Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Friday Ramblings

September 6, 2019 at 10:32 am by Claudia

Friday, already! The school bus is back to being a daily occurrence, a particular sound on my radar. Students here have just about finished their first week in school. This morning on our walk (and boy did I not  want to go on that walk) it was cold! It’s all relative, of course, but in early September morning temps in the fifties seem quite, shall we say, brisk!

I’ve had too little sleep for two days in a row, so it took every ounce of effort for me to chug along on our walk, but I’m glad I did it. Back inside, I made our second cup of coffee and we sat on the sofa for our morning chat.

Black walnuts, which are abundant on our property.

I finished Shakespeare and Company Paris. It’s a fascinating history of that historic bookshop and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Then I pulled out Grief is the Thing with Feathers  by Max Porter.

Max Porter is a British writer and this novel is unlike anything I’ve ever read. The use of language, the upending of the usual style of a novel, the subject matter – all of it makes for a compelling read. It’s short – 117 pages – which is why I finished it this morning and most likely won’t post it under “Currently Reading” on my sidebar. So I’ve posted it here for you.

Porter is really quite brilliant. And the ending is beautiful. I have his newest, Lanny, on my TBR pile here in the den.

And now I am faced with choosing another book to read within 12 hours of having to choose the last one!

I cleaned the dollhouse yesterday – by dollhouse, I mean the big one in the den. That usually means straightening up things that have become messy, reattaching things that have fallen off the wall, and ‘dusting’ with a small paintbrush.

I don’t know if you’ve been following on Instagram but I posted a couple of ‘series’ about the similarity between Caroline and me in Stories. The second one  is still up there. The first is in my Highlights section under Miniatures. They were a lot of fun to do.

Incidentally, you’ll rarely, and I mean rarely, find me facing my iPhone camera and talking incessantly on Stories. I only did it once and it had to do with children being kept in cages at the Border. There seems to have been a memo sent out to young (and not-so-young) IGers that their audience wants to hear from them face-to-face as it were, sharing every single thing about their day with us. I know that a lot of people love these chats, but I just see them as extended selfies. Some people do it only occasionally. But others? On and on and on until I routinely skip over them. Or, depending on my mood, unfollow. (This is only my opinion, of course.)

I know it’s generational and also my own aversion to constantly posting pictures of myself. Who wants to see that all of the time? I sure as heck don’t. Most of my posts are centered on the garden or the house or something I’ve seen on the road, or books I’ve read. An occasional picture of Don or me.

But this is the selfie generation and it sort of drives me nuts. One of the most troublesome examples of selfie-mania was something we observed in the Louvre. All these young people waited in line to see the Mona Lisa and when they finally got up to the front, what did they do? Took a picture of themselves with the Mona Lisa behind them. They didn’t stop and look at the painting. They immediately took the selfie and then moved on.

“Let’s see, a picture of the Mona Lisa itself because, how cool, I got to see the exquisite Mona Lisa in person, or a picture of ME in primary focus with the Mona Lisa a bit blurry in the background?” It takes a lot of chutzpah to opt for the latter.

Oh well. It is what it is. My parents raised me not to talk about religion (it’s private), politics (I obviously failed that one), or to make every conversation about yourself. These things were verboten in our household. Humility was Shirley’s mantra. That, and saying please, thank you, and being respectful to your elders.

Not a bad way to be raised.

Happy Friday.

Filed Under: books, dollhouse, miniatures 30 Comments

Rescues (And Birds at the Birdbath)

July 31, 2019 at 9:51 am by Claudia

Vicki asked if I would share a photo of the antique dollhouse. Here it is. This was taken the day I found it in a local antique shop – December 21st of last year. I dressed it up for the holidays. There you go, Vicki!

And a side view. The shutters open and close. What a labor of love this was. I wonder if it was made for a child or simply for the satisfaction of constructing a miniature? What’s the back story on the house itself? I knew it was a steal when I bought it for $75 on sale, but I also couldn’t bear the thought that this heavy, well-made, one-of-a-kind house was sitting in a booth with a big ‘mark down’ sign, abandoned and alone.

I tend to do that with certain things. I endow them with human qualities. That dollhouse was immediately ‘sad and lonely’ and needed to be adopted. By me.

I did the same thing with this little beauty.

I saw her in an antique shop several years ago. She was sitting on a child’s rocking chair in a booth. Each time I went back to the shop over the course of several months, she was still there. She was wearing a beautifully handmade dress with lovely shoes and a bonnet. She was a little worse for the wear, but that made her even more lovely.

Someone had loved this baby doll.

We had next to no money on hand at the time and I was getting ready to go to San Diego to coach for 10 weeks. I think she was about $50 or maybe less, but, nonetheless, even that was too much. I couldn’t buy her.

Off I went to SD, but I couldn’t get her out of my mind. Finally, when I had received a few paychecks, I emailed the antique center, told them my story, tried my best to indicate what booth she was in and asked the big question: was she still there? The person on the other end said he knew exactly what doll I was referring to and yes, she was. I paid him right then and there. Then I asked if he could hold onto her until I returned home. Yes, he said. And that is how this little darling came to live in our cottage.

My beautiful doll with two left legs is also a rescue. More on her another day.

Two Finches Taking A Bath:

They were at the birdbath again yesterday. It’s been very hot. I’ve seen bees drinking the water, birds, hornets – you name it.

Finally, Happy Birthday to my beloved mom. She would have been 92 today.

Happy Wednesday.

Filed Under: antiques, birds, dollhouse, dolls 43 Comments

Playing House

July 30, 2019 at 9:46 am by Claudia

I’d been thinking about doing something with the antique dollhouse for about a week. Yesterday, I pulled it down from its perch on top of the china cabinet in the den and moved it to the kitchen table.

I ran up and down the stairs several times, gathering up whatever I had on hand in my stash. That isn’t a whole lot, by the way, because 1) dollhouse furniture can be expensive and 2) I don’t have much storage space.

This little lovingly handmade house has one big room and two tiny rooms. Getting to one of the rooms is almost impossible (but I’ll do it at some point). All the interior walls are made of dark wood. So, it can get really dark in there.

I had an idea to find something I could use as wallpaper on the living room wall that faces me when I look inside the house. But I would only attach it temporarily, as I have qualms about doing anything permanent to the walls. It is, after all, a piece of folk art as well.

Here’s what I came up with:

I purchased the chair and the sofa a while back. The vase was in my stash. Barbara gave me the console table. She might have given me the rugs, as well, but I’m not sure about that.

The wallpaper was a duplicate of some I have on hand for a future project. I forgot I had it in my stash, so that was a wonderful surprise!

The pitcher was a gift from Barbara and the painting was something I received in a swap.

I look forward to getting books for the shelves as well as tchotchkes.

The hooks were in Hummingbird Cottage but they kept falling off the wall. I decided to use them here.

See that room to the left? The only way to get in there is via the doorway and a door that opens into the room from the other even smaller room. I’m planning on that being the bedroom, so I’ll have to find a bed that I can maneuver into the room from the doorway. Yikes.

That other, really tiny room will be a kitchenette. It’s almost all doors and windows, so again – yikes. There’s no room for a bathroom.

My take on this little antique house is that it’s a family getaway – a cottage or a cabin – that’s been in that family for years. Rustic elegance. Smallish kitchen, just enough to refrigerate a few items and/or boil some water. One bedroom. (Maybe the bathroom is in some unseen outbuilding?)

It was awfully fun playing house and I look forward to adding more.

(The server that this blog is on is a wee bit slow this morning – at least for me. If it’s slow for you, hang in there. It will be fixed.)

Happy Tuesday.

 

 

Filed Under: antiques, dollhouse, miniatures, vintage 36 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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