Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
- MargaritaMc
- Look to the Evenstar
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Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Members in the USA probably know this wonderful poem in glass, but I've only recently found it.
"The most prominent and recognizable feature of Thanks-Giving Square is the Chapel of Thanksgiving, a small, spiral tower that features an enclave for prayerful thanks. The entrance to the chapel is at the end of a 125-foot (38 m) bridge that runs over a cascading waterfall. Inside the chapel, the spiral is topped with stained glass "Glory Window", one of largest horizontally mounted stained-glass pieces in the world.[1] The window was designed by Gabriel Loire of Chartres, France to feature brighter colors as the spiral reached its apex, becoming brighter as it reaches the center. The window appears in a shot in director Terrence Malick's 2011 film The Tree of Life. The etched glass window "The Spirit of Thanksgiving," designed by glass engraver John Hutton, features a dove over the doorway.
Below the chapel is the Hall of Thanksgiving and Exhibit Area, which tells the story of the American Thanksgiving tradition."
Higher resolution available at
http://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fil ... erior_.jpg
Info about the Thanks-Giving Square at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanks-Giving_Square
My best wishes to everybody for a peaceful day and a thanks-filled heart.
Mx
"In those rare moments of total quiet with a dark sky, I again feel the awe that struck me as a child. The feeling is utterly overwhelming as my mind races out across the stars. I feel peaceful and serene."
— Dr Debra M. Elmegreen, Fellow of the AAAS
- orin stepanek
- Plutopian
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
+ 100 and I hope everyone has a great day!MargaritaMc wrote:
Members in the USA probably know this wonderful poem in glass, but I've only recently found it.
"The most prominent and recognizable feature of Thanks-Giving Square is the Chapel of Thanksgiving, a small, spiral tower that features an enclave for prayerful thanks. The entrance to the chapel is at the end of a 125-foot (38 m) bridge that runs over a cascading waterfall. Inside the chapel, the spiral is topped with stained glass "Glory Window", one of largest horizontally mounted stained-glass pieces in the world.[1] The window was designed by Gabriel Loire of Chartres, France to feature brighter colors as the spiral reached its apex, becoming brighter as it reaches the center. The window appears in a shot in director Terrence Malick's 2011 film The Tree of Life. The etched glass window "The Spirit of Thanksgiving," designed by glass engraver John Hutton, features a dove over the doorway.
Below the chapel is the Hall of Thanksgiving and Exhibit Area, which tells the story of the American Thanksgiving tradition."
Higher resolution available at
http://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fil ... erior_.jpg
Info about the Thanks-Giving Square at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanks-Giving_Square
My best wishes to everybody for a peaceful day and a thanks-filled heart.
Mx
Orin
Smile today; tomorrow's another day!
Smile today; tomorrow's another day!
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Thank you, Margarita! A large storm has passed, leaving behind brilliant blue skies, biting cold, and moderate winds; a lovely day to be going out if dressed warmly! My son and I plan to visit the National Museum of the American Indian today. But first, it's time to make pumpkin bread!
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
- neufer
- Vacationer at Tralfamadore
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
My daughter Dawn works there! (She was in charge of the doll exhibit.)owlice wrote:
My son and I plan to visit the National Museum of the American Indian today.
Unleavened pumpkin breadowlice wrote:
But first, it's time to make pumpkin bread!
Art Neuendorffer
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Leavened with baking powder, now out of the oven and on the cooling rack. Smells wonderful!!
Is Dawn working today? If so, I can take her a loaf of pumpkin bread!
Is Dawn working today? If so, I can take her a loaf of pumpkin bread!
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
- neufer
- Vacationer at Tralfamadore
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
I know. (My 100x20 binoculars convert into a Smell-O-Scope.)owlice wrote:
Leavened with baking powder, now out of the oven and on the cooling rack. Smells wonderful!!
The Indians let her off on Thanksgiving but that was very thoughtful of you.owlice wrote:
Is Dawn working today? If so, I can take her a loaf of pumpkin bread!
Art Neuendorffer
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
That was very thoughtful of the Indians!neufer wrote: The Indians let her off on Thanksgiving but that was very thoughtful of you.
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Margarita, so good to see you here! And what a wonderful, wonderful stained glass structure!
Oh, and... Happy Thanksgiving. We don't celebrate anything like that in my country, so I tend to forget.
Ann
Oh, and... Happy Thanksgiving. We don't celebrate anything like that in my country, so I tend to forget.
Ann
Color Commentator
- MargaritaMc
- Look to the Evenstar
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- Location: 28°16'7"N 16°36'20"W
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Do take a look at the highest resolution image, it is staggering in its beauty! I love spirals (think galaxies and Fibonacci sequence) and this is the loveliest HUMAN made one I've ever seen.
We don't celebrate Thanksgiving either, it's a specifically United States event - tho I think that Canadians have a similar celebration in October. We have Harvest Festival, but that doesn't have the depth of heartfelt 'Thanks Be! We have a harvest so we will survive through the coming winter'.
Mx
PS. I've not heard of pumpkin bread. Sounds very good indeed.
We don't celebrate Thanksgiving either, it's a specifically United States event - tho I think that Canadians have a similar celebration in October. We have Harvest Festival, but that doesn't have the depth of heartfelt 'Thanks Be! We have a harvest so we will survive through the coming winter'.
Mx
PS. I've not heard of pumpkin bread. Sounds very good indeed.
"In those rare moments of total quiet with a dark sky, I again feel the awe that struck me as a child. The feeling is utterly overwhelming as my mind races out across the stars. I feel peaceful and serene."
— Dr Debra M. Elmegreen, Fellow of the AAAS
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
I spent a few years in the US around the turn of the century and -- turkey or not -- Thanksgiving is a most excellent holiday. Enjoy the feasting and whatever else you find yourselves doing.
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Margarita, Canada does indeed celebrate Thanksgiving, but in October, as you've said.
Thanksgiving is a favorite holiday for many Americans; something any and everyone can celebrate, and so simple! Food, family, friends.
One of the things I'm thankful for today (and every day) is the many people who educate me; thanks very much for being one of them! I have never heard of Thanks-Giving Square, despite several trips to Dallas. The spiral is lovely!
We ate at the museum, which has an excellent cafeteria. My son had alligator as an appetizer ("tastes like chicken." said he. "lizards usually do." replied I.), bison steak, kale, and what he dubbed "beaten potatoes" which were potatoes mashed with beets. He also had some of everything I had, which was turkey with gravy and cranberries (tart tart tart!!), an amazing (cold) wild rice and watercress salad, stuffing, and a butternut squash dish that was delish. We bought three desserts (maple pecan pie, pinenut tart, and apple crumble pie), two of which came home with us, as did half of his meal and a large order of pumpkin soup.
We talked about family on the drive home, old family -- his great-grandparents and distant cousins and who came over when and from where and how long one line has been here and changed last names -- and immigration patterns in the US and Scots-Irish and their influence on English in the US and why there are so many Methodist churches in the area. When we got home, we looked at stuff that we'd cleared out of my mother's house some years ago-- his grandfather's resume and great-grandfather's military service papers and old school photos of his mother and uncles and the lovely English springer spaniel my family had when I was a small child and music programs and an old grocery book listing purchases, prices, and balances that had belonged to a long-ago cousin-by-marriage and letters about a scandalous family feud my brother and I hadn't known about until we were boxing up these papers. He declared "Rufus" a funny name, I tried to open a camera very similar to the one below and failed, and then he wandered off to sleep off his still-full, and I puzzled over how to get everything back where it had been before, because it certainly seemed to take up more space than it had when we'd started pawing through it.
He's still sleeping, and I should probably go give various cats-that-are-mine and cats-who-think-they-are-mine tuna for their Thanksgiving meal now that I'm done threatening old friends on Facebook with giving old pictures of them to their children.
Thanksgiving is a favorite holiday for many Americans; something any and everyone can celebrate, and so simple! Food, family, friends.
One of the things I'm thankful for today (and every day) is the many people who educate me; thanks very much for being one of them! I have never heard of Thanks-Giving Square, despite several trips to Dallas. The spiral is lovely!
We ate at the museum, which has an excellent cafeteria. My son had alligator as an appetizer ("tastes like chicken." said he. "lizards usually do." replied I.), bison steak, kale, and what he dubbed "beaten potatoes" which were potatoes mashed with beets. He also had some of everything I had, which was turkey with gravy and cranberries (tart tart tart!!), an amazing (cold) wild rice and watercress salad, stuffing, and a butternut squash dish that was delish. We bought three desserts (maple pecan pie, pinenut tart, and apple crumble pie), two of which came home with us, as did half of his meal and a large order of pumpkin soup.
We talked about family on the drive home, old family -- his great-grandparents and distant cousins and who came over when and from where and how long one line has been here and changed last names -- and immigration patterns in the US and Scots-Irish and their influence on English in the US and why there are so many Methodist churches in the area. When we got home, we looked at stuff that we'd cleared out of my mother's house some years ago-- his grandfather's resume and great-grandfather's military service papers and old school photos of his mother and uncles and the lovely English springer spaniel my family had when I was a small child and music programs and an old grocery book listing purchases, prices, and balances that had belonged to a long-ago cousin-by-marriage and letters about a scandalous family feud my brother and I hadn't known about until we were boxing up these papers. He declared "Rufus" a funny name, I tried to open a camera very similar to the one below and failed, and then he wandered off to sleep off his still-full, and I puzzled over how to get everything back where it had been before, because it certainly seemed to take up more space than it had when we'd started pawing through it.
He's still sleeping, and I should probably go give various cats-that-are-mine and cats-who-think-they-are-mine tuna for their Thanksgiving meal now that I'm done threatening old friends on Facebook with giving old pictures of them to their children.
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
- rstevenson
- Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
There should be a little bump in the black covering, on the body just above the edge of the front drop-down panel, or perhaps on the side as on the pictured model. You may have to hold it up to the light to see it. Press in on that bump and the front should at least release if not exactly pop open. Those old Kodaks can get pretty stiff at the age they are now, so if you do get the front to unfold, be very careful pulling open the bellows. (I had a dozen of these from the very earliest to the last of the folding Kodaks. I sold them all a couple of years ago. Somebody else now deals with the moldy old things.)owlice wrote:I tried to open a camera very similar to the one below and failed
Rob
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Thank you, Rob! (More to be thankful for!)
How did you sell your old cameras? I seem to have the history of Kodak stuffed in to various boxes here.
How did you sell your old cameras? I seem to have the history of Kodak stuffed in to various boxes here.
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
- rstevenson
- Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
- Posts: 2705
- Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:24 pm
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
I put them on Kijiji (kind of like Craigslist.) The guy who bought them wanted to cherry-pick them, but I insisted that they all go or none goes. He took them all. A few days later he came back for my half-dozen Polaroids, including the second one made, which was the best of the lot. I had previously sold my folding wooden 4x5 camera and the Leicas, and more recently I sold my old Zeiss Icarex 35mm cameras, as well as a Yashica and a Contax. Now I have a digital Canon G10 which can (arguably, and I don't want to argue) shoot better than any of those old things, except in low light.
Rob
Rob
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
Thanks very much! Bulk sale; I like it, I like it!
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
It's the same with donuts. Sell'em by the dozen. And then sell the 'holes' separately.
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
- geckzilla
- Ocular Digitator
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
so
much
food
and then... ugh so full
much
food
and then... ugh so full
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.
- MargaritaMc
- Look to the Evenstar
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Re: Happy Thanksgiving to Asteriskians in the USA!
I'm so pleased that I posted the Thanks Giving Window: it truly is something to be proud of!
Owlice, you wrote, '"tastes like chicken." said he. "lizards usually do." replied I.'
So THAT is why our well fed year old cat, Elvira, has taken to EATING the lizards that she oh too routinely catches!
M
Owlice, you wrote, '"tastes like chicken." said he. "lizards usually do." replied I.'
So THAT is why our well fed year old cat, Elvira, has taken to EATING the lizards that she oh too routinely catches!
M
"In those rare moments of total quiet with a dark sky, I again feel the awe that struck me as a child. The feeling is utterly overwhelming as my mind races out across the stars. I feel peaceful and serene."
— Dr Debra M. Elmegreen, Fellow of the AAAS