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Confession: I Don’t Decorate for the Seasons

September 16, 2013 at 9:48 am by Claudia

Before I get to the heart of this post, let’s talk about this clipboard. I was asked by Hometalk to create a clipboard entitled Quaint Quilt Ideas. Since I love all things quilting and quilts, I was thrilled to do it. I searched through all the posts on Hometalk and put together a clipboard that I think you will like. Here it is. Click on it and you will be taken to the actual clipboard and the posts that I’ve highlighted. Thanks for the opportunity, Hometalk!

quaint quilt ideas

And now, on to my confession:

scootie

As leaves begin to fall and the air gets a little cooler outside, I am reminded that Autumn is around the corner. And it’s time to admit something.

I don’t do seasonal decorating.

There, I’ve said it. And it might appear to be a form of blasphemy in our blogging world, which is currently full of pretty fall vignettes and wreaths and mantels. I love looking at them. Though I admire and applaud everyone who takes the time to do those things, it is simply not for me. Why? I’ve thought about it and here’s what I’ve come up with.

I live in a part of the country that has four distinct seasons. I live in the country. All I have to do is look out my windows to see Mother Nature’s seasonal decorating which, frankly, tops anything I could create. I bow to her and freely admit that she is simply the best. I’d much rather look at the real deal. So I let her do her thing and I watch and marvel and take pictures. That seems to be a fair trade.

I don’t think I did this even when we lived in San Diego, which does not have four distinct seasons. I suspect I might consider decorating for the seasons if I lived in San Diego or, say, Florida. But probably not.

I don’t have the patience or desire to create vignettes or seasonally themed wreaths or mantels. I don’t even have a mantel. This desire is clearly missing from my genetic makeup. It’s the reason that I could never be an elementary school teacher. If I had to constantly dream up new bulletin boards all the time, I’d be in trouble. My eyes glaze over at even the thought of it. My dear friend Jackie has been an elementary school teacher for years. She is the epitome of patience. She creates all sorts of bulletin boards for her students. She is all things I am not. My hat is off to her.

I can’t do it.

I also suspect that parents with children are more apt to decorate for the seasons. I might be wrong. My mother never did anything of the kind, but I can see that it would be fun and stimulating for kids. I don’t have children. And Scoutie doesn’t care about any of it. She told me so.

I have no storage space. Even if I wanted to decorate seasonally, I don’t have the extra room to store all this stuff. Nor do I want to spend money on something I have to throw away.

Oh, I’ll bring some branches of forsythia into the house in the spring. I’ll collect feathers and pine cones and acorns. But I do that because I want them with me in the cottage. I do it because I like them, not to create a vignette or a themed mantel. I may throw in a white mini pumpkin or two. And I’ll pull out the quilts and throws when winter comes around. But I have my quilts, with their delicious graphic beauty, around me all year round. And, of course, I decorate for Christmas – but no themes there, either. Just well-loved ornaments and decorations that we use every year.

There you have it. I’m owning up to the truth. “My name is Claudia. I’m a blogger who blogs about nesting, decorating, gardening, creating. And I don’t decorate for the seasons.”

Whew! That’s a relief.

Happy Monday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: decorating, quilting 98 Comments

Sigh of Relief

September 15, 2013 at 9:53 am by Claudia

First up, the good news. After sweating it out all afternoon here in CT waiting to hear from Don, I was on the receiving end of some great news. The Sugar Maple is fine. The arborist didn’t see any sign of disease.

treeisokay

Yay!

He suggested some pruning is in order on that tree, the Catalpa (which sustained a bit of damage from the falling maple limb) and another maple that grows near the dog corral. And we have to have the dead hickory taken down, which I was already planning to do. But, the tree doesn’t pose any threat to the house, which I also suspected was the case, since it leans away from the house.

I cannot tell you how happy we are. The arborist said the maple is between 120 and 150 years old. The house was built in 1891, which makes it 122 years old. I like to think that the people who built our cottage planted that tree. We feel very strongly that we are its current caretakers and that we are entrusted with its health and safety. So we will gladly have some pruning done – anything to keep our beloved maple thriving.

Don sent some iPhone photos of the Chicken Wire Fence Garden and the glorious morning glories. They’re a bit blurry, but that’s okay by me.

morningglories1

Don entitled this one “The gang’s all here.” How I wish I was there to see this! That’s a lot of blooms!

morningglories2

This one is “O Sole Mio” because the bloom in the foreground is off by itself. But do you notice who’s hanging out with her? There’s my one and only sunflower! Don didn’t even notice it until I pointed it out to him. Isn’t it beautiful?

Today I have to take notes at the matinee of Macbeth. Last night’s preview went very well. Then the Red Sox vs. Yankees, and the Emmys. I’ll be watching both at the same time. Edited to add: No I won’t. The Emmys aren’t until next week.

Happy Sunday.

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Filed Under: flowers, Mockingbird Hill Cottage, trees 62 Comments

Plays, Books & Baseball

September 14, 2013 at 9:31 am by Claudia

unfurlingzinnia2

A coolish Saturday, thank goodness. The weather broke yesterday and the apartment is a much more tolerable place to live. No, the A/C hasn’t been fixed yet, but someone did come by and a new compressor has been ordered. It’s a heat and A/C unit, so I, knowing nothing about these things, wonder if the compressor is needed for the heat as well? If so, I feel that all my nudging on getting this unit fixed will benefit the next occupant of the apartment, most likely someone in the cast of A Christmas Carol.

program

We’re officially into preview performances now. La Dispute has had two previews with audiences. Tonight, Macbeth begins previews. Previews are performances with an audience that occur before the official opening. I think that each of these plays will get a total of eight previews. While a play is in previews, rehearsals still go on in the afternoons – tweaking of the staging or the lighting or the sound happens, sometimes things are reblocked, actors get notes from the director and me and everything is finely tuned so that by the time the plays officially open, everything is about as perfect as it will ever be considering theater is a live, never-the-same-way-twice, medium.

The Red Sox are playing the Yankees this weekend, and somehow their schedule fits into mine. I caught the beginning of last night’s game and got home in time to see the last three innings. (We won.) Today’s game is in the afternoon. Perfect. Sunday’s game is at 8:00 and since there are two performances of Macbeth tomorrow, I will take notes on the matinee and will be able to see the game. The actors don’t need notes from me twice in one day, believe me. That would be annoying.

brutaltelling

I just finished A Rule Against Murder by Louise Penny. I’ve started the next book in the series, The Brutal Telling. I know I have written about these books before on this blog, but I am simply blown away by Penny’s writing. What makes her mysteries different, what sets them apart from many other books in this genre, is her examination of the human heart. The characters in the town of Three Pines are featured in some way or other in every book. They have flaws. Sometimes those flaws are exasperating. But Penny, with true compassion and understanding, takes us on a journey of discovery. She knows that we are all damaged in some way; she uncovers the fears and pain and petty jealousies that we all have deep within us, brings them to the light and by doing so, sets both the characters and us, the readers, free.

Penny slowly and patiently weaves her stories; with intricate plots, with some things revealed and others yet to be revealed in another book. Not only is there the arc of an individual book, but there is an overall arc in the series. She does this so skillfully that I feel like a resident of Three Pines, that little town in Quebec. I care for those characters. I get angry at them. And, because of her key protagonist, Inspector Gamache, I learn to see them with compassion. To stop judging. To understand.

When I finished the book yesterday, I had tears in my eyes. I learned more about myself. I vowed to be a better person.

That’s powerful writing, my friends.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Tagged With: Louise PennyFiled Under: books, On The Road, reading, red sox, theater 22 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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