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Printed November 1977, Pooh, Happy Election Day

I volunteered to scan some old photos for my in-laws for their new digital photo frame, photos from weddings – theirs, and those of my two sisters-in-law. I will be posting them on flickr as well in my old photos set.

While I was scanning I took the opportunity to finally scan some fantastic photos I have of my mom’s parents visiting California. They have so much style. Even though the photos were taken in October 1977 – the photos were printed in November 1977 – so they make a perfect NaBloPoMo post.

I love the slightly-out-of-focus photo of my grandparents with 1977 Pooh at Disneyland in California. I added it to the Vintage Disneyland group on flickr.

The following links are Pooh at various theme parks through the ages in snapshots. Many features change over time. 1970, 1971, 1976, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1981b, 1998, 1998b, 1999, 1999b, 1999c, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2003b, 2004, 2004b, 2005, 2005b, 2005c, 2006, 2006b, 2006c, 2006d, 2007, 2008. Here are a few more without an exact year: 1, 2 , 3, 4, 5, 6.

Winnie the Pooh in costume also featured on Disney postcards: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8.

Pooh also ran for president in 1976. Happy Election Day! US people go out and vote. There are perks beside making sure the person you want gets elected – there’s free coffee at Starbucks, free Krispy Kreme star-shaped Election Day donuts, and a free scoop of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream (between 5 and 8 p.m.). As usual with these kinds of things – participating locations only. via. If you’re in NY or Seattle you can also get a free sex toy from Babeland. The Babeland offer is good until the 11th.

Saba and Savta in California 1977 Saba and Savta in Disneyland 1977 1976 style and me
My grandparents visiting California in 1977 (top two photos)
and holding me in Israel in 1976 (bottom photo).
Saba and Savta with Winnie the Pooh
My grandparents visiting California in 1977.
In all their 70s glory.
Pooh for PresidentHappy Election Day!


Rosh Hashanah for Vegetarians

Fish Heads for Rosh Hashanah for Vegetarians
Fishheads by Thomas and Bethany

It is custom for the Jewish New Year to have a fish head at the table so that the nation and you may be at the lead for the following year not the tail-end of things.

As a vegetarian I had two thoughts on how to fulfill this: cutting off the heads of gummy fish and having a bowl of them at the table or getting our niece and nephew to draw fish heads – these were them and they made a lovely addition to our table.

Other traditional food items at our table: slices of apple with honey for a sweet year (and two apples cakes), pomegranate seeds for prosperity and numerous good deeds (and pomegranate ice cream), round honey challah symbolizing the yearly cycle (other challah shapes and symbols from last year).

We wanted to do pumpkin pancakes for the Sephardic custom of eating pumpkins because the Hebrew word for gourd is similar sounding to the word call out and you want your good deeds to be called out. There was no pumpkin to be found so we made butternut squash pancakes instead – they came out quite nice.

Spinach and other greens in the salad symbolize a green year (spinach or beets are also connected to the Hebrew word for to remove so it can symbolize having your enemies removed – or anything that holds you back.)

Additional foods on the menu: sweet potato and red pepper kugel, broccoli and spinach quiche, round pizza (for fussy eaters), linguine with garlic lemon and thyme, moonblush tomato and goat cheese salad (includes spinach and rocket salad).

No dates or carrots (though apparently squash can qualify for carrots), but a bountiful meal as a harbinger for a wonderful year.

Wishing you and your loved ones a great Rosh Hashanah and I can’t say it better than Neil Gaiman, “May your coming year be filled with magic and dreams and good madness. I hope you read some fine books and kiss someone who thinks you’re wonderful, and don’t forget to make some art — write or draw or build or sing or live as only you can. And I hope, somewhere in the next year, you surprise yourself.”

Home in Hartlepool – Happy Anniversary

I have been away working in NY, Poland and Israel and am now back home with Kevin. Today is our one year wedding anniversary. The photo was taken a year ago today by the amazing Chris Armstrong. This year went by really quickly and it seems strange that we have been married for a year. A wonderful year, looking forward to many more without so much time away.

DIY Wedding Invitations and Favors

Finally writing out these, if anyone else is considering going the DIY route for wedding invitations and favors. [If you are doing a DIY wedding create a schedule and give yourself some time to do it. Depending on how elaborate the elements are, they can take more time than you think.]

INVITATIONS

Figure out when you want people to have their invitations. Don’t give in to pressure and send out invites as they get made. This can lead to people wondering if they are invited if they have heard that someone else has received their invitation already.

For a traditional invite, Wilton make pretty do-it-yourself kits. They have a full range that includes Save-the-Date, Thank you cards, place settings, favors and more. In NYC, Jack’s World [110 W. 32nd (between 6th & 7th Avenues) and 45 W. 45th (between 5th & 6th)] sometimes has their products at highly discounted prices.

My husband was dead-set against a traditional invite and lucky for me he is talented enough to design us something different. He wanted an invite that would reflect our personalities as opposed to something stuffy and boring. [His reaction, I don't mind the traditional invites but love what he came up with instead.]

The cover:

DIY Wedding Invitation

We took A4 sheets of black card stock (from Kid’s section of Staples) and cut them in half length-wise. Our cards are an A6 landscape design. We did this with a paper trimmer from staples. It was then given an edge in the middle with the same trimmer, different attachment.

On the cover we pasted a mosaic photo design printed on a Canon Selphy printer & paper. The mosaic of a photo from our engagement party is composed of pictures from a vacation we took last summer. If one looks at it with a magnifying glass you can make out the individual pictures. (If we were to do this again we would slip in flat, business card size magnifiers with an explanatory note.) I like the idea that our invite reflects us being composed of our previous experiences. We used a photosafe gluestick to attach it and it gives the card a bit more heft.

We tried a few different options for paper supplies that didn’t work out. Printing directly on white card stock (from Kid’s section of Staples) with a laser printer did not look good. It came out very flat and not interesting. The same was true for Tesco Photo Greeting Card papers. It came out very amateurish. Fine for a little kid’s party but not a wedding.

The inside:

DIY Wedding Invitation DIY Wedding Invitation

We printed the inside on white tracing paper (from Kid’s section of Staples) with a laser printer and stapled it inside the black card. It is a cheaper take on the vellum idea. It looked great. The left side features Hebrew with English translation and a picture of the bride as a child. The right side features English with a picture of the groom as a child. RSVP is by phone, web, email or snailmail. The website we put up included useful, local information for people who were traveling and contact information for us. There was also the cover photo from the invite, clickable to a larger size so you could see the individual photos.

I really like the way it came out. Be advised if you’re going to go with pictures of yourself as children, people will hound you even more so about when you will start working on children that look as cute as that….sheesh! :-)

The night-do:

There was also a separate card that served as an invitation for the night-do. Four cards printed on the A4 white card stock we didn’t end up using for the invites. They were cut with the paper trimmer and had the same theme as the inside of the invite.

DIY Wedding Invitation

For envelopes we used Tesco Finest C6 envelopes. They have a different color lining inside (like pricier options), but overall they are pretty thin if you are using a thin-tipped marker to address them. We weren’t really bothered about the envelopes since they go straight in the trash, these were a step up from C6 brown envelopes, or security envelopes that look like it should enclose a check or a PIN.

We got great feedback on these invites. People enjoyed that they weren’t the same old thing…so if people [parents, friends] raise objections to trying something different stick to your instincts and do what you want. Remember at all times that it is YOUR day.

FAVORS or FAVOURS

Placecards:

DIY Wedding Placecards

Placecards were made by my amazing husband until 2:00 AM the night before the wedding. This is a leftover stack. A4 white card stock was printed with 8 placecards, then cut and given a crease with the paper trimmer, then folded and handwritten with names. The names could also have been printed. They looked great and we didn’t buy expensive frames or holders for them at a $1 a pop.

Poems:

DIY Wedding Poem Favor DIY Wedding Poem Favor

The two poems were an amazing surprise for us. Laurie Giles, a former Northeast radio presenter and current chair of the Sunderland Pianoforte Society, read the Shakespeare as part of our ceremony in the morning. He and his wife Nora were spot-on in finding poems we really liked. They printed and laminated the poems on A6 cards and made enough to put one at each place setting.

Chocolate:

DIY Wedding Favor

Does anyone like the stale coated almonds that are usually given as wedding favors? We decided to make our own. We made 75 out of plain Tulle White Circles from Party City in Brooklyn NY. It is $6.99 for a pack of 75. We bought some ribbon to tie it up and some slightly snazzier netting for the bundles on the head table as in the photo above from a shop in Hartlepool [Cake Decorating Workshop, part of The Arches complex on Park Road]. They were about 20 pence each. We also rented our cake stand from them and bought the silver platters for the cakes there as well.

There are tons of expensive boxes for these kind of things and I personally think they are a waste of money, even the slightly more expensive tulle pouches are a waste. These looked great and they were a lot cheaper. For a personal spin we put in American (3 Hershey Kisses) and British chocolate (1 Cadbury Hero – mini-Cadbury chocolates) to symbolize our union.

April Is National Donate Life Month

0008 - Wedding at Sea of Galilee - K

mom and me

Please take this opportunity to register to be an organ donor. It is an amazing gift you can give. My mom is the proud recipient of a kidney transplant. She was lucky. There are thousands of people on waitlists around the country.

Read more about my mom’s story here. You will also find links to more information about becoming an organ donor.

Presidential proclamation here.

In NY register here.

For organ donor families, recipients and loved ones Saturday, April 14 “Remember and Rejoice.” Transplant Recipients International Organization (TRIO) of Manhattan hosts its 12th Annual Ecumenical Service from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan. Join TRIO to remember donors and their families, and to rejoice with recipients. No tickets or reservations necessary. All welcome. For information, call 718-597-5619.