Tuesday, March 10, 2015

NBC 1964-65 Souvenir Star Guide

1964 marked the height of my television addiction. I sent away for a STAR ALBUM about the new season. 100 pages of colorful, full page photos of NBC's big stars!

It must have been my favorite channel--Channel 4 out of Detroit--because I sure watched a lot of these shows. Like the Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color. (Only we didn't have a color tv yet...I would not get one until 1985.)

Some of my favorite shows included Bonanza 


 and The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

Mom watched Dr. Kildare and I always watched what Mom watched

 And my brother and I still enjoyed Mr. Magoo

 We watched Daniel Boone

And Flipper



 And even Hazel
I think Mom watched Mr. Novak


 And Tammy
 Mom stayed up late, but she watched old movies instead of Johnny Carson

 But I remember the  Huntley-Brinkley Report
I remember getting excited for Saturday Night at the Movies
 Then they added Wednesday Night at the Movies.
 Danny Thomas I knew from Make Room for Daddy
The News was big. NBC had 17 correspondents. 
Their programs included the Today show, the Huntley-Brinkley Report, the Morning Report, the Day Report, the Mid-Afternoon Report, the Afternoon Report, Meet the Press and Sunday. Now we have CNN and continual news 24-7.

What was your favorite NBC show this season? If you don't see it let me know and I can upload the photos!

Monday, March 9, 2015

My Flea Market Haul

On Sunday we went to the Royal Oak Flea Market--just because. After months of single digit and low 20 degree temperatures it is warming up and we feel like getting out again.

A lady was closing out her shop here and offered me a great deal on her entire stash of linens, handkerchiefs, gloves, napkins and tablecloths.
Souvenir handkerchiefs from San Francisco (nylon) and Winnipeg (hand painted silk)
Tatted edged hankies

a whole lot of gloves!
1970s towel

Bluebird embroidered table covers

 embroidered linen table cover

embroidered doilies

embroidered table cover and napkin set

napkins of all kinds! 

crochet work with "M"

embroidered His and Hers pillowcases with orchids

A sachet?

Table cloth

Tablecloth


Lacy things
The entire haul
NOW... what shall I do with it?

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Landscape Impacting Art: Art Quilts of the Midwest

On the historical timeline Art Quilts are relative newcomers. One could argue that the Crazy Quilt fad of the 19th c. produced quilts for show, not use, but the term as we employ it today refers to art studio quilts to be shown in exhibitions and collected by museums. They are designed with no functional use in mind. They are fabric based, usually several layers somehow tied together, but also can incorporate found materials, embellishments, and can be three-dimensional and asymmetrical. They are always the viewpoint of an artist, a statement, something encountered and experienced.

It may surprise some to know how important the Midwest is to the development of quilting and art quilts. Not to those of us from the Midwest! Consider:
And this just begins the list. In 2013 the Grand Rapids Art Prize went to quilt artist Ann Loveless for her Sleeping Bear Dune Lakeshore quilt. The American Quilt Society show at Grand Rapids has brought art quilts to West Michigan, as well as the traveling Mancusco Brothers World Quilt and Textile festival when it came to Lansing, MI. We Michiganders are very aware of the impact of environment on art quilts!

Art Quilts of the Midwest by Linzee Kull McCray looks at twenty quilt artists from the Midwest to explore how environment impacts their work. Our environment influences us in many ways, from childhood memories and nostalgia to our values and customs. The Midwest is primarily rural, endures seasonal extremes, was settled by pioneers and immigrants used to thrift and the necessity of hard labor. It also incorporates diverse ecosystems, from the Great Lakes with its beaches and great inland seas, its deep woods, to the vast open prairies and big skies.

McCray interviewed each quilt artist about influences and techniques behind their work. Each artist has a close up and page sized broad view of a quilt and a broad view of a second quilt. Artists included are:
As a quilter I don't view this as merely a coffee table book, but as a source of inspiration, a reminder that one's art is only limited by one's imagination. I want to try some of these techniques! No, there are not how-to instructions, you cannot recreate these works of art. Yet it is by studying the Masters that artists learn, and the same holds true for quilters.

I received the ebook through NetGalley in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Art Quilts of the Midwest
by Linzee Kull McCray
University of Iowa Press
ISBN: 9781609383237
$24.95
104 pages, 60 color photographs, 8x9 inches
Publication Date: March 15, 2015



Saturday, March 7, 2015

On Hearing Beethoven's Allegretto, First Heard 52 years Ago

"One of the happiest products of my poor talent." Ludwig von Beethoven

Last evening we attended a concert by the Royal Oak Symphony Orchestra, our local community orchestra. The concert included Beethoven's Symphony No. 7, in A Major, Op. 92. The moment the Allegretto began in the second movement I was transported back to over 50 years ago. I was about 10 when my elementary school class went to hear the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra play, and this was one of the pieces performed in the Young People's Concert.

I remember this so clearly because I had recognized the theme and told those around me I had learned the theme on the piano. I have always loved this music. I found a nice article about the Seventh Symphony at this NPR article.

I found the picture postcard of Kleinhans Music Hall in Buffalo, NY where I heard my first concert.

From their webpage, I learned that the Kleinhans Music Hall opened on October 12, 1940 with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra's first concert. The building was designed by Eliel and Eero Saarinen to resemble the body of a string instrument. Read more here. It is located on what was originally a park designed by Frederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux in 1868.

The history of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra shows the music director I would have seen was Josef Krips. We moved in June 1963, and I am sure my Fifth Grade class attended the concert.
Farewell letter from music director Krips
I also learned that since their inception in 1935 they held youth concerts with 1,200,000 students having attended!!!
1950 children going to Young Persons Concert at Kleinhans Music Hall
"All tumult, all yearning and storming of the heart, become here the blissful insolence of joy, which carries us away with bacchanalian power through the roomy space of nature, through all the streams and seas of life, shouting in glad self-consciousness as we sound throughout the universe the daring strains of this human sphere-dance. The Symphony is the Apotheosis of the Dance itself: it is Dance in its highest aspect, the loftiest deed of bodily motion, incorporated into an ideal mold of tone." Richard Wagner

Friday, March 6, 2015

From My Files

I have been tossing and organizing. I found my high school newspapers. I was in journalism and the newspaper staff for three years. 

A great fashion ad! 
But also in these old school newspapers were articles about the social issues that had become youth culture issues.

 In 1970 Earth Day came to school. I still have my Give Earth a Chance button!
Anti-war demonstrations took place across the country on October 15, 1969. Including in the Royal Oak, MI Memorial Park.
 A special edition of the paper came out after on April 22, 1968 about the assassination of
 Rev. Martin Luther King.

 I had not remembered the hiring of the school's first African American teachers in 1969.
And I sure didn't recall writing this article on student's reaction to including minority studies in the curriculum. (Note: I had an elective history class in Modern History that included reading about the creation of Unions and on Civil Rights. Rad.)
An article that totally threw me was in the March, 1970 issue: The KKK had visited KHS! The student reporters, one of whom was a good friend, reported that the head of the Michigan KKK (who admitted to being a bigot) was promoting Gov. George Wallace for president in 1972. He said the American Independent Party was for the "white, lower-income, middle class American".

I had not realized when I picked up these papers that I would be gaining insight into the social issues of my high school years.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

'New' Vintage Fabric

My new quilt friend Theresa brought in some vintage fabrics from one of her friends. We all took home something.

There were many 8" squares.






And some various scarps.

 Like this polished cotton.
 I got about a yard of this!It isn't new reproduction fabric. How old is it?

Friends at a Facebook antique quilt group had quilt a discussion about its age.

The print pattern has been around since the 19th c.; it is similar to fabrics common around 1910-9120, but was reproduced in the 1980s. If it were darker, with the dye having bled through to the back, it would indicate an Indigo dye. I knew it was not Indigo. Since it was cut along one side I don't know the original width, which would--perhaps-- have helped date it. It could be from the 1890s to the 1980s!



Wednesday, March 4, 2015

A 1911 Boy's Handkerchief, Polar Exploration, and Walrus Hunting

I love this handkerchief I bought from eBay many years ago. A card shows it was from Howard White, and a on a paper is written, "Howard from Uncle Eddie, Dec. 25, 1911."


In 1911 polar exploration was romantic and dangerous. Polar Explorers were the Astronauts of the 19th c. It was only two years before, in 1909 that Robert Peary reached the North Pole after years of failure.What child's imagination would not have thrilled to the portrayed polar walrus hunt, the men surrounded by icebergs?

Although the walrus on the handkerchief are Arctic animals it was the South Pole that was in the news in 1911. British Robert Falcon Scott was trudging across Antarctica in a race to the South Pole, arriving on January 17, 1912 only to discover that Norwegian Roald Amundsen had reached the pole first, on Dec. 14, 1911. Only 11 days before Eddie was given this handkerchief.

Scott never made it back. As a girl I read and reread about Scott's expedition in dad's book The Great White South by Herbert Ponting. He was my ultimate tragic hero.