Completion!

Sunday, August 17, 2008 12:23:14 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

After more than 40 hours, I have the grand glory of presenting a major completed project...

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This 1857 Promenade Dress is the Patterns of History pattern, in silk, lined in cotton. The undersleeves and collar are from the same pattern, in cotton.

The hooped petticoat (you can't see it; it's underneath!) is Past Patterns' hooped petticoat (without the flounce).

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The silk is from Fashion Fabrics Club (.com) and the trims are all from Joann fabric.

The project is for the Wylie House Museum in Bloomington, IN. It will be a supporting character in a theatrical program in September, October and November at the museum, Talk of the Times, Letters from the Wylie Family, 1852-1865.

All in all, I'm quite pleased.

Fashion of the Olde-Tyme sort

Tuesday, August 05, 2008 4:29:21 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

One of my big interests in going on my trip was the chance to see some great fashion from my way-back-when time periods. There was a chance for me to get study appointments at both the Fashion Museum at Bath and the Victoria & Albert Museum, but they were for naught.

I got a glimpse of fashion anyhow.

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This is a fabulous ventilated corset that Paula and I would love to replicate at our Prairie. The time is a little late, though (1890), but I did see documentation on one that was ventilated around the waist, so that's a great start. (This is at the V&A.)

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We were a little disappointed in the Fashion museum at Bath, especially since (*horror of horrors*) they do not display their stuff chronologically but by subject. And the text on the displays was pretty dumbed-down. And some of the things I was interested in were made harder to see because of bad lighting. But.

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This shows the new analine dyes that made some bright colors possible for the first time. Before, all dyes were natural and left many bright colors unachievable or unstable. Chemical dyes were more stable and able to last through the ages. Like this. :)

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A nice corset.

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A bustle dress to die for. I swooned.

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Even David got into the fun in the interactive part of the exhibit.

At Shakespeare's Globe Theatre "Experience" there were some costumes on display. I know they're not real olde-tyme, but they were nice and cool (they were form performances).

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I wouldn't mind wearing this.

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What man wouldn't look dashing in this? (Especially the ruff. Every man needs a good ruff!)

 

Mer, how am I doing? :)

 

I'm not in hot water...

Thursday, April 10, 2008 8:18:52 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

In fact, no one in our house is.

This is me, making sure the kids have clean spoons and plates for breakfast. (I had to heat the water on the stove, and we don't have as big kettles to heat it in as we do at the Zimmerman Farmhouse.) I'm even wearing a blue apron.

The water heater went out -- it's been limping along for a while, but since we already spent our home improvement budget for the year, we hoped it was just being finicky -- right as Tim was leaving for St. Louis for a couple days. Last night he and the boys went to Sears and bought

but he was short some of the necessary tools, so the actual installation has to wait until tonight.

Brrrrrr.

 

Odds and Ends

Monday, April 07, 2008 3:20:35 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Today, after they finished lunch, Mark shouted to me from the living room, "Is it naptime?"

I wondered if he was already tired. "I don't know. Is it naptime?" I asked him.

"It's only noon," he replied, as if I was a fool.

I glanced at my watch. 12:01. Geez. Too bad he can't tell time.

----

We took a little walk before naptime (it was only noon, after all, and Adam was cranky) and stopped off at the house with the rocks by the sidewalk. The boys love to play with the "rock lady's" rocks. Today, the Rock Lady's daughter was leaving, and she stopped to say hello. Apparently, the boys met her already. Mark even asked what she was doing there. I mean, it's his rock lady, after all.

----

I have one dress finished but for the hem, a daycap finished but for the ties, an apron and petticoat finished, and a dress bodice in process. I have another dress and daycap "on deck", plans to start another friend's stuff once her life settles down a little bit (and I get some of this cleared up), request for a corset for a long-time corset wearer whose corset is falling apart, and a project for another museum (but they don't need it until fall).

I have peely and blistery fingers and a great sense of accomplishment when I get even a part of it done. Like "Wheee! I just attached piping!" Simple things make me happy.

----

Then there's Adam. We played "ou-si" this afternoon and he collected sticks and rocks and dumped sand on the ground and wandered around saying "yuck!" and wanting his hands wiped off. He practiced saying "wwwwww-wock!" as he showed me a rock. He stuck a stick in his mouth. He ate dirt and sand. It was a good time.

----

Mark and I planted sunflower seeds from Grandma Sarah. Hope they come up!

----

Eh. Yeah.

It's spring.

The Grand Reveal

Monday, March 31, 2008 7:38:39 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

As the package containing this has been received, I can now reveal what the fabulous batik was for...

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This is a friendship star quilt for my friend Angela, a college acquaintance who has grown to be a dear friend since. Her favorite colors are green and purple, and after a second surprise box of goodies from her (she has now learned that I get giddy -- and a little teary -- over presents), I wanted to do something...

I've been reading a series of books about quilters and I do like to make a little quilt now and then, though I'm far from talented at it. I had a little bundle of fat quarters I've been hanging on to for a while (read: hoarding) and decided that this was a way to use some!

(By the way, it really isn't as hourglass-shaped as the picture. I had it hanging from the cabinet doors and it ended up draping over the edge of the counter top.)

The quilt was inspired by one in a book by another quilter, but the book it was in has the tiniest little quilts and I didn't want to go that small, so I made my own pattern based on hers. I ended up hand-quilting it because I don't have a walking foot, which would make both the top and bottom of the piece go through the machine at the same rate (Christmas list), and I even got some fancy thread for the binding and some of the quilting. It was a fun project, and I called it "Surprise! Friendship".

Ooooh, drooooooool

Tuesday, March 18, 2008 9:30:57 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Yeah, everyone, drool over this:

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This is a beautiful piece of batik fabric I got recently for a project that will not be revealed here, at least not yet. It was exactly what I was looking for to use in the project I had in mind, and I found it at our new needlework store, Always in Stitches (which carries fabrics, yarns, and accessories for quilting, knitting, felting, etc.).

Did I mention it was just what I was after? The colors were in perfect harmony with what I already had.

I think I need some fancy thread now.

It turns out I can sew things other than olde-tyme stuff

Thursday, February 21, 2008 8:40:45 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

The other day, I was at my favorite store in the world, and I saw the most impressive rack of sari and brocade fabrics. Now I have always wished that I could wear a sari -- I think they look cool and comfortable and I love the textures and colors and weaves of the fabrics. And this time -- yes, wait for it -- they were on sale! Granted, we're not talking about real silk here (it was a local fabric store after all), but in one's modern clothes, one doesn't always have to be a snob (though if someone wants to buy me some real silk sari fabrics, don't let this stop you).

So I went through the pattern book to find a blouse that would look nice in such a fabric and found this:

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After a while and a lot of contemplation, I chose a fabric (the first choice was in pieces on the bolt), and within a few hours, I had a blouse ready to wear on my date with Tim last Saturday night. (It's the dark blue blouse in the right-hand column on the package.)

This evening I finally finished finishing all the seams (it's a very easily unraveled fabric) and attached the bow on the front, and so I present Gertie wearing my new blouse!

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and

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So, it turns out I can sew stuff that comes in an actual pattern envelope, even if it's made of synthetic fabric. :)

Next?

In other news, it turns out that I can sew olde-tyme stuff, too. This is the 1830s bonnet I finished a couple of weeks ago:

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A Truly Nerdy Christmas

Tuesday, December 25, 2007 4:40:40 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

My sister-in-law, Mrs. Dunce, always knows just the right thing for the holidays.

So come Mer, come Mel, come Laura and Jenna, come Alaina, come ... well, all you history nerds, gather 'round for...

Mrs Beeton Board Game

Mrs. Beeton Traditional Housekeeping Trivia Board Game.

What does this game include?

From the website:

Where should silks be dried? Which fruit was used in Bachelor’s Pudding? This charming board game tests your knowledge of life in Victorian England, all according to the domestic goddess of the era, Mrs Beeton. Share her pearls of wisdom about manners, etiquette and the running of an orderly household! The first player to work their way around the board and correctly answer a question from all 6 categories is the winner.

Presented in a tin to keep it dust-free and pristine, just how Mrs Beeton would have liked it.

Well, OKAY...

Wednesday, September 26, 2007 8:16:05 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Mrs. Dunce was apparently disappointed that the photo I included showed none of her finery.

Of course I did it to spare her feelings, and to avoid pointing out that, though the Dunce says that her sister might have had an unusual smile as a child, we wouldn't know about the future Mrs. Dunce, since she chose not to smile for her photos. And so I offer you, the future Mrs. Dunce in her finery:

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(my apologies for the photo quality; the scanner isn't hooked up, so I had to use the photograph-the-photo method.)

Sorry also for getting distract by this post and following the link it provided. Now back to my commentary.

And so. Now the photographic evidence of Mrs. Dunce's fashion at a young age...

 

 

I said I'd pay money

Thursday, September 20, 2007 3:05:39 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Now I need to know what I owe Roberta-in-law (mother of Mrs. Dunce).

Amanda gets the big house...

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While Heather-in-law is relegated to the hard life of a pioneer.

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Even then, the future Mrs. Dunce was no fool. "She always did have champagne tastes!" says her mother. Which, of course, is why she hooked up with the Dunce in the end.

It may not be my fabulous silk -- gee, Roberta, what were you thinking in depriving your daughters??? ha ha -- but the pictures were a hoot, and the Noblesvillian and I agree the young ladies in question grew up just fine despite the shocking upbringing. Taking them to an olde tyme place! Dressing them in old clothes! SHOCKING!

Baby on the Prairie Part II

Sunday, August 26, 2007 7:12:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

 A Little Boy got to join his mommy for a couple of hours at our olde tyme town. We were having a special Civil War weekend (a very quiet one, compared to the earlier one), and the Boss said young Master Adam could come by in his historical clothing.

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He mostly wanted to just go watch the pigs (see the fence in the background).

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He walked around with Mommy. He was cute and people loved him. He wasn't quite as outgoing as his brother was at his first visit to the Prairie in the same olde tyme clothes. (Remember?...

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Mark with mommy, left, but taking of with Laura. P.S. He still likes Laura an awful lot, even though she's far far away.)

But he got to be cute, and he had fun, and he DID get to flirt with the girls from the Young Ladies Living History Society of Cincinnati, who were our guests at the event. He made a couple of particular friends from that group. Yeah, and he decided to hold hands with someone else's mommy -- not letting go of his own mommy at the same time -- and I thought maybe she'd have to join our family before it was all over. But he got to be cute and that was nice.

Author's Note: As a result of the below comment from Heather-in-law, I am willing to pay good cash money or prizes or admiration for photographic evidence of her and Mrs. Dunce in historical clothing of any level of cuteness. This offer should also be extended to the mother of the ladies in question.

Tracking

Thursday, August 23, 2007 11:10:44 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Last week I ordered some silk for a hat or two that I'm working on. I ordered 5 one-yard pieces of silk, various colors. Great price, too, by the way.

Yesterday I got notification from the supplier that my order had been shipped, and here's the tracking information.

So. It was picked up at 4 p.m. on Tuesday in St. Louis. Arrived in the Fed Ex "sortation center" in Missouri that evening, was sorted overnight and departed in the morning.

It arrived in Grove City, Ohio (southwest suburb of Columbus) yesterday afternoon, was sorted, and left early this morning. "Electronic shipping information" was sent from Cincinnati, Ohio, about an hour later.

Now. It seems to me that the most likely route from St. Louis, Missouri, to Columbus, Ohio, is a very fine interstate that goes from city to city. It's called Interstate 70, and it runs right through Indianapolis -- which seems to be to be a great place for a package being shipped to Noblesville to stop. Perhaps they don't have the manpower in Indianapolis -- oh, wait a minute! There's a FedEx HUB in Indianapolis. Right off Interstate 70. Hmmm.

Perhaps it's being transported by the participants in ABC's new and certainly uplifting Fat March (egads).

Perhaps it's being brought by carrier pigeon.

Perhaps it's walking on its own.

The estimate "in home" date (I realize these dates are padded a bit to make room for weather, traffic, etc.) is August 27. Does it even take a week to crawl from St. Louis to Indianapolis????

Update, Thursday afternoon: 11:37 a.m. Enroute Cincinnati, Ohio; 12:37 p.m. Shipment Accepted Cincinnati, Ohio. I still don't know how going there is going to get things here...Please let Andrea's book shipment be a fluke, please let Andrea's book shipment be a fluke...

Update, Sunday evening, it's been "enroute" from Cincinnati since the 23rd. Tomorrow is the 27th and I guess the estimated time in home might be about right...

A couple of things...

Tuesday, July 17, 2007 8:21:33 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

First of all, it's happened. I've threated for several years to do this in some form or another (at one point threatening to get it for Big Mama and then ask to use it a lot) but now it's happened...

Prym Dritz DMDM My Double Medium Dress Form Adjustable Bust: 39-47" Waist: 31-39" Hips: 41-49" Neck & Back 14-16"

Gertie has become a part of my home. A lady in town had a whim and bought her a couple years ago and hasn't used her. She's advertised her in the paper a few times; finally, today, I saw her in the classifieds. $30 beats regular prices of close to $200, I think. So if it's just a whim for me, well, I'm not out that much...

And. Just when you thought it was safe to ask questions...

The other night I called Mark in for supper. As he came in from the family room, where he'd been playing with trains, he said, "I need a new diaper." (sort of like Grandpa disappearing into the bathroom when Grandma called us all for supper when we were kids and they were "dad" and "mom".)
"You do?" I asked, surprised that he'd even mention it. Usually he doesn't care.

"I can't sit in my chair with a nasty ol' yucky diaper while I eat," he replied. Duh.

Oh. Yeah. And Adam can go up the stairs.

Yup. Up the stairs. All the way up. (I'm not that bad of a mom -- I was right behind him. After about three stairs.)

The War of Northern Aggression...

Friday, May 25, 2007 10:02:21 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Is over once again.

Most of the stories will have to tell themselves at other times and in other places.

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But imagine if you will those questionable characters you see above as some of your ancestors. And shudder just a little.

It was a glorious weekend; I lost track of all the wonderful conversations I had with guests. For the first time, I found myself more able to connect and engage adults than children. This was because we were a little lacking in "interactives" -- chores for the kids to do, appropriate period items for the kids to play with, etc. -- and because a lot of the talk about the Civil War was more theoretical. Aside from learning some very interesting information about a time period I don't know much about, I also gained some valuable successes in interpreting to adults, connecting with things they know already and then bringing in things they don't.

What about costumed third-person interpretation? Hmm. I like it on occasion for a special project -- I think it gives our guests an "inside peek", letting them feel "in on" what's going on behind the scenes. I think that if you did it all the time, it wouldn't be special. And there wouldn't be the other side, the really terrific first-person interactions, where guests feel like they "actually" met someone from history.

I haven't worked three days in a row since the preschool closed. And I certainly haven't worked three days in a row at the Prairie with more than 1000 guests in, well, 15 years. We had something like 1,400 school kids on Friday (plus other guests), and near 4,000 per day on Saturday and Sunday. The weather was perfect, there was a lot going on, and I think just about everyone had a good time.

See what a few days' perspective will do for a person?

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Says Aili: "I shot me a Yankee!"
"I got one, too," replies Mel.

IMG_0711.jpgJohn wants us to know soldiering is serious business.

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Kyle wants to know why spoon bonnets went out of style.

What's keeping ME off the streets?

Sunday, May 06, 2007 6:47:05 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Why, sewing, of course!

Civil War Weekend at "my" Prairie is just two weeks away!

I have made this. It looks rather like what you see. It was from a kit from Needle and Thread. For more information, go here.

Lady's side lacing shoes, Forest green

These have arrived. They are from here.

This is finished. It is the Madame Foy Skirt-supporting corset. It is from Past Patterns.
 

And this is almost done. (Just one, though.) This is also from Past Patterns.

A Little Bit of History

Tuesday, December 05, 2006 1:06:10 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

I was at the local antique shop a couple weeks ago, looking for something that spoke my sister-in-law's name but wasn't too large or fragile to take back to her country. I didn't find it. What I did find, I thought was pretty cool.

The Mellette Family

(This is not the actual item; more on why later.)

I'd been flipping through a pile of "old" photos. What caught my eye first was the woman's nice 1880s dress; this is why I picked it up. Then at the bottom of the image (not here, the actual one) was the name of the photographer's studio, Arnold, and the location, Watertown, Dakota. Watertown, Dakota! I know that! It's Tim's hometown. Of course, since 1889 and the statehood for the two states made from the Dakota Territory, it's been a part of South Dakota, but never mind that. I shelled out the $2 for the picture as a neat item from Tim's hometown.

Yesterday good friend and fellow living history and historical clothing nerd Mel was over for a visit after our museum's holiday breakfast (she needed a Mark and Adam fix, and we needed a good visit), and I showed her the picture. We spent a good many minutes enjoying the lady's dress, pointing out that she's slumping (even in her corset, an art an experienced corset-wearer masters), checking out the frizzes at the top of her head (either side of the part, and you have to look closely), and, of course, speculating on which of the boys was the rebel and who was the solid, trustworthy one. We decided that the father was a Civil War veteran.

This naturally led to wondering about the family. Who were they? How did this picture end up in an antique shop in Noblesville? Whatever happened to them?... And on. Yeah. Dead a long time. Who knows... But I thought, "Golly, that would give me something interesting to do the next time we make the trip out to Watertown. I could take this to the Mellette House or the local historical society and do a little research."

Later in the evening, Tim speculated that there could be a "Mellette connection" -- Governor Arthur C. Mellette, the first governor of South Dakota, was originally from Muncie, Indiana (not that far from here). So he went online to read up a little on the illustrious fellow. "Find a picture!" I demanded. "Find a picture!"

The very first picture of the governor answered my first question. mellette.JPG (88685 bytes)

 

 

 

 

 

Who were these people? Why, it's the governor and his family: his wife Maggie and their sons (left to right) Wylie, Dick, Anton and Charles.

And the photo I pasted in my blog -- the same one I picked up in the antique shop? That comes from the page about the Mellette family on the Mellette House's website. The Mellette House was his home in Watertown, at the top of the bluff, a mere eight blocks from Tim's family's home.

I still wonder how it got to my little antique shop, and it does make me curious about the people in the picture. The next time we're in Watertown, we will visit the Mellette House, and perhaps learn a little more about the family than we could find on the internet.

It was a fun little trip through history.

Thumbs up...

Wednesday, May 31, 2006 9:43:39 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

My small friend Nettie continues to go through physical therapy as they try to help her relearn to use her muscles and wait for her to come out of her coma. She has a long road ahead of her, but last night, friend Ericka arrived to find mommy & daddy seemed much less stressed. Mommy soon explained why.

Nettie had been in therapy, and was finishing up, when the therapist said, "Bye Nettie," and waved at her. No one could believe it when a tiny little hand lifted by itself and bent itself in a little wave. Just a fluke? No. She asked her to wave again, and she did, all by herself.

This was a great day, they told her. Thumbs up. And the little hand turned and stuck her thumb up in the gesture that just might become mommy & daddy's favorite one ever. Not only does it mean she's gaining some control and use of the muscles that have been unused for all this time, it also means Nettie's still there. Thumbs up, Nettie. Hang in there.

Thanks for your prayers and keep them coming.

A Mother's Day Story to make you teary

Thursday, May 18, 2006 7:38:12 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Stephanie was sitting beside Nettie's bed in the peidatric critical care unit at the hospital on Sunday... not the place a Mommy should have to be. Nettie was becoming restless and trying to open her eyes just a bit and Stephanie stroked her arm and told her "Mommy's here."

(Sorry, can't see the monitor for the tears.)

And Nettie reached out and found Mommy's hand and squeezed it.

And Stephanie said that finally, for the first time since the accident, she saw Nettie there.

Okay, blow your noses and wipe your eyes. Here's the condition update for the day: Nettie has had the pressure probe & drainage shunt removed. She is being weaned from the meds. And most importantly, they have taken her off of the respirator and she is breathing on her own!!!

Keep your prayers coming!

Update on Nettie

Monday, May 15, 2006 10:36:49 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Ericka writes this morning:

"For the first time I am typing this with a smile on my face. The pressure in Nettie's brain for the past 2 days has stayed very low (between 2 & 10). And most importantly, she is keeping it down on her own with minimal assistance from medications!!!! Her fever has been staying down around 99-100. Her blood pressure is stable. She is moving her hands and legs, and seems to respond to family members. They are weaning her from the heavy sedation and all her numbers are staying where they should. All in all, a very good couple of days."

I don't consider the needs for prayers any less, in fact, as she continues to improve, all sorts of new prayers will come up. It's also a joy to see how eagerly my co-workers have pitched in to help with everything from food to money to gardening help. I do truly have a crowd of caring and loving people I work with, and anytime we grit our teeth over such-and-such or this-and-that, it helps to remember what a giving group of people do surround us.

 

You've got to pray

Friday, May 12, 2006 1:21:08 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

It's hardly news because it's a week old, and several of you already have received emails about this, but I just might be able to sit here and write about it without bawling the whole time (likely story, hormones and the rest of the day considered)... But here's an update for those who are keeping up, and a prayer request for those who haven't heard.

Last Thursday evening, my small friend Nettie was hit by a car in front of her house in Cicero. This is a lively, bright, impulsive little 7-year-old whose parents are co-workers of mine at the Prairie, the same little girl who, one evening when her daddy was trying to get some work done at the '86 farmhouse, appeared without her pants. "Where are your pants?" Daddy asked. "I don't know," Nettie (who was 4 at the time) replied. "I buried them." She seemed rather pleased with herself. "Where did you bury them?" There was perhaps a moment's pause, and then a definite answer. "I don't know." It was a good portion of the year later when another historical interpreter found, near the bottom of the compost pile, the formerly new butterfly pants.

A week after the accident -- which seems to have occurred when she darted out into the street in front of a driver who had no chance to avoid her, and seems to have been going the posted speed limit even -- this wild and willful little girl is still hanging on in a show of stubbornness clearly inherited from both parents. Auntie Ericka reports no fewer than 11 IV bags, a bank of computers and monitors that dwarfs this little girl, and perhaps two or three square inches where she can be touched that aren't covered with something or another. Other details get me a little too choked up to dwell on, but even Ericka -- not known for her deep sentimental or soppy nature (*unlike me) -- goes home from seeing her each evening crying.

It'll be a long road for Nettie and her family. Right now she remains in pediatric critical care in a hospital with a marvelous reputation for treating head trauma. Mommy and Daddy are able to spend the night either in the ICU or a nearby lounge, while grandparents and family are looking after little sisters. My co-workers have already covered a sign-up sheet to bring meals for the family, are taking care of the garden, and have donated a good deal of money for the family's expenses at this time. 

Most importantly, the number of prayers for this little girl must be in the zillions. But if you have a moment to add yours, it would be much appreciated.

Wrapping up that show on that channel...

Friday, May 05, 2006 1:06:46 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

A follow-up to my previous post, which was written before the final episodes. The name of this entry has been changed in attempt to cut down on "referral" blogspam. Thank you

Oh the things I could say, the rantings I could go on with, the off-color comments about poor Mr. Cooke and his lack of, ahem, you know. (Guts. That's it.)

Texas Ranch House has ended, the experts have spoken, and the ranchers have come up short. Very short, if the truth be told. Hmm, let's see, at the end of their season, their house was a complete filth heap with a serious plague of flies, they had no hands left to work the ranch except their little lapdog Maura, they'd wasted an entire garden worth of vegetables ("We don't eat very many vegetables back home," youngest daughter Hannah sheepishly admitted when their expert visited before the program was over and discovered mounds and mounds of produce spoiling in the garden), but, by golly, they had cute little sayings they'd embroidered to make the house more homey, and they were pretty well-juiced on self-righteousness.

Ah. May I rant about the flies? Some hoards of flies are to be expected. But when you leave dirty dishes and wasted food sitting around for over a week because you're too flipping lazy to clean up after your big party to send off the cowhands on the cattle drive, you're going to have a serious problem.

Mrs. Cooke, keeper of supplies, withholding even surplus food, really showed her selfishness. The fact that the boys were starving while the Cooke family let the garden go to almost complete waste -- and sometimes traded away the produce for luxuries like milled soap -- is appalling. She was responsible for doling out food supplies, and never seemed to consider that the boys might like to have something out of the garden. [And when they were without a cook, and had to eat at the house, she treated them like they should be beholden to her for her magnanimity.]

The daughters were upset because not a one of the cowhands asked them to dance during the fandango. Perhaps the cowhands had been specifically told by their father from day one that they were to stay away from his family and leave his daughers alone... And when the hands were leaving (I wanted to cheer for them on that one, by the way), the girls whined and cried because the cowhands hadn't befriended them. Gee, wonder why. Talk to dad about that, girls.

The evaluators put the blame squarely on Mr. Cooke's shoulders for the fact that the ranch would not survive. But Mrs. Cooke, who could have been a unifying force for all the women -- and men -- on the ranch, is the one who ruined it for everyone. Instead of teaching her daughters (and girl-of-all-work) how to be true 19th-century women, instead of working to fulfill the duties of a ranch wife, she spent her time undermining her husband's authority, making rules, whining about how badly the hands were behaving (thank you, evaluators, for calling them sophomoric, which was true, but which seemed to be about the only real criticism they were given), and generally trying to run the ranch without doing any actual work.

And then there's Mr. Cooke, who couldn't go off on the cattle drive because he was "needed at the ranch". For what, for goodness' sake? (Well, because he couldn't stand to be that far away from his, ahem, guts, that were in Mrs. Cooke's pocket all this time.) Aside from the fact that he was completely useless on the cattle drive because he hadn't been out with his men at any other time, he was just too wrapped up in self to take part in the biggest work of the entire project. [And the fact that the fellow set up to "buy" the cattle from him agreed to buy the cattle they didn't want was just a way to smooth feelings and fix a situation that poor dumb Mr. Cooke didn't plan properly.]

I imagine my own participation in Texas Ranch House would leave me looking a bit daft and neurotic to a television audience, but I imagine I would do a few things a little better. I'd dress properly. I understand a corset and how to use it, and I'd wear mine. I would also wear clothes over my underwear (thank you writers for including comments on that in the narration), and I would wear my hair up to promote cleanliness and to cool myself off. I would understand the value of cleanliness, and would not leave dishes to sit around for days, drawing more and more flies until they swarmed so severely that even our dining porch was unfit for meals. That would mean washing the dishes promptly in the hottest water possible (lye soap does work when the water's hot enough). Of course, that means you don't plunge your hands into the water right away; you wash things using a knife or wooden spoon as a washrag holder/dipper until the water cools more. (This also cuts the grease, kids, and kills germs.) I would salt down all food preparation surfaces, probably daily. I never saw anyone do that at all. I would use the produce in the garden, and, since I was responsible for supplies, I would also share the produce with the hands! I would tell Tim (since he would apparently be the ranch owner, since I am the owner's wife) that it would be fine for him to go off on the cattle round-ups, and I would encourage him to get to know the hands better. I would try to do nice things for the hands sometimes, and not expect them to come to me and beg to kiss my feet in humble gratitude. Floors and windows would be scrubbed with regularity, so that no one had to complain that you couldn't see out the windows because of the fly specks (and smears). We'd wash those off. (Clear water with vinegar, gang.) I would support my husband in his decisions, and let him vent when he needed to without attempting to take it upon myself to solve the troubles (putting my vinson-ness aside). I would offer to help with the ledger, because my handwriting is a bit better than his (though he would have to do the adding). And I would keep my daughters and girl-of-all-work busy enough with these chores that they wouldn't have time to bellyache about the inequality of men and women. It's the 19th century here, girls, deal with it and thank God for those women who waged war for more equality for your 21st-century selves.

Perhaps if Mrs. Cooke had embraced the lifestyle for what it was -- 19th century -- and tried to take care of what needed done, the whole thing would have been more of a success.

 

To Corset, or not to corset, that is the question

Thursday, May 04, 2006 7:03:33 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

It’s time for another television reality show PBS-style, which means, historical, informative, and all crammed into one week (British reality-style) rather than strung out over an entire season a la  Survivor USA. This time it’s Texas Ranch House, an opportunity for a handful of lucky participants to step back to the year 1867 and join a Texas ranch.

Unfortunately for any television viewers who watch anything else, in order to enjoy all of Texas Ranch House, you’ll need to clear your schedule for two hours every night this week, not watching anything else (set your Tivo if you dare), and by Friday, you’ll be so tired of the Cooke family and Texas longhorns, you’ll not even care if the cattle make it to the buyer and who ultimately goes on the drive after all. In British reality shows this makes sense because at least a portion of each show is live, and the shows sum up the past day’s events, but this is not the case with Ranch House. (I’d prefer to have it strung out a bit, maybe one hour a night for two weeks. I do hate to wait a whole week for the next installment of a show, so yes, please, give it to me, but gee whiz, kids, not ALL at once. My broadcast journalism professor referred to the “parsimony principle” as using [usually a syndicated program] as much as possible – in order to make more money –  but as sparingly as possible – so as not to create overkill. Do the math here, PBS – 10 hours of anything on TV in one week is overkill. Thanks.)

 

But on with my commentary on the show. Thanks to one of the daughters of the “ranch family” for wearing her corset most of the time. Really. There are a lot of areas here where you and your sisters and mother are not holding your end of the appropriate-dress bargain, but at least you’ve got the corset on when you’re in the confessional.

Hurrah for the self-proclaimed computer nerd Jared for getting kidnapped by Indians and making interesting comments. Yippee for the horses and cows and super-cute dog and all that. But Mrs. Cooke, wife of the ranch owner, needs to be hit alongside the head with a heavy board. Congratulations, lady, for your eagerness to take on the sexism of our society, to bring equality to the ranch, except for one small thing: You’re supposed to be a nineteenth-century rancher’s wife!!! No ranch owner would let his wife make the demands you’re making. No rancher’s wife would take it upon herself to make the rules for the cowboys. Those cowboys would be gone to the next ranch so fast, leaving your ranch without a hand on deck. Thanks to her hands-on approach, her husband is less than a joke among his men; no one respects him because he is obviously being constantly instructed by his wife about what to do when. He gives the ranch hands and his foreman one answer (clearly the one he’d prefer), but when he goes back to the house, his wife whines and complains and he feels he has to give in to her as well.

I found it amusing the other night when he commented that he’s been running major corporations for years without this sort of trouble – perhaps it’s because his wife doesn’t butt in to his work “back home.”

Perhaps she has the hardest job to fit into. The guys, well, basically, get to be guys, carousing, drinking, working pretty stinking hard trying to find cattle. Hard work is hard work, no matter what year it is, and the job parameters and supplies (or lack thereof) pretty much keep the guys in a period-appropriate place. But apparently she doesn’t have enough to do to really keep her busy enough that she’s not concerned about everyone else’s business besides just her own.

Yes. I know. Cross-cultural experiences bring out our weaknesses and foibles, and being on TV for everyone to see them doesn’t help. But is she even trying to play the part of the 19th-century woman? Is she encouraging her daughters and “girl of all work” to try to fit the roles set before them as 19th-century women? Not even close.

Crime Watch THIS

Friday, November 18, 2005 3:00:09 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

A suspicious-looking car cruises through the deserted streets of downtown in the wee hours of the morning, sliding to a stop in an empty parking lot opposite the typical small-town businesses.

A shady character disembarks from the passenger seat, yet the car waits in the shadows, engine running, while the unknown person crosses the street toward the darkened doors of long-closed merchants. A robbery, perhaps? Something evil must be afoot.

Fortunately, Officer Friendly is at the ready, having seen the car coming to a stop in a place it shouldn't be at this hour. He has stopped his police cruiser in a place prominent enough to discourage all but the foulest of criminals, with his headlights shining into the eyes of the alert getaway driver.

The driver, fearing for freedom, makes his move, tires squealing as he pulls away from the curb, running red lights through the sleepy streets of downtown, exceeding the posted 25-mile-an-hour speed limit by at least 50 miles, trying to outrun his pursuer until Officer Friendly catches his prey in the Kroger parking lot. The shady character who was left behind, clearly up to no good downtown, has, in the meantime, been apprehended in the act of some terrible crime, and the getaway driver has also been captured.

Another wretched crime foiled by our town's finest.

That's not exactly how it happened. It was more like 10:00 p.m., and the suspicious car was a gas-electric hybrid Civic, which pulled up in front of friend Ericka's apartment to drop her off. Officer Friendly did indeed pull into the neighboring Subway parking lot, headlights shining into my eyes, waiting until I pulled away from the curb.

Ericka safely within her front door (I always feel it's polite to make sure she at least gets inside before driving off, though I doubt anyone would have the temerity to attempt some sort of mischief on her), I pulled away from the curb (signalling my intentions, naturally). Officer Friendly followed me. Left turn at the first stop light, officer behind me. Straight through three lights in downtown (all green for me as I cruised a mile or so below the posted limit), a stop at the light across the bridge with the officer still behind me. Once across 19, he did turn into the Kroger parking lot and gave up chasing me for another day.

Nobody Move

Tuesday, November 15, 2005 9:34:42 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Really. Nobody move until I find out which one of you stole my work ID badge.

It was Mom. Or Mark. Or the two of you in concert.

It's been gone for two weeks now. The last time I had it, I stuck it in my pocket, saying "I'm going to need this tonight." (I would be going to sewing later and would, indeed, need it to get into the building.)

By the time I got to sewing, it was gone.

Some of us *might* have gone to a local restaurant before sewing. I checked there. Really. The very next morning, I called and asked. They hadn't seen it, but assured me they'd keep an eye out for it. I even looped through the parking lot and checked by the parking space I'd used the night before. No tag on the ground.

Last week I made the trip over to work to do something -- now I can't even remember what -- but mostly with the purpose of heading upstairs to have a new badge made -- at a cost to me of FIVE (5) DOLLARS. However, the new lady who does it now that the amazing Kelly is working maintenance was ill that day, and the other person who could also do it was also not in. So I didn't get it.

That means (aside from not getting into the building without calling the front desk) that I can't go free to my friendly local museums until I replace it. I can't plan a Children's Museum trip with Andrea and the girls and Mark until I get my ID badge. I can't run off for a freezing zoo trip. I can't see the LORD OF THE RINGS exhibit at the Indiana State Museum (http://www.in.gov/ism/MuseumExhibits/lotr.asp), at least not for a museum-employee courtesy price. I determined I *would* get back and get a new badge.

This morning I got a phone call. It was one of the people roughly in my department. Mr. So-and-so (of facilities fame) came by and dropped off my ID badge with her (possibly because she was the only person "in charge" around at the time in our department). He'd been at said restaurant that evening (the same evening as I had been, 2 weeks ago) apparently wearing his museum-logo duds. An employee, finding my badge, had given it to him to return to me. I'm sure he or she thought it would happen in a more timely manner.

But you can all move again. The lost is found.

Baby on the Prairie

Saturday, September 17, 2005 8:59:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

The baby made his debut as a historical interpreter yesterday for our annual Country Fair as an 1886 baby (Mark Stone) out with his mommy Alice for the Agricultural Improvement Society Fair and received rave reviews both yesterday and when he returned today in the glorious sunshine (instead of the chill of Friday).

He talked to the guests. He played with the children. He ran off with his Auntie Laura and had a high time, even finding a wonderful stick to play with for a while. He talked to the chickens. (Auntie Laura swears he said "Bawk" back to the chickens when they clucked at him, which is a possibility. Twice.) He LOVED the music of Saxton's Cornet Band as they played Civil War music on their period-appropriate instruments, and bounced, tapped and clapped along to the music.

And did I mention he was CUTE?IMG_8626.jpg

A Visit to the Farm

Sunday, July 17, 2005 9:36:29 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

We're on a trip out to visit the boy's grandparents, and thought that while we were in a certain idyllic state, we would stop off at a museum where a friend from my own museum is now employed.

We arrived at Fleabag Farms at 3 p.m. and were informed that the last tractor had just left to take happy visitors out to the 1700 site, the first stop on your planned tour of the farm. We didn't really care to get to the 1700 site, but only to the 1875 site, where the friend works, presumably in the Millinary shop. "I'm sorry. The last tractor just left. The only thing I could let you do is go out to the 1900 area." She then went on to describe the plan for travel, taking the tractor-carts to the 1700 site and then working forward in time to the 1900 site last before coming in to the gift shop.

"Is there any way to get a message to her?" I asked, recalling her mention of calling out to inform them the last tractor had left.

"We're a working farm. They didn't have these" she held up the phone-slash-radio "back in 1850." The snottiness factor was rising.

"Is there a place where the employees usually park, so I could leave a message on her car?"

"You can't get there. It's down a long private road. This is private property. We have over 500 acres."

Gee, thanks. I couldn't figure that out.

"We are a working farm, you know."

Yes, I know.

I called friend Ericka back at our own Fleabag Farm. "You can see the shop from the window of the gift shop!" she exclaimed.

"That's not what the lady at the desk told me. She said that was the 1900 site."

"Well, that's stupid." (I concur.)

We sat around outside, not willing to pay the $19 to get in just to see the 1900 site. (I got a professional courtesy of $1 off the admission price, and just to see one area.) Mark happily played in the grass, a breeze blew, and all was, well, less that perfect. Finally, at 4:30, we decided to re-enter the museum building to enjoy the air conditioning. Tim wanted just to go out the doors to the grounds, as we had concluded that no, the area kind ticket lady was sending us to was not 1900 but was indeed the 1875 town we wanted to see Merrilee in. However, I didn't have the guts to be such a scofflaw. I went instead to the gift shop.

"Where do most of the employees in the town park their cars?" I asked the Nice Gift Shop Ladies.

"Just along that fence," one said, pointing to the side of the shop and the nearby parking lot. "Either there, or at the maintenance building."

"Ok, thanks. We had wanted to see a good friend of mine from the museum where I worked, but we weren't allowed to go there because the last tractor had just left."

"Where does she work?"

"The Millinary shop."

"Oh, just go on back," Nice Museum Shop Lady said. "Go through the doors behind the ticket desk. There's no one there now."

She gestured us on, and using the map we had pilfered, we trotted off to the Millinary Shop, which we could see from the window of the gift shop, just as Ericka had suggested. Merrillee wasn't there, but instead was at the General Store, where we headed next.

The surprise on her face and her speechlessness were worth it as we stepped through the screen door. All was well in the world and Mark was cuddling with his Auntie Mer, playing with her buttons.

Perhaps sometime we'll get to Fleabag Farm early enough to take the tractor out to the 1700 site. But not if that sorely uninformed woman is working at the desk. She might send us to Minneapolis instead.

At Last, the Dress

Wednesday, July 06, 2005 11:17:20 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

Should I bother with words? Probably not.

There it is, 9 yards of striped silk taffeta and 3 of the solid, 5 yards of fringe, a yard of beads and two of braid. And new shoes to boot. (heh heh.)

Compliments will be accepted at this website. :)