Monday, December 24, 2012

Post 61

Merry 12, Merry Christmas 

The colored bits are links to music on Youtube.

Once again, the good, bad and in-between in humanity meet at the time when we celebrate hope, new light, love and, the unimaginable reconciliation of heaven and earth, in the form of a powerless baby.


Almost too soon, just after the recent slaughter of the innocents.


Yet, as it has done for 2,000 years,
--Christmas, and all its promises and gifts, arrives again.


For Christmas Eve Night



 I Saw Three Ships











   What Child is This?/Greensleeves



This one rose has insisted on blooming for the last two weeks,is still in bloom, and has a bud that might bloom.



The Christmas Song




 It has been joined by the first camellia of the winter



 I've always had a weakness for the reindeer with the unusual nos



This Nativity Set  is made up of the unbroken bits of pieces from the sets of at least 3 different families. Most of our indoor decorations are from relatives who are gone or no longer able to decorate for the season.


 Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring (skip ad)



 Link to last years Christmas Post 

Last year I posted some of my favorite carols, if you want to hear them, just go to the above link.

Merry Christmas, Good Will to All






O.K., the last one's not really traditionally Christmasy, it's a picture that hung in my childhood bedroom. But it seems to fit--Peaceable Kingdom and all.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Wissahickon Style XII, or the Mystery of the Bicolored Shutters

Post 60

One morning, as I was walking the dogs, I noticed a house along our route, a Wissahickon Schist Neocolonial house with white shutters around the windows on its first floor and black shutters around its windows on the second floor. "How odd, " I thought, "...though not unattractive."

Another morning, sleepily looking out the window during my morning commute, I noticed another house, again Wissahickon Schist Neocolonial, with the same sort of shutters. "How not so odd this time," I thought," ... perhaps a style?"

The owners of this house were outside putting up Christmas decorations when I stopped to take a pic,  and were happy to talk about their house, which was built in the 1920s, had only had three owners, and had its shutters as pictured above when they bought it over 30 years ago. The also knew of the two other nearby houses with the same shutter configuration.  Thus this one...

And this one...
Growing up in New York City and Long Island and educated in New England, I had never seen houses with different colored shutters before. But a little digging surfaced the fact that Elizabeth Pennell, an olde-timey Philadelphian, had. As she noted in her book, Our Philadelphia, published in 1914.

"If I walked up Spruce Street, or as far as Pine and up Pine, silence and peace enfolded me. Peace, breathed, exuded from the red brick houses with their white marble steps, their white shutters below and green above, their pleasant line of trees shading the red brick pavement."

So here is  evidence of white shutters below, darker shutters above, though in this case green, not black. And since these words are reminiscences of childhood, we're talking 19th century--well before all the above 20th century houses were built.

But had I really never seen this design before? Or had I seen it but not really looked? What about Philadelphia's many historical houses?

On the left is the Physick House at 321 S. 4th, (off Spruce.)
It was built in 1786 by Henry Hill and lived in by Philip Syng Physick after 1817. Robert E.Looney's book, Old Philadelphia in Early Photographs 1839-1914, shows a 1865 depiction with the shutters in these colors.

And according to the Historic American Buildings Survey for New Castle, Delaware,--

"Row Houses on Strand --...The green blinds above and white shutters below are as usual. The green door blinds were common a generation ago, but there is a tendency at present to eliminate them.”

These row houses were built in the 1820s-30s. And if one dips into Looney's book and looks at early photos of the city, it's easy to find examples of different shutter configurations--sometimes solid, often dark above light, but even occasionally light above dark.

So here is a conjecture. Perhaps when shutters were a necessity for keeping out wind and not just a useless appendage which improves the appearance of older houses, people were less fussy about how they looked. So that out of  a hodge-podge of practical options, preferences grew for configurations that did more than just keeping the wind out.



The owners of this house said that they heard that the reason for shutters like this was because the social rooms were all on the first floor, and that if the shutters had to be closed at least they could still reflect light. While the shutters on the second floor were outside bedrooms, which were better kept dark.


The owners of this house said it was because it was easier to wash the windows on the first floor, so a light color could be kept clean, which was harder to do on higher floors.

I still have more work to do researching this. While I did turn up what looked to be a description of shutters like these in a New York newspaper from 1878, the text was to blurry for me to confirm this.

This looks to be a Mid-Atlantic tradition that leaves me with a lot of unanswered questions, questions I will follow up on. So there may well be a second part to this post at some point.


Till then--please enjoy an on-theme Cole Porter song, as sung by Bobby Short.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Wissahickon Style XI, Arches and the Archetype of Archetypes

Post 59

I love arches, strong, load-bearing curves that break up all the right angles of our human-made world.


They echo nature,

 A nature tempered into harmony with human needs and wants, making a sheltering space.



The Arts n Crafts influenced architecture of our valley takes kindly to this shape...


...As there's a reason that humans and hobbits favor rounded doors.

As we approach all the holidays that are about Light and the birth of Light, the appearance of the archetype, the Word, that makes all archetypes and words possible, it seems like a good time to include these stray pics of arches that I have taken for the last few years


Just because I love arches,


And,


There are few better reasons.


Or words.



Than such love.


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Good News Health Update--

For those kind enough to read, I have had a bunch of tests and am on my way to a specialist. Seems I have several infected sinuses even after 3 rounds of antibiotics. Now, I expect, I will be fully treated and so be able to mend.


Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Wissahickon Style X: The Dogs of Pastorius Park

Post 58

Still not breathing well, which I will take as an excuse to cheer myself up, and I hope others as well, with a slightly off topic post. Yes--dogs again.


If I felt better, I have no doubt I could (seemingly,) connect dogs, style, gardening and dogparks in a twinkling of a sentence or two. (Yes, I won the Golden Shovel Award at college.)


But do cute dog pics really need an excuse, bald and slimy as an old tennis ball or not?


A crowded dogpark of creatures would vote no!


So, what good would any place be, Wissahickon or not, without a proper place for a frolic?


And if a garden is a place for flowers to frolic then a dogpark, a place for dogs and their humans to frolic, is analogous (told you I could do it, just needed to  warm up.)

I

I've waxed elsewhere about the Woodward family and their many gifts to this area. One of my favorite of these gifts is Pastorius Park, a small, English landscape-style park, where nature, in general, romps in great style.


So, now that I've pretended to justify myself--unleash more cuteness!


Is joy not a style?



And if it is, then Joy to the World  (and the Wissahickon Watershed.)




 P.S.--Thanks to all the people who have seen me in the park  aiming my camera around and have allowed me to celebrate their animals and them. If anyone objects to a pic, just let me know and I'll take it down.