Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Saturday, February 14, 2009

HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!

It seems like a very long time since I last blogged, when in reality, it's only been two weeks. . . .not so very long in the overall scheme of things.


BUT, Today is VALENTINE'S DAY! And what better day than this, to get back into my blogging groove and re-connect with my fellow bloggers?








It seems like I've been busy making Valentine cards for WEEKS (and I guess I have!), so it almost feels to me like Valentine's Day should have come and gone by now.

Maybe that kind of time disorientation is an "occupational hazard" of handmade card designers. There are times I'm so engrossed in making cards for specific holidays that before I know it, the holiday is nearly upon me, and I'm not ready for it.















Indeed, it was only yesterday that I realized that I didn't have a special Valentine card for my dear husband Lee, so I had to go out and buy one! (Again, it brings to mind the old saying, "The cobbler's children have no shoes.")

But at any rate, today, on VALENTINE'S DAY, I want to send a sincere wish to all of you out there in Blogger Land . . .my fellow bloggers, friends, readers, and craftspersons alike . . .for a very special day filled with love and laughter.

























Whether you are spending the day with your significant other, family members, friends, beloved pets or simply in your own company engaged in activities that you enjoy, I hope you have a lovely day!


Ciao!


Monday, December 22, 2008

A Christmas Tour of a Historic Mansion

When Lee and I went to my childhood home of Abilene, Kansas recently to visit my family over Thanksgiving, we took the opportunity to tour a local historic landmark, the Seelye Mansion.

From my childhood memories, I have only a vague recollection of the old Seelye Mansion. What I do recall in my mind's eye is a huge, rather gray and slightly run down looking house on one of the main streets, Buckeye, that runs north and south through Abilene.

Now, many years later, and thanks to a local entrepreneur, this wonderful Georgian styled mansion built in 1905 has been restored to its original beauty, and is now open for tours all throughout the year. You can read more about the Seelye Mansion here.

Lee and I make a trip back to Kansas twice a year, usually in the Spring and in the Fall. Our trips are typically by car, so we try to schdule our road trips from Salt Lake City to Abilene, KS (1,000 miles one way!) when the weather and road conditions are fairly good. Hence, we don't usually travel home during the winter.

This year, however, we'd decided to make a trip to see my family over Thanksgiving, so we flew.

And since we were there later in the year than usual, we were lucky enough to be in town when the Seelye Mansion opened their first round of annual Christmas tours, right after Thanksgiving.

The mansion was all decked out for Christmas, with red bows and wreaths on the front porch, and Christmas decorations and lights scattered throughout the inside of the home.






I wish now that I had taken photos of EVERY room inside this house . . . it truly is amazing.


Lee and I, my sister and our niece took the tour, and it was such fun to see this lovely and unique home in all its splendor, restored so beautifully.

But, despite the fact that I don't have photos of the entire inside of the house, I think you can get a feeling for its ambience!




Here's the main foyer of the mansion, looking from the inside out toward the front yard.



This is the "library" off to the right of the foyer as you enter the house.



To the left of the front entry, here's what I would call the "music room".





This lovely tiled fireplace is in the large central foyer/parlour/sitting room of the home.


The inside of the mansion was decorated with poinsettias and Christmas trees in just about every room


AND, there were also literally HUNDREDS of decorative nutcrackers placed all throughout the mansion, also in honor of Christmas.

(We were told by the woman conducting the tour that this vast collection of nutcrackers was donated a few years ago by a woman who originally discovered the Seelye Mansion while traveling through Kansas with a motorcycle group.)



Here is the main staircase leading from the central foyer upstairs toward the second floor bedrooms and the main "ballroom".



This is one of the three or four antique Victrolas (record players) throughout the house.




Here is one of the second floor hallways leading to a bedroom





Here's are a couple of photos of one of the second floor bedrooms on the front side of the house.



I lost track of how many bedrooms there were . . . but there were LOTS!

I do remember that there were also several bedrooms and a small bath toward the back of the house, for "maid" quarters!)



Back on the main floor again, this photo is looking in at the dining room from the central foyer.




This is at the far end of the dining room, showing a curved wooden stairwell, leading down to the lower level to . . . . . .you'll never guess . . . . .the "bowling alley"!



And yes, HERE is the "bowling alley", located just below the dining room. No doubt, this was quite the novelty in Abilene, Kansas, in its day!


Off to the right is the "storm shelter", a definite necessity in the Midwest!




Here's my dear sis, posing for me in yet another curved wooden staircase going from the back of the basement (where a laundry area, food storage, and safety vault were located) up into the kitchen area of the mansion.




And here's a photo taken in the kitchen, located along the back of the house.




No, this photo isn't sideways! This shot was taken near the kitchen area and inside back door, looking up at the various staircase levels.




As I look at the Seelye Mansion today, right here in the middle of my home town, I find it hard to believe that I hardly noticed it in my growing up years.

But then I guess it's not SO unusual that, in our youth, we don't always notice (or perhaps we take for granted?) much of the uniqueness and beauty of our surroundings.
Who knows, maybe we're just too "busy" with the task of growing up!

In any case, I wanted to share these few photos of my newly "discovered" home town treasure with you, and hope that you enjoy them at least ALMOST as much as I enjoyed taking them!

Until we meet again . . . . .may you never lose your sense of new discovery.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Well, that's an overview of my family and me......

I hope that you'll check back every now and then and take a little time to get acquainted.

In future posts, I hope to focus a bit more on my cardmaking and paper crafts, as well as to highlight the work of other cardmaking artists, photographers, and craftpersons.

And of course, I ALWAYS encourage and welcome comments and active participation from anyone who happens to read my Blog!


And this is my dear husband, Lee, who shares my love of nature, animals (especially greyhounds), music, and the arts. Although a land surveyor by trade, his first love (or second, if you count me!) is photography. Please check out his Blog and his Etsy Shop under Some of My Favorite Blogs , and under Some of My Favorite Links.

Lee and I will be celebrating our 24th wedding anniversary in a few months.

A Little About Me . . . . .

My husband and I are the proud owners of two ex-racing greyhounds, Harley and Ride. This is Harley, in his "Snoopy" pose at the top of our stairs. Harley is four years old (still a "puppy" really), weighs in at 90 lbs, and is full of energy and affection.










And this is Ride (racing name: Emotional Ride).....her name is fitting for two reasons......even at age 12, she's VERY "emotional" AND she loves to "ride" in the car! This brindle beauty weighs a mere 70 lbs.

Ride is pictured here with her favorite soft squeaky toy, a giant spider.