Wednesday, November 24, 2010

A Living Legacy | Peter Francisco

Over Veterans Day, Adam and I had the fortunate opportunity to spend a couple of days with Travis Bowman, good friend and a 6th generation descendant of Revolutionary War hero Peter Francisco.

As someone who is passionate about preserving memories and heritage, Peter’s story is right up my alley.

Thanks to the hospitality of the Women’s Club of Hopewell, Adam and I were able to attend their monthly meeting at the Maude Langhorne Nelson Library, during which Travis -- who stands a looming six feet six inches just like Peter -- delivered his convincing interpretation of Peter’s life.

Travis Bowman performs his dramatic impersonation


Upon returning from war, Peter admits, with obvious emotion, “I just wanted to hear my father say, ‘Good job, son. I’m proud of you. Thank you for fighting for our freedom.’ But I didn’t have a father. I went back to the plantation, and, rather than laurels, I was met with Judge Winston telling me, ‘Get back to work.’

That part really hit home.

Peter who?

Prior to reconnecting with Travis, I didn’t know anything about Peter Francisco. Peter was like the Sully Sullenberger of his day! People everywhere knew his name and what he had done for them. He faced adversity and danger with aplomb and little regard for his own life. He protected his fellow soldiers from open fire and allowed them to retreat to safety by carrying and repositioning a fallen tree limb so snipers could get behind it. He was a commando at Stony Point, second over the wall, and first to capture the flag. He rescued a stranded, 1,100-pound cannon from its carriage, hoisting it with his arms onto a wagon. With his quick thinking and deft hand, he saved the same Colonel not once but twice during the same battle! He cut down eleven British in another battle with his formidable five-foot blade. He was instrumental in securing America’s freedom. My freedom.

It’s no wonder this guy is known as Hercules of the Revolution! Anyone remember that scene in Forrest Gump when Forrest carries all the men in his platoon off the front lines to safety, even brawny Bubba? That’s what I’m talking about! Booyah!

A Dutiful Tour

After signing some books and eating lunch with the sweet ladies of Hopewell, Travis took us personally on a tour of landmarks and monuments that now commemorate Peter’s life and legendary prowess. He even let me try on the hat! We stopped at City Point, the dock in Hopewell where Peter was deposited and deserted after spending weeks held captive on a ship by greedy swashbucklers.



We went onto see the monument in Hopewell in front of City Hall – one of five monuments in the nation. Now dusk, we drove into downtown Richmond and visited St. John’s Church, where Peter stood outside listening to Patrick Henry’s inspiring oration. Built in 1741, that church is truly a monument to its own history. Elizabeth Poe (Edgar’s mother) is also buried here.

Adam and Travis in front of St. John's Church in Richmond, Virginia


Peter Francisco is buried in Shockoe Hill Cemetery, among other notables such as US Chief Justice John Marshall and famed Union spy Elizabeth Van Lew. The thing about cemeteries for me – and I’ve said this before – it’s the last place on earth a person was. No speculation. No imagination. Peter was there. His soul had departed, but the vessel – his body – the one he so freely tendered for our freedom touched that cold, winter earth.

Adam and I brought two Betsy Ross flags to place at his grave. Travis and I did the honors.

Travis and I placing Betsy Ross flags at Peter Francisco's grave


The piece de resistance was seeing Locust Grove, the post-war home Peter and his family occupied for nearly two decades, which we visited the next day. It’s possible Peter inherited the property, but he did not build the house, as was evident from the standard-sized doorways. The property is privately owned, but the owners, who restored it to its former glory, graciously let us in for a look-see. The fireplaces were probably original, and I could imagine Peter warming himself there, perhaps contemplating the legislative matters of the day. I could have spent hours walking those rooms.

Locust Grove, post-war home of Peter Francisco, in Dillwyn, Virginia

Lastly, we visited the Buckingham County Museum, which is located in the Housewright House on James Anderson Highway. This museum contains the most documents and papers on Peter Francisco. They have a Civil-War-era sword that was recovered from Locust Grove and a tall cabinet that was hand-crafted by Peter Francisco.

What a fantastic way to spend Veterans Day, learning about one of America’s Founding Fathers! Thank you, Peter, for your service and for your willingness to sacrifice yourself. And thank you, Travis, for sharing your ancestor’s legacy with us.

Learn more about Peter Francisco. Or better yet, read the book!


What stories of memory preservation inspire you?

Monday, November 15, 2010

Ode to Comfy Jeans

Thou goest on without a struggle.
From the dryer art thou smuggled.
Thou art like an extension of my skin,
A chameleon for every occasion.
Thou never gappeth, droopeth or saggeth;
Ye frayed legs never draggeth.
Though ye knees art worn
And ye belt loops torn,
To no other pair
Doth thou compare.
Thou zippeth, buttoneth and snappeth with ease
Thou makes me looketh so good, me wants to strip tease
O, how do I love thee comfy jeans!

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Childhood Memorabilia: Keepers or Castoffs


Had the fortunate opportunity to spend three weeks in the United Kingdom with some members of my family – girls only. We even went on a Harry Potter movie tour! That’s right, Harry Potter and Twilight in the same year! I thought about blogging during the trip, but there was really only so much time during the day. I did keep a journal (for the scrapbook!) and will post some pictures to the blog soon.

We had a blast visiting England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales and even Belgium. Can you believe we didn’t encounter a single scrapbooking store?! Many of the souvenir shops didn’t even have stickers. Fortunately, there are sites like Scrap Your Trip. After the second week, I was convinced scrapbooking just isn’t as popular in the UK as it is in America. Certainly hope that isn’t a sign of things to come!

Find order in organization

Since returning from the UK, I’ve been on a cleaning and organizing binge. For someone who is so passionate about paper and often finds herself surrounded by it, even I get tired of the trail that somehow ends up all over the house. Number one organizing rule of thumb: don’t set it down -- anywhere! Any scrapbooking expert will tell you that staying organized is the key to completing any project, advice I would do well to take, lest I find myself on another scavenger hunt.

Not all of the paper belongs in the recycling basket, though. As a lover of all things papyrus, including memorabilia, I have amassed quite an assemblage of Summer’s drawings, painting and art projects. Early on, I tamed it by purchasing one of those oversized accordion art folders, dating each item, and grouping them by month. Come scrapbooking time, I thought, it would be a cinch to pull something out for whatever page I happened to be working on. However, the months and years have quickly generated a paper mound that would rival kindling for a bonfire. And she hasn't even started school yet! Sheesh! At least I had good intentions! 

Sad truth: we can't keep everything

Yesterday, with a little trepidation, I spent the afternoon going through a lot of Summer's old drawings and art projects. Part of me felt very accomplished as the pile gradually dwindled, but the other part felt like a heartless mother casting off the imprint of her child’s first years. As I went through each stack, I set aside one out of every dozen or so pieces. What criteria did I use to determine what to keep? You may wonder. It wasn’t easy, because every piece is precious in some way, but there comes a time when even the mawkish among us must find a way to let things go.


Scrapbook-perfect. First and foremost, I held onto anything that would fit neatly onto a scrapbook page beside other items without having to manipulate or shrink it.  I can just envision a Valentine's Day page from 2010 embellished with those two red-hearted teddy bears bearing Summer's penciled-in faces and circles.

Sentimentality. I know what you're thinking: what of our children's art doesn't have sentimental value? I agree, but had to exercise pragmatism in solving this dilemma. I know they are all cute, but how many pencil drawings and paintings of stick figures do we honestly need to recollect our kids' youthful innocence and unsullied world view? I elected to keep anything Summer worked on with members of the family. For example, my mom occasionally does one-on-one projects with her about stories from the Bible, like Joseph and his colorful coat, and sometimes the three of us draw cards to give each other on holidays. 

Milestones. I never want to forget how small Summer's hands were, so I kept anything with the shape or outline of her hands. I also kept things like her first coloring book, or the progression of her practicing to write ABCs and 123s.

Originals. Some pieces were easy to separate based on whether she had worked on them herself or she had some “help.” While some of the more intricate pieces are nice, originals by Summer are much more cherished.

If there was a piece of memorabilia I was waffling over, I snapped a picture of it, then committed it to castoffs. In everything, there is compromise.

Do you keep all of your kids’ artwork through the years? If so, how do you keep it organized? In sifting through it, how did you decide what to keep? How have you incorporated the artwork into your scrapbooks? I'd love to hear from you!

Next organizing project:  Scrapbook merchandise inventory (that means sale - stay tuned!)

Friday, September 3, 2010

The New Jacob and Bella

For all you Twilight fans pining over Jacob Black and still waiting in vain for the installment in which Jacob and Bella do hook up, meet Max & Menna. While Max and Menna are fraternal twins born in a small town in a family without a single hope, the unlikely friendships they forge teach them about things their home life does not. Things like love, acceptance, loyalty and sacrifice.

The first novel by friend and debut novelist Shauna Kelley, Max & Menna is a melancholic coming-of-age story about beating the odds and breaking free from the cycle of generational influence and rural mores that has all the shadow and mystery of Twilight sans the supernatural forces.

Although the first few pages read awkwardly like excerpts from a collegiate creative writing assignment, as the relationship between Max and Menna starts to unfold into a gentle cadence between past and present, Max & Menna quickly develops into the story of me or the story of countless latchkey-like kids who, growing up, were the product of broken homes, abuse or otherwise distracted, derelict parents. We all had a place like the Hill, whether real or imagined, and, like Max and Menna, while there, we rarely spoke of why we fled to it, as if doing so would somehow diminish its sanctuary.

Kelley aptly captures the void one feels — even into adulthood — that results from dysfunction and abandonment. The way the weight of its emptiness latches to the soul like a dense, torrid humidity.

This underlying emotion — clingy desperation, perpetual inadequacy and permanent entrapment — may be lost to readers unfamiliar with nuances of a childhood riddled with alcoholism and abuse. These depressive states are easily vanquished, though, by the feverish intensity between Nick and Menna — the new Jacob and Bella — and, even amid tragedy, the unbreakable bond of friends.

Max & Menna was published by Lucky Press on November 1, 2010! Look for it at Barnes & Noble and on Amazon!







Sunday, May 23, 2010

French Broad River Bike Ride | Biltmore Estate

[Written August 9, 2009]

We spent one of the few torrid days this summer season outside in the back yard. Summer played with a bucket of water and her sandbox. Adam trimmed some low-hanging branches, and together we transplanted Summer's sunflower from a large pot on the deck to out in the yard. While Adam was digging the hole with the augur, Summer exclaimed, "That's cool! What's down there?" If you can imagine that in "Summer voice," it was quite humorous. Because of the heat, we didn't stay outside very long and soon returned inside to shower and thank God for whomever invented air conditioning!

Today also happens to be Crop Club. I have just one guest today, and she'll be arriving late. So, after I put Summer down for a nap, I use the time to peck away at the Biltmore Estate trip album.

The next few pages are among my favorites because the pics are of the bike ride Leslie and I took along some of the trails and French Broad River on the Biltmore Estate grounds. This bike ride ranks among the top ten most inspiring experiences of my life.

River Bike Ride at Biltmore Estate

As we pedaled passed a field of corn towards the lagoon flanked by the majestic Blue Ridge Mountains, sprawling vineyards and timeless architecture, my spirit was freed. I was living in the moment without a care about yesterday or worry about tomorrow. I was grateful for Leslie's company because she truly got it. I would have rather been with no one else at that moment. As we rode along the Lagoon Trail, pedaling in time with nature, I remember commenting, "This is what life is all about." At the end of the Lagoon Trail, we were rewarded with a spectacular view of Biltmore House reflected in the lagoon, a gentle reminder to inwardly examine ourselves.

With these feelings in mind, I begin to layout the page. I saved a page completion kit just for this cluster of pages. The kit contains a double-dipped -- that's scrap lingo for double-sided -- border and two double-dipped journaling boxes. The page completion kit is aptly named Riverside and contains images of river rocks. I shuffle the three pics, border and journaling box around until I'm happy with their positions. I also want to leave room for a special vignette in the bottom right corner.



Next step is to crop the pictures with the personal trimmer. For a fleeting moment, I consider using the oval patterns to crop the pictures in shapes of rocks, which would have been pretty cool if I could pull it off. The intent wouldn't be immediately apparent. Also, I couldn't bear to crop out too much of that lush landscape. So, at least in this instance, it's hip to be square or rectangle, as it were!

The title emerges as the clear obstacle for this page. For one, I can't think of anything appropriate. For two, I have no idea how to craft it. I consider punching squares with square maker in dark green and sand card stock and embellish with cornflower ABC/123 stickers. I then remember I have dark green 3/8" ABC stickers in my stash. I try in vain to transfer "French Broad" to the page but the oval shape is slightly too narrow, and the stickers don't cooperate.


to err is French

What will I do to cover up the mistake? you ask. I plan on cutting an oval with oval patterns to eclipse it. That's the least of my concerns. I'm still suffering from scrapper's block on the title. I thought "River Ride" and even "French Broad River Ride", but I'm not sold. It's missing pizzazz. So, I do what I always do when I hit a roadblock: go around it! No reason to hold up the entire page for one hurdle.

I know I have to cut an oval to hide my last blunder, so I grab the medium-sized oval pattern, my red blade and cutting mat. After slicing the oval from sand cardstock, I realize I have much more room to develop the title. I think: It would be sweet if I could cut/draw some outdoor elements (trees, river), add them to the oval, then put the title around 'em.

With my trusty pencil, I start by tracing the outline of a river fading into the horizon. I professionally cut some "evergreen" trees in - you guessed it - green cardstock then fill in the trunks with a brown fine-tip pen. The result is pleasing and will coordinate nicely with my planned vignette.

to correct is divine

I complete the page with the vignette, professionally cutting trees and using the tearing tool to form the hill. I professionally cut an image of a bike and to make it look more like the bikes we rented, I color in various parts with the black round tip and silver metallic pens.


River ride vignette

The final product is a fitting tribute to memory Leslie and I knotched out of the weekend.

Next episode: Bike Trail Map holder

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Make Gift Tags From Greeting Cards

I know I'm not alone. You get excited when those greeting cards come pouring in the mail, especially at Christmas. Some of you probably tear right into them. Others of you wait until there's a small collection, then savor them with your favorite cup of holiday cheer. You display all of the cards with pride on your door, mantle or card holder, taking care that the most unique or most treasured cards occupy a prominent spot. You tweak the arrangement so the photo cards aren't obscured. You never know when those family members might drop by!

What happens when the season is over, and it's time to send the decorations into hibernation once more? If you are like me, you're not quite ready to part with the cards. But after several weeks, the stack of cards you had such good intentions for becomes more of a nuisance than a source of pride. Then you're forced to filter the stack into toss-outs and treasures.

No more. Turn those toss-outs into gift tags!

Peace on Earth gift tag

You treehuggers out there will appreciate this idea. I've been talking about it for a while. Some of you have even been recipient to a few. So, anyway, here's how I make them:
  1. Trim your favorite part of the card with multi-purpose scissors or personal trimmer. This could be an image, words or both.
  2. Embellish the cutout with brads, eyelets, ribbon, etc. of your choice.
  3. Choose one to three pieces of coordinating cardstock.
  4. Trim a piece of cardstock that is slightly larger than the card cutout. Use the cardstock to charge the cutout or cut slits in the corners following steps five to nine below.
  5. Using a photo corner maker, punch slits into all four corners of the cardstock.
  6. Make sure the card cutout fits into the slits. If not, trim to fit.
  7. Optional: Trim corners of cutout if you don't want them to appear on the other side of slits. 
  8. Put tape runner on the back of the cutout and slide it into the corners.
  9. Trim another piece of cardstock so that it fits into the slits on the reverse side.
  10. Put tape runner on one side of the cardstock and slide it into the corners. (If you trimmed the corners of the cutout in step 6, this new color will appear on the front side in place of the corners.)
  11. green red stocking gift tag
  12. Using a eyelets setter, create a hole on the corner, top or bottom. You can later insert ribbon to attach it to a gift.
  13. angel gift tag
  14. With a metallic round tip pen and your best penmanship, write To: and From: on the back side of the tag.
  15. angel gift tag reverse
  16. Attach to the gift package!

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Scrapbook-izers Anonymous

Those faithful few of you who’ve followed my blog from the beginning know how long it takes me to complete a project. I’m deluding myself if I say I’ve got it all figured out. I make no pretense. I do have an occasional breakthrough or personal triumph, but eventually I start to question my own self-awareness. I will depart this life one day – and what will my legacy be? A pile of scrapbooks and albums with missing pages, blank pages tagged with sticky flags, haphazardly strewn stacks of embellishments and memorabilia, and a work table surrounded by the leavings of my latest temporarily abandoned project and the faint odor of adhesive. It could rival the domestic lifestyle of Walter Sickert.




How much better is this than a container- or computer-full of unorganized, unmarked pictures?

This subject came up at one of my recent crops. One of my good friends asked me point blank why I think it so hard to finish some projects. She tactfully grouped all of us into the same category, but I knew she meant me.

She’s right. At any given point, I might have four or five different projects going on at one time. Believe it or not, I don’t plan that; it’s just a symptom of a VERY short attention span. I have the memory retention of a dog. Doug from the movie UP comes to mind here: Hi, there. My name is Doug. My master made this collar so I may talk - Squirrel?! – Hi, there. My focus constantly migrates from books to movies to scrapbooking to copious miscellaneous side projects (e.g. gift tags, Valentines, paper albums, greeting cards, borders, journaling boxes, writings). I can’t even use the same shower gel for more than a few days at a time without experiencing ennui.

Have you ever started a book only to have several weeks go by without ever picking it up again? You suddenly feel disengaged from the story, forget who the characters are and wonder what brought them to the page where your book bungee has nestled itself. Then you contemplate starting over or giving up on it entirely.

Let’s just call it: I’m a scrapbook-izer with an insatiable need for variety. I like to play the field. My commitment falters because I’m tempted by the flirtations of newly purchased supplies, project ideas, or recently experienced events.

I have good intentions, but, frankly, the novelty begins to wane. Some days, after weeks of neglect, I’ll walk by my work table on the way to the kitchen and think: Ugh. Do I still have to finish that? What inevitably follows are the haunts of past projects that I never called back. I probably have enough now to warrant keeping a little black book. Oooh – a little black scrap book! Sounds like a good diversion. Anyone know where can I find a gently used genie lamp?

In part, it’s what we in the scrapbooking world reluctantly admit as scrapper’s block. That really happens to some people. But, for me, it’s just more of a doctor’s note excusing me to put personal projects off indefinitely. After about the 30th page or so, I’m suddenly spent – fresh out of ideas or embellishments or motivation.

Do any of you belong in this camp or am I the self-proclaimed leader and sole member of the club? Is there any cure for it?

To alleviate myself from the commitment, maybe I’ll put it to vote and let my two or three readers decide which project I should complete (list below).

Comment or message me to vote. My future generations are depending on you.

1. 2001/2002 Years in Review
2. Biltmore Estate girls’ weekend
3. Hawaii Revisited
4. 2009 Walls Yearbook
5. Blank, tagged pages from so-called completed albums
6. Project I can’t remember still in progress


Saturday, April 3, 2010

My Hands - My Perceived Weakness

[written Sunday, August 2, 2009]


Last day of staycation. Went on a bike ride along C&O Canal yesterday stopping at Dickerson Recreation Center along the Potomac River. Dirt splattered onto our legs with each pedal and bugs smacked against our heads, announcing their arrival with a buzz. But we were in the heart of nature, near where the Confederate Army crossed the Potomac River during the Civil War. The terrain is flat flanked by the canal on one side and the river on the other. We picnicked at Dickerson Recreation Center and watched White's Ferry make its routine crossing a few times before biking back to our car.






From there, melancholy crept in. The thought of returning to work is almost unbearable. Soon autumn will be upon us again and with it the rush of back-to-school activities and holidays and, ugh, winter. By the time you read this, that dreaded season may well be over.


This may be the last page of the Biltmore scrapbook I complete for a while, but I'm happy with my progress this week.



I've got most of this page worked out already. I selected a couple of 6 x 6 background papers that resemble Victorian wallpaper to arrange in checker formation behind my pictures. I also know I want to use a "Rest & Relaxation" rub-on in the center of the page.




For the journaling, I plan to cut strips of beige cardstock to flank the pictures. But right now, I adhere everything with tape runner. As I'm trying to line up the papers with the edge of the page and with each other in the center, I silently curse because my very unsteady hand won't cooperate. When I'm old and decrepit, I'll have tremors. You heard it here first.



Wiggly, wobbly hands is my chief weakness from my vantage point. They contribute to camera shake and many an error when handling delicate embellishments like alphabet stickers and tiny wands with stars. Fortunately, the digital age has been my saving grace. Gladly, the shake doesn't negatively contribute to vigorously moving a popsicle stick back and forth over a rub-on, which I proceed to do now onto a piece of beige cardstock. I add this to the center.





Ink color is the only real decision I'm faced with before completing this page. I consider three shades of pink before reasoning that black would coordinate with the R & R title. I lay beige cardstock under the first picture I'm going to caption, then mark with a pencil where I"m planning to cut. The mark is a guide for me when I write so I don't scrawl beyond the cutting point.



I set the captions on the page where I plan to adhere them. I don't adhere immediately because of my commitment-phobic tendencies. Read how I conquered this. Sometimes this works to my advantage, like today. I initially write vertically for the top right and bottom left photos but don't like it, so I rewrite captions on smaller squares, then adhere with tape runner right on photos. Since all my paper, adhesive and ink is acid- and lignin-free, this is safe for my photos. The result is a smidge more whimsical.



The next page is very easy. I mimic the layout and color scheme from page five posted under Biltmore Rewind. I trim the background paper to fit, which consists of drawings of caddy, overdressed women gossiping over afternoon tea - perfect for this page of us eating breakfast on the Biltmore Inn patio. Using a few purple and green photo mats from the Everyday Storybox, I charge three of the pictures. I crop the picture of our waitress, and trim a section off a green photo mat for the background. I cut a strip of purple to charge a vellum accent, which reads: "Friends are the sunshine of life." I write about the pictures on a purple journaling box using a lime-green colored fine-tip pen. I adhere all with tape runner and frosted splits, which are for the vellum.




Next episode: Bike ride on Biltmore Estate

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

The Six Day Twilight Book and Movie Tour

Braving the elements and armed with only a sketchy map, a few POIs, Mandy (our GPS) and our wits, Stacey and I embarked on what would be the adventure to remember: a six day tour of all things Twilight.

Day 1 – Arriving in Seattle

From Baltimore, we flew into Seattle, Washington. A quick side trip to the Space Needle was a must. We ate lunch in the rotating restaurant Sky City at the top of the needle on an abnormally sunny, clear day. The pictures speak for themselves:


View from Space Needle

From there, we drove Northwest toward the Puget Sound and hopped on the Edmonds-Kingston Ferry with our little rental car, which we later dubbed "Lamby." Again, the clear day made for superb photos. We didn’t mind the wind.

Nearing the Olympic Peninsula, we continued the nearly-four-hour drive to Forks, WA. After a long day of traveling, we were more than happy to bunk for the next 3 nights at The Miller Tree Inn, the designated Cullen House in Forks.


Miller Tree Inn, Cullen House

One of the best things about traveling in March was that we didn’t have to fight any crowds. We had most places to ourselves, which only added to the experience.

Day 2 – La Push, Downtown Forks

Our first stop on another gorgeous, sunny day was La Push or First Beach. I still don’t know why Summit Entertainment didn’t film here except that Indian Beach was much more secluded. The view was breathtaking.

La Push, First Beach
The tour of downtown Forks only took about 30 minutes. Everything is 2 – 3 minutes apart. At times, I thought I could hear Mandy whisper "Seriously?" when we tapped the next address onto her screen. I’ll admit, my favorite part of the downtown tour was the shopping. Literally, every commercial establishment in town sold some sort of Twilight merchandise – even the Lock & Key! Dazzled by Twilight is decorated to mimic scenes from the film, particularly the meadow with a grassy floor and trees and rocks at every turn. Leppell’s Flowers & Gifts carried all of our Twilight scrapbooking needs!

We ate dinner that night at the official Treaty Line in La Push, wolfing down a werewolf burger, then stopping back at First Beach to catch the sunset on a still-clear evening!

Day 3 – More La Push, Port Angeles

We stopped in La Push again to visit the designated Jacob Black house and baseball field before heading out to Port Angeles for the day. These were not the easiest landmarks to find since nothing is clearly marked in La Push. We turned around more times than I can count and ended up on some pretty remote, unpaved trails. But our tenacity paid off.

Port Angeles is pretty desolate on a blustery Sunday in March. Few stores open before 11 am. The ones that do operate seem to do so only for the benefit of the other shopkeepers. Despite the 1.5 hour, sidewindy trek around Lake Crescent, Port Angeles is probably not worth an entire day, unless you tote along your passport and take the Ferry over to Victoria, British Columbia. All the Twilight landmarks are nestled together within two blocks and Bella Italia doesn’t open until 4 pm.


Bella Italia in Port Angeles
While we were in another Dazzled by Twilight, Stacey spotted an advertisement for a free tasting of Sparkling Twilight at the Olympic Cellars Winery about 6 miles east of downtown. We took that as a cue for a little diversion.

Day 4 – Indian Beach, Oregon and other filming locations

We woke around 4:45 am, bid farewell to Washington state and drove the 5-hour journey down the Pacific Coast to Indian Beach, where the La Push scene was filmed in the movie. For you trivia buffs, The Goonies was also filmed here. At first, we didn’t think we were in the right place, but as soon as the unmistakable domed cliff off shore came into view, our excitement materialized.


Indian Beach, La Push beach in Twilight

After about an hour there, we drove to Vernonia, Oregon a cornpoke little town that would go wholly unnoticed by the universe if not for Twilight. Downtown Forks was shot here for the film, including the police station (a credit union), passing the Forks welcome sign, and the concrete bridge seen just before the inconsequential dialogue about Bella’s hair.



Forks Police Station

From there, we stopped in Saint Helens of Mt. Saint Helens fame. Most of the downtown Port Angeles scenes were filmed here and also Charlie Swan’s house. Just like in Port Angeles, everything except the Swan house is nestled together on 1st St. We stopped in Jilly’s, the dress shop that sold all of the prom dresses to Summit for the film, and reenacted our own version of the dress shop scene. The best part was walking down the narrow alley to see the Thunderbird & Whale bookstore on the hill and then the back lot where the "lowlifes" try to herd Bella. All look exactly as they do in the film.


Twilight alley and backlot
From Saint Helens, we crossed back over the Columbia River to Kalama, Washington, where the outside school scenes were shot at Kalama High School. With just enough daylight, we mapped out spots in the parking lot, paths, and feigned a walk up the hill in the rear of the school where Bella leads Edward to reveal the knowledge that he’s a vampire.



Kalama High School, Forks High School

Our final stop of the day was The View Point Inn, where we’d be staying for the next two nights. The dark drive up the windy mountain was a little treacherous and disquieting at times, but it was worth it. The place is an inspirational retreat - a perfect getaway.



The View Point Inn


Day 5 – Filming locations along the Columbia River and in Portland suburbs
Another early start to the snowy morning led us first to Vista House, where we took in some spectacular views of the Columbia River Gorge.



View of Columbia River Gorge
A few miles down the road is Multnomah Falls, which appears in the film just before and during the Twilight baseball scene. One of many beautiful falls along the scenic river drive.




Multnomah Falls

Next we stopped at the Bridge of the Gods, the large bridge Bella and Charlie cross as they head into Forks. It also offers some grand views of the river.


Bridge of the Gods

From here, we went to spy on the location where the Twilight baseball scene was shot. This area is also known as the Shire. Of all the stops on the trip, this was my favorite. It was like having a backstage pass to the set of the movie. I couldn’t help but think that this must be what the Garden of Eden was like, so pure and still untainted by mankind.


View from Twilight baseball field
Nearby are the rocks where Bella and Edward conduct their intimate conversations about his lifestyle as a vampire and the backstory on how he ended up that way.



Rocks where Edward and Bella talked in Twilight
To round out a long morning, we drove to Oxbow Regional Park to get a look at the “say it out loud” scene, which was still staked. The opening scenes of the movie were also filmed here. It’s about 1.6 miles into the park on the left-hand side just before campground A.


Oxbow Park - Say it out loud scene

We took a little more time than necessary at Oxbow Park and got a little lost on the way, so we nearly missed our Twilight-table reservation at the Carver Café for lunch. But we made it and ordered burgers like Charlie & Bella do in the film.


Carver Cafe
A few more stops that afternoon included the Blue Heron Paper Company, where the Grisham Mill scenes were filmed. We didn’t venture too far onto the property, just enough to snap a picture. Then we went over to Clackamas Community College where the infamous greenhouse field trip scenes were shot. Since classes were done for the day, there weren’t many people around, so we sneaked a peak inside greenhouse #2.


Greenhouses from Twilight

The piece de resistance was a leisurely romp around the boulders at the Stone Cliff Inn. This was the film equivalent of the meadow scene in the first book. The Stone Cliff Inn rocks. They marked everything with signs to make it easy for Twilighters to get oriented. The boulders are literally right beside the parking lot and each flanks the other, so we could easily see how the scenes progressed in the movie. I couldn’t believe how close to the ground Edward’s tree is. We tasted our final dinner of the trip here as well.


Stone Cliff Inn, Twilight boulder scenes

Day 6 – The View Point Inn at twilight + a couple of last minute stops
We woke before sunrise again in attempt to capture The View Point Inn as it is in the film – with waning sunlight. Of course, it was raining, but some of our shots still worked out.

View Point Inn

After packing up our things and bidding the beautiful Inn adieu, we set off to find a few more landmarks before heading to the airport. The first of which was the Cullen House used in the film, locally known as the Hoke family house. The address is 3333 NW Quimby, Portland, OR.

Cullen House
For any avid reader, being in Portland means close proximity to the original Powell’s City of Books! Didn’t have time to browse the full block of books, but grabbed a quick shot out front. Hey, I was there!

Then we drove the short distance over to the empty office building filmed to represent the façade of Mimi’s School of Dance. The sign on the building was empty, so that meant we could digitally fill in the appropriate wording later!



Mimi's School of Dance building

Last stop before flying home was James Madison County High School, where the interior school scenes were shot. We didn’t think they’d let us in, but when we inquired at the school office, the head of maintenance said it wouldn’t be a problem since 30 minutes were left in the current period. We easily found the cafeteria, but it took a little sleuthing to find the “biology” classroom.

Twilight cafeteria and biology classroom

The trip was fantastic, and I highly recommend it to any crazed (or closeted) Twilight fan.

Check out all the pictures from our trip on Picasa.

Want more? Check out Paula Wessells' Twilight Movie Tour on her blog It's All a Part of Life's Rich Pageant.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Irish Soda Bread Paper Recipe Album

I posted these pics to Facebook, but never got around to posting them to the blog. There's quite a few, so I'll post my faves here. You can view the rest on Facebook.


So, here's the backstory: in late autumn, my sister's boyfriend Dave began expressing an interest in Irish Soda Bread. He likes to cook and bake, so I think he was trying to figure out how to make it. Everywhere Amy went it seemed - restaurants, get togethers - she sleuthed for info about the bread and recipes.

Late autumn means holiday shopping, right? Traditionally, we exchange gifts with everyone on my side of the family. When Amy started interrogating people about the bread, the wheels in my head began to turn. In want of an original Christmas gift idea for Dave, I asked Amy if he had an Irish recipe book or something similar. Since he didn't, I decided to make one using the Spice of Life Paper Album Kit.


I culled together various images and clippings I found online. I printed the pictures using my Kodak printer, cropped them, and, along with the paper and stickers that came with the kit plus a few other embellishments, created a one-of-a-kind keepsake.






I wasn't sure I'd get it finished in time for our holiday get-together, but I did, with a LOT of help from Adam! This product resulted from our joint effort. He sacrificed much of his time (and sanity), so I could finish it. What a great husband!






The whole thing only took me about 2 - 3 days to complete. I started with the history of Irish Soda Bread, which I printed on vellum. I added a basic recipe plus a few variations, including one involving jalepenos!






I included definitions of the different types of bread plus mixing and baking techniques.





I even put a space in the back for Dave to slide in his own recipe cards using a memorabilia pocket! How nifty is that?




I used an X-acto knife to cut a slit along the folds of the inside front and back covers to slip in the ribbon. Then, I adhered the ribbon with adhesive.


The icing on the "bread" was that Dave absolutely loved the recipe book! We even got him a large cast-iron skillet to go with it.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Page Completion Challenge 2010 - Win a $25 Shopping Spree

Page Completion Challenge Contest - Win a $25 Creative Memories Shopping Spree
Who doesn't like free stuff, right?


Well, you could be the next winner of a $25 Creative Memories shopping spree by participating in the 2010 Page Completion Challenge!


The Challenge

Attempt to complete 210 pages in the 2010 calendar year.


Qualifications

  • Pages can be from any manufacturer, but in order to qualify, the pages must contain some use of Creative Memories products, such as adhesive, pen ink, paper, stickers, etc.
  • The pages also need to contain some form of journaling, such as titles, captions or journaling areas/boxes.
  • Every page counts: digital, page prints, picfolio, side-loading, or traditional.

Prizes

  • Grand prize - Cropper who completes the most pages (at least 50) wins a $25 shopping spree in January 2011.
  • First prize - first runner-up wins one pack of Creative Memories refill pages, any size, any style ($17 value).
  • All participants win a free workshop coupon for Crop Till Ya Drop in February 2011 ($5 value).


Keeping Track of Completed Pages

If you attend my regular self-hosted crops, then you will get a page log to keep track of your pages. You can also e-mail me and let me know if you completed pages outside of the crops, and I will keep track of them for you.


You'll also appear on the leaderboard here on my blog.


By attending my self-hosted events, you'll also have the chance to win free pages that you can add to your total. This number will appear within parenthesis after the number of pages the cropper has physically completed [e.g. Kathy Harrelson - 41 (10)].


2009 Results

Heather Walls - 137 (100 of these were the 2008 Walls Digital Yearbook!)

Kathy Harrelson - 52 (25) - WINNER

Stacey Prosper - 15 (5) - RUNNER-UP

Amy Hatfield - 8 (5)

Maureen Johnson - 11 (5)

Michelle Wheeler - 5 (5)


Good luck and happy cropping!






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