Thursday, December 8, 2011

The Big-A** Book of Crafts, by Mark Montano



Description: The Big-A** Book of Crafts is packed with ideas for sprucing up your living space; concocting fabulous, all-natural body products; designing your own unique stationery; and creating countless other crafts that will convince your friends and loved ones that you're the secret love child of Martha Stewart (only much, much cooler).

Forget crocheted doilies and itchy knit sweaters -- TLC's While You Were Out top designer Mark Montano has created stylish and imaginative projects that range from a Warhol-esque Ultrasuede iPod case to photo-adorned boxer shorts to African mask patio chairs to wooden night-light boxes. Divided into sections that include Outdoorsy (ideas to enhance your backyard), Dishing It Out (decorating plates using different techniques), You've Been Framed (innovative picture framing ideas), and Can I Have a Light? (creating and decorating lamps, lanterns, and chandeliers), it's as entertaining to read as it is endlessly inspiring. With more than one hundred and fifty inventive and fun projects, The Big-A** Book of Crafts is the perfect activity book for readers of every mood, budget, and skill level.


My Thoughts: I love to upcycle...that means take unloved things and make them useful to be loved again. This book is full of ideas to upcycle things into usable home decor and gifts! My husband and I poured over this book and decided we need a very large house to accommodate every idea we liked in, The Big-A** Book of Crafts.


There are great templates that you can use, humor and some projects...are just strange. I cannot say that I am a fan of every project, but overall, there are far more projects in this book, that I like, than I will be able to tackle in one full year! Simply put, if you craft...get this book.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Presentations: A Passion For Gift Wrapping, by Carolyne Roehm



Description: With her brilliant sense of style, designer and bestselling author Carolyne Roehm makes the case in Presentations that there’s just as much pleasure in wrapping gifts as in receiving them—and that beautiful packages guarantee memorable celebrations.

For everyone who loved At Home with Carolyne Roehm, one of America’s premier style-setters now offers her ideas for creating breathtaking gift wrappings using readily available paper, tags, rubber stamps, ribbons, artificial flowers, and other inexpensive materials. Arranged seasonally, and taking inspiration from Roehm’s love of nature, travel and collecting, and fine art, the book focuses on holidays as well as on ways to make children’s gifts look unique and adorable. As Roehm shows, with creativity and care any present can be made an exquisite offering.

More than two hundred dazzling photographs provide inspiration, and a clear and detailed how-to section gives readers the step-by-step tools they need to create beautiful gifts. And for those who would like to create stunning packages but have little time, the book also offers wonderfully distinctive—yet simple—gift-bagging ideas. To coordinate with these eye-popping wrappings, there are the author’s original theme-party ideas and distinctive table settings. 

With Carolyne Roehm’s advice, anyone can elevate a special occasion to the realm of the unforgettable.



My Thoughts: Presentations is a spectacular book! With every page there is a new rush of creativity and ideas that flow through my brain! The photography is amazing and many of these ideas are very easily created on a budget!


For the Shabbat hostess, she has several ways to incorporate gifts for the guests as part of the table setting...that alone is stunning and ingenious! As you read this book a person is inspired to reach new heights of personal excellence.


For anyone that finds satisfaction in the details of life, Presentations is the book for you! I rate this with an unequivocal five stars.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Film Classic Friday Link-Up 11.25.11

Yay, your here to link up and celebrate true theatrical talent! You know what I mean...back in the day where there were hardly any special effects, the backdrops were hand painted instead of digital and the talent was really talent...they did their own singing and dancing! We did not have cable...except for the TCM (Turner Classic Movies) marathons which my mother watched and planned for. Then, those were serious movie recording weekends!


As my mother and grandmother loved music, it was only natural that we gravitated toward the musicals and of course comedies. My family loved to laugh! There are so many great lines that I can remember us all laughing uncontrollably over. These were great and wonderful memories and I would love to relive them with you!


One of the earliest actresses I remember is June Allyson from the movie Two Girls and a Sailor.  Of course I watched her in several more films later on.  Her voice is spectacular in Good News, Thousands Cheer, and Till The Clouds Roll By.  The more dramatic roles that I enjoy watching her in are The Opposite Sex, The Glenn Miller Story and Jo, from Little Women.  She was such a sweetheart in her movies, the perfect example of the girl next door!  That type of innocence is not around much anymore, thankfully these movies capture it very well!  Enjoy these clips!









Would you like to join in the fun? By all means! Just link up your post, it will be open all week! If you would like, you can take the button with you so that others can join in the fun as well.


See you here next week as we celebrate actors, actresses, directors, producers and classic film titles that start with the letter, "K!"

Monday, November 21, 2011

The Music from Good News

Good News!  The title of that movie makes you know it is not a sad story and the music is uplifting and delightful.  The toe tapping numbers and the soft ballads from the movie made magic in the theaters across the nation.  I remember my mother playing the music both on the piano and on her record player.  When the VHS came to our home, so did the movie Good News!  Enjoy these clips with me, won't you please?







If you loved these songs, you can purchase the CD on Amazon.com, click here!

Friday, November 18, 2011

Film Classic Friday Link-Up 11.18.11

Yay, your here to link up and celebrate true theatrical talent! You know what I mean...back in the day where there were hardly any special effects, the backdrops were hand painted instead of digital and the talent was really talent...they did their own singing and dancing! We did not have cable...except for the TCM (Turner Classic Movies) marathons which my mother watched and planned for. Then, those were serious movie recording weekends!


As my mother and grandmother loved music, it was only natural that we gravitated toward the musicals and of course comedies. My family loved to laugh! There are so many great lines that I can remember us all laughing uncontrollably over. These were great and wonderful memories and I would love to relive them with you!


Irving Berlin is not an actor, a director or a producer...but the movies, White Christmas, Easter Parade, Top Hat, Holiday Inn, and Annie Get Your Gun would not be what they are today if not for his songs.  Irving Berlin is one of the most memorable film composers of his time.  Some of the biggest names of their day made his music famous with the American people such as Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney, Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole, Doris Day and Ella Fitzgerald to name just a few.  Have you seen these classics and do you remember the music from them as if it were yesterday?









Would you like to join in the fun? By all means! Just link up your post, it will be open all week! If you would like, you can take the button with you so that others can join in the fun as well.


See you here next week as we celebrate actors, actresses, directors, producers and classic film titles that start with the letter, "J!"


Thursday, November 17, 2011

The Weekend Crafter: Gourd Crafts, by Ginger Summit


Description: A guide to using the Cucurbita and Lagenaria siceraria (a sort of hard shelled pumpkin), for a range of decorative uses in the home and in the garden. No special tools or equipment are needed, standard craft materials such as a scalpel, paints, leather dyes, shoe polish, varnish and stains. The projects include cups and bowls, bracelets, carved vase, duck-shaped birdhouse, stamped and woodburned earrings, masks, candle holders, ornamental flowerpots and an African musical rattle.

My Thoughts: I don't know that I would recommend this book for the beginner, but there are people with talent that can easily pull it off! Outside of being more than my own skill level, this book is fantastic! The photographs bring a rather ugly looking dried squash into the realm of beautiful and artistic.

The various crafts that are shown are beautiful and can easily be changed to reveal your own personal style and taste level. I love all of the different uses for the sustainable gourd and what a great opportunity to grow your own craft from scratch!

Monday, November 14, 2011

The Music of Irving Berlin

Irving Berlin had some of the best songs ever written!  I have no idea where the inspiration came from or how he could make a seemingly silly song like, "Mandy," become a hit, but he did it!  Please listen to these fabulous show tunes with me today...and don't worry, humming them all day long is perfectly acceptable.







Did you enjoy these toe tapping numbers?  If you did, they are available on Amazon.com, click here!

Friday, November 11, 2011

Film Classic Friday Link-Up 11.11.11

Yay, your here to link up and celebrate true theatrical talent! You know what I mean...back in the day where there were hardly any special effects, the backdrops were hand painted instead of digital and the talent was really talent...they did their own singing and dancing! We did not have cable...except for the TCM (Turner Classic Movies) marathons which my mother watched and planned for. Then, those were serious movie recording weekends!


As my mother and grandmother loved music, it was only natural that we gravitated toward the musicals and of course comedies. My family loved to laugh! There are so many great lines that I can remember us all laughing uncontrollably over. These were great and wonderful memories and I would love to relive them with you!

Was "H" hard for you?  It only took me a few moments to remember my love for Howard Keel's voice!  Oh my goodness, but I do love to hear him sing!  He had somewhat of a sad life, I don't think that he was prepared in life for stardom and yet that never really seemed to show in his better musicals.  Perhaps that is the mark of a great actor...when you cannot tell that life is actually not like it is on the screen.  For me, his best vocal talents were showcased in Show Boat, Calamity Jane, and Kiss Me Kate, what is your opinion?  Please enjoy these clips with me as we enjoy Howard Keel for "H" the letter of the week!









Would you like to join in the fun? By all means! Just link up your post, it will be open all week! If you would like, you can take the button with you so that others can join in the fun as well.


See you here next week as we celebrate actors, actresses, directors, producers and classic film titles that start with the letter, "I!"


Thursday, November 10, 2011

Gourd Crafts For The First Time, by Marilyn Host



Description: Most ancient cultures used gourds in every aspect of life. Decorating gourds is everybody's favorite craft, as you'll see from the more than two-dozen varied projects shown here. A handy guide tells you where to find or buy gourds, and how to prepare them. Then use your easily-learned skills with leather-dye, egg-dye, spray and acrylic paint, wax shoe polish, découpage, airbrush, waxed linen, dyed raffia, and beads. Select your projects: storage containers for food, medicine, herbs, seeds, oils, jewelry, and even sacred objects. Turn dipper gourds into ladles, bowls, and cooking utensils, or create musical instruments such as thumb pianos, harps, banjos, drums, and rattles, as well as a variety of masks, earrings and necklaces, piggy banks, bird feeders, birdhouses, toys, candleholders, and luminaries.

My Thoughts: I was not exposed to decorating with vegetables most of my life and was not very interested in Native American art which did use alot of gourds in the area I grew up in. However, with some life changes that have been made, I am very interested in sustainable crafts projects and growing your own gourds for a craft project...that is very sustainable.

This book has a wealth of information for the beginner! Tools, techniques, repairs...everything seems to be listed that one needs to get started in crafting with a gourd. There are uses for gourds that really never crossed my mind and I look forward to growing some this coming spring in my little container garden!

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Bring Them Back!

I don't have cable, but if I did, these are the kind of shows that I would request for primetime.  I suppose my voice has already spoken since we just do not watch television. 



What do you think?  Did you like any of these shows when they aired on prime time?

***Click on the title links and it will take you to where you can purchase the DVD's and bring the memories home!




























Monday, November 7, 2011

The Music of Howard Keel

Watching Howard Keel strut into his scenes at first glance does not reveal the amazing voice hidden deep within his chest.  He has such a magnificent voice!  The old expression, "Never judge a book by its cover," applies to him as no one can guess what a humble start he had in life.  It was almost a mistake that he became a king of the silver screen and found a special place in so many American hearts, with his easy way of expressing the emotion they felt, with his voice.  Enjoy these powerful ballads with me today, perhaps with a strong cup of tea?







Bring the beautiful and powerful voice of Howard Keel home with you today...share these wonderful songs with your friends and family!  They are available on Amazon.com, click here.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Film Classic Friday Link-Up 11.4.11

Yay, your here to link up and celebrate true theatrical talent! You know what I mean...back in the day where there were hardly any special effects, the backdrops were hand painted instead of digital and the talent was really talent...they did their own singing and dancing! We did not have cable...except for the TCM (Turner Classic Movies) marathons which my mother watched and planned for. Then, those were serious movie recording weekends!


As my mother and grandmother loved music, it was only natural that we gravitated toward the musicals and of course comedies. My family loved to laugh! There are so many great lines that I can remember us all laughing uncontrollably over. These were great and wonderful memories and I would love to relive them with you!

I have not seen very many movies with Gloria DeHaven, but the very first VHS movie that I purchased with my own money was Two Girls and a Sailor and she was one of the stars.  I watched the movie so much that I actually wore the tape out.  Perhaps I will invest in the DVD someday...for now, enjoy these great clips with me.  Gloria DeHaven is my choice for "G" this week!







Would you like to join in the fun? By all means! Just link up your post, it will be open all week! If you would like, you can take the button with you so that others can join in the fun as well.


See you here next week as we celebrate actors, actresses, directors, producers and classic film titles that start with the letter, "H!"


Thursday, November 3, 2011

Dress Your Best: The Complete Guide to Finding the Style That's Right for Your Body, by Clinton Kelly and Stacy London


Description: The 8 million fans of TLC’s hottest show, What Not to Wear, know it as the place to go for real-life fashion advice. Now the show’s hosts, Clinton Kelly and Stacy London, offer spot-on fashion wisdom—with an attitude—in this fully illustrated, authoritative, and irreverent fashion guide to dressing your best for every occasion. Clinton and Stacy’s surefire method for boosting appearance rests on their belief that we can all win admiring glances by selecting clothes that play up our positives and create a balanced body shape. In Dress Your Best, Clinton and Stacy match a wide range of female and male body types with the perfect work, casual, and evening attire, showing you exactly how to make your best parts “work” for you.

Dressing tips for 26 body types!
Features 18 women and 8 men: bigger on top, bigger on bottom, a little extra in the middle, not curvy, extra curvy, small-framed, athletic, and more!


Whether you’re searching for a way to accentuate your assets, puzzling over the right print pattern for your frame, or just looking for a solution to the dilemma “What do I need to wear to look fabulous?” you’ll find here the universal tips, dos and don’ts, seasonal alternatives, and must-haves that will deliver the answers. Dress Your Best is certain to become the standard by which all other fashion guides are measured.


My Thoughts: This book is so necessary for the Shabbat dinner hostess! After you have poured so much love into making the meal, decorating the table and adding all of those finishing touches and details...you need to look the part as well! Trust me, it is not in how much you spend on your clothes that matters, but rather how much time you have spent researching your figure and how to wear the clothes you have or look for the right clothes when you are able to shop.


I will say that there are some immodest ideas, but with creativity, you can easily make the clothing ideas and suggestions in Dress Your Best work for you. Don't settle for frumpy when you know you can be fabulous!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

The Ancients...Continued

The Ancients were fascinating!  I have no doubt that we have interpetted nearly everything wrongly in regards to how they lived and thought.  I have chosen to look at the past with a different outlook than what you will find with mainstream science.


Here are more key points from one of the first books I read about Ancient Civilizations, "Dead Men's Secrets," by Jonathan Gray.  What of these points have you heard of and which ones are new to you?  Do you find any of these fascinating?

11. Astronomy: Originally, constellations took the form of
animals, making it easier to remember and identify them;
however, as civilization retrogressed, they actually became
animals, heroes or gods.

12. Scientific compasses, which pointed due north and south,
were later preserved as magic, through which Chinese
necromancers told fortunes.

13. Crete: The earliest Cretan empire was more culturally
advanced than the empire which followed it (featuring running
water, the most modern bathroom facilities, tinted-glass
goblets, glazed dinnerware and elaborate dress styles).

14. Canary Islands: Considerable cultural deterioration
operated until (by the time the Spaniards discovered them in
the fourteenth century) warfare was being waged with stones
and wooden weapons. They preserved the memory of a great
civilization of cities, but were no longer capable of
constructing anything more than simple huts.

15. The Pacific: On most islands of Polynesia and
Micronesia are remains of cities, temples, harbors and
statues, whose size and elaborate architecture indicate a
civilization incomparably more advanced than exists there
today.

16. Pakistan: The lowest strata of the remains of
layers. Later the quality of the commercial seals fell off
sadly. The soapstone was replaced by common clay; and crude
geometric shapes replaced the lifelike engravings. Highly
glazed ceramics were supplanted by plain clumsy pots. The
city’s systematic plan gave way to shabby structures and
mere hovels at the topmost stratum. From a high early peak
of technology, it then progressed no further. Everything
was done in imitation of the old techniques. Even the bricks
were inferior.

17. Central America: The present-day descendants of what
was once the greatest empire in the Americas (the Maya) are
mere jungle savages, unable to read or write their ancestors’
hieroglyphics; unable to construct large buildings, much less
whole cities.

18. Egypt declined from technical sophistication to a vague
shadow of its former glory. Earliest pyramid construction was
superior to later pyramid construction; succeeding pyramids
are clumsy imitations. Even construction methods changed
(from levitation science to build the Great Pyramid in the
Fourth Dynasty, to a balance of levers and pulleys a thousand
years later in the Twelfth Dynasty). The workmanship level of
jewelry as well as architecture was higher in earlier periods
(everything being more perfectly made and more beautiful). On
top of that, later generations suffered a decline in
lifestyle.

19. Sumeria, extensive and all-encompassing, was in many
respects more advanced than the cultures which followed it.

20. Greece: A city of the third millennium B.C. now at the
bottom of Lake Copias (the legendary Copae destroyed by
Hercules?) possesses a titanic complex of rock-hewn passages
said to be beyond the capabilities of either classical or
modern Greece.


Click here, to read an excerpt from my affiliate, Amazon.com.

Bonus...Three More!!!


21. Bulgaria: Grave excavations at Karanova have revealed
an extraordinarily rich and complex technology of 3000 B.C.
far in advance of later achievements in Europe.

22. Peru: Pre-Inca buildings and art were of a much higher
level than those of the Incas. Furthermore, while more recent
Spanish buildings collapse today in earthquakes, both the Inca
and pre-Inca constructions survive them intact.

23. Easter Island statues of more recent times appear to be
imperfect copies of the first creations. (And they have
suffered most from erosion, whereas those from the archaic
period have remained intact.) Again, the earliest settlement
on the island was more remarkably developed than its two
later successors.

Monday, October 31, 2011

The Music of Gloria DeHaven

Gloria DeHaven had such a beautiful voice!  It is almost crazy to think that in her later life she was only known for a soap opera which I will not type on my blog.  She could sing the blues and yet sing a happy tune to get you smiling all day long!  Here are a couple clips that are worth your time for a listen!







The way girls voices are trained now, you will not hear another singer like this in your lifetime...I encourage you to snatch up her music while it is available on Amazon.com, click here!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Film Classic Friday Link-Up 10.28.11

Yay, your here to link up and celebrate true theatrical talent! You know what I mean...back in the day where there were hardly any special effects, the backdrops were hand painted instead of digital and the talent was really talent...they did their own singing and dancing! We did not have cable...except for the TCM (Turner Classic Movies) marathons which my mother watched and planned for. Then, those were serious movie recording weekends!


As my mother and grandmother loved music, it was only natural that we gravitated toward the musicals and of course comedies. My family loved to laugh! There are so many great lines that I can remember us all laughing uncontrollably over. These were great and wonderful memories and I would love to relive them with you!

A legend on the screen that was a household name growing up was Fred Astaire.  He could sing, dance, act, play the comedy routine and vaudeville!  Though he was well known for being suave, he could make the crowd bust out in laughter with his one liners and facial expressions.  He played opposite some of the biggest and brightest stars on the silver screen such as Ginger Rogers, Jane Powell, and Vera Ellen to name a few.  One of my favorite movies of his was Holiday Inn with Bing Crosby...in fact Holiday Inn is one of my earliest movie memories!  Enjoy these clips with me as we celebrate "F" with my choice, Fred Astaire!










Would you like to join in the fun? By all means! Just link up your post, it will be open all week! If you would like, you can take the button with you so that others can join in the fun as well.


See you here next week as we celebrate actors, actresses, directors, producers and classic film titles that start with the letter, "G!"


Thursday, October 27, 2011

The Complete Flower Arranger's Companion, by Neophytou, Bacon, Morris, Hatala, and Reeves



Description: Demonstrates how to successfully create stunning floral designs using fresh, dried, and artificial flowers, providing innovated suggestions for more than one hundred gifts and arrangements.

My Thoughts: This is one of the best books I have seen so far with flower arranging! Fresh flowers are not always easily accessible in some climates (or a horrendous price) and when flower gardens die, artificial or dried flowers are the only alternatives in some hostesses budgets.

The full color photographs are beautiful and extremely enticing! The ideas are very ingenious and quite delightful and refreshing. The Directory of Flowers and Foliage is very helpful. The authors are very good about what is needed for tools and techniques.

Overall, this book is excellent! If you are like me and lacking in a green thumb, but want a natural approach to decorating...try some of these dried flower arrangements, I am sure you will be pleasantly surprised!



Tuesday, October 25, 2011

The Ancients

What do we really know about Ancient cultures?  Just what the text books have told us?  For years I was happy to rely on someone else's opinion on life.  Not anymore.  I do my own research.


From some amazing archeological digs that are just not given the media attention (gee, I wonder why), we come to know that the Ancients in many ways were far superior to our modern civilizations.  There are many, many things that we are incapable of doing that the Ancients mastered.  Perhaps it is time for a fresh perspective on life and our worldview.


Here are some key points to one of the first books that I read on the subject of Ancient Civilizations, "Dead Men's Secrets," by Jonathan Gray.  Which points have you read about before and which are new concepts for you?

1. Digging to the lowest depths, archaeologists repeatedly
come upon a city complex architecturally superior to later
cities on the same site.

2. The medicine of ancient Egypt was, generally speaking,
far superior to that practiced in Europe during the Middle
Ages. Pre-Incan medical surgery was superior to that of the
Peruvian Inca.

3. The oceangoing vessels employed by the ancient explorers
were large, strong and immensely superior to the craft
possessed by medieval Europeans.

4. The earliest ancient maps were drawn with the greatest
precision — and superior to later navigational charts.

5. The old Maya calendar is superior to our own.


6. It can be demonstrated also that many languages have
suffered degeneration.

7. Ancient set building stones are much larger and more
difficult to transport than those of subsequent cultures.

8. In dynamic realism, the masterpieces of the Cro-Magnon
cave artists of Altamira (Spain) and Lascaux (France) were
superior to the paintings and sculptures of later
civilizations.

9. Roads: Britain’s prehistoric Icknield Way (running 200
miles, in places as wide as a four-lane highway) is superior
to any road constructed by the later Romans.

10. Mathematics: Whereas very ancient cultures knew about
zero (the secret ingredient in advanced mathematics),
frequently, as decadence occurred, they forgot it. The
Babylonians, for example, wrote it as a blank space — a
practice which eventually disappeared. The same retrograde
process occurred in China.


Click here, to read an excerpt from our affiliate, Amazon.com.

Monday, October 24, 2011

The Music of Fred Astaire

Fred Astaire is a voice from my childhood!  He was not the most talented voice out there, but he got to sing the happy songs...and dance to them.  He is classic talent and there are few that can top him to this day.  Put your feet up and relax as you enjoy the music of Fred Astaire with me today!








If these helped to bring back some memories from your past...or if you want to make new memories in the future, these songs are available on Amazon.com, click here!

Friday, October 21, 2011

Film Classic Friday Link-Up 10.21.11

Yay, your here to link up and celebrate true theatrical talent! You know what I mean...back in the day where there were hardly any special effects, the backdrops were hand painted instead of digital and the talent was really talent...they did their own singing and dancing! We did not have cable...except for the TCM (Turner Classic Movies) marathons which my mother watched and planned for. Then, those were serious movie recording weekends!


As my mother and grandmother loved music, it was only natural that we gravitated toward the musicals and of course comedies. My family loved to laugh! There are so many great lines that I can remember us all laughing uncontrollably over. These were great and wonderful memories and I would love to relive them with you!

Esther Williams is hands down, my favorite actress!  I have seen almost every movie she ever made, read her biography and auto biographies and attempted to swim like her as a child.  Before entering Hollywood, she would have competed in the Olympics if WWII had not happened, but she was then discovered as serious talent working for Billy Rose's Aquacade.  She could sing, dance, swim, dive, act and anything else the directors decided they needed her for.  She was a very hard worker!  Her personal life was rather sad, but professionally she had hit the big time!  I appreciate her movies knowing all the behind the scenes work that she personally had to give to make the movies glow for all of us!  Someday I am going to own the Esther Williams Collections Volume One and Volume Two...for now, I will just enjoy these trailers with you.  Here she is, my "E" for the week, Esther Williams!









Would you like to join in the fun? By all means! Just link up your post, it will be open all week! If you would like, you can take the button with you so that others can join in the fun as well.


See you here next week as we celebrate actors, actresses, directors, producers and classic film titles that start with the letter, "F!"