Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Beach, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 107
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: BEACH, MOON, John Nez, PBAA members, Add a tag
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: BEACH, pigs, KITE, Hidden Pictures, Seagull, crab, lighthouse, PICNIC, Digital artwork, Seashore, THEMED ART, Patrick Girouard, surfboard, Add a tag
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: BEACH, OCEAN, Watercolor, Rhode island, Block Island, Steven James Petruccio, Add a tag
Since "retirement" and "painting on the beach" have come up on the list, here are a few of my paintings done on a recent trip to Block Island, RI. Up at 6 a.m. - take a walk - become inspired - paint! Retirement is not on my bucket list.
Blog: Michelle Can Draw (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, cute, beach, break, woody, stationwagon, Add a tag
Blog: Saipan Writer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: beach, fishing, methamphetamine, bait, Marianas Milk, zombie meth, Add a tag
Blog: Saipan Writer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: beach, vehicles, cars, business as usual, methamphetamine, Marianas Milk, ice traffic, our new economy, pala pala, Add a tag
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: BEACH, Seagull, HOUSE, THEMED ART, Barbara Spurll, hermit crab, Add a tag
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Book News, friendship, seasons, beach, shaun tan, Claire Saxby, recycling, Alison Lester, Walker Books, Sue Whiting, Random House Australia, dianne wolfer, Fremantle Press, Lothian, Allen & Unwin, reassurance, Karen Blair, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Tom Jellett, Granny Grommet and Me, Seadog, Rules of Summer, Romi Sharp, A Swim in the Sea, Kyle Hughes-Odgers, On a Small Island, Meredith Thomas, Noni the Pony Goes to the Beach, Add a tag
In Australia we’re in the midst of Summer, although here in Melbourne we’ve already had all four seasons in one, sometimes even in one day! A great way to familiarise children with all that the season encompasses is through engaging language experiences. That means providing children opportunities to see, do, touch, listen, read and think […]
Add a CommentBlog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: reading, Christmas, beach, Holiday Reading, summertime, Tracey Allen, Add a tag
With summer well on the way in Australia, I’ve noticed our thoughts have begun to shift away from snuggling down or curling up with a good book and a glass of wine. Instead we start talking and thinking about lying on the grass with our favourite book, reclining in the sunshine and enjoying a good ‘beach read’. […]
Add a CommentBlog: Burly and Grum (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: work, beach, holiday, burly and grum, Add a tag
I can't believe it's almost two months since I last posted on the Burly & Grum blog. Go on, ask me what I've been doing for the last few weeks! I'll give you a clue - I'm shaking builder's dust from my hair as I type. Yes, I moved from the house I'd lived in for 24 years to somewhere new. Well, when I say new, it was built in the 1930s but somehow managed to get stuck in a 1970's time warp. Not that I'm against the 70s at all, it's just that after 40 years the wallpaper is looking a bit tired! I've been up and down ladders, knocked down walls, drilled holes, painted everything that doesn't move, and poor old Burly and Grum have taken a back seat.
Not that they've minded at all, they've been relaxing on the beach and have been sending me postcards to prove it.This one is from Grum...
Blog: paperwork (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, kids, animals, beach, watercolor, poems, rhymes, Babybug Magazine, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Books, beach, Memory, senses, dementia, Nursing Homes, cognitive psychology, synesthesia, *Featured, Science & Medicine, Health & Medicine, Psychology & Neuroscience, care homes, Cretien van Campen, Sense Memories, Snoezelen, multisensory, multisensory, vreugdehof, campen, ‘beach, Add a tag
By Cretien van Campen
Would you take a person with dementia to the beach?
This might not really be an idea you would think of. There are several possible constraints: difficulty with travel, for example, being one. And what if, having succeeded in getting the dementia sufferer there and back, the next day you asked if they enjoyed their day out and he or she just stared at you with a confused gaze as if to ask, ‘what are you talking about?’
If you think it makes little sense to take persons with dementia to the beach, it will surprise you that a nursing home in Amsterdam has built a Beach room. In this room, residents can enjoy the feeling of sitting in the sun with their bare feet in the sand. The room is designed to improve the well-being of these residents. The garden room at the centre of the home has recently been converted into a true ‘beach room’, complete with sand and a ‘sun’ which can be adjusted in intensity and heat output. A summer breeze blows occasionally and the sounds of waves and seagulls can be heard. The décor on the walls is several metres high, giving those in the room the impression that they are looking out over the sea. There are five or six chairs in the room where the older residents can sit. There are also areas of wooden decking on which wheelchairs can be parked. The designers have even managed to replicate the impression of sea air.
Visits to the beach room appear to have calming and inspiring effects on residents of the nursing home. One male resident used to go to the beach often in the past and now, after initially protesting when his daughter collected him from his bedroom, feels calm and content in the beach room. His dementia hinders us from asking him whether he remembers anything from the past, but there does appear to be a moment of recognition of a familiar setting when he is in there.
Evidence is building through studies into the sensorial aspects of memorizing and reminiscing by frail older persons in nursing and residential homes. Several experimental studies have noted the positive effects of sense memories on the subjective well-being of frail older persons. For instance, one study showed that participants of a life review course including sensory materials had significantly fewer depressive complaints and felt more in control of their lives than the control group who had watched a film.
The Beach Room is an example of a multisensory room that emanates from a specific sensorial approach to dementia. The ‘Snoezelen’ approach was initiated in the Netherlands in the late 1970s. The word ‘Snoezelen’ is a combination of two Dutch words: ‘doezelen’ (to doze) and ‘snuffelen’ (to sniff ). Snoezelen takes place in a specially equipped room where the nature, quantity, arrangement, and intensity of stimulation by touch, smells, sounds and light are controlled. The aim of these multisensory interventions is to find a balance between relaxation and activity in a safe environment. Snoezelen has become very popular in nursing homes: around 75% of homes in the Netherlands, for example, have a room set aside for snoezelen activities.
On request by health care institutions, artists have taken up the challenge to design multisensory rooms or redesign the multisensory space of wards (e.g. distinguished by smells) and procedures (cooking and eating together instead of individual microwave dinners). Besides a few scientific evaluations, most evidence is actually acquired from collaborations of artists and health professionals at the moment. The senses are often a better way of communicating with people affected by deep dementia. Like the way that novelist Marcel Proust opened the joys of his childhood memories with the flavour of a Madeleine cake dipped in linden-blossom tea, these artistic health projects open windows to a variety of ways of using sensorial materials to reach unreachable people.
So, would you take a person with dementia to the beach? Yes, take them to the beach! It can evoke Proust effects and enhance their joy and well-being. Although, we still do not know what the Proust effect does inside the minds of people with dementia, we can oftentimes observe the result as an enhanced state of calmness with perhaps a little smile on their face. People with dementia who have lost so much of their quality of life can still experience moments of joy and serenity through their sense memories.
Cretien van Campen is a Dutch author, scientific researcher and lecturer in social science and fine arts. He is the founder of Synesthetics Netherlands and is affiliated with the Netherlands Institute for Social Research and Windesheim University of Applied Sciences. He is best known for his work on synesthesia in art, including historical reviews of how artists have used synesthetic perceptions to produce art, and studies of perceived quality of life, in particular of how older people with health problems perceive their living conditions in the context of health and social care services. He is the author of The Proust Effect: The Senses as Doorways to Lost Memories.
Subscribe to the OUPblog via email or RSS.
Subscribe to only psychology articles on the OUPblog via email or RSS.
Image credits: Multisensory ‘Beach room’ in the Vreugdehof care centre, Amsterdam. Photo: Cor Mantel, with permission from Vreugdehof.
The post Dementia on the beach appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: Allen's Zoo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: International, Illustration, Art, Beach, Ocean, California, About Me, sketchbook, America, Genesis, sketchbook drawing, Drawing & Painting from Life, Allen Capoferri, Add a tag
Took a moment from my class to sketch. Hope you like the title…it’s one of my favorites from Genesis.
Tagged: About Me, Allen Capoferri, America, Art, Beach, California, Genesis, Illustration, International, Ocean, sketchbook, sketchbook drawing
Blog: Allen's Zoo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: International, Nature, Beach, Ocean, California, About Me, America, USA, Fatherhood, Photo's, Add a tag
Tagged: About Me, America, Beach, California, Fatherhood, International, Nature, Ocean, USA
Blog: Allen's Zoo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Illustration, Art, Humor, Beach, character design, quick sketch, California, sketchbook, Add a tag
Tagged: Art, Beach, California, character design, Humor, Illustration, quick sketch, sketchbook
Blog: Welcome to my Tweendom (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: family, Friendship, summer, romance, beach, feminism, first crushes, arc from publisher, 2013, Simon Spotlight, Add a tag
Lauren is a girl who plans things. She checks and double checks. She loves having everything in its place. So it really comes as no surprise that when it comes to love, she has a plan. Lauren has come up with her love plan. This is the summer that she will get Charlie not only to notice her, but fall for her just like she has fallen for him. She knows from taking lots of multiple choice tests in teen magazines that she and Charlie are indeed soul mates. She will get him to notice her through her flowcharted Operation Cell Phone, where she has planned each detail of their "chance" encounter.
The problem is Lauren hasn't even left for the beach and there is a wrench thrown into her plans. Lauren's mom thought it would be fun to invite Chrissy along on vacation to keep only child Lauren company. Lauren likes Chrissy alright, but she certainly isn't part of her plan. And the worst part of it is that Lauren sort of told everyone at school that she and Charlie are already an item.What will Chrissy think when she sees the truth?
Lauren need not worry about Chrissy. It turns out she is super understanding and supportive of Lauren's love plan.
Things start off great. The girls get along famously, and Charlie is indeed at the beach with his friend Frank. Lauren thinks this is just perfect because she can hang out with Charlie and Chrissy can hang with Frank. But Lauren soon learns not only that the best laid plans don't always work out, but that crushing on someone from afar, is indeed different from knowing a person face to face.
This is an easy breezy beach read that gets the desperate tone of first crushes just right. What I like is that Darling gives Chrissy and Lauren agency, and put it right out there that sometimes the boy with all the looks can be lacking in other areas. This is a squeaky clean romance that will have tweensters flipping the pages to find out who Lauren will choose.
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: beach, children's art, ocean, recipe, hawaii, whimsical, sandwich, luau, sand, kraft, tropical, pineapple, original painting, they draw and cook, palm tree, the enchanted easel, girl, boy, pig, Add a tag
Blog: Laurasmagicday (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Family, Pets, Love, dogs, humor, beach, Wordless Wednesday, Oso, Add a tag
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: photos, poetry, beach, poems, dalyellup, Add a tag
Tough choice Should I walk 'Round lake? Through bush? Along beach? I have a hard life. (Today I chose the beach)
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: camping holidays, Allen & Unwin, Dimity Powell, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Picture Books, beach, CBCA, Elizabeth Honey, Book News, Add a tag
Family holidays are the stuff many childhood memories are forged from. With just a couple more weeks of summer holidays left, I revisited an old favourite and evoked some happy would-be memories (if mine had been the type of family to embark on seaside camping trips).
The excitement is palpable as Susie’s family head to the beach, car packed to the roof racks. They soon set up camp and immediately immerse themselves into all things seaside: hunting in rock pools, feeding seagulls, swimming the surf, and of course, fishing.
Led by over enthusiastic Dad, Susie, her brothers and cousins begin each day with great expectations, but for Susie, catching fish proves as elusive as keeping waves upon the sand. Her determination however never wanes, not even when her brother Alex taunts and teases her with fake-fish-hope. It’s not until the last day of their holiday that Susie glumly concedes defeat. Not everyone is lucky with fishing. She appears to be that luckless somebody.
Incredibly, Susie’s luck changes. She catches a glimpse of two Southern Right whales off the jetty much to the disbelief and delight of the surrounding crowd. She, her Dad and a dozen fascinated on-lookers, unite as they share a few special moments together watching mother and calf frolic in the waters before them. It’s a holiday memory bigger than any fish her family have caught before and one Susie won’t easily let get away.
Elizabeth Honey’s entrancing sojourn to the beach captures precious familiarity and the exuberance of youth with playful grace. It is a story we can cherish for years to come much like a treasured cowrie shell. Honey’s spirited prose makes me want to kick off my sandals and grab a rod and bucket of bait. Susie’s Dad’s regular morning wake-up calls, addressing his kids as various species of marine-life, caused me to smile often. And who doesn’t delight in a big frothy milk shake from the local beach town café?
Each page drips with Honey’s sparkling watercolour illustrations, capturing the very essence and light of the seaside. Vintage Honey and deserved CBCA Picture Book of the Year.
Ideal to share with primary-aged readers.
Published by Allen and Unwin 1997
Add a CommentBlog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Children's Books, book reviews, family, picture book, imagination, relationships, beach, dragons, parents, children's book reviews, playing, picture book reviews, sand, Flashlight Press, child's play, kites, bully, Jodi Moore, Howard McWilliam, sandcastles, beach bullies, beach bums, dragon bubbles, Add a tag
5 Stars When a Dragon Moves In Jodi Moore Howard McWilliam 23 Pages Ages: 4 to 8 ........ .......... Inside Jacket: If you build a perfect sandcastle, a dragon will move in—and that’s exactly what happens to one very lucky boy on the beach. The boy and his dragon brave the waves, roast marshmallows, roam [...]
Add a CommentBlog: studio lolo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: gratitude, illustration friday, beach, clouds, ocean, stretch, seascape, grateful, asilomar beach, Add a tag
Blog: Donna Pellegata ~ ArtQwerks ~ Art Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, beach, baby, horses, ArtQwerks, farcical folk art, donna pellegata children's book illustrator, custom pastel portraits, equine, straw market, Views and Visions 2012, Nassau, Add a tag
Blog: Illustration for Kids Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, Illustration, kids, fun, promo, summer, animals, beach, Jannie Ho, postcard, Anette Heiberg, illustration for kids, paula j. becker, Holli Conger, Jennifer Morris, Susan Mitchell, ifk, claire louise milne, Add a tag
Here's our latest promotional postcard--with a summer/beach theme! We LOVE summer! May it never end!*
*Unless, or course, you live in a perpetually hot climate--okay. May it end. And soon, right?
Blog: Whateverings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: promo, summer, promotional, seagull, Susan Mitchell, children, Links, kids, girl, boy, dog, pig, animals, beach, General Illustration, Jannie Ho, postcard, Anette Heiberg, Illustration For Kids, castle, paula j. becker, paula becker, Holli Conger, bear, lifeguard, childrens, IFK, Jennifer E. Morris, Claire Louise Milne, gull, Add a tag
Below is Illustration For Kids‘ latest postcard promo! (I put it in a vertical format for better sizing on the the blog.) Please have a visit at our group website and check out the individual illustrator websites, blogs, FB, Twitter pages, etc. Thanks!
View Next 25 Posts
Thanks, Elena.
Hi Karen and Antonio, thank you.
Awesome!
What class(es) are you taking (or teaching?), Allen?
Teaching. The class was Drawing Fundamentals, now it’ s Art Fundamentals as I’ve added painting to the curriculum.
Looks like a great place. If it was yours, would you continue the coat rental?
That’s funny. If it were mine it’d take a moment to consider. The view is spectacular. My daughter asked me about the coat too.
Hi Natalia and Noir33, thank you.
Hi Renata, thank you.
Thank you, Izms of Art.
this one’s awesome Allen! Evokes hedonistic impulses in me!