Oh, how I wish I was still in England right now! I would love to be in London on the week of the 4th for the Master Paintings Week!
If you're in London that week, don't miss such an amazing opportunity to see paintings by Old Masters and others. I would love to see the Lucas Cranach the Elder at P&D Colnaghi & Co Ltd! In undergrad, I got an opportunity to write a research paper on Cranach. I'm glad that one of his paintings will be featured during Master Paintings Week!
Until next time ^___^
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Book treasures ^___^
Today I had a great many errands to run: mostly involving the post office and putting some things away in storage.

I had mailed out some fun things to a Canadian friend of mine from Royal Holloway. She decided to continue on to her PhD after her MA studies. She is far away in New Zealand finishing up a degree in Classics ;) I thought she might like some fun goodies to brighter up her day.
Since she was the person who got me interested in cross stitch while I was in England, I decided to get her a few embroidery kits along with some chocolate & peanut butter candy. When we were in England, we used to joke about the peanut butter there. It just wasn't the same as American peanut butter.
I also mailed out a package to my friend in CA. The Amitie pinkeep, pink biscornu, and pink floss tag with initials that I had stitched up earlier this year went out to my dear friend ;) Along with some romance novels, Twilight sweetheart candy, and a very long letter. I forgot to take a photo of the box I put everything in O_o" It was pretty....another find at Hobby Lobby for 50% off ;)
While I was out, I drove to The Book Nook in town. I found some amazing books!

Isn't the frontispiece beautiful?

Title: Cranford
Author: Mrs. Gaskell
Publisher: New York, Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.
Date: 1892

Close-up of frontispiece!
I found another one of my favorite author's books there as well....can you guess who?!?! ^___^ Why Anthony Hope of course!

Publisher: George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd.
Date: 1925
The Harrap company published ten pocket editions of Anthony Hope's titles.I wonder if I can find the other titles somewhere?!?!
The neatest collection I came across at The Book Nook were these books published by Little Leather Library in New York around 1916. This set of 28 volumes was $20. A steal for such an unusual set of books.

Titles in the set:
Fifty Best Poems of America
Fifty Best Poems of England
Poems and Plays by Robert Browning
The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Other Poems by Samuel Coleridge
Short Stories by Guy de Maupassant
Sherlock Holmes, A Case of Identity and Scandal in Bohemia by Arthur Conan Doyle
Essays by Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam by Fitzgerald - trans.
Bab Ballads by W. S. Gilbert
Man Without a Country by Edward Hale
Barrack Room Ballads by Rudyard Kipling
Speeches and Addresses by Abraham Lincoln
The Courtship of Miles Standish by Henry Longfellow
Lays of Ancient Rome by Thomas Macaulay
The Gold Bug by Edgar Allan Poe
Olive Dreams by Schreiber
Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
The Tempest by William Shakespeare
A Child's Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
Will O' the Mill and Markheim by Robert Louis Stevenson
Enoch Arden by Alfred Tennyson
The Coming of Arthur by Alfred Tennyson
Friendship and Other Essays by Henry Thoreau
Speeches and Letters by George Washington
Salome by Oscar Wilde
The Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde
Apparently, there were about a 100 titles available through Little Leather Library. I have a set of the Type II titles which have leather suede covers. Very neat! I've seen these every once in a while at antique shows.
I think my sister (a politics geek) will get a kick out of the Speeches & Letters volumes by Lincoln and Washington.
Until next time!! Happy book hunting to all my fellow lovers of musty old books ;)

I had mailed out some fun things to a Canadian friend of mine from Royal Holloway. She decided to continue on to her PhD after her MA studies. She is far away in New Zealand finishing up a degree in Classics ;) I thought she might like some fun goodies to brighter up her day.
Since she was the person who got me interested in cross stitch while I was in England, I decided to get her a few embroidery kits along with some chocolate & peanut butter candy. When we were in England, we used to joke about the peanut butter there. It just wasn't the same as American peanut butter.
I also mailed out a package to my friend in CA. The Amitie pinkeep, pink biscornu, and pink floss tag with initials that I had stitched up earlier this year went out to my dear friend ;) Along with some romance novels, Twilight sweetheart candy, and a very long letter. I forgot to take a photo of the box I put everything in O_o" It was pretty....another find at Hobby Lobby for 50% off ;)
While I was out, I drove to The Book Nook in town. I found some amazing books!

Isn't the frontispiece beautiful?

Title: Cranford
Author: Mrs. Gaskell
Publisher: New York, Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.
Date: 1892

Close-up of frontispiece!
I found another one of my favorite author's books there as well....can you guess who?!?! ^___^ Why Anthony Hope of course!

Publisher: George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd.
Date: 1925
The Harrap company published ten pocket editions of Anthony Hope's titles.I wonder if I can find the other titles somewhere?!?!
The neatest collection I came across at The Book Nook were these books published by Little Leather Library in New York around 1916. This set of 28 volumes was $20. A steal for such an unusual set of books.

Titles in the set:
Fifty Best Poems of America
Fifty Best Poems of England
Poems and Plays by Robert Browning
The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Other Poems by Samuel Coleridge
Short Stories by Guy de Maupassant
Sherlock Holmes, A Case of Identity and Scandal in Bohemia by Arthur Conan Doyle
Essays by Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam by Fitzgerald - trans.
Bab Ballads by W. S. Gilbert
Man Without a Country by Edward Hale
Barrack Room Ballads by Rudyard Kipling
Speeches and Addresses by Abraham Lincoln
The Courtship of Miles Standish by Henry Longfellow
Lays of Ancient Rome by Thomas Macaulay
The Gold Bug by Edgar Allan Poe
Olive Dreams by Schreiber
Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
The Tempest by William Shakespeare
A Child's Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
Will O' the Mill and Markheim by Robert Louis Stevenson
Enoch Arden by Alfred Tennyson
The Coming of Arthur by Alfred Tennyson
Friendship and Other Essays by Henry Thoreau
Speeches and Letters by George Washington
Salome by Oscar Wilde
The Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde
Apparently, there were about a 100 titles available through Little Leather Library. I have a set of the Type II titles which have leather suede covers. Very neat! I've seen these every once in a while at antique shows.
I think my sister (a politics geek) will get a kick out of the Speeches & Letters volumes by Lincoln and Washington.
Until next time!! Happy book hunting to all my fellow lovers of musty old books ;)
Monday, June 22, 2009
Wishing for Fall
Evident by the finish below, I'm in the mood for cooler weather, crunchy leaves under my feet, school supplies, and Halloween ;) Today, we reached 100 degrees with our heat index at 110. Yuck!

Design: Autumn Harvest by JBW Designs
Threads: Variegated DMC 90, 51, 4124 and The Gentle Art 'Harvest Moon'
Fabric: 25 ct Lugana Antique White
Finished: 6/18, 6/20-22/2009
LOL It doesn't help that our local craft stores have Fall merchandise out already. (sigh) Teasing us with expectations of cooler weather and all that comes with it.
Until next time!

Design: Autumn Harvest by JBW Designs
Threads: Variegated DMC 90, 51, 4124 and The Gentle Art 'Harvest Moon'
Fabric: 25 ct Lugana Antique White
Finished: 6/18, 6/20-22/2009
LOL It doesn't help that our local craft stores have Fall merchandise out already. (sigh) Teasing us with expectations of cooler weather and all that comes with it.
Until next time!
Happy Summer Solstice!

Bluebells at Royal Holloway, Egham, Surrey, England
A late post for the summer solstice! I hope everyone had a great Solstice yesterday, which actually coincided with Father's Day this year as well.
The heat has been unbearable for the last week or two with the heat index reaching 108 degrees. Very odd weather for June, usually it waits to knock us senseless with the heat until mid-July and into August.
LOL Definitely makes me wish for that field of bluebells and the cool afternoons in Egham right now!
Until next time!
Monday, June 15, 2009
Veggies
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Pinkeep and tin ;)
I got the chance to go by Hobby Lobby and pick up some supplies for my Amitie Bleu pinkeep finish yesterday and I put it together this morning! Sadly, it is a bit open on the right side O_o" I should have moved it over a tad to completely center it. Well, it isn't bad for my first large pinkeep.

Design: Amitie - Bleu freebie by Windy Willows
Threads: DMC
Fabric: 32 ct Cashel antique white Zweigart
Finished: As a pinkeep, 6/7/09

Fabric for back of pinkeep ;)
I also took out a small design that I had stitched up last year and completely forgot about!! I bought the kit at Hobby Lobby in their clearance section.

Design: Busy Bee - Needle Keep by Lorri Birmingham Designs
Threads: DMC
Fabric: 14 ct Aida
Finished: As a tin, 6/7/09
The kit came with all the notions to finish the project; I just never got around to it. There was thread to make some cording for the edges of tin, but I couldn't figure out how to make cording to save my life so I got some burgundy braid out of my stash and used that ;)
In other news, I have been working on my Saisons sampler, but I don't want to bore you with photos of it all the time!
I almost forgot! I have an amusing story to tell you. I had forgot to get a glue gun at Hobby Lobby and while I was at Target I decided to ask one of the sales attendants if they had one! Never ask a man for a glue gun!! He said they sold them and lead me to the tool section and showed me a Stanley glue gun?!?!?!? I didn't heart to tell the man that wasn't what I was looking for. I wonder if he had ever since a craft glue gun in his life?! Well, at least that experience made me laugh for the rest of the day when I thought about it :)
Until next time!

Design: Amitie - Bleu freebie by Windy Willows
Threads: DMC
Fabric: 32 ct Cashel antique white Zweigart
Finished: As a pinkeep, 6/7/09

Fabric for back of pinkeep ;)
I also took out a small design that I had stitched up last year and completely forgot about!! I bought the kit at Hobby Lobby in their clearance section.

Design: Busy Bee - Needle Keep by Lorri Birmingham Designs
Threads: DMC
Fabric: 14 ct Aida
Finished: As a tin, 6/7/09
The kit came with all the notions to finish the project; I just never got around to it. There was thread to make some cording for the edges of tin, but I couldn't figure out how to make cording to save my life so I got some burgundy braid out of my stash and used that ;)
In other news, I have been working on my Saisons sampler, but I don't want to bore you with photos of it all the time!
I almost forgot! I have an amusing story to tell you. I had forgot to get a glue gun at Hobby Lobby and while I was at Target I decided to ask one of the sales attendants if they had one! Never ask a man for a glue gun!! He said they sold them and lead me to the tool section and showed me a Stanley glue gun?!?!?!? I didn't heart to tell the man that wasn't what I was looking for. I wonder if he had ever since a craft glue gun in his life?! Well, at least that experience made me laugh for the rest of the day when I thought about it :)
Until next time!
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
A small finish ;)
Hi, everyone! I finished up a small design tonight.

Design: Amitie - Bleu by Windy Willows
Threads: DMC
Fabric: 32 ct Cashel antique white Zweigart
Finished: Not sure of time frame, possibly a week total O_o"
I am hoping to finish this design as a pinkeep over the weekend. I need to go by Hobby Lobby to get some supplies for the finish ;)
Until next time!

Design: Amitie - Bleu by Windy Willows
Threads: DMC
Fabric: 32 ct Cashel antique white Zweigart
Finished: Not sure of time frame, possibly a week total O_o"
I am hoping to finish this design as a pinkeep over the weekend. I need to go by Hobby Lobby to get some supplies for the finish ;)
Until next time!
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Saisons sampler - May 2009

I couldn't resist starting another Anagram Diffusion design after finishing the Elements sampler earlier this year!

Design: Anagram Diffusions, 4 Saisons
Thread: DMC 498 & B5200
Fabric: 32ct olive green Belfast linen
I finally got the entire border finished last week and started the ornate 'A' this week! I got to work on the first two rows of designs this weekend ;)
As always, I love working on Anagram Diffusion designs! I'll have more updates soon, hopefully!
Until next time!
Friday, May 29, 2009
Friday :)
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Rosaline Woodbridge Summary

Rosaline Woodbridge: or the midnight visit. A romantic tale by Hannah Maria Jones
London : George Virtue, 1827
712 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.
If you don't want to read my VERY long summary of Rosaline Woodbridge, please check out this summary!
The book begins with the background story of Rosaline Woodbridge and her connection with the St. Aubyn family. Rosaline is the daughter of a gamekeeper, Will Woodbridge, who works on the family’s estate. After the death of her mother, Rosaline is educated at the instruction of Lady St. Aubyn who took pity on the child. She is raised as a companion to Emily St. Aubyn.
The St. Aubyn’s son Frederic was also raised in the company of Rosaline; he grew to admire her greatly. When Rosaline was fifteen years old, the brother of Lady St. Aubyn, Mr. Somers, paid them a visit. He observed the interactions between Rosaline and Frederic and concluded that Rosaline had ‘designs’ on Frederic. Lady St. Aubyn allows Mr. Somers to take Frederic away for an extended visit to see if his passion for Rosaline abates. Unfortunately, when he returns, he speaks of nothing but Rosaline and compares her manners and beauty to all the women he had met while staying with his uncle. His mother decides that the best course of action is to take Frederic and the rest of the family abroad to the Continent; Rosaline is no longer favored by the St. Aubyns.
The ‘start’ of the book brings us back to the reception awaiting the return of Frederic St. Aubyn and his family who have come back from their travels abroad. It has been 3 years since Rosaline and Frederic have met. At the party, Frederic is seen in the company of Lady Julia Dewarden who knows of his regard for his childhood friend Rosaline. Julia always them to converse together before Rosaline’s father takes her away quite suddenly after seeing one of Frederic’s guest Lord Winterborne.
When they arrive at their cottage, Will tells his daughter that he must leave and that she must go and stay with a woman named Mrs. Thomas. He does not tell her why they must leave their home, but seems quite agitated and crazed. Rosaline questions her father to what has caused this sudden departure, but gets no answers. Her father leaves and Rosaline is left to settle their affairs before she can leave for Mrs. Thomas’ residence.
Upon arrival, Rosaline realizes that Mrs. Thomas is not a polite woman, she is an overzealous woman in terms of her religion. Rosaline eventually leaves to take up lodgings at a friend’s house in town. Jenny was a former servant of the St. Aubyn family and remembers Rosaline fondly and allows her to stay for a monthly rent. Unfortunately, Jenny and her husband have been secretly in correspondence with Frederic St. Aubyn. He made several visits, trying to convince Rosaline of his feelings, but she would not accept his proposal. Rosaline had heard that Frederic was to be married to a lady in London and that his proposal was a scandalous one, an offer to be his mistress.
Rosaline is taken ill with Frederic’s persistent visits to assure her that he still loves her. She is nursed back to health by Dr. Lenox, an old doctor who has been widowed for a long time. One night when Rosaline is coming back from visiting her father secretly in town, a party containing Mrs. Thomas, swears that Rosaline and her father tried to rob Mrs. Thomas. She is made to stay with a friend of Mrs. Thomas’ named Mrs. Godwin. She is taken ill again and once again nursed by Dr. Lenox. He remembers her fondly and gives her an introduction to a friend of his, Lady Lessington, a low-spirited lady whose daughter is a frivolous and cares nothing for her mother’s company.
Rosaline lives quietly with Lady Lessington as her companion and enjoys the comforts of that position. Her friendship with Lady Lessington is the cause of jealous with several wealthy friends of the lady, namely the Bradshaw family: a mother and her two daughters. Both of the sisters are intent on finding a husband and when Tyrawley, the nephew of Lady Lessington, comes to visit they constantly put themselves in his way. When they see that his attentions are engaged to Rosaline, they decide to start vicious rumors about their relationship. Sadly, Lady Lessington believes the Bradshaw sisters and Rosaline flees the household to Mrs. Crofton’s house who was a milliner for the Lessington family.
As Rosaline tries to figure out where she will go next, Mrs. Crofton communicates to Frederic the whereabouts of Rosaline. He persists in his misguided love for Rosaline and sends her letters daily. Yet again, she doesn’t succumb to him because he is a libertine and is known throughout London as such. Rosaline’s father comes back and she goes to live with him. That life doesn’t last long, her father constantly spends the last of her money from Lady Lessington on liquor. One night Rosaline realizes that her father has informed Frederic of her location. He continues to assure her of his feelings. One day shortly before her father and Frederic return, Rosaline makes an escape, but only makes it to the first floor of the building before Frederic and her father discover that she has fled and are coming down the stairs. She meets a lady in the hall and begs her to let her stay with her. While staying with Mrs. Elmore, Rosaline meets her friend Mr. Arundel Ramsey, a poor gentleman. They form an immediate attachment to one another. He gives her a letter of introduction to a friend of his named Lady Maria Cornwall. This lady was a companion of Ramsey’s when they were growing up together. He refused to marry her at the insistent of Maria’s father and was banished.
Rosaline greatly enjoys the company of the plain, vivacious Maria. They attend numerous parties, plays, and other social outings. Maria’s father approves of Rosaline, but insists that she resembles Lady Rosaline Dewarden, though she swears that she has never known the Dewarden family besides Julia Dewarden, friend of Frederic. With the help of Rosaline, Maria persuades her father to help Arundel with his debt. He is sent away to the Continent to relieve it.
Fate forces Rosaline out of the Cornwall family when Lord Cornwall realizes that Rosaline and Arundel have formed an attachment. He thinks that his daughter has been slighted, when she has in fact given Rosaline her blessing. Before leaving, Rosaline’s father showed up again and asks for more money in order to make a fresh start in Switzerland, Maria lends a hand and gives Rosaline the money for her father.
After leaving the Cornwall family, Rosaline falls ill again and is nursed by Dr. Lenox who insists on taking her away from the city to the countryside to stay with two ladies who will look out for her, Ellen and Mrs. Purdon. Mr. Lenox proposes marriage to Rosaline, but she refuses him and tells him of her love for Arundel. They remain friends despite her refusal.
While staying in the country, one of Frederic’s friends Lord Roseburn takes residence nearby. He takes a fancy to Rosaline and tries to accost her, but he is thrown out of the house. During this time, when Rosaline attempts to write to Dr. Lenox about Lord Roseburn, she learns that he has died from a fever, which he caught from a patient and passed off as a mere cold. Tyrawley, nephew of Lady Lessington, is heir to Dr. Lenox’s estate and fortunate. Dr. Lenox had set aside some of the fortune for Rosaline’s inheritance when she came of age. She is sent to the household of the Stanhopes, who will be her guardians until that time. Before residing with the Stanhopes, she hears of the accidental death of Lord Roseburn.
Rosaline’s life with the Stanhopes, a minister and his wife, is a good one. They enjoy one another’s company and love her like their own daughter. One night at midnight, Rosaline and Mrs. Stanhope hear noises downstairs of robbers who have broken in. When they come into Rosaline’s room, she shoots a man who has accosted Mr. Stanhope and is trying to kill him. The man who has been shot is her own father Will Woodbridge.
As he lies dying he confesses his sins and tells the story of Rosaline’s birth. Will was the illegitimate son of Lord Winterborne. He was not treated with the same kindness as his half-siblings and did not figure into the inheritance of the family so he vowed revenge. Rosaline’s parents, the Earl of Winterborne and Lady Rosaline Dewarden, had both died. The lady had died in childbirth; Ormsby (Will Woodbridge) traded his own wife’s dead baby for that of Rosaline when the lady passed. No one knew that the child buried with the earl and his lady was not their child.
The current Earl of Winterborne is not the rightful heir to the fortune of the family so Rosaline inherits all. Arundel comes back to England and eventually confronts Rosaline with the help of Tyrawley and the rumors about Roseburn are cleared up. Arundel is related to Roseburn and he assumes to title of Lord Roseburn. He and Rosaline are married. In the end, they meet with the Lessington and Cornwall families and all misunderstandings are forgiven.
Would I read another Hannah Maria Jones novel if I came across one? Yes, I think I would.
Until next time!
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