Happy New Year to all my family and friends!
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Friday, October 25, 2013
Sam'Studio has found a new home...
A new artisan gallery and gift store has opened in Bellingham and Sam'Studio is now offering the product line you've been buying through the Allied Arts Holiday Festival event at DragonFrog. DragonFrog Gallery is open:
Tuesday-Friday 11:00am - 5:30pm and Saturdays 11:00am-3:00pm all year long.
Come out and see the amazing NW artist/crafters works, take a workshop or pick up a bouquet of flowers that Deb has on display. If you've loved going to Allied Arts Holiday Festival, but can't wait for it to start --- you won't be disappointed with the selection at DragonFrog --- there are Allied Arts artist/crafters, new NW crafter's work and flowers arranged by Deb (the owner).
SAVE THE DATE
November 13 5:pm-8:00pm
"Shoppers Nite Out"
courtesy gift wrapping - refreshments - hourly prizes
Sam'Studio will not be participating in the Allied Arts Holiday Festival this year.
DraonFrog Gallery and Gifts
4131 Hannegan Road Suite #101
Bellingham, WA.
visit the web site at: http://www.dragonfroggifts.com
Monday, May 13, 2013
You Gotta Love Brad Parks
When I was focused on filling this blog with insightful thoughts, sketches of life and sometimes the mundane, I had included a monthly book review. Books that I had read during the month, giving a very brief synopsis and a thumbs up or a thumbs down. I stopped doing that. Not because I stopped reading, I just got lazy and didn't brag blog about my ferocious hunger for the written word. Plus, I figured you had your taste in books and I had mine --- I Love A Good Mystery, how about you?
I like following the storyline, picking up clues as the author drops them along the pages, figuring out just "who done it" before I get to the end of the book. I've been known to come to the last page of a book and shout, "I KNEW IT!" And I especially love a good mystery when there is humor sprinkled thought out by an author that can pull it off with ease.
Marshall Karp is one of the best
Lisa Lutz - she's just plain crazy fun to read
Janet Evonovich - her earlier books are far better than the later
Just to name a few
BUT
I have to put Brad Parks at the top of my list!
His character, Carter Ross, is an investigative reporter in New Jersey. He's inquisitive, an original preppy, and down right funny. His one liners should be sneaking into everyone's repertoire. Coming from a journalist background, Brad Parks, has given the fourth estate something to live up to in his refreshing and very, very funny mystery series.
IF you're looking for a great read, love to laugh until it hurts, then get to know Carter Ross and the man who writes some of the best prose around.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Write - edit - proof - edit some more
Where the heck have I been, you ask? Writing, writing, writing. I'm writing a book -- NO, I've written a book. And with that comes all kinds of things:
the writing (of course)
the editing
the proof reading
more editing
selections
polishing the writing
how I want it to look as opposed to how it will look
etc. etc. etc.
then comes:
how the heck do I get it into the hands of the powers that be?
a steep learning curve on the "how to's" to publishing
the second guessing -- really? a book? etc. etc. etc.
If you've ever been to my other site (and I hope you have), Attic Whispers, you know I love to discover the old, sepia photos that have a story to tell. The vignettes are simple slices of who these people might have been and what they may have done in their lives. It's all fiction, of course - that's what makes it fun (for me and hopefully for the reader, too).
Now that you know what I've been up to (and up to my neck in alligators) you'll understand why this site has taken the back seat and at the bottom of my list of things to do. I haven't completely forgotten about Sam's Amusing World - heck, I stop by now and then to see if anything new has cropped up in my absence. But, for now (and the next 3 months) "THE BOOK" has my full attention. The working title of my new book is Lost & Found. That's all I'm going to say for now about "THE BOOK" but I will keep you posted on developing events - just not for the next 3 months. Thank you, Sam
the writing (of course)
the editing
the proof reading
more editing
selections
polishing the writing
how I want it to look as opposed to how it will look
etc. etc. etc.
then comes:
how the heck do I get it into the hands of the powers that be?
a steep learning curve on the "how to's" to publishing
the second guessing -- really? a book? etc. etc. etc.
If you've ever been to my other site (and I hope you have), Attic Whispers, you know I love to discover the old, sepia photos that have a story to tell. The vignettes are simple slices of who these people might have been and what they may have done in their lives. It's all fiction, of course - that's what makes it fun (for me and hopefully for the reader, too).
Now that you know what I've been up to (and up to my neck in alligators) you'll understand why this site has taken the back seat and at the bottom of my list of things to do. I haven't completely forgotten about Sam's Amusing World - heck, I stop by now and then to see if anything new has cropped up in my absence. But, for now (and the next 3 months) "THE BOOK" has my full attention. The working title of my new book is Lost & Found. That's all I'm going to say for now about "THE BOOK" but I will keep you posted on developing events - just not for the next 3 months. Thank you, Sam
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Interesting - or is it?
I'm in the process of finishing my book, Lost and Found and after some research (actually after much research) I discovered an interesting bit of information. At least it's interesting to me. Do you know the break down of fund distribution from a book sale? That's one book sold. Here is a small sample:
7-8% = The Literary Agent - finds the publisher and may help in editing
43% = The Publisher - they edit, proof, print, promote and distribute the book
10% = The Author - writes the book, edits the book, proofreads the book, edits the book some more, finishes manuscript in the "correct" format for publisher, begs agent to represent the book, helps promote the book
What's wrong with this picture?
I'm a bit surprised we have any books left to read
(guess I better not quit my day job)
I'm a bit surprised we have any books left to read
(guess I better not quit my day job)
Monday, April 1, 2013
The Background Story
During a trip to Portland, Oregon last year, my son, daughter-in-law and I ventured east to old historical Hwy. 30 and the Columbia Gorge. It was a cold, windy, stormy day and we were deluged with buckets of rain until we hit the beginning of the highway when the rain stopped and we could see the storm veering off to the south. This very first scenic drive in the United States was built in 1922-23 and for 30 miles it encounters over 77 waterfalls. Most of these water gushing falls cascade right down to the parking areas offering trails and view points nearby. We drove from one awe inspiring waterfall and view to the next becoming overwhelmed as they got bigger and bigger along the way.
We lunched at the famous Multonmah Falls Lodge (great food by the way) and traveled on, taking photographs, catching memories and ending up at Hood River. I won't go into detail of each waterfall or our special day trip, this snippet is about my discovery at a little antique store in Hood River.
It was there, as I was pawing through the boxes and baskets of old sepia photos (always looking for the next photo to tell it's tale on Attic Whispers) that I found a series of 22 photographs. They are small, black and white photos only 3" x 1.75" and of the Columbia Gorge Hwy. 30 taken around 1923. Each little photo had a note written on the front in white writing of the location and name of the scene. For $12.00 I shouted, "Sold!".
It wasn't until I got home, unpacked and took a good look at the photos that I felt they had a special quality to them. They were obviously taken by a professional photographer, so I started doing some research. I found the photographer. Benjamin A. Gifford 1859-1936. He was a landscape photographer who was an apprentice to Wm. LaTour in Missouri before relocating to Portland, Oregon in 1888. He and his family moved to the Dalles in 1895 and set up shop. Their photography studio and store was very famous and well known, as was Benjamin's work. After his first wife died in 1919, he married his shop worker, Rachel and settled on the Salmon River just north of the Columbia in Washington state. They called their homestead Wa-Ke-Nah. Benjamin's son continued the family business and became a landscape photographer himself.
Now it gets interesting.....while researching I stumbled onto a web site that displayed Columbia Gorge postcards. What to my surprise -- there was Benjamin's photographs, colorized (probably by hand) and printed as postcards. My Hood River purchased photographs were done for a Portland postcard company and I had copies of the originals for the series. WooHoo!
Here are 9 of the photos I have and their counterpart as post cards. Amazing - huh? I'm sure I'll find the remaining 13 post cards as I continue finding photos, post cards and stories that make up Attic Whispers.
The story I wrote for these photos are being posted on Monday's Attic Whispers' Post Card Series. Go check it out and read the story of Harold and Sylvia's 1923 auto trip.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
A Before and After......
The Before Look (above the frig)
The After Look
I have always wanted to take down the ugly 70's spindles that were posted behind the frig - they came out and I hung a window salvaged from the bedroom. Now that it's done, I wish the window was wider - but wanted to use what I had on hand. Better than the spindles and kinda funky.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Is it just me? I think not......
I've noticed over the last few months that the blog sites I mostly visit are slowing (or stopping) a bit. I know with the holidays behind us and with all that activity bloggers had taken a break - I did. But, lately the blog sites I visit the most (opps, daily) are just not posting. Is this form of communication, lectures, hoo-hahs slowing down? Has tweeting and Facebook taken up the slack of the need to tell-all? I don't know, maybe we've just run out of things to say, post, brag about and share. The business blogs are active - of course they have a paid staff to grab the attention of an audience. It's a mystery.
So, with that said, I'll blog on this site when I've got something to say, post, brag about or share. But, you can always find me at my other site: Attic Whispers where the posts are regular, entertaining and for now will continue.
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