Then there
are those items that really aren’t immediately usable…but which we would never
discard! This is a large glass framed
collage created by my mother…Elizabeth (Beth) Weed Myers Thomson. It was made with egg shells, ferns and an
assortment of flowers and leafs. It’s
held together pretty well for the last 40 – 45 years. We still don’t have a place for it.
Then
there’s this photograph of a castle in Scotland, on the isle of Mull to be
exact. This is Laurie’s family castle on
the McCormick (maternal) side of her family. The two people standing directly in front of
the tower are Laurie’s cousin Alan and his son Jeremy. We did find a space for this large photo in
our bedroom.
Moy
Castle stands on a low rock platform at the head of Loch Buie. It was built in the 15th Century
but was abandoned as a residence in 1752 in favor of a newer home, Lochbuie
House. No access to Moy Castle is
permitted due to crumbling masonry and a long term stabilization and renovation
project.
This
Grandma Moses style oil painting, depicting a family gathering walnuts, was
painted by Beth Thomson (my mother) at least 50 years ago. She created many paintings in this style as
well as a couple series of tiles and, late in her life, even greeting cards for
the nursing home she was living in. I
used to have to help her gather and de-husk walnuts for dyes she used for her
weavings… Working with walnuts was not my favorite job as husking them stains
everything!
This
metal sign was already hanging on the wall next to my side of the bed. It was forced to relocate by the ‘walnut
gathering’ painting shown above. Laurie
and I acquired this nice sign during a visit to the Magnolia Market at the
Silo’s in Waco Texas.
It reads,
“grow old with me…the best is yet to be”.
We also
came across an engraving of George Washington that we’d acquired many years ago
when we were still purchasing antiques and collectable objects. We looked around and decided that it would
sit nicely on this old Eastlake Desk in our foyer. The desk was originally given to my mother by
her sister, Jeane W. Austin, to furnish my mother’s new house.
Here’s a
close up of that George Washington engraving with his bust and surrounded by
critical points in the Revolutionary War.
We bought it from a print and frame shop in Chicago back in the
mid-1980s.
At the
time, the engraving was warranted as being over 100 years old and the frame was
actually dated as being from 1885. I
recognize one scene at the bottom left as being from Valley Forge. The picture at the lower right is either Burgoyne’s
surrender at Saratoga or Cornwallis’ surrender at Yorktown.
This is another oil painting by my mother, this time showing children playing in piles
of fall leaves. Stylistically, it is a
crossover from her primitive Grandma Moses period over to her impressionistic
period. We ended up hanging this
painting in our third bedroom.
This hand-colored
engraving is from Historie Naturelle’s Ornithologie, published in 1790. This is plate #180 and it was attributed to
Denis Diderot…a French philosopher, art critic and writer who is best known as
co-founder, chief editor and contributor to the Encyclopedie. I actually believe that the art work was by
Brenard Direxit.
I could
only identify one of the birds in the engraving. The red bird at the lower left is called the
musician or organ wren. It is named for
its elaborate song. It’s native to South
America, especially the Amazon rainforest.
I will tell you that when we bought it, this attractive engraved
illustration cost more than the frame.
However, now I could purchase another copy of it on the Internet for $65.00! This piece of art is now hanging our bonus
room/man cave.
When
Montgomery Ward went out of business in 2001, I rescued this old aerial
photograph of downtown Chicago from the trash.
All of the interconnected buildings along the Chicago River starting at
the far left to the break at Chicago Avenue and then on across the street to
far right…were part of this huge complex.
The 8-story building with the tower at the right side of Chicago Avenue
was the 600,000 sq. ft. Administration Building. It was completed in 1907. That huge building just to the left of the
Administration Building was the 2,000,000 sq. ft. Catalog Building. It was completed in 1908. I’m still holding on to this print…but don’t
have a place to display it right now.
While I
can’t specifically date the photo, I do know that the tower on the Administration Building
was completed in 1929. My best guess,
given the height of the buildings shown on the north shore area of downtown
Chicago would be that this photo was taken sometime in the early 1930s. The former catalog center is now home to restaurants, the Big Ten Network, Wrigley, Echo Global Logistics, a gym, a spa,
Groupon, Dyson Inc. and 296 luxury condominiums.
How about
a bit of screened-in porch décor? How
about celebrating and remembering fond memories from the past?
All of
these items have been added over the last couple of years, but our latest ‘find’
amongst our ‘stuff’ was the rendering of Laurie’s former city skyline, Maplewood
Missouri. Her former family home is in
Maplewood and that’s where she grew up.
The sign with the numbers above the porch sign provides the city’s zip
code. Heafford Junction Wisconsin is the
little town adjacent to the cabin on Deer Lake where her family spent
vacations every summer. We’ve
also stayed there since we’ve been together…
I’ll end
this post with two more great bird photos that Laurie captured! This hungry little female house finch did a
great job of stripping the seeds from the Thai basil plant in one of Laurie’s
several herb pots that she maintains on our deck.
Thai
basil is native to Southeast Asia. Its
flavor is generally described as anise and licorice-like and slightly
spicy. While widely used in Southeast
Asia, it plays an especially prominent role in Vietnamese cuisine. It’s also the cultivar most often used for
Asian cooking in Western kitchens.
That’s
all for now… Just click on any of the photos to enlarge them.
Thanks
for stopping by for a visit!
Stay Safe
and Take Care, Big Daddy Dave
We have some things like these that we just must keep as well but then our kids will likely just trash them.
ReplyDeleteah David we all have old stuff and some times Im surprised with some things I find (and still I dont go to my mom's apartment to try to order) but you have lovelies things here. hugs and take care.
ReplyDeleteI love this bird!
Thanks, Dave, for sharing some of your family treasures. We also have some wall hangings, but mainly photos we have taken and no art works like yours. I enjoyed the painting of children playing. Also the metal sign is something I would hang in our bedroom along with one already there, Love You to the Moon and Back.
ReplyDeleteLovely oil panting which "depicting a family gathering walnuts".... Great art work. You have so talented mother...
ReplyDeleteHave a wonderful day