Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
One year in 40 seconds [video] from snow to summer and back . . .
One year in 40 seconds from Eirik Solheim on Vimeo.
Images from the same spot through one entire year. Audio captured at the same place.
His last video was entitled: One year in 2 minutes.
Was it too long...getting too few viewers?
Was the same thing accomplished in 40 seconds?
Methinks more people would watch the 40-second one. A sign of the times?
Oranges are so interesting . . .
- In Afghanistan, oranges are customarily used as a seasoning at the dinner table; oranges are squeezed over the food to help cut grease.
- In Jamaica, people clean their floors with an orange cut in half; mechanics there use oranges to clean away grease and oil.
- Spain has over 35,000,000 orange trees.
- In Switzerland, oranges are sometimes served smothered with sugar and whipped cream.
- Europeans sometimes eat oranges with knives and forks.
- It wasn’t until after the Second World War that commercial orange-juice concentrate became available in America.
- The taste and aroma of oranges differ by season, county, state, and country, and even in the position in which it grew on the tree.
- The outside color of an orange has no absolute correlation with the maturity of the fruit and juice inside.
- Oranges were used in cosmetics by ladies of the French court in the 17th-century.
- The navel orange is one of the oldest varieties of oranges.
- About 25 billion oranges are typically grown in the United States each year.
- Many orange varieties float when placed in water; very sweet varieties, however, sink to the bottom.
- In the 19th-century orange blossoms were regularly shipped to Paris in salted barrels, because no French bride wanted to be married without wearing or holding them.
- Lightning kills as many orange trees as any disease.
- 17th-century Frenchmen liked to pour orange juice over their roasted chestnuts.
Orange you glad I'm finished? More facts about oranges.
Photo: Bowl of oranges in an antique Georgian glass bowl in my kitchen.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Easter Sunday + a few photos . . .
Have a great Easter whatever you do. I am going to put my ham in the oven as soon as I have another cup of hot coffee. Has anyone else heard the weatherman say that Easter is colder than Christmas? I'm trying to think back to what I wore when I went out to deliver some gifts to nearby friends and I'm remembering needlepoint shoes with no socks...so maybe he's right!
Vintage Easter Postcards . . .
This one is my favorite! Which is yours?
My mother used to make new outfits for me (and my brother) until I got old enough to sew my own. After that I can remember being up late the night before putting the finishing touches on my creation and being somewhat sleepy in church on Easter Sunday. I was an expert seamstress from a young age and my clothes never looked homemade. I don't sew much now but I sometimes dream about it. Have a wonderful Good Friday and a great Easter (and Passover) weekend. The weather is supposed to be nice here. ♥Rosemary
flickr images
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Make time to pamper yourself today . . .
Tomorrow is Easter Sunday. Make time today for a little pampering to ensure that you'll be beautiful.
ImagesFriday, April 10, 2009
Beatrix Potter Easter Eggs + Video . . .
Hedgehog pincushion + Beatrix Potter | Perfect Day + Peter Rabbit BBC Videos
It was produced by the BBC and was called: The World of Peter Rabbit and Friends. One of my readers told me about it in a comment on one of my previous posts about Beatrix Potter. No, this is not a blog about Miss Potter...she just keeps coming up lately for some reason.
Anyway...this video is in two parts. Let me know if you like it.
The show's theme song 'Perfect Day' is also on YouTube. It is hauntingly beautiful and I recommend it highly. Here's hoping today is your perfect day!
You will enjoy the DVD boxed set The Beatrix Potter Collection based on the BBC Series
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Thursday, April 9, 2009
Porte-cochère ~ Architectural Word of the Day . . .
Even though a professional photographer was hired for this 19th century historic home listing, my photograph was chosen for the brochure.
Porte-cochère: (French) "porte," door + "cochère," carriage ~ A porch large enough for a carriage to pass through.
Porte"-co`chère" noun [ French: See Port (a gate), and Coach.]
(Architecture) A large doorway allowing vehicles to drive into or through a building. It is common to have the entrance door open upon the passage of the porte-cochère. Also, a porch over a driveway before an entrance door.
More spellings and definitions here.