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Blog: Illustrator Kim Sponaugle's Picture Kitchen Studio (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: winter, snow, snowflakes, preschoolers, Picture Kitchen Studio, Winter Wonderland, book illustrations by Kim Sponaugle, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: winter, snow, weather, science, snowflakes, ice, climate, Infographics, snowfall, Oxford Reference, OR, winter weather, infographic, *Featured, meteorology, Science & Medicine, Online products, Earth & Life Sciences, oxford online, snow formation, Add a tag
Every winter the child inside us hopes for snow. It brings with it the potential for days off work and school, the chance to make snowmen, create snow angels, and have snowball fights with anyone that might happen to walk past. But as the snow falls have you ever wondered how it is formed? What goes on in the clouds high above our heads to make these snowflakes come to life?
The post How is snow formed? [infographic] appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: WORDS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: evening, haiku Tuesday, melodies, autumn, summer, snow, haiku, snowflakes, songs, writing for children, melody, thaw, night, blankets, Add a tag
Night falls like snowflakes, I slide under warm blankets and wait for dawn’s thaw Autumn sings her song echoing through the evening golden melodies Filed under: writing for children Tagged: autumn, blankets, evening, haiku, haiku Tuesday, melodies, melody, night, snow, snowflakes, songs, summer, thaw
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: girl, acrylic, children's art, ocean, snowflakes, mermaid, kawaii, sea, december, water, whimsical, mythical, original painting, poinsettia, nursery art, the enchanted easel, blue topaz, Add a tag
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mythical, original painting, nursery art, the enchanted easel, gemstone, garnet, blue topaz, girl, sketch, children's art, ocean, snowflakes, mermaid, kawaii, sea, december, water, whimsical, january, Add a tag
© the enchanted easel 2013 |
© the enchanted easel 2013 |
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: arctic, the enchanted easel, girl, cute, winter, fairy, snow, sketch, snowflakes, bunny, kawaii, whimsical, Add a tag
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: whimsical, candy cane, original painting, the enchanted easel, girl, animal, cute, winter, christmas, illustration friday, snow, zebra, children's art, snowflakes, Add a tag
Blog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: magic, Children's Books, Santa, Christmas, snow, mouse, snowflakes, Christmas books, mice, children's story, North Pole, elves, Debut Author, Holiday Book, Christmas Story, Christmas Eve, 4stars, Library Donated Books, Jane Matyger, Santa's toy shop, Add a tag
4 Stars Seymour's Christmas Wish Jane Matyger Javier Duarte Mirror Publishing 28 Pages Ages: 3 + ..................... ...................... Back Cover: Seymour, a tiny, tiny mouse, lives at the North Pole. Each Christmas Eve, he shines Rudolph’s red nose before Santa’s big trip. This year Seymour has a special wish . . . a wish that [...]
Add a CommentBlog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: tinted graphite, the enchanted easel, girl, cute, winter, snow, woods, sketch, graphite, snowflakes, forest, colored pencil, birch trees, whimsical, cardinals, Add a tag
Blog: Sugar Frosted Goodness (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: reindeer, Holiday Greetings, yule, snowpeople, holidays, boy, winter, Christmas, snow, snowflakes, Xmas, Add a tag
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: candy canes, the enchanted easel, peppermint, cute, christmas, red, zebra, stripes, holiday, green, snowflakes, whimsical, Add a tag
Blog: studio lolo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: christmas, snowflakes, bliss, studio lolo, snowglobe, Add a tag
Blog: Monday Artday (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: snow, snowflakes, game, Add a tag
This is my first response to Monday Artday. I imagined most people would create images of skiing, ice skating, or hockey, so I decided to follow a different path. I like games and puzzles, so I created a SNOW GAME.
Every snowflake is supposed to be unique, but in the image above there are two snowflakes that are exactly the same design. Can you find them?
I could, of course, have created my snowflakes by cutting folded paper (see example, left, of one of my cut-paper flakes) but anyone can cut a paper snowflake virtually at SnowDays. (It takes a while to load the page, so be patient.) I created about 35 flakes and chose 24 (one duplicated) for my Snow Game.
Blog: Big and Little Art (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: snowflakes, Erin Sherman, Add a tag
Holidays are over but it's still winter :) We made these fun snowflakes with Q-tips.
We cut a piece of white paper plate: hexagon or circle. We glued six Q-tips onto it, (low-temp hot-glue is easiest if you can). A button pressed into the center even helps finish it. TheSquirrel thought it was so cool she could use the Q-tips for something.
Her bedroom has a tree with removeable apples (via Velcro)... so we put Velcro on the backs of these snowflakes, to decorate her "tree" with them in the Winter. (For the Fall, we have autumn leaves to stick on there, and this Spring we'll stick blossoms on there.)
By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age almost-5
WhiteShoes
Blog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: goodbyes, snowflakes, Add a tag
We'd waited all day for the snow, and when it came the flakes were saucers—huge and slant, conjoined. We had had our time as a family of three, but the next day our boy would be headed back to the hills, to Literature and Advertising, to Probability and World Cultures, to a sound engineering booth and a dorm. So that we drove through the night on back country roads—the snow falling, the moon rising, the world bright and wholly bittersweet, for what does one do with the deep, rutted, impossible love for children who grow, too, who emerge, like us, into the age they are becoming? What does one do, but drive across roads and inside the shell of a heart-quelled silence?
Blog: What's New (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: new year, snowman, snowflakes, Add a tag
Happy 2009!
Blog: Monday Artday (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, girl, cute, winter, Christmas, snow, snowflakes, cat, Anita Mejía, x-mas, froot loops, chocolatita, Add a tag
Blog: Plot This (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: research, snowflakes, Add a tag
I decided to postpone Random Panic - number two until next time. Today I was helping Kate with her snow crystal science project, and I thought, "My God. Snowflakes are the most beautiful things on earth." So just for today, I think I will focus on the beautiful, and lovely. And I will remember the blessings, and not the panics.
Her project made me think that we are all, in a sense, exactly like human snowflakes. All beautiful, and not one is the same.
I have been asked to speak to a large group of students at the University. As I have been thinking about what to tell them, I have decided that I want them to remember that we are all born with certain gifts. Surely they know this, but many times I think we try to be another kind of snowflake because that's what our parents expect, or that is what we think makes more money, or we are shamed into thinking our snowflake is defective (Like that poor, little, imaginary warrior dude in Role Models). I want them to know that if they are in a major that they hate, that they can stop. It's never to late to start over. They need to allow their own snowflake to be exposed. Even if it seems unconventional.
I was the artsy little girl who slaved away for years in accounting, statistics, and business classes. I believed my parents, and bosses, and teachers when they said that design and art is not really a good idea. That I wouldn't make any money, and couldn't "go places." And so I spent many unhappy and unfulfilled years daydreaming storylines while selling real estate etc... Thank God I came to my senses before I was too old to dream :-)
I don't know what the point of this oddball-snowflake-inspired post is? But just to say that-- just like when you hear writing people say that no one else can write the book you will write, because there is only one you... I'd like to add that no one can do ANYTHING you were born to do, because you are an individual. And if you stay true to your own gifts and desires, you WILL be successful, no matter what. 'Cuz just like the ICE, you are one of a kind. Unique. And beautiful....
Katie
Blog: It's A Whimsical Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Robert's Snow, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Snowflakes, Robert's Snow, Snowflakes, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Add a tag
Week three for Robert's Snow
This is your last chance to catch your own snowflake. All the proceeds will go to the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. Bidding starts today and ends Friday, 7th December at 5pm. Robert's Snow
Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Rafaela Castra, Children's Literacy, Literary Murder, Rafaela Castro, Add a tag
Manuel Ramos
PROVOCACIONES: LETTERS FROM THE PRETTIEST GIRL IN ARVIN by RAFAELA G. CASTRO
Last week Daniel Olivas mentioned this book and I wanted to give it a bit more attention. It's a new work from Chusma House, the respected publishing enterprise of Charley Trujillo (Soldados) that offers fine literature sometimes overlooked by readers and reviewers. Here's the announcement from Chusma House about Castro's intriguing book:
"A collection of sensitive essays that depict the lives of a close knit Mexican family living first in Arvin, in the San Joaquin Valley, and later in the San Francisco Bay Area. These insightful, loving, guilt ridden, and at times very sad narratives, reveal the religious, moral, cultural, and ethical values of a young girl raised in the 1950s and 1960s in a Mexican Catholic working class home. We are told stories about a special Mexican mother-daughter relationship; about loving one’s family but needing to leave it; about living in another country and loving it; and about the role of the Peace Corps in the lives of young Americans of the 1960s. The essays cover the years from the late 1930s, when the author’s parents married and came to California from New Mexico, to the 1990s when their lives ended. In between those years their special marriage experienced intense love and intense tragedy."
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
"Rafaela G. Castro was born in Bakersfield, California, but has lived most of her life in the San Francisco Bay Area. She spent two years in Brazil with the Peace Corps before receiving degrees in English Literature, Library Science, and Folklore from the University of California, Berkeley. She has lectured in Ethnic Bibliography and Chicano Studies at UC Berkeley, and recently retired from the Humanities/Social Sciences department of Shields Library at the University of California, Davis. She is the author of Dictionary of Chicano Folklore."
CHILDREN'S STORY WORKSHOP
The Aurora Central Library and the Colorado Authors League presents another workshop in the CAL Speaker Series, "I Wrote (or Have an Idea For) a Children's Story - Now What?" CAL speaker Denise Vega is author of, among others, Click Here (To Find Out How I Survived Seventh Grade) (Little, Brown & Co. Books for Young Readers, 2005) and Build A Burrito (Cartwheel Books, Scholastic, 2008). The workshop takes place at 6:00 p.m., March 29, Aurora Central Library, 14949 E. Alameda Parkway, Aurora, CO. The event is free, but please call 303-739-6626 to reserve a space.
CALL FOR CHILDREN'S LITERACY VOLUNTEERS
Friends of Food For Thought, a children's literacy group that works with low-income youngsters in Denver, is recruiting volunteers and board members.
The organization has been in existence for about 14 years. Find a short description at http://www.ffft.org/
The board usually meets the second Wednesday of the month from noon to two p.m. in Denver.
Volunteers can work on developing participants for and planning book drives, fund-raising, marketing, and events.
For more information, Bonnie F. McCune, Library Community Programs Consultant
WHAT I'M READING NOW
One of the books resting on the small table next to my bed is Murder & Other Acts of Literature, edited by Michele Slung (Book-of-the-Month Club, 1997). I picked up a pristine copy of this short story anthology at Miss Prothero's Books on Santa Fe Drive here in Denver. (Check out this store the next time you are cruising the West Side, visiting the Museo de Las Americas or the art galleries, including CHAC, or grabbing a bite to eat at El Noa Noa or El Taco de Mexico. It's address is 1112 Santa Fe Drive, Denver, CO 80204, 303-572-2260.)
The basic idea for the collection is that the crime fiction was written by authors not necessarily recognized as crime fiction writers. That attracted me immediately -- here was an opportunity to stretch my understanding of several writers. This book provided a chance to read mystery and detective stories by authors I respect but who are not usually associated with those genres. And what a lineup: John Cheever, Eudora Welty, Naguib Mahfouz, Alice Walker, Isak Dinesen, Louisa May Alcott, William Faulkner, Isabel Allende, Gabriel García Márquez, Virginia Woolf and fourteen other esteemed and honored writers from around the world. For a reader this type of collection is a treasure, something to linger over while propped against a pillow with a book light the only illumination in an otherwise pitch-dark bedroom. And linger I have, limiting myself to one story each night, no matter how tempted I am to flip the pages from the James Thurber piece to the Rudyard Kipling story.
I haven't finished the book so I can't say which of the stories will turn out to be my favorite, but Mahfouz, García Márquez, Allende and Woolf so far have set a pretty high bar (no surprise, right?) The Mahfouz story, By A Person Unknown, is a troubling, ambiguous detective story centered on a serial killer whose crimes are works of heinous art. Perfect and cold-blooded, the killer appears to have no motive for his cruelty; he leaves absolutely no clues nor does he make any mistakes. He appears seemingly out of nowhere and leaves the scene untouched, undisturbed except for the blood and protruding eyeballs of the strangled victims. The horror mounts and normalcy becomes a lost ideal. The detective, Muhsin, grapples with trying to solve the crime but he realizes that, essentially, such acts of violence can never be solved, they can never be explained. Where is the reality in that?
Miss Forbes's Summer of Happiness by García Márquez is creepy. How's this for an opening line: "When we came back to the house in the afternoon, we found an enormous sea serpent nailed by the neck to the door frame." A classic tale of misdirection, the ending surprises the reader who can only say, "Yeah, that's it."
Monk is quintessential Faulkner, almost Gothic in its tone, while Allende's An Act of Vengeance reads like a Shakespearean tragedy with a depressing but romantic Latina twist.
Ah, nothing like a good murder story to stir up the literary juices. As the editor says in her Foreword: "Murder and Other Acts of Literature implies what we already know, that the pen can be lethal and that the book is indeed a blunt instrument. Thus, when those wielding these weapons are among the world's greatest and most honored literary figures, what more desirable fate than willingly, for a few hours, to allow oneself to become a victim of their artistry?"
MARKETPLACE WANTS TO HEAR FROM YOU ABOUT BUSH'S RECENT TRIP THROUGH THE AMERICAS
Joellen Easton of the public radio program Marketplace sent in the following survey that she thought some readers of La Bloga might want to answer. She invites you to answer questions on their website, found here. Here's her message.
What was the impact of President Bush's Americas trip? Was this all political theater? Or do you expect Bush’s trip to affect your life or the lives of other Latinos in the U.S.? What do you expect to happen as a result of the trip? Share your insights with us. The trip highlighted some tensions between the U.S. and its neighbors to the south. Bush and Chavez's dueling tours underscored their ongoing tug-of-war for influence in the region. In Mexico, president Felipe Calderon pressed Bush for U.S. action on comprehensive immigration reform focused on creating jobs, not a fence. What do you make of the Bush visit, and what it means for relations between the U.S. and Latin America?
Joellen Easton
Analyst, Public Insight Journalism
MarketplaceMarketplace Money
American Public Media
Finally, the answer to the question I asked a few weeks ago is Jack Kerouac. If you don't remember the question, you can find it here.
Later.
Donna,
Thanks for sharing your haikus. I especially like your description of night with winter images. Really lovely!
Beautiful!
Thank you!