Monday, December 31, 2012

A myriad of outfits!

Hi and a very happy new year to you!! I shall be off to Allendale for the barrel-burning for midnight after a nice supper in Haltwhistle!
I've seen lots of bloggers do these kind of - here are my favourite outfits of the year and thought- hey , why don't I go and have a look at what I liked!  I discovered I hate anything I wore trousers in (and strange top/cardie combos!! Anyway, it'd be funny to hear what you think about these (I ignored quite a few that I disliked but I am quite sure that there will be stacks that you think, "WHY?".  C'est la vie!)

January

I adore this cat t-shirt!  Strangely it only appears to be me!


Oh, trousers!

Alas, fair hat, we are now parted!

February



March

It's mostly to do with the floral crown!

I just liked the hat and shorts combo!





April:  apparently I liked lots of what I wore in April!









May





June




July



August



September




October



November

December

Cat jumper


If you've done one of these, let me know, I love looking at them!

Happy New Year my lovelies!xxx

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Read it, loved it!

Hello there,  greetings from a quiet Northumbrian living room.  CBC is transcribing music, J is snoozing, WOMOTM is reading a book about maths equations and I am flitting I haven't done a book post for such a long time!  I kept meaning to write down what I'd read and it gradually got too long a list and I am quite sure there are an absolute wealth of books that I've forgotten about.  As I draw near the end of the year, I a pleased to discover I have read more than one a week, including a couple of weighty tomes!

I've read a couple of books recently that I have found rather brilliant and gripping!
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48.Claude Izner Murder on the Eiffel Tower
49.Clause Izner The Montmatre Investigation

A Poirot-esque mystery set in 1889 Paris, during the Great Universal Exposition, but a bit more risque than Christie!  Our hero and detective is a Victor Legris who is a bookseller.  Romantic interest is provided in suspicious artist, Tasha.   He has his only family mysteries and background that are integral to the plot.  His colleague and practically Father, Kenji seems implicated as Victor dashes all over the city.  The author provides some nice colour and description of the time and setting but not too much to be at all obstrusive to the plot.  The second book was also interesting visiting another spot we tourists know- the Moulin Rouge! These are worth a read.  Sorry, not really a review, I can't seem to say anything interesting, I just wanted to put them down on the list as an interesting possible read for any of you!
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50.  Carola Dunn Die lauging
 Once again, Daisy stumbles on a crime- she's lovable and really wants the best for people,s o she always, to the chagrin of Scotland Yard, manages to get in on the detecting action!  Great fun as usual and hurrah, true to form, I guessed who the murderer was!!!
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51.  Carola Dunn Damsel in Distress
It's always distressing when you lose a book when you're just about to reach the denouement- so irritating- have no idea where this disappeared to- it was good though!  This definitely had a real Enid Blyton feel to this- namely, Five fall into adventure- with a kidnapping, searching in a forest for the victim, sub-plots and treachery- great, but I'd love to know how it ends.


An old work colleague used to go on and on about the Chalet school series, she adored them and was always trying to collect first editions of them.  I always remember seeing them in my local library but sadly, did not read them when there was a wealth of them available- alas, why did I not realise they are exactly like Malory Towers and St Claire's, only better!!!  I was lucky enough to find these three books in a charity shop and consumed them instantly!!!
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52.  Peggy of the Chalet School
In this book, the Chalet school has moved to St Briavel's and Peggy is head-girl. It has the usual school story formula of disgruntled pupil who must be reformed- great fun and an enjoyable read.  If you love Enid Blyton, you'll love this!
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53. Jo Returns to the Chalet School
The heroine in this book totally reminds me of Darerel from the Malory Towers series, she's fun and intelligent and cares passionately about her school- I loved reading the setting of this bok out in Austria- you get a real sense of coldness of the setting, I found myself really drawn into this story!
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54. The Rivals of the Chalet School
 I love a good bit of school rivalry!  This book was as good as the other 3, except there was a rather dramatic amount of adventure in here with cracking ice and desperate escapes across snowy mountain passes!  Well worth a read!
55. C.S. Lewis Voyage to Venus
 If you read my review below of Out of the silent planet you will know about book 1 in C.S. Lewis's Sci-fi trilogy of books.  When I first read them, I always preferred the first book.  However, on the second reading, I find I enjoyed Voyage to Venus or Perelandra much more.  It tells the tale of Dr Ransom, hero of the first book who is called to travel to Venus to witness the beginning of life on that planet and to help keep the influence of the evil Eldil Oyarsa of Thulcandra (our planet) from corrupting a new Eve.  The story once again has absolutely wonderful description, I long, oh how I long, to experience the floating islands of Perelandra- islands that ripple with the waves they flow over, delicious gourd fruits and bubble trees that burst and refresh you like you've had a shower of fragrant morning dew.  I found the dialogue between the corrupted Weston and Ransom to be really interesting and thought-provoking and found myself once again, very anxious to find out the result of it- what would Eve do- surprisingly, I'd forgotten a lot of this story!  A reallly lovely read!

Here are my reviews for the three Blogging good read books in case you missed them!

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45.  Markus Zusak The Book thief
The Book Thief for me was an utter joy to read: in a bittersweet way. It tells the tale of a young girl, Liesl Meminger who is fostered by a family in Molching, Nazi Germany in 1939, after her Mother cannot afford to keep her (and though we don’t learn of her fate, we suspect she gives her up partially because the Nazis have something against her and she ends up dead, ‘off-stage’ as it were) and how the power of words in a book ultimately saves and nurtures her life.


I consider a good sign that a book evokes strong emotions in me, one that engages your emotions and makes you care about the fate of the characters deeply. I confess to crying several times reading this book (3 times embarrassingly in a single Tube journey!) - I fretted over the ending of this book before I reached it, I was that drawn into the story and I cared about each and every character deeply! The story constantly kept up the sense of suspense as to their fate. The Narrator as Death was clever and he was a witty raconteur. A really special part of the book is the relationship development between Liesl and the various characters she meets, her foster father, her best friend Rudy, a hidden Jew, the latter particularly beautifully develops. The stories within the story (the books which are thieved!) are rather poignant too.

The description and vocabulary was something striking for me about this book, the imagery used- it was clever, witty and highly original- phrases like bullet-proof eyes, and the shop was white and cold and bloodless (p51) had me laughing in delight at the originality as did the creative and unusual verb choices. The story was just the right length- despite its 580 pages, the pace was constantly moving and there was always something to learn or something happening. Honestly, I know I say this about most books I read, but you really have to read this - it is utterly beautiful and though a multitude of tales exist written about this era, this really is something Other with that capital O! There is nothing I can say that I did not like about it apart from the fact I wish things ended differently for certain characters!
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46. A Tale of Time City by Diana Wynne Jones

Interestingly, when I started this, I noticed that all 3 books we read were written or set in 1938-9! On the whole I liked this book. It had a great Dr Who-esque sense of adventure in the quest to find who was causing Time City to become Unstable and unhinged from time with interesting and creative ideas of what might happen in future Earth history and the type of technological advancements.

The plot took a while to get going, there were moments of hiatus where we had some more description of Time City (or at least that was my impression) and then it got moving again. I wanted it to keep up the pace! I liked the main character Vivian although I find the two leading boys rather annoying. It had an Enid Blytonesque element, which seems ubiquitous to most children’s stories, with lots of talk of food which I found strangely annoying, unusual for me. I usually love a bit of food description!

The ending was a bit abrupt, confused and unresolved- I wasn’t quite sure exactly what was happening to Vivian - and the final denouement was a bit of a let-down: I thought, “Oh is that it?” I may have raised some negative points but on the whole though, I enjoyed this tale- I always enjoy a quest and I would certainly recommend this to some of my kids at school to read (I think I’ll donate my copy of this to the school library) because I think it has all the ingredients that boys and girls alike would alike.

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47.  Out of the Silent Planet by C.S Lewis

I think it is an extraordinary book that more people should know about. I first read it about 6 years ago, (not read it since), and I don’t know anyone personally who has read it, so I really wanted to hear what other people think of it! For me, I was most excited at views of what space, planets, space-ships and extra-terrestial life-forms in an author pre-space travel, pre-Moon landing! This was the first book I had read in which the author has not been saturated by a myriad of different films, TV programmes and books with their images and thoughts of alien-life, so it was refreshing and beautiful. I adored hearing about a spherical space ship with its own centre of gravity and the strange landscape and life-forms on the beautiful planet of Malacandra. C.S. Lewis has a beautiful method of description and the second book in this trilogy has the same delightfully original description. I like the subtle allegorical message involved- it’s not too in your face!

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Faith, hope and charity swap

Hello there!  I recently took part in another blog-swap organised by the fabulous Lakota of Faith, Hope and Charity shopping and I was really excited to be teamed with the fabulous Clare of Miss Simmond Says!

I was so excited and happy to find a rather soggy parcel put behind my plant-plot outside my door (thanks postman- 0 out of 10 for common sense in the wettest December in memory!)

Upon opening I was greeted by a set of imaculately wrapped parcels in Nativity paper and raffia ribbon!

Here they are: 

Faith hope charity christmas 2012 2
Faith, hope charity christmas 2012 1


How beautiful and generous Clare was (she managed to find things that suited me so well and miraculous within Lakota's set budget!)
A lovely handmade card sent a message from Clare followed by one of my favourite items- a gorgeous beret! I had been thinking for ages, how much I'd like a mustard coloured beret as a hat would be a way for me to wear yellow without my usual fear of it, and how fab I received one as a gift- it also came embellised with a home-made badge by Clare!
 2 cute exercise books which I can't wait to use, a fun green crayon necklace (I love quirky jewellery!) and some pretty green bead earrings and a Ladybird Little Lord Jesus book!
One of the gifts had to be handmade and Clare had me a beautiful felt and button velvet holly headband which she made especially for me!  I of course, wore it for the last day of school for the Carol service, teamed with a green and red outfit!

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Thank you so so much Clare for an absolutely perfect and thoughtful parcel! If you don't know Clare's blog already, why not?  Get thee thence to her blog to say Hi!


I also wore that fabulous wool beret on the penultimate day of school teamed with Orla Keily top and my new gingerbread brooch from Jille!

Beret

Here's what I sent to Clare (plus some 18th century repro fortune-telling cards which I thought she might make into something!).  I made the Hello-Kitty earrings which may look simple but caused me unbelieveable hassle (like with Jille's earrings) with the eyes and whiskers that would not stay on- in the end I used stained-glass paint outliner which did the trick! Acrylic paint (blue) is supposed to stay put but oh no, this batch decided that vintage pearl buttons are too shabby for them to stay put!
FHC swap- what I sent

Hope you are well and happy!  Have you done any swaps recently?  Do leave a link in the box-I love having a nosy!
xx

Friday, December 28, 2012

Waffles for breakfast

Hello there! I hope you had a lovely Christmas.  I had a lovely time at my Dad's home together with CBC, my step-mum, her parents and little sister!

Christmas family

We had a jolly time which included copious amounts of food, some rather beautiful presents, a lovely midnight trip in the rain to the tiny Norman church in the middle of the woods for the midnight service, which was lovely,  lots of chat, 2 rounds from the Christmas Quiz and a rather a long and heated game of Blockbusters on KS3 national curriculum subjects!

My weekend before that had been rather lovely.  On the Saturday morning, CBC and I went over to my Mum's for a Christmas celebration with her and her husband- we had a lovely dinner and shared presents and laughs.  Mummy bought me some lovely handmade daisy soaps, handcrafted bag, Neal's yard syrups and teas and other lovely items!  I was really pleased she liked her Portmerion large porcelain biscuit barrel which I found in a charity shop (and she was all the more pleased when I told her that!), squirrel blouse that would make her a worthy entry in Char's #wardrobe zoo and other goodies.
We didd some shoppong and returned to CBC's where we shared pressies with his flatmate who gave me the most wonderful frilly white umbrella!

Sunday morning, after the aforementioned delayed train-journey in my previous post, I arrived a little late for church but in enough time to don a vintage white and gold kaftan my Mum gave me for Christmas some years ago for my starring role as one of the Wise-men (the one with myrrh)  for the chiurch nativity.  My fellow wisemen were very 'lively' to say the least!!
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I had the most wonderful surprise Christmas present at the service, because a dear friend who moved back to South Africa 3.5 years ago, came to visit us! It was so nice to catch up- twas like she'd never been away, except for the pair of us to get engaged!!  We went to a local cafe for bacon sarnies after the service!
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In the evening, after a rehearsal, we had our Carols by Candlelight service at church.  I was so pleased that CBC and my Mum came along too.  It was a really beautiful service and my voice was there in fullness for the first time in a long time, so my voice could soar in the rafters, especially for the rousing descants! The choir made a truly beautiful sound that evening, it was a privilege to be part of.
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After the service, CBC and I drove my Mum back home.  We indulged in a childhood favourite of counting Christmas decorations and we even stopped to take pictures of this rather loud collection!  This area is renowned for its ostentation in lightage!!!

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CBC and I returned home to pack and eat every item in the fridge!!!! (seriously!!)

On Monday, after emptying my neighbour's dehumidifier (she has a leak from above!) we headed off to my Dad's loaded with pressies!!! Lots and lots of cheerful preparation of food and then heading off to the midnight service- I've never been there before, nor had my family, so it was a nice visit for all of us!
Christmas morning began with smoked salmon and scrambled eggs (my family have certain traditions in terms of food!) and then much food cooking with a lovely dinner after sharing presents which we were all pleased about!

I was rather spoiled with presents in abundance, most excitingly, CBC bought me a gorgeous turquoise fluffy lined down gilet from Fatface which will keep me toastily clad in my favourite colour, along with a gorgeous grey cashmere/silk sweater from beautiful Florence, vintage-inspired Florence boutique, Midinette (check out the link, there are gorgeous pics of the shop and their clothing), a jar of knickers from Whitestuff, a beautiful hand-marbelled notebook from Florence and amazingly, a beautiful Tiffany-lamp.  I have wanted one for soooooooooo long, I cannot say, so I was excited that CBC bought me one (particularly as he is not usually fond of them, thinks they're too dark!) .  I'll post some photos soon, but haven't taken any yet!


I received a wonderful purple down-filled Per Una coat from my Dad and Step-Mum which I really wanted along with lots of other gorgeous gifts including rainbow pasta (and yes rainbow, not just red, green and white!).

presents

My little sister (pictured wearing my CBC present of the gilet), very very impressively made ALL her Christmas presents as she has only got a Christmas job and didn't think she'd be able to afford anything (as if she needed to give us anything!).  She made me the presents above (I did take a piccie before my battery died!) - a beautiful handmade cushion, 3 beautiful button decorated magnet pegs, a set of coasters featuring her and I, a handmade and bound notebook and she also put together a selection of malteasers, chocolate buttons and pink smarties!  She made CBC the lovely pegs with shapes on and delicious truffles!

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CBC and I had a lovely walk down the valley around the countryside which was much needed fresh-air after being in all day on Christmas day!

Christmas dress

Finally, I thought I'd share my Christmas outfit- I wore a gorgeous Frank Usher vintage dress which I've had since September but not worn- it is a really heavy textured fabric with a big stiff underskirt that makes it stick out- I felt a cross between Alice in Wonderland and the Doctor's new assistant, Clara!!! Any idea on date anyone?

If you've made it through the end, through all my waffle- well done,go and have a cup of tea!  What've you been up to?  xx