Friday, May 8, 2009

Happy Mother's Day

Happy Mother's Day to all of you with children! I'm looking forward to a nice brunch with my son and future daughter-in-law, and my daughter and her boyfriend who are home visiting from Boston. I'm hoping it will be a beautiful day.

My own mother passed away a number of years ago, but she will certainly be in my thoughts. She was a terrific mom who put all of her kids first no matter what was going on. She led a very active life; she was Election Commissioner for Saratoga County for 26 years and was very involved with local and state politics in New York. I'd also like to credit it her with being a loving and caring grandmother to my children. It was her greatest regret that she would not see them grow up.

(The photo shows me [far left, in younger days!], and my two sisters, along with my mom.)

My mother developed lung cancer, even though she was never a smoker. She lived for two years with the disease before dyeing in 1996. While she was ill, we encouraged her to keep up with her hobbies. She loved to knit and crochet and read. Not long before she died, I had my rug hooking teacher put together the materials necessary for her to hook a chair pad. She was unable to complete it, but I did, and here is a photo of the pad.


I think that if she had lived, she would have become quite a hooker!! So, here's a tip of the hat to all the mothers out there, and special thank you to my mom.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Update!

First of all, I finished my rug for the challenge on Gene Shepard's blog. Here is a photo of my completed project. I'm very pleased with the results!

Now, I'm back to working on my garden rug. I'm nearly finished, having just the sky and flowers to finish up. I've mentioned this rug before and noted that this rug was begun in 1995! While working on the sky, I've noticed that the blue has faded. I'm going to pull out all of the sky and redo. Here are the choices for the sky:














Doesn't really look like much of a color difference, but the first (Heavenly Illusion) has bits of purple. The second is my favorite so far (Endless Sky). The third is made with teal, and I'm not sure I'll like it with the rest of the rug.






My other news is a wonderful flea market find. A nearby fair grounds hosts a flea market and antique show twice a year. We went this past weekend, and I found this great frame for hooking, with a rug attached! I wasn't sure I wanted to get it as I wondered where it was going to be stored, but in the end, I said what the heck and brought it home with me! Here's a photo of it.



It was a fun day at the show. Got some Saratoga postcards, racetrack souvenir glasses, some old jigsaw puzzles from the thirties, and an old TV guide with a cover story about Jackie Gleason for my husband.

Speaking of jigsaw puzzles (I'm a puzzle fanatic) ... I just ordered this great puzzle of a woman hooking a rug as a wedding gift. Here is a photo of it.


It caught my eye immediately, and I love the fact that even the binding tape is already on the rug! It is called the Wedding Gift, and I ordered it from www.puzzlesusa.com. 500 pieces ... can't wait to get it!!

Friday, May 1, 2009

The Skeptic

Big excitement in our neighborhood. In 2005, a movie was filmed in Saratoga Springs called The Skeptic. The majority of the movie was shot in an old house known as the Batcheller Mansion which sits directly in front of our home. Also, my husband is a funeral director and provided the flowers and hearse for the cemetery scenes!!

Finally, after four years the movie is going to be released in a limited engagement. The movie stars Tim Daly, Tom Arnold, Edward Herrmann, and Robert Prosky. Yahoo movies describes the movie as follows:

Following the mysterious death of his aunt, power lawyer Bryan Becket moves into the elderly woman's purportedly haunted Victorian mansion. A die hard skeptic, he dismisses one eerie incident after another, until the haunting turns so personal and vicious, Becket's cool, unemotional veneer begins to unravel. Whispers in the night, things he sees in the darkness, clues of a horrible secret, turn our rationalist into a terrified and reluctant seeker. A seeker of a truth so unspeakable it could destroy him. And the mystery, always just out of reach down the darkened hall, is not fully revealed until the film's final moments. And even then, it leaves a tantalizing question.

Since we saw many of the outside scenes shot in the neighborhood, we are looking forward to seeing the movie which premieres in Albany, New York on May 8th. Not exactly a Hollywood opening, but big doings around here!

Here is the link to the trailer for this movie:

http://www.imdb.com/video/screenplay/vi961282841/