Showing posts with label Gran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gran. Show all posts

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Button Envy

Like so many things...my button obsession collection started with my grandmother. While she mended the family's clothing I would sit at her feet, poking through the button box and listening to the hum of her treadle machine. I would carefully match and thread buttons onto lengths of string and choose the buttons that would become eyes for the countless teddy bears she sewed.

When I was a teen, Gram presented me with a large tin filled with every kind of button imaginable. I was, pardon the pun, hooked. 

In the years since, I have amassed quite a collection of buttons, fasteners and clasps of all kinds. Enough to make Granny proud. Still...there are times when I find myself the victim of button envy.

For instance, when reading the blog of fellow button aficionados who refer to themselves as the 'Button Floosies'... And although not officially a member, I am certainly a button floosie at heart. Case in point:

 On Monday, an old friend stopped by to bring me these...
(left click for a closer look)


 Her mother was an antiques dealer and had these beauties in storage for years. The original prices are still visible on the cards from her shop.

 Of course they'll need a good cleaning...any recommendations would be very much appreciated.

 These rectangular glass beauties are some of my favorites. I wonder what they were used for?


There are glass, metal, shell, and even buttons made out of walnut halves.  Each button has a history. Each button once adorned a precious article of clothing.


Any assistance in identifying button types would be lovely.

These pastels are made of glass. They look like candies to me.


If you happen to be a collector...I'd love to talk buttons sometime. Maybe you can recommend your favorite website?


Just a few of the rhinestone pretties.


Wouldn't these medallions look lovely worn as a necklace?


Back in Black


Button sets.


I love these little brown glass buttons on the right, with the painted posies.



Should I tell you that this is a fraction of what she brought me? 

After she left, I had to take a nap from all the excitement.

This is one floosie who will never have button envy again.

Until next time...

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Tuesday Display Chain

Each Tuesday, Misi of Gable House Musings, chooses a theme and invites bloggers to play along with her 'Tuesday Display Chain' by featuring items from their collections. The theme this week is "Make-Do."

In my grandmother's day, when folks had a need, they'd look around to see how they might "make-do" with what they had. It was a common practice for people to pass down or patch clothing, fashion a needed tool, or share what they had with a neighbor.

I can't count the number of times I heard Gram recite the old saying, "Use it up, wear it it out, make it do, or do without."

As I was looking around our home, I realized that we "make-do" with a lot. Almost everything, has had a previous owner...or two. Rather than running around photographing every stick of furniture in the house, I thought I'd share a few favorites.

A litter of goofy sock cats, stuffed with rags.
 

 We've all made at least a couple of these pincushions, haven't we? Both of these started with candlestick bases.



 This old blue bench serves as a coffee table in front of our craigslist sofa.


A make-do apothecary, made from old crates and cheese boxes.


And speaking of my gram...she made literally hundreds of teddy bears over the years. These from my childhood, are my favorite "make-dos" ever. Their "fur" is made from cast off winter coats. I can remember Gram allowing me to cut the cardboard that lined their footpads. The large bear, was Papa of  "The Three Bears"...Baby Bear is wearing his second skin-because I wore the hair off his first. Momma Bear now lives with my cousin.


I still have Gram's original pattern...she made bears in three sizes.


I wonder how many of her bears have survived?


Baby Bear


I hope you've enjoyed today's Display Chain. Hop on over to Misi's blog to see the other fabulous contributors! Until next time...

Friday, October 1, 2010

Mercantile Gatherings Magazine Holiday Issue Giveaway!

Guess what's just arrived in my mailbox? That's right, my Mercantile Gatherings Magazines! I've been waiting rather impatiently for this issue as I am planning a special gift for my Mom based on the article I've written. It's a sort of tribute to my grandparents...remembered from stories Mom has told me over the years.


The ladies at Mercantile Gatherings do a splendid job on the magazine and I feel truly blessed to have the opportunity to write for their publication. This issue is filled with all the wonderful photos, patterns and stories you've come to expect...along with a few new features like recipes and tutorials. I think you'll love it as much as I do.


With the Holiday issue hot off the press, I thought I'd share the love with a little giveaway...

To be eligible to win YOUR copy of the magazine, you must be a follower of my blog, and leave me a comment on this post by Friday, October 8th, one week from today. I'll announce the winner here on Friday evening.

Until Next time...

PS. I've found a peanut doll!!! Shhhh....don't tell!

Monday, September 27, 2010

Pppp...pumpkin

Anyone who knows me well knows that I do not “do” pumpkin. While everyone else is exchanging their autumnal recipes, featuring the lovely orange squash, I am likely to be wrinkling up my nose to show my displeasure, unless we are talking about THIS recipe. This is a soft, nutty, wholesome cookie…and as my Granny always said “I only put good things it there.” So for those like me, who usually pass on pumpkin, might I suggest?



Pumpkin Oatmeal Raisin Cookies

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
In a large mixing bowl combine:
1 Cup Flour
1 Cup Brown Sugar
½ Cup White Sugar
½ Teaspoon Salt
½ Teaspoon Baking Soda

Blend together:
1 Cup Butter (Softened)
1 Cup Pumpkin Puree
1 Large Egg

Fold wet ingredients into dry ingredients.
Next, fold into batter:
3 Cups Old Fashioned Oats
1 Cup Dark Seedless Raisins
½ Cup Coconut
½ cup Pecan (chopped)
½ Cup Walnuts (chopped)
½ Cup Almonds (Slices)
½ Cup Roasted Sunflower Meats

Blend well. Drop by spoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheet and bake for 13-15 minutes at 375 degrees. Makes 3-5 dozen, depending on how large you make them.

Helpful Hints: I like to mix in the last ingredients in with my hands. Also I use Pampered Chef’s (1.25 diameter) melon ball scoop to give cookies a uniform size. This makes about 5 dozen smallish cookies. And lastly, I like these cookies best when they are nicely browned…it brings out the toasted flavors of the nuts. Enjoy!


Monday, February 1, 2010

Sweet Beulah Land

The photo in my header is of my mother. It was taken on her first day of school. Her sweet little dress was hand sewn by my grandmother. I always smile when I see this photo, because my mother confided to me that she was embarrassed because she was wearing homemade underwear beneath her dress.

Beulah Irene Gill was born and raised in central Illinois where she helped cook and serve meals to the hired men on her family farm. It was good practice for feeding her own large family during the lean years of the great depression. At Gran’s well attended funeral service there wasn’t a person there who hadn’t eaten a meal at her table. She was well known for serving hearty and delicious country fare. Gran taught me how to bake bread and cookies, preserve food and make homemade sour kraut, among other delicacies. As we cooked together, I can still remember her telling me, “I only put good things in there”. It showed.


My grandmother was my hero. She was an angel of mercy in her small community, providing meals, distributing clothing, and tending to the sick, while raising eight children of her own. Although Gran never finished high school, she was trained as a nurse. When the local doctor couldn’t come fast enough…neighbors called on Ma Dalton. She delivered over one hundred babies, losing only one. It still made her sad to talk about that “one” 40 years later.

Gran loved people and never spoke unkindly about anyone. She was saddened when folks didn’t do as they should and always said, “We’ll just pray for them”. She read to us from her bible, sang hymns and taught us how to fold our hands and pray.

Gran sewed on a treadle sewing machine for as long as I can remember. She made quilts and teddy bears for every baby born into the family…and everyone was family. When I was a girl I watched as row upon colorful row, her nimble fingers braided a room size rug, fashioned from her father’s old wool clothing. Nothing went to waste.

As a child, Gran’s house was my favorite place to visit. I recall hurrying up the stone lined path, the “smack” of the screen door, and then my own mother’s voice calling out “Mom?” Gran greeted us in an apron and a smile, always asking, “Are you hungry?” no matter what time of day it was. Then we were off to the garden to pick strawberries, or green beans…or maybe a bundle of daffodils.

In the winter, if there was snow, Gran bundled us up and took us sledding. She slipped plastic bread bags inside our boots and woolen socks over our hands to keep us warm and dry. In the springtime she led us through the woods and pointed out “Jack in the Pulpit, “Dutchman’s Britches” and “Snowdrops”. She taught us how to identify trees and songbirds.

It was at Gran’s house that I had my first taste of a Burger King “Whopper” and heard The Beatles singing on the radio (although she didn’t approve of their long hair). Gran pointed out “fairy rings” in the grass, taught us to make daisy chains and to dance the Charleston. She read to us from “The Tall Grass Zoo”.


The thing I remember most about my Gran was her love of children. She was always surrounded by them; from wiggling, squirming babies to teenagers…they naturally gravitated to her. She sat at the “kids table” at holidays, and always had a babe in arms. I recall the squeak of her wooden rocker as she soothed my oldest son. I am thankful that she got to hold each of my babies and pronounce them, in turn, “brilliant and beautiful”. Gran holding my youngest son is one of my last and best memories of her.

My Gran was kind, loving, smart, funny, creative, frugal, and industrious...and until the last, her gentle hands were never still.