Windows


Bergdorf’s Holiday windows are, so over the top this year that they are a challenge to behold. ‘Labor intensive’ doesn’t even begin to describe this extravaganza of passementarie, quilling, encrustation, and taxidermy, with a dose of steampunk.


During the day, the reflections of Fifth Avenue
upon the glass offer some dreamlike surprises ...



But the general effect is dizzying.



If you visit after dark …



and get up close to explore …



you’ll be transported to a world of fantastical detail.











































Glorious, but exhausting, much like the Christmas season in New York!

Happy Dysfunctional Xmas


Had enough of It's a Wonderful Life? Here's tonight’s movie lineup on Turner Classic Movies. I’m not kidding.

8:00pm THE LION IN WINTER (1968)
Christmas 1183--an aging and conniving King Henry II plans a reunion where he hopes to name his successor. He summons the following people for the holiday: his scheming but imprisoned wife, Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine; his mistress, Princess Alais, whom he wishes to marry; his three sons (Richard, Geoffrey, and John), all of whom desire the throne; and the young but crafty King Philip of France (who is also Alais' brother). With the fate of Henry's empire at stake, everybody engages in their own brand of deception and treachery to stake their claim.


10:30pm WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? (1966)
A bitter aging couple with the help of alcohol, use a young couple to fuel anguish and emotional pain towards each other.


1:00am CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF (1958)Brick, an alcoholic ex-football player, drinks his days away and resists the affections of his wife, Maggie. His reunion with his father, Big Daddy, who is dying of cancer, jogs a host of memories and revelations for both father and son.


3:00am ORDINARY PEOPLE (1980)The accidental death of the older son of an affluent family deeply strains the relationships among the bitter mother, the good-natured father, and the guilt-ridden younger son.

a christmas eve wedding

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I wonder if my GranMa's early girlhood dreams included a young man from Virginia? Maybe.
He came to her hometown with the Norfolk & Western-and whether she initially had eyes for him-He did for her. The story goes that one day Bessie was walking along uptown and George-upon seeing her-pronounced to his friend- "See that girl in the red coat? I am going to marry her."

It was love at first sight for him & I am sure when Bess was properly introduced to George Joseph-she was impressed with this handsome, quick witted, intelligent man. From a fine Maryland family and though last in line for its wealth, she had to think he would make good-as they say- and he would. 
A courtship, with bouquets & the passing of letters ensued. Some of the letters have been kept and they show a darling and clever George at his witty best.


A proposal was made.
Accepted.
The pair was married in her small family home with pine boughs and candles & a neat fire in the hearth.
The bride wore a simple blue suit-no doubt made by her mother's skillful hand and held a bouquet of parma violets the color of her eyes.

Bessie & George were married December 24,1916.




 photographs from their Virginia honeymoon


The two had five children-four girls and one son. My mother- the youngest-was born in 1930. George died when my mother was 13. A young man. My GranMa would live to be 107. She never considered a second marriage and her GJ provided for her until the day she breathed her last and closed her truly violet eyes. She saw much with those eyes-always seeing him- and I hope at last- after sixty years of missing him- saw him that day.

Last weekend, I laid a double wreath of magnolia at their grave. The wreaths were linked together as George and Bess were December 24 1916, ninety four years ago today.


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a Saint

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 1962 Pierre Cardin for YSL





The Saint Provides a Dowry for Three Poor Girls
Ambrogio Lorenzetti

In this panel, St Nicholas is throwing gold into the house of a poor man whose three daughters face prostitution to support themselves. The saint did the same on three consecutive nights, providing dowries so the girls could marry. Lorenzetti painted four scenes from the life of the saint as an altarpiece for the Church of San Procolo-



 Stories of Saint Nicholas
Ambrogio Lorenzetti




tempera on wood
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence



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dress tartan 1990

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somethings don't change, I still love tartan plaids and big long skirts for Christmas dressing- if I need to go there. This one-had a big swishy skirt. I wore this 10 years earlier while in college with red silk satin. I'd wear it now, if I only knew where to find it.

 
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dress tartan 1770

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Portrait of a Jacobite Lady
Cosmo Alexander
(the Lady wears a tartan riding habit & holds the Jacobite symbol, the white rose)



(& you know this had a wonderful big swishy skirt.)



read more about the painter  here 

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greetings cards have all been sent

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I get mounds of old postcards I've collected over the years out each Christmas to reacquaint myself with. Stacks and stacks full of style, reflecting the design of the times they were posted in.







I love cards-I am getting some of them via email from fabric houses, other vendors. They are pretty and appreciated-




but- Don't you love to open the colorful envelopes in the mail? Cards from the post are really an extravagance Now, and I still do love them so.






In the New York apartment of Carroll Petrie
a perfectly beautiful way to show cards off & add festively to the decorations
(from an old Town & Country)



I get many from clients in the post with photographs of their children- I am crazy over these, such fun to see the changes just in a year. I've shared this one before with permission-  and today an update arrived from these two that I would love to share-but I won't. These boys are growing into men, one is now over 6 feet tall-
Still they are full
of
Wonder,
Joy
&
Christmas-



it is good to grow &
& yet, not abandon some of that
Wonder
& Joy.


 all sent, but never too late.


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