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Under a Blue Moon

Decor, cooking, organization, all the pretty things

11.4.2010

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Today is a very special day ~ my dear friend Kelly (my benefactress) is having a birthday! 

Happy Birthday Kelly!  I hope all your birthday wishes come true!

I won't out her by telling her age but it is a good one.  As you know, Kelly has been quite generous to me.  I have stacks of beautiful linens, lovely plates and teacups, gorgeous pictures and so much more that she has given me over the years.  She is a champion estate and garage sale shopper and has a very discerning eye for discovering treasures. 

She also knows exactly the things I like (lots of white, silver and frothy handkerchiefs). 

But most of all she is a dear and caring friend.  We've known each other since we were 12 years old.  Here's to another (mumble) years of friendship!

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November 4, 2010 9:52 am Andrea Filed Under: Musings

11.3.2010

Tumblr_kvav05K7tb1qatctmo1_500 

Free People

About two or three Halloweens ago I ordered a top from Free People.  I am surely not their demographic – I don't think they have overweight, middle-aged women in mind when they are designing their collections each season.  I only bought the top because I needed a filmy, peasanty like top for my costume.  And it was on sale.  Yet they cheerfully send me a catalog every couple of months.

2010-11-02_drippingincrystal 

Ack!  What is that?  Is it a teeny chandelier, draped in jewels?  I think I need one hanging in my dressing room.  Just as soon as I get a dressing room….

The photography and styling is amazing.  I'm tempted to order some little trinket every year, just to ensure they keep sending me their catalog.  It's like a lovely story, told in beautiful images.

2010-11-02_boxoftreasures 

If you want to see more about the photographers you can glean some information from their blog:  http://blog.freepeople.com/

Or go to their website and order something so you receive a copy yourself. 

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November 3, 2010 12:01 am Andrea Filed Under: Musings

11.1.2010

031 copy 

It looks like we had an actual ghost at our Halloween Soiree. 

We were expecting rain so we did the food inside.  No great culinary genius here – the food is as scary as the costumes.  This is the one day of the year where we buy all the crappy hors d'ouvres Costco has to offer.  Tacquitos, jalapeno poppers, meatballs in bbq sauce, mini corndogs, hot wings.  We figure we've already eaten a metric ton of Halloween candy so why stop there. 

Steph copy 

Actually I take it back – my cousin Stephanie made a fabulous cake and cupcakes.  That was pretty genius.  She's adorable, isn't she?

By the time I took the group shot it was kind of late so a few of the revelers had already left.  

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I'm not sure how to explain my costume.  It was my homage to the magpie.  Every year there is someone that sheds feathers all over the house and this year it was me. 

Any excuse to incorporate a tiara into my look.

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November 1, 2010 5:00 am Andrea Filed Under: Food

Friday’s Favorites

I want to move into each photo 

Flickr Favorites

Fridays Favorites 

  • This company actually prepares picnic baskets for you (if you live in Australia.  Mostly I was just enchanted with how they packed the baskets.   I wonder if we can sneak in a picnic before the weather completely turns on us.
  • Design Sponge had a collage of beautiful door hardware.  I loved this doorbell (we really need to replace ours) and this door knocker.
  • Love these earrings from Tamar on Etsy. 
  • Loving the work of this artist.  Particularly the cookbook painting and the spools painting.
  • I ordered these beads from Sleeping Dog Studio.  I just loved all the shades of white and cream.  And it looks like she has more than one set…

Happy Friday Everyone!  Tomorrow is our Annual Halloween soiree.  I'll be sure to take lots of pictures!

October 29, 2010 5:00 am Andrea Filed Under: Favorites

10.27.2010

TimGunn 

Screencap from of Project Runway swiped from Project RunGay

Life is being a bit contentious at the moment.  I'll be taking a wee bit of a blogging break.  Posts may be sporadic for the next couple of weeks.

(I'm feeling the need for a bit of levity and I love this picture of Tim Gunn.  Not a big fan of the catfish, that Tim….)

 

October 27, 2010 5:00 am Andrea Filed Under: Musings

10.26.2010

Book Report Banner 
 

I thought a book report was long overdue. 

Now I have to make the disclaimer that I hardly ever "read" books anymore.  Since I am in the car for long periods of time I tend to listen to books (love me some audible.com) more than actually read them.  So some of my reviews will refer to the narrator as well as the story itself.

 

The-widowers-tale1 I am a fan of Julia Glass's other works (The Three Junes and The Whole World Over) and The Widower's Tale did not disappoint. 

Julia Glass's other books are similar in format; the point of view shifts from character to character.  Each is likable in his own way but I feel the pivotal character is the eponymous Percy – the widower. 

He is living in his big old house in Massachusetts with its barn and pond and memories of his wife who passed away 30 years prior. 

The story starts off with him allowing a pre-school to take over his barn – something he has allowed in order to give his daughter some focus in her life.  It turns out to be the catalyst for many changes in his own life. 

Julia Glass's gift is that she takes ordinary people, doing ordinary things and makes it interesting.  Each character has a unique point of view and each ties into the other.  

There are a number of different plot lines that develop on their own and then weave together in the end in a very plausible way.

The narrator did a fabulous job of keeping the characters distinct.  Pretty impressive when you have a 70 year old Boston librarian, a 20 year old Harvard pre-med student, a gay preschool teacher and an illegal Guatemalan immigrant gardener. 

 

Remarkable-creatures Tracy Chevalier is the master at taking real events and making them come alive with her fictional characters in her novels.  

Remarkable Creatures is the story the discovery of fossils on the beaches of South-West England and the effect it had on the world of science. 

The two main characters - female fossil hunters from very different backgrounds have the same challenge of overcoming male prejudice in 19th century England. 

I love an author that entertains me with a story and simultaineously educates me on a particular subject.  Tracy Chevalier not only paints the picture of the two main characters and their unlikely friendship but also conveys the excitement of this particular time in scientific discovery. 

One of the characters, Mary Anning, was an actual, real person.  She is listed as one of Britain's Royal Society top ten British women that influenced the world of science.  Her social class and the fact she was female kept her from being properly recognized, at the time, for her contributions. 

This book was narrated by two different readers.  Normally that distracts me but the two narraters did a good job of depicted the different social classes and personalities of the two characters.

 

Hissy Fit Saving the worst for last! 

I have enjoyed Mary Kay Andrews' other novels, in an escapist, chick-lit (ugh – hate that term) way.  Hissy Fit seemed like a throw-away to me.

I will admit that I listened the abridged version (unabridged wasn't available) and that may have influenced my opinion. 

I loved the story and overlapping characters in Savannah Blues and Savannah Breeze.  And I loved The Fixer Upper (love a story with a house as one of the main characters…).

Hissy fit follows the same formula but the characters are not as endearing or as interesting.

First of all they seem unreasonably dumb when it comes to their respective love lives.  They are supposed to be smart, successful people and yet are so stupid about the people they are attracted to. 

Secondly – the narration was grating in places.  The narrator has done a fine job on some of Mary Kay Andrews other books and she does okay with the main character but her nasally version of the main character's gay neighbor was just plain annoying. 

And finally – this may be an editing/abridgement issue – but certain characters and sub-plot lines would be introduced and then just sort of dropped or come to a quick resolution. 

Ms. Andrews must have a decorating or house restoration background because that is a reoccuring theme in her books.  And I do like that part of it (at least in her other novels).  This particular book is about a woman, jilted on the eve of her wedding and the big decorating job she takes on afterwards - with the predictable, accompanying love interest. 

I'd pass on this one.

October 26, 2010 5:00 am Andrea Filed Under: Books

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