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It’s really, really hot here today and we are trapped inside. Ned and I have enjoyed this little book trailer immensely and we will probably watch it a couple more times before the day is out. It looks gorgeous animated so it will be really interesting to see the book.
The author/illustrator, award winning designer, Michael Hall includes 300 hearts in his stunning illustrations and readers are encouraged to try and count all of the hearts at the end of the book. It is due to be published in Australia next month and you can see inside the book more on the Harper Collins website.
Also have a look at some deleted scenes from the book on the newly created blog Under the Greenwillow devoted to celebrating the publishers 35th birthday - this will be a blog to watch.
Thanks to Fuse #8 for pointing me in the direction of this great book trailer. Also check out their review of Cosmic, an intermediate novel by Frank Cottrell Boyce - one of my all time favorite authors.
Also discovered today is this awesome new blog, this is definitely going to be one that I am going to be addicted to. A whole blog devoted meticulously to ‘recommended inappropriate books for kids’. The research, the writing and the images are just incredible and will give you a giggle as well as providing some incredible info.
1 Comments on My Heart Is Like a Zoo, last added: 1/12/2010
This book was one of my very favorite books from childhood and I remember it vividly…
Whistle For Willie is about Peter, a little boy who really wants to learn to whistle his very long sausage dog - Willie. It is such a simple story but it meant so much to me, as it has to millions of other children since its publication in 1964. And still now I am just in love with Keats.
Just like Sesame Street did, Ezra Jack Keats and his picture books opened up a whole different world to me. I learnt about big cities on the other side of the world, urban landscapes that I had not experienced but they fascinated me.
The illustrations in this book are as vivid as my memories of it. The colours are loud and happy, the sky bright blue and the pavements gritty grey. There is funky graffiti on the streets and gorgeous 60s floral wallpaper on Peter’s walls at home. Keats used a spectacular technique of blending gouache watercolour with collage in his illustrations that gives the book an illusion of texture.
I don’t remember ever questioning the fact that Peter is an African American child and I was interested to find this quote by Keats on his Foundation website…
“…None of the manuscripts I’d been illustrating featured any black kids—except for token blacks in the background. My book would have him there simply because he should have been there all along. Years before I had cut from a magazine a strip of photos of a little black boy. I often put them on my studio walls before I’d begun to illustrate children’s books. I just loved looking at him. This was the child who would be the hero of my book.”
Peter is every child; he struggles with learning to whistle, he plays, he skips and he explores. His enthusiasm and joyfulness in life is infectious and irrepressible. His expressions and his movements are just delightful and just looking at this book makes me want to give him a big kiss.
This animation of Whistle For Willie was filmed in 1965.
Whistle For Willie was the second book written by Keats about Peter, the first being The Snowy Day for which he won the Caldecott Medal. The Snowy Day is also gorgeous; for me imagining a city covered in snow is still a dream and of course this book also taught me the art of making snow angels. Peter goes on to feature in four other books growing up to be a teenager. You can see that lucky Katie found a second hand copy of Goggles starring Peter in this photo from her loot at Booktown. The Keats books are actually hard to find in Aus.
There is a beautiful clip from a film made about Keats on the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation website. Watching it brought me to tears today as I discovered so much about the man who created these amazing stories from my childhood. Overwhelmingly what comes from this piece and the rest of the information on the website is that Keats just adored children. Although he never had a family of his own he respected children and really believed that all children have a place in the world and should be loved and treated well.
On this Mothers’ Day I feel very lucky to have had a mother and grandmother who instilled such a love for reading and literature in me. I know that I want the same for Ned and the best way to do that? I think I’ll share some stories about Peter with him.
When people - especially non-book people - visit my house for the first time, they invariably say, ‘Wow, so many books!’ And then if they make it to our playroom or Rowan’s room, they say, ‘Gosh, more books!’
I love buying new books. There’s something special about selecting a new book, making it yours and finding a spot for it on your shelf.
But I also love borrowing books from our library, and over the last few years I have increasingly had lots of fun buying thrifted or secondhand books. To help give a framework for sharing our favourite ‘non-new’ finds, Lou and I have decided to start a new semi-regular themed post, ‘Borrowed and Thrifted’. We hope you like it.
A couple of years ago I discovered a GREAT thing about our library, which is the online process of putting books on reserve. Often when I’m on the internet, trundling around all the gorgeous blogs, I find a book that sounds like one I need to read. I just hop straight across to our online library catalogue without leaving my chair. Our library has several branches, and if a book is on loan or at a different branch, the system allows you to put the book on reserve through the online catalogue. When the book comes in to my branch, I get an email, and then all I have to do is go to the reserve shelf, and grab the book(s) with my name on them. It’s so efficient, I can be in and out of the library in about 2 minutes. I do love browsing the shelves of the library too, but when I’m short of time, this (free!) system is much appreciated.
I found this treasure at the library recently: What the Sky Knows by Nina Bourke and illustrated by Stella Danalis.
I want to know what the sky knows
How to be blue
Or grey
Or pink
How to make clouds …
Sparse text and abstract collage illustrations characterise this picture book by Australians Nina Bourke and Stella Danalis. I love how the narrative gets you to think about what it means to be the sky with all the responsibilities it entails. But I especially love the mixed media artwork because I always try to expose Rowan to different styles of illustration in the books we read.
The illustrations themselves ask as many questions as the text: fish with legs and wings, flying carpets and ladders to the moon. The concise text does not mean that this is a book purely for younger readers; there is lots of room for discussion in this book and older children would be able to engage with questions about the illustrator’s interpretation of the author’s words, and would be able to use the illustrative style as inspiration for their own artwork.
In the next post in this series I’m planning to list some ways I go about tracking down secondhand books online… Stay tuned!
3 Comments on Borrowed and thrifted, last added: 5/18/2009
Vintage Kids' Books My Kid Loves said, on 4/30/2009 7:22:00 AM
i couldn’t live without our library reserve system… if i hear about a band i like too, i reserve the cd and burn it… awful I know, but having audio books for the bub at my fingertips for those long car rides is essential.
kirsti said, on 4/30/2009 4:18:00 PM
Yay!
Loved this post - reminded me of actually doing this (reserving library books that is). Thanks Katie.
Also TOTALLY love that book about the sky. Mia has recently been telling me she can talk to the ocean and sky. Perhaps she knows things I don’t….. I will be reserving this one.
xxx
Sally said, on 5/7/2009 9:02:00 PM
We get similar comments - especially about my boys room which is top to toe books and more books in cupboards etc…
I must admit I don’t use the libraries as much as I did when living in the UK. In the UK they seemed to have a greater range of books and you were never charged overdue fees for children books - instead everything was automatically renewed.
There is no other series that transports me instantaneously to my childhood like that of Beatrix Potter.
My main BP memory is of being tucked up in bed at my grandparents’ house, in flannelette sheets and with a feathered pillow and eiderdown. My Papa is reading me and my sister one of the small format Beatrix Potter books…
Once upon a time there were four little Rabbits, and their names were––
Flopsy,
Mopsy,
Cotton-tail,
and Peter.
They lived with their Mother in a sand-bank, underneath the root of a very big fir-tree.
Papa had a unique storytelling style, and he used lots of dramatic tonal variation in his renditions of these stories. Sometimes he would make up new narrative and dialogue. (I remember that I would get quite annoyed when he did this – I just wanted him to read the story ‘properly’!) But what is obvious to me now is that he got an enormous amount of joy from reading these books to us.
A little shelf of the Peter Rabbit books were kept on a dresser in the room that we always stayed in at my grandparents’ house. As much as I remember being read the stories, I also remember reading the books myself, selecting different volumes from that little shelf.
Mum later told me that BEFORE these books were at my grandparents’ house, they lived at my mum’s grandmother’s house. By my calculations this makes them at least 50-odd years old. First read by my mum and her sisters, then by me, my sisters and cousins, this is one well-loved set of books.
After my Nana died, just 6 days after Rowan was born, my Mum passed on to Rowan the set of books, still enclosed in the same set of shelves.
So Rowan is now the lucky guardian. At some stage, we will have to see if we can get some preservation work done on the books - undoing the well-intentioned scars of sticky tape. Hopefully we can ensure they last long enough to be passed on to his grandchildren too.
Beatrix Potter first self-published The Tale of Peter Rabbit in 1901, based on a story she’d written in a letter to the five-year-old son of her governess. In that story she invented an exquisite and believable world of animal characters and the stories of their interactions with human characters. She broke many conventions of her time, and – I think – she inspired many other great pieces of children’s literature. The first book was later picked up by publisher Frederick Warne & Co, and by the end of 1902, 28,000 copies were in print. It’s hard to believe, but a soft toy of Peter Rabbit was produced just a year later, in 1903, which makes Peter the oldest known licensed character!
The joy of Peter Rabbit lives on - there are countless editions of the series now, in every available format. For me, it represents the most timeless children’s series of them all. It seems like perfect reading for the lead-up to Easter, and I will be sharing the tales of Peter Rabbit, the Flopsy Bunnies and Benjamin Bunny with Rowan over the next couple of weeks - and I might not be able to resist an imitation of one of Papa’s dramatic renditions.
Vintage Kids' Books My Kid Loves said, on 3/29/2009 8:20:00 AM
lovely posts… it’s so funny that those little collections can look so equally loved the world over….
LadyB said, on 3/29/2009 7:56:00 PM
Great post Katie. I also remember reading these at Nana and Papa’s house. Your post made me remember the smell of those books and the room in general - fluffing the feather pillows up and falling back down into them, and also the loveliness of finding the place where the hot water bottle had warmed our beds in winter!
Pauline said, on 3/30/2009 12:32:00 AM
That is such a lovely family collection to have.
My eldest daughter (now 5) loves these books and can recite Peter by heart. I bought the set in a case for her just after she was born and got a Readers Digest set for my first niece when she was born about 13 years ago now. I was read them as a child but don’t really remember them very well, though I know my favourite was Jemima Puddle Duck.
The movie Miss Potter with Rene Zellweger was just lovely for a bit of background on the stories and Beatrix herself. I would also recommend the DVD collection of the series - perfect for a rainy day or just a quick look as each story is self contained.
Penni said, on 3/30/2009 2:05:00 AM
My mother banned Beatrix Potter because, in her words, rabbits are vermin. Only a few months before she died, my Nana gave me a complete collection (bound in one volume) to, as she writes in a note in the front, ‘make up for a deprived childhood’ and so my children won’t be deprived. I was 16 when she gave it to me…my children now sit and listen to the stories nearly 20 years later.
Fred’s favourite (and mine now) is Two Bad Mice. There is something about the way she writes ‘Then there was no end to the rage and disappointment of Tom Thumb and Hunca Munca.’ It’s the most perfect example of tell don’t show I could ever come up with - beats Raymond Carver under the table.
When I was a little girl I loved The Tale of Mrs Tiggy-Winkle, I think I loved all the cameos, but I also loved the perfectly laundered pinny and handkins. Strange that I loved a book about laundry so much when I grew up with no interest in the task itself (though I quite like bringing fresh washing in from the line, and I love the smell of sundried clothes).
When my brother and I were little we would help mum decorate the tree in our living room. He had one side to decorate and I had the other, each of us had special ornaments given to us by special people. We would move an armchair to each side and sit bathed in the glow of the lights, listening to the cicadas, smelling the pine and reading our piles of Christmas books.
One of our favorites was and still is The Little Drummer Boy illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats. The text is the original words to the traditional carol originally composed in 1958.
Come they told me, pa rum pum pum pum
A new born King to see, pa rum pum pum pum
Our finest gifts we bring, pa rum pum pum pum
To lay before the King, pa rum pum pum pum,
rum pum pum pum, rum pum pum pum,
Ezra Jack Keats, who died in 1983, is a favorite in the US particualarly for creating the character of Peter who stared in a whole series of books, including another of my childhood favorites - Whistle for Willie. His illustrations mesmorised me, his use of bold colours that often clashed was fantastic and it’s that style that suits the story of the drummer boy perfectly.
The Little Drummer Boy is still available, also in board book format, and is a really special book to own. I’m just glad that my brother and I still have our original copy and we can now share it with our children.
Good post. I love this illustrator. Have you ever read ‘Jennie’s Hat’. Fantastico!
MamaShift said, on 12/8/2008 2:09:00 AM
My favorite Christmas story, song and movie! I was just Saturday telling my oldest this story. I didn’t know he, one of my favorite children’s book authors, had adapted this story.
You need go no further than Facebook to discover the cult following of this vintage Australian classic. Believe it or not, at last count Grug had 25,659 friends!
It would have been a rare Australian primary school in the 1980s that didn’t have a copy of some of the Grug books on their shelves. The first four books in the series by Ted Prior were first published in 1979, and the colours and design give it that unmissable 70s style.
Grug is a small creature who began life as the top of a Burrawong tree, which one day fell off, and gradually morphed into Grug. He has a unique view on the world; he’s a bit of a loner, but occasionally sets out to interact with the world in his own special way.
I remember taking some of these books home as readers, and have a very nostalgic feelings towards little Grug - he’s so industrious, but also so sensitive and considerate …
issued right up to the late 80s and early 90s. One of Grug’s many fans includes Australian author, Marcus Zusak, most famous for writing The Book Thief.
1 Comments on When We Were Little Sunday…, last added: 9/21/2008
Since I didn’t grow up in Australia I missed out on Grug (I’d never heard of him until now)… but I don’t want my son to miss out Are these books widely available in Australian bookstores, or do I have to hunt them down?
Harry the Dirty Dog, originally published in 1956, is another book that I vividly remember from childhood and as a testament to its appeal it remains a huge seller in bookshops today.
Harry is a little white dog with black spots who has an aversion to baths (what dog doesn’t?). One day when he hears the water running he buries the scrubbing brush and runs away from home. Gradually during his very adventurous day around the city he becomes a very dirty dog: ‘In fact, he changed from a white dog with black spots, to a black dog with white spots‘.
When Harry returns home his family doesn’t recognise him as their dog. Then the real fun begins as Harry tries to convince the family that he belongs to them ending with…a bath!
Husband and wife team Gene Zion and Margaret Bloy Graham created several Harry books together; No Roses for Harry, Harry by the Sea and Harry and the Lady Next Door, all with simple story lines about Harry getting in - and out of - trouble. What really makes me love these books now as an adult is the illustrations by Bloy Graham and their lovely warm 1950s style. There is always so much happening in her artwork, I love the people with their wide eyed expressions, and Harry of course just has so much personality in his up turned nose.
This is one of those books that everyone I know always adds to their ‘must have’ children’s book list and rightly so, it’s a classic.
3 Comments on When We Were Little Sunday, last added: 10/2/2008
Vintage Kids' Books My Kid Loves said, on 9/14/2008 12:11:00 PM
i heart sundays…
Kellie said, on 9/15/2008 5:39:00 AM
Thank you so much for your kind comment regarding my families Book Week costumes! We had a great time! They are still being worn in the most unusual situations … my son so wanted to go to bed as the wizard last week!
What a great place you have here! I will have to do some serious lurking!
Lindsay said, on 10/2/2008 3:19:00 AM
We love this book! There are so many 50th Anniversary editions of wonderful children’s books at the moment, it must have been an amazingly creative time 50 years ago! The Tiger Who Came to Tea, Brown Bear, Brown Bear and Paddington!
I know Lou reviewed a Berenstain book for When We Were Little Sunday last week, but a golden photo opportunity this evening means a repeat mention is required.
The book is Old Hat, New Hat by Stan and Jan Berenstain. It was, I am told, my very favourite book as a toddler - one of those ones that I knew every word of and could tell straight away if a page was skipped (which means, of course, that I made my parents read this book over and over ad nauseum…) Although I don’t remember this experience in detail, the book held fond memories for me, and it was one of the first books I bought when I began working in a bookshop.
The book tells the story of a bear who goes hat shopping, entering a store with his ‘old hat’ and surveying a display of new hats. The shop assistant provides a range of many hats to try, and models showcase still more, but every hat has a problem.
The repetition and rhyme are great fun and as a read-aloud it lends itself to indignant tones, at an increasing pace, as the bear becomes more fussy and the shop assistant more and more exasperated. I think one reason toddlers love this book is because it allows them to imagine being able to refuse and complain as much as they like! In the end, inevitably, the bear realises that sometimes a new model can’t replace trusty old favourite.
At dinner with my mum and dad and two sisters tonight, we were discussing Dr Seuss and Berenstein Bear books and I brought out my copy of Old Hat, New Hat. Rowan had it read to him for the first time. I think he enjoyed hearing it almost as much as I did as a toddler, but not quite as much as much as my dad enjoyed reading it again. That was, until the fourth reading, after which Rowan still called out, ‘Again!’
1 Comments on When We Were Little Sunday, last added: 8/24/2008
hi lou, thanks so much for your comment, yes it is a framed mog print. i scanned and printed it myself, along with a ‘tiger who came to tea’ illustration. my little boy loves them.
When Ned was born his dad insisted we get a copy ofBears In The Night because he remembered it from when he was little.
Bears in the Night is one of the Bright and Early Books for Beginning Beginnersseries written by Stan and Jan Berenstain. There’s not much to this skinny little book but Ned’s dad can remember it word for word. The text is great because it matches exactly what is happening in the illustration and is repetitious which aids children in memorising the story - one of the first steps to reading. There are only 24 words used in the story but repeated over and over and over again.
There is also an exciting build up as the bears sneak out of bed late at night - what’s going to happen? - and then a big BOOO and back you go through the text until the bears are safe in bed again. It is quite fun to read aloud as you can use lots of different tones and speeds with your voice.
There are now so many Berenstain Bears books in print I’ve lost count (I think there are over 250), although I do remember the favourite of my brother and I was The Bike Lesson. The Bears now have their own TV series and website.
5 Comments on When we were little Sunday…, last added: 8/24/2008
Thanks for the memory - I will have to get some as there are currently NO Berenstain Bears books in my house ( *gasp!* ), although MC does love the website.
victoria said, on 8/19/2008 3:04:00 AM
I am not alone in being one whose parents kept ALL my books from when I was growing up. For a long time all my Dr Seuss books were on Ella’s shelf, along with old nursery rhyme books, Peter Rabbit and Mr Mens. Now we’ve taken out the Little House books as we’ve moved to chapter books - we’re up to Plum Creek already and I’m loving reading them as much if not more than Ella. Milly Molly Mandy is also a hit in this house. Pippi Longstocking was another favourite chapter book. We tried Wind in the Willows - but the chapters are quite long and the language a little advanced for an almost 5 year old.
I’d love to hear more on any ideas for age appropriate chapter books when you get the chance.
Vintage Kids' Books My Kid Loves said, on 8/20/2008 8:23:00 AM
great pick…. we’ve checked it out at the library, but strangely i don’t own that one….. googling… now!
Sue said, on 8/22/2008 2:43:00 AM
Chapter books! … I’m not generally into recommending Enid Blyton but from the moment I read her Faraway Tree series I became a fan of these 4 books.
Looking up details about them I was surprised at their publication dates:
The Enchanted Wood (1939)
The Magic Faraway Tree (1943)
The Folk of the Faraway Tree (1946)
Up the Faraway Tree (1951)
All 4 stories focus on an enchanted wood with one gigantic magical tree discovered by three adventurous siblings (Jo, Bessie and Fanny) allowed to explore at random in days gone by when children’s freedom was unrestrained.
At the top of the Faraway Tree is a ladder which accesses a magic land - a different place every time they visit - but not always entirely pleasant - and there is always the tension of making sure they get down ther ladder before the land moves on. Great excitment and along the way they meet the folk of the Faraway Tree including Moonface, Silky the fairy, Saucepan Man, Dame Washalot, Mr Watzisname and the Angry Pixie. Great characterisation, as I remember.
Long before I had children I remember reading this book to my younger sister and stimulating her imagination to such an extent that she and the boy next door when off on their own adventure looking for the Faraway Tree in our pedal car. (Eventually found some hours later by frantic parents.)
Haven’t read it recently but will dig it out at the appropriate time for my grandson - and hope the language doesn’t disappoint.
We Heart Books » When We Were Little Sunday said, on 8/24/2008 7:55:00 AM
[...] know Lou reviewed a Berenstain book for When We Were Little Sunday last week, but a golden photo opportunity this evening means a repeat mention is [...]
Ned and I bought this wonderful book last week and it is officially our favorite picture book of 2008. Cheeky Monkey is the new book written by Andrew Daddo and illustrated by Emma Quay, the team that also created the beautiful Goodnight Me.
Cheeky Monkey is one of those books that just grabs you from the first moment you pick it off the shelf. It gave me that little skip in the heart beat I get when I see something really beautiful.
The little boy Emma has created in this book instantly reminded me of Ned. He has the same beautiful toddler expressions that Ned has that make me ache with love for him. I adore how the character wraps his little leg around his dad as they get in the shower and how he leaps from the high chair for a cuddle just like Ned does.
Andrew Daddo’s text in this book is just simple and beautiful to read aloud. He uses all those funny little sayings that we all find ourselves using around little ones, well I do anyway. Silly Billy, Lucky Duck, Funny Bunny and of course Cheeky Monkey are all in there and leaving the most important till last, a big “I Love You!”
Goodnight Me was Andrew and Emma’s first picture book together and is also magic. Hear Andrew Daddo read their beautiful book here and you will fall in love with it too. On each page the little Orangutan baby says goodnight to a body part, reading this aloud is almost like a meditation, it is soft and lyrical making it perfect for bedtime. Emma’s illustrations are again incredible as she makes this little ape look so cuddly, he is a lovely fuzzy orange gangly creature against a stunning purple background that just makes the book so warm and inviting.
I have given Goodnight Me many times as a gift to little friends and also to one of my best girlfriends who has trouble sleeping. The other day some friends showed me their copy that I had given their little girl Amelie when she was born, much sticky tape had been used to repair the well loved pages as she and her little sister Olivia had wanted it read over and over again at bedtime.
Andrew and Emma obviously make a great team as they have created two instant classics and I can’t wait to see what comes next.
4 Comments on Cheeky Monkey, last added: 7/30/2008
Oh that is a favourite. I saw that new book the other day, I’ll have to go back and get a copy - sounds brilliant.
ron said, on 7/8/2008 8:25:00 AM
Yes, we have it, too.
We love it- it sings our songs- now we have to find Goodnight, Me
Ron- proud Dad
Becky said, on 7/11/2008 10:07:00 AM
I loved Goodnight, Me. I’m sure I’ll love this newest book as well
Toby said, on 7/23/2008 2:29:00 AM
We’re big fans of cheeky monkey as well. It’s easy to read, there’s some good jokes, but over all, it’s a tender loving book. It makes my husband and I remember our childhood and place our kids in theirs.
by Mick Inkpen has just been released in the UK to great reviews, unfortunately it doesn’t look like it will be released in Australia until November. You could order it in through your local independent bookshop or pop it on your list for later this year.
‘We are wearing out the Naughty Step - I lost the school hamster, and Josh fed the elephant the wrong way and we made the dog into a panda… Mummy is not happy… but the day she makes Kevin a chocolate birthday cake is the day that ALL of us, including Mummy, end up on the Naughty Step!’
This reminds me of a 30 degree day earlier this year when I made four batches of Nigella’s Cupcakes before one turned out edible! I really needed a spell on the naughty step when I literally had a meltdown over blue and yellow cupcakes. So I definitely know how ‘Mummy’ in the book feels.
This gorgeous new book points out one of the great hypocrisies of childhood, should mummies and daddies be banished to the naughty step too? Because we can all lose our temper can’t we?
Mick Inkpen is one of the most popular picture book writers and illustrators in the world. His Kipperand Wibbly Pigstories have sold millions of copies worldwide. Kipper alone has sold over 6 million books and is this year turning 18 years old. Like Nick Butterworth, Mick Inkpen has a graphic design background so he also places his characters in the middle of crisp white pages which makes the books really enjoyable for toddlers because they can really focus on the character. All of Mick’s characters are irresistible and later this year he will launch a new series based on the enthusiastic Zebra that features in Kipper’s A to Z.
2 Comments on We Are Wearing Out The Naughty Step, last added: 7/10/2008
A guest post by Trudy, 30-something-year-old first-time mum to Oscar, 16 months.
You think you’ve had a cow of day, but have you really? Have you ever really thought what a cow might go through during the day? Nor had I until our most recent purchase. I know, yet another animal book to add to Oscar’s already furry and feathered bookshelf.
We were out last week with Grandma (country Grandma as opposed to city Nanna!) and visited our favourite local bookstore, Book Bonding. I saw two sets of big brown eyes looking from the book display and it was too much for me to resist so we purchased Cow by Malachy Doyle and illustrated by Angelo Rinaldi. The front cover in it’s own right hit the right cord with me. When we were at the counter ready to pay, Natasha showed me Malachy’s latest book as well, Horse. Needless to say Grandma reached into her purse and we walked out with another two animal books.
The illustrations in this book are amazing. It’s as if the cows are in your living room. I felt as if I could reach out and pat their fur or feel the steam coming out of their mouths on the cold morning as they made their way to the milking shed. I have included a couple of illustrations from the book so you can appreciate the expertise of Angelo Rinaldi. You can actually see veins on the udder of the cow and could only imagine the milk sloshing around inside and the pain she must be experiencing prior to milking.
It will be a great book as Oscar gets older so we can teach him that milk doesn’t come out of cartons and teach him the process of getting the milk from the cow to the dairy. He can also get an understanding of what it might be like to be a cow. For the first time in my life I sat back and thought too what it must be like in the paddocks at night, on a dewy morning or during the heat of a summer’s day.
“Slowly you rise from the sodden grass, your thick coat wet with morning dew. Big and heavy, you amble to the gate, full udder swinging between your legs”.
The journey is amazing although simplistic in its own right. I was totally encapsulated in the experience and even as I write this blog I am still touched by those big brown eyes.
The trip to the milking shed, the trip back to the paddock and what a cow would experience during the day. Watching the children leave for school and return on the school bus. How the children swim in the river as the cow sits on the banks watching.
“As the midday sun blazes, you rest in the shade of the oak tree, and close your deep dark eyes. Your ears twitch to clear the flies from your face. You swish them from your back with your long bushy tail……”
From now on I will choose my words carefully before I state that I’ve had a cow of day….
“You’re back in the field, the sun has gone, the files have flown and the long, hot day draws to an end. You graze. You chew. And you rest. It’s hard work being a cow……..”
A guest post by Sarah, 38 year old mum to Neve (9 3/4), Cissy (3) and Jemima (10 months).
I think my favourite author would have to be Alison Lester. I love the Australian-ness of her books, the gentle stories and illustrations and the fact that the substantial nature of them kind of creeps up on you. These books are “worthy” without boasting about it. My kid’s love them too.
Alison Lester grew up on a farm near Wilson’s Prom in Victoria, riding horses, spending time at the beach and her stories really reflect this upbringing. Alison herself says that she thinks what is appealing about her books is that they are “filled with the spirit of the young”. I think she captures this so beautifully. Her characters are adventurous and not afraid to be who they are - great qualities!
“Imagine if we were….” and be transported to other worlds. Every second page opens up to a double spread of other places. Filled with animals of every variety (listed around the outside so you can play an animal version of “Where’s Wally”)
“Imagine if we were surrounded by monsters where pteradons swoop and triceratops smash where stegosaurs stomp and tyrannosaurs gnash” Turn the page and you are there. You can also go to the jungle, savannah, Antarctic, a farm, under the sea and the Australian Bush. This book converted me and I’ve been a fan ever since.
Inscribed at the front “to Mum and Dad for a wonderful childhood”
This book is told in seasons - and includes all the happenings on the farm. Alison takes us to the local show; she rescues a baby wombat, feeds the cows, and musters cattle along the beach. I imagine these events to be highlights of Alison’s own childhood and I end up feeling quite nostalgic for a more innocent time and place. The children in this story have such great adventures - it really is a window into quite a different life for our urban children.
“In September it was time to bring the cattle home from the bush run. That year, Jake and I were finally old enough to go along. It took a day to ride down and muster, and a day to drive them home along the beach. We splashed through the shallows and jumped the waves. I decided to be a drover when I grow up”
There is a bit more text in this one, so you probably need to be a bit bigger to appreciate it fully.
“Ernie is going to live in Arnhem Land for a year. His parents are working in a hospital there”
It’s a new take on the other Tessa, Clive, Frank, Rosie books, with Ernie in Arnhem Land. I think this book is so delightful because in pointing out the cultural differences between us it manages to reinforce the fact that children are the same no matter what their culture.
I absolutely love the pages about the school play.
This book came about following Alison Lester’s own journey to Arnhem Land.
Follows the travels of a family in a caravan around Australia. Every second page has a map showing where they are and how far they have gone. They visit all the places you expect but it is not just a tourist guide. The book is filled with little vignettes of the experience - caravan park showers, where they sat in the car, playing monopoly in the caravan when it rained and the catch cry of younger brother Billy…. “Are we there yet?”
In which everyone hides in the cupboard, there is a rhyming clue to guess what each character is dressed up as. “I’m green and I’m grumpy, I’m huge and I roar. I’m a thundering,rumbling…. (open the flap) DINOSAUR! “finishing up with Rosie - a bit younger than we see her in Rosie Sips Spiders - asleep in the cupboard. Very sweet.
So if you haven’t visited Alison Lester’s books before, check them out at the library when you next visit- I’m sure you will love them as much as I do.
A guest post by Trudy, 30-something-year-old first-time mum to Oscar, 15 months.
What is it about animals that kids find so interesting, actually what is it about animals that I find so interesting? Is it their shape, the noises they make, the colour of their skin, fur or feathers? Yes you guessed it, Oscar, Matt & I made a recent trip to the zoo. I am not sure who was more excited, Oscar, his dad pointing out all of the wonderful animals or me watching the expressions on both of their faces.
Ever since our adventure to the zoo last week, we have had even more fun with our vast array of animal books at home. I actually didn’t realise how many animal books we have got!
Open the front cover and you are taken back by the most beautiful bold black and white letters. The anticipation of what’s behind is too much for Oscar as he grabs at a letter. [He needs to be reminded again that it's a special book and we need to be careful! He is learning slowly].
A = Antelope B = Baboon C = Chameleon. The bright colours of the Chameleon against the black shinny background is truly amazing and the pop out 3 dimensional branch which holds the Chameleon and it’s five offspring is like the real thing.
As you work your way through the alphabet, you are greeted with wonderful pop outs or lift the flaps to see who may be behind that wonderful letter. The range of animals is just amazing and it’s always nice to see some Australian classics such as the koala and wallaby (what a clever man to put a wallaby, but I guess when you’re confronted with “k” for kangaroo and koala you have to think a little more laterally).
Most of the classics such as the gorilla, elephant, snakes, tigers and lions are in there. I was disappointed that the giraffe couldn’t squeeze into the book but when you see the family of gorillas you forgive him for the oversight! We then move to some of the more obscure animals including the okapi, numbat, quetzal, urial and vicuna - all very interesting to say the least.
I have shared a couple of our favourite pages below so you can see how wonderful the illustrations and pop outs are. (Forgive some of my photography skills but it’s a tricky book to capture).
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For our upcoming trip overseas, I’ve been preparing my goodie bag of distractions for Rowan on the plane. Rowan does have some experience of flying, as his grandparents live interstate. And perhaps more significantly, I do now have some experience of flying as a mum. Suffice to say, I’ve got a lot better at it over time. These tips on books for travelling with kids are gleaned from our own travels and advice from well-travelled friends…
Books are excellent for travelling because compared to other forms of distraction, they generally have no small parts, and are not messy. (With the best of intentions I took a tub of playdough on one plane flight - big mistake.) With some parent interaction, a good book can be strung out for an extended period of time, especially for the period when the seatbelt sign is on… I’ve found it’s a good idea to take a mix of old favourites and new books Rowan has never seen before. Hiding one of Rowan’s favourite books for a period before we leave also works well.
Here is a list of a few of the types of books we will be taking on this holiday…
1) Small books
A few small books are light and take up minimal space; they also provide variety and it’s not a disaster if you lose one. Golden Books, the Thomas Library books (at $3.95 a pop) and Mr Men books all fit in this category.
2) Busy books
When I say busy books I mean ones with lots of detail and things to look for on every page. A hit for us has been the Thomas’ Really Useful Word Book. This durable large format board book is also great value at $16.95. Each spread pictures Thomas in a different part of Sodor, and shows lots of different objects and animals - at the farm, at the station, at the seaside. Lots of things to find in every picture and there is a bit of a narrative too throughout the book. Unfortunately it is fairly heavy, which may rule it out for this trip…
Also highly recommended are the Richard Scarry books. Haven’t tried these with Rowan yet, but I suspect they would do the job perfectly.
3) Books with stickers
Stickers are another great distraction for travelling. A while ago I picked up this great pad of stickers called ‘Vehicle Movement’ for the grand total of $2.25 from the Queenscliff Newsagency. Of course I’ve never seen them in a newsagent since, and I now wish I’d bought several of them… This one pad of stickers has taken us on several flights already and we’ve shared them with grateful fellow parents on the plane.
This time we will be trying one of Ladybird’s series of books with reusable stickers - we have Let’s get dressed. In this one the two sheets of stickers of clothes and accessories can be used to dress four children inside. Even if Rowan doesn’t like this one, I think I’ll have some fun!
I also found the Play Scene On The Construction Site which despite my best efforts, Rowan spotted and he has already had a tantrum over it. A board folds out and an assortment of diggers, tip trucks, workmen, witches hats and other goodies can be placed on the scene. There are lots more in this series, which you can view here at Mudpuppy. (Click on Sticker Set Play Scenes.)
But there is one more book with great current appeal for Rowan, which really took me by surprise. It is IDEAL for the plane. It’s called Point It, and I found it at Metropolis Books. A passport-sized book, it is a kind of visual dictionary, designed so you can show a picture of something you are trying to communicate to someone who doesn’t speak your language. It has retro 70s photos and illustrations of 1200 items, covering the topics of food, accommodation, transport and shopping. (The transport section guarantees the Rowan appeal…) I initially bought it for a bit of fun. But the more I look at it the more I think it will be useful, and the toddler appeal is a fabulous bonus!!!
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A guest post by Nicole, first-time mum to Charlotte, 22 months.
At about 7:30pm every night Charlotte and I (and sometimes her Daddy) sink into her bean bag and read some books before she settles into bed with Dolly. Charlotte heads straight to her book shelf and starts pulling books out for Mummy to read to her that night. She has a couple of favourites that always need a once over before bed.
Continuing the music theme from Trudy’s guest post, one of Charlotte’s favourite books is Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. On the front cover you press a section which starts the nursery rhyme and lights up the sky with tiny twinkle stars. The twinkling stars mesmerised her as a baby. (It was always a good book to have on hand when she was unsettled.) We never seem to get past the front cover of the book, once the song is over and the lights stop flashing, Charlotte says, “MORE, MORE” and we start the nursery rhyme again. Along with flashing lights, Charlotte also performs the actions to the nursery rhyme, very cute…
Once we get pass the front cover, the book is brought to life with some beautifully illustrated drawings. Five little creatures of the night take us on a journey to find out what twinkles in the bright night sky. It is very much a book that can be enjoyed over and over again.
The other book is Rabbit Ears by Amber Stewart, which Charlotte got for Easter from her Granny. Hopscotch is a very determined little rabbit who knows exactly what he likes and what he doesn’t like. Sounds a bit like Charlotte and most other two-year-olds. What Hopscotch knows for absolute certain is that he does not like having his ears washed. Charlotte can relate to Hopscotch, as she knows for absolute certain that she does not like having her hair washed…
Hopscotch’s big cousin Bobtail comes to stay overnight. While eating some extra-chocolaty chocolate cake, Hopscotch inquires as to when he too can go and stay at Bobtails. Daddy replies when you are a big Hopscotch. While Hopscotch and Bobtail are in the bath, Hopscotch notices that bobtail is washing his own ears. This is where Hopscotch realises that maybe if he washes his own ears this would make him a big Hopscotch and he would be able to go and stays at Bobtails house.
Laura Rankin’s illustrations are exquisite and along with the story it makes for an every enjoyable read.
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A guest post by Trudy, 30-something-year-old first-time mum to Oscar, 15 months.
Oscar and I go to Nanny’s house every Thursday night as Matt plays tennis and his parents love having us (that is Oscar) for dinner.
I have noticed over the last month or so that within five minutes of arriving, Oscar crawls to the toy box in the back room, and opens the lid. His face just lights up with excitement as he surveys the array of toys that are inside.
Much to our amazement, the first thing he always gets out are three books, all with a musical theme and they keep him (and his cousin Charlie) entertained for ages. Reader warning: having all three musical books out together can drive you crazy within 5 minutes.
I asked Nanny if we could borrow the books so we could contribute to the weheartbooks.com family. This post is the first of three guest posts I will make over the next week.
Incy Wincy Spideris bright, it’s fun, it’s interactive and above all else it seems to be entertaining Oscar no end. The front cover has a hole at the bottom right hand corner, which is also the bottom of the water spout. When you press the button it plays the tune, Incy Wincy Spider. Oscar knows exactly where the button is and also knows if he opens the front cover of the book, the music becomes louder.
Once you open the cover of the book there is also another small button with a cartoon spider on it. You can only press this once the music has finished, Oscar hasn’t quite mastered that element of the book yet! When you press this button it makes a special sound effect which I just cannot describe in words but is something like “rip-raw”.
As you work your way through the book it tells the story of Incy Wincy Spider and has interactive pull tabs along the way. (Don’t forget the music button can always be pressed again for more singing…)
The “out comes the sunshine” page is one of our favourites. It’s got the biggest brightest sunshine with a blue bird popping out. You also get the opportunity to start the Incy journey up the spout again. There a few other animals along the way too which are as equally bright and happy. There’s a dog, or as Oscar refers to him, a “woof woof” and there is also a fat pink pig.
The illustrations and pop outs are so clever. We also like the page (illustrated here) which has Incy climbing across a thin piece of string which represents his web.
By this stage of the book we have hit the song four times and the other rip-raw sound at least twice. The final page in the book is just too exciting for words and you can see by the photo that Oscar is so intrigued as to how the legs are free and dangly.
I tell Oscar it’s a special book and we have to take care when reading “Nanny’s special books”. Nanny says it’s fine (as most Nannys would) but we want poor old Incy to last a few more years yet. When he saw the books at our house today, his face was one of total surprise and joy. There may be tears tomorrow night when we take the books back and leave them at Nanny’s house…
0 Comments on The excitement of Nanny’s house as of 1/1/1990
Backpacks for kids seem hard to come by if you are not inspired by the licensed character merchandise à la Dora, Wiggles, Bob and Bratz. But I discovered these gorgeous animal-inspired backpacks, made by Little Packrats, and tracked down their Australian distributor. These are three of my favourites:
I ordered the mouse one for Rowan, and it’s now his childcare bag. Made from thick vinyl, it’s durable and easy to clean, and the 3D ears are so cute. It is smaller than the average kids backpack, which makes it ideal for toddlers and preschoolers – small enough that you don’t attempt to overload it to make it too heavy. Having said that, it’s not really big enough to accommodate ALL our books from the library and for anyone who’s seen the back seat of my car lately, that’s just as well cos I couldn’t reasonably expect a toddler to carry that weight…
Rowan’s bag was bought with the intention that he would wear it on our forthcoming overseas trip. We are going to JAPAN! Yippee! But right now, Rowan hasn’t quite got the idea that he is supposed to wear the bag on his back, so invariably it’s me who can be seen carrying it on my shoulder. So now I’m not so sure that this bag will make the cut with all the new rules on carry-on luggage…
More posts on the travel theme coming soon. Meanwhile, Lou is having a sunny break up north, and some guest posts will be appearing shortly.
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When I did my post on my Owl Obsession fellow blogger Annie from anniesorganics mentioned that her son loves Owl Babies by Martin Waddell and illustrated by Patrick Benson.
Ned also loves Owl Babies especially when I read it aloud and do different voices for owl siblings Sarah, Percy and Bill. When the owlets awake to find their mummy gone the two older owls decide that she is out hunting and will be back soon but every time they come up with a reason as to why mum is not there Bill gets more and more anxious repeating “I want my mummy”. Bill is great fun to read aloud because you can put on a very sad voice that really keeps Ned’s attention and he thinks is very funny.
Finally mummy arrives back at the nest, swooping through the night for cuddles with the babies. This is a particularly good concept for Ned at present as he is starting to fret a little when I leave him but I want him to know that I am always coming back to get him.
Patrick Benson’s illustrations for this book are amazing, his artwork makes it so you can almost reach out and stroke the tiny fluffy owlets. He gives each owl a personality and their wide little eyes are adorable, toddlers like Ned can see themselves in the owls with their wonder of the big wide world but also feeling slightly scared of it.
Owl Babies makes a lovely bedtime story too as it explains to children that you will always be there for them, it’s very comforting. Simply written and with not to much text Owl Babies so it is perfect for the very young and is even available in board book for them to look at and hold themselves.
Rumours of my demise have been greatly exaggerated. October was full of post strikes mucking up everything, taking time off with Andy, motorbike illness (the bike, not us) and lists. You know - you wake up and you start working your way through The List, by the end of the day you have hopefully crossed half of it off and then just before bedtime you make a fresh one for the next day. Sometimes when I am in the village, someone stops me and asks me how I am. ''I haven't seen you for such a long time!" Whereupon I assure them that I am, in fact, rather boringly stuck in the Hovel, working, most of the time; as if the fact of them not seeing me meant that I had vanished under a stone. Then they ask how 'work' is going. And as I haven't had much by the way of a 'proper job' for a few months, I say - ''oh, you know, this and that''. Because I don't want to bore them - or you - with the List. The List that has everything on it from making tonight's tea, updating websites, and trying to source some decent coloured card, to emailing a b c and d, ordering art prints for my Etsy shop, ordering Christmas cards, designing the darned things in the first place, trying to get 660 Christmas tags letter pressed and - well, as they say, the list goes on. And on. So I dipped my head down and got stuck into it.
Not to mention finishing off card orders. That's right, every card someone buys from me has been lovingly folded, creased and corner punched by my own podgy little fingers. It keeps printing costs down. And yes, there are hundreds to do. Still, it gives me an excuse to put Midsomer Murders on the Box, and do some work at the same time. I've whipped my time down to 150x prepared in 2 hours. So - pleasant things which happened in October - my Robert Snowflake was kindly reviewed by the Finding Wonderland blog, who said all sorts of nice things about me. I do feel a bit of a fraud sometimes, as I have only illustrated one picture book in my life, (oh yes and a little bit of another one which I don't really feel counts) . I wish I could persuade publishers and a decent agent to change this situation, but most of my work is simply my own cards and artwork, because thankfully there are a lot of good people out there who do like what I do. So I'm never quite sure what category I fall into...oh let's have a nice random photo before I get maudlin. What shall we have...ah, my nice little new-but-vintage Christmas pony block...or rather, the results.
But - reasons to be cheerful, I have had a gratifyingly big order for Christmas cards and multi-packs of Christmas letter pressed tags from a new shop opening in Winchester, mid-November. 'Your Life, Your Style' is owned by a lovely person who is aiming to stock quality, unique products not normally seen in the High Street - and giving small creatives like myself a chance to put our goods out there. I hadn't expected my humble printing hobby to actually start making me some money so soon. So I sensibly blew my last 85 quid on 5 pots of block printing ink...when I should have bought letterpress ink. Um. Never mind, if I roll my colour out and leave it for 6 hours or more it does get the required tack for a crisp print.
Next week I am sending off my first American order to a gorgeous shop in Hawaii, (where I believe it is somewhat warmer). Nest will be selling a good selection of Red Flannel Elephant cards and open edition prints - take a look inside, is it not adorable? Now I must fly, as my ink has been tacking for nearly ten hours and should be ready by now. There are tags to press, tags to trim, supper to make, and - where did I put that list..?
Sneaked off to the computer while K is trying to fix our cranky plumbing, Lovely to see all your prints, love the horse. I hate that question hows work going. I would really rather talk about the weather.
Francie of The Scented Cottage said, on 11/1/2007 2:11:00 PM
AH, so there you are...and you answered one of my questions to you here so no need to tell me about it LOL. Hang in there... (())
Ash said, on 11/1/2007 2:13:00 PM
Yup, I sympathise. I keep getting asked how retirement is because obviously now that I don't 'go out to work' I must be idling about all day. And oh, the lists, the endless blinking lists.... Delighted to hear about the orders and new stockists, G, and hope it continues.
xx
Eric Orchard said, on 11/1/2007 3:48:00 PM
Well, I'm certainly glad you're doing well and doing cool new stuff. The ponies look great. It also gives me the excuse to rave about the Anonymous 4-Do you know them? They're a singing group based in NY who do medieval polyphony and rennaissance music. Amazing stuff.
carolyn said, on 11/1/2007 4:09:00 PM
Adore the little Christmas pony! Congrats on the new stockists. And don't you just hate it when people ask how work is? We get the equivalent with "And how is the business doing?" and I don't mean to sound hateful but nobody really wants to hear the ans so why ask?
natural attrill said, on 11/2/2007 1:54:00 AM
Hope one day you'll be able to hand deliver to Hawaii !! P.xx
Cotswoldgent said, on 11/2/2007 3:15:00 AM
Was wondering where you had disappeared to, now we know. Good to hear work is picking up. Hope the bike is now OK? Charlotte is moving to Scotland to be replaced by a BMW……….Have I done the right thing?
LittleBrownDog said, on 11/2/2007 3:56:00 AM
Yes, yes, and I'm hoping my little order for the Somerford Village Fayre is on your list, Gretel. (Not nagging, honestly - only if you have time, you know).
Lovely to read you again, and I'm glad things are keeping you busy (in a productive - and hopefully profitable - way, of course). My work has been much the same for the past couple of weeks, but I'm hoping that, now Mercury has stopped going retrograde, things are going to start picking up.
LBD x
PS Loved your singing lady papercut so much I couldn't bear to give it away (what am I like?). I thought, as my friend's birthday was such a big event, I didn't want it to just get consumed among piles of ordinary cards, so I'm afraid it's still on my windowsill, where I can look at it and enjoy it every day. Hey, it's my birthday soon - I might just send it to myself!
J x
Rima said, on 11/2/2007 9:46:00 AM
Scottish Autumn Greetings to you G .. yes you told me to, and I did... :) Seem to go through days when I like the idea of having a blog, and days when I don't want to write about what I'm up to AT ALL! Am busy Doing things tho, and very happy... hope you are, and as ever - I love reading your very nicely written indeed blog. Well done on your motivation and continuing successes .. Love xx Rima PS - sorry for comment deleting .. bad spellings!!
gilfling said, on 11/2/2007 11:50:00 AM
Oh this sounds like my list - my never ending list that never ever gets done on any one day - a days list can quite easily stretch to a week! I love the vague looks people give when they ask how 'work' is going - when I realise actually it was a rhetorical question and they are not really 'that' interested in my daily goings on!
Great news about all these wonderful places stocking your cards!
tlc illustration said, on 11/4/2007 6:47:00 PM
lists..lists...lists....
I am rethinking my desire to be gainfully employed in this field! Kinda want to curl up on the couch with a book... For the next 6 months maybe...
Hope you are enjoying your productivity.
elizabethm said, on 11/10/2007 3:19:00 PM
My god, the lists! So glad to know I am not alone. Loved your fungi too. we have been brave for the first time and eaten some we have identified. yummy.
Poor old block, it looked so delicate and pretty - this must be the oldest one I have, I think it must be verging on the antique, judging by the script and patina - more like old, hard leather than metal. But although it awoke - a little - for me, this old workhorse is going to be pastured out. In other words, it will have to go on the shelf and be decorative.
The main problem is that the fine lettering has been worn and softened through years of use. There is ancient caked ink between the letters which is impossible to get out without damage and in areas the words have sunk marginally too low to give a decent impression. I tried it on both the proof press and the Adana, but the poor thing was having none of it. At first I thought I could get away with an 'aged' finish, but Andy gave my efforts short thrift and after a bit of a sulk I took his point. Not only does it not look great, but I am going to have to invest in some proper (and horribly expensive) printing inks.
At the moment I am mixing oil paints with a medium which gives it a certain tackiness, (as printing ink should be). But it isn't working perfectly and it's being forced out to the edges of the indentations on fine lines like this...
Meanwhile, I'll trim these up and see if I can flog them on Etsy as supplies for collage. I'd like to think the old block had had one last hurrah.
(for letterpress enthusiasts there are more photos on Flickr...go on, you know you want to...)
7 Comments on Not making a very good impression, last added: 11/1/2007
Thats a shame about that old block, its pretty hope it gets a new lease of life. I'm very interested in all your letter press things they have such a nice feel about them.
Eric Orchard said, on 10/12/2007 6:04:00 AM
I love the script, it reminds me of the text in victorian Christmas gift books.
Sue said, on 10/12/2007 6:19:00 AM
It's a lovely old block, maybe it'll print crisper with 'proper' letterpress ink. I enjoyed my excursion to FlickR, it certainly made an 'impression'! Ha ha ha! (See, I can do nerdy jokes too. ;-)) )
Lorna said, on 10/14/2007 2:49:00 AM
Can you show the printing itself as O do not understand the printers?
Francie of The Scented Cottage said, on 10/14/2007 3:22:00 PM
Just lovely ! Thanks for the pictures I really enjoyed seeing the type...and I think the Adana in the window looks wonderful there...
(())
Merisi said, on 10/15/2007 6:55:00 AM
How would this old block of yours look on gift wrapping? Gold letters on Venetian Red? Or Venetian Red letters on butcher paper?
Connie said, on 11/1/2007 1:45:00 AM
The script is beautiful. Actually it looks wonderful in the photo. It has such a lovely vintage look just like you have it displayed.
Oh how fun! I have never seen a book trailer before- I love the idea!