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5/52 Weekly Photos, Yellow and Living Arrows

This week I tried to find cool yellow things which is hard.  All I could see was road markings and traffic signs.  Then, at the weekend, we went to the Upcycle Exchange where they sell all sorts of crafty bits and bobs as well as vintage fabric-ness.  I found the lovely spotted yellow scarf there and continued to find all sorts of yellow through the day!

So my yellow train barriers and fire hydrant had some yellow company.  Thanks to Hula Seventy and Xanthe Berkeley for hosting this  colourful photo gathering opportunity.

Onto the weekly photos.  This week has been cold and sunny and cold and cloudy and rainy then icy!  We had a very slippery walk to karate on Friday evening. At one point Mr.Y and I both went down on a sloping drive, every time we tried to get up, down we went.   The giggling may not have helped, but crawling and sliding to the grass verge did help us get up!    Sorry, no photos of that.  I do have photos of our weekend wandering around The Grove area of St Louis and snapping the wall art.

And I had my hair cut!

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This photo of Mr.Y inspired by  the Living Arrows project hosted by I Heart Snapping.  I am hoping to snap a photo of one of the boys, or both of them every week to include as a Living Arrow.  I am finding so many fab blogs and projects this year!  Love it!

Photo a day 2014 January

20140106-102412.jpg 1. Lunch

20140106-102451.jpg 2. Begins with G.  Gloves.

20140106-102521.jpg 3. My town

20140106-102555.jpg 4. Word to live by

20140106-102620.jpg 5. Found.  A snow covered path.

20140107-162403.jpg 6. Happens everyday.  Something gets made.

20140107-162425.jpg 7. Upside down

20140131-095844.jpg 8. Lucky number. Warmer temps.

20140131-095928.jpg 9. Natural

20140131-100016.jpg 10. Man made.  New CatsEatDogs necklaces.

20140131-100059.jpg 11. Looking down

20140131-100142.jpg 12. Colourful

20140131-100318.jpg 13. Makes me smile. Rescuing a discarded Poinsettia.

20140131-100425.jpg 14. 3 Things

20140131-100519.jpg 15. Black and White

20140131-100552.jpg 16. Sun

20140131-100626.jpg 17. Tiny

20140131-100706.jpg 18. Happy place

20140131-100747.jpg 19. Breakfast

20140131-100820.jpg 20. To do list

20140131-100906.jpg 21. Blue

20140131-101017.jpg 22. Nice!  Nest by CatsEatDogs with rose quartz.

20140131-101052.jpg 23. Bedtime

20140131-101133.jpg 24. Your space

20140131-101242.jpg 25. A taste of summer/winter

20140131-101331.jpg 26. Fun stuff

20140131-101410.jpg 27. I bought this

20140131-101439.jpg 28. Dinner

20140131-101509.jpg 29. Window

20140131-101546.jpg 30. Best invention ever. The iPhone and hair dye!

20140131-102726.jpg 31. Polka dot

January saw the Polar Vortex and we still have some snow melting very slowly in our front garden.  I started reading ‘The Flamethrowers’ and stopped and I started reading ‘Life after Life’ and stopped.  I need a book I like!  Maybe I will find one in February.

I ate Dim Sum which is my absolute favourite in the world.  We made splatter pictures outside on the one warm (ish) day of the month and we played lots of ‘Zooreka’.

Photo a day is hosted by Fat Mum Slim, do you play?  It’s fun, you should.

Through the Lens Thursday. Reflection.

As part of Through the Lens Thursday hosted by Greta at GFunkified and Alison at Writing Wishing, here is this weeks offering.  Today is cloudy and dry, so not many natural reflection opportunities. I have this lovely vintage mirror, so I thought the reflection of the tree in the mirror might be cool, then look who popped in to check himself out. Click, done!

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Thanks Pablo for being my doggie model!

The insides of books

I borrowed some books from the library today and all of them had some loveliness inside.  I haven’t read them yet, but I am sure the picture books will be devoured and I will browse the non-fiction and hopefully I will love the novel.

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From ‘The Bear’s Song’ by Benjamin Chaud.  Look at all the detail here, all of the illustrations in the book are like this.  Makes me want to find things!  In this picture I like the lady exercising in the window.

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‘My Father’s Arms are a Boat’ by Stein Erik Lunde and Oyvind Torseter.  Wonderful 3D created illustrations throughout this book using cut out paper.

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At last I am at the front of the line for Kate Atkinson’s ‘Life After Life’.  I can’t wait to get stuck into it.

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From ‘Josephine’ by Patricia Hruby Powell.  I spotted this book during Multicultural Children’s Book Day, I was immediately drawn to the illustration style and I wasn’t disappointed when I saw the book.  It is thicker than I thought and I can’t wait to read and admire it.  Doesn’t this painting of Josephine Baker just make you want to get up and shimmy!

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The inside cover of ‘The Highway Rat’ by Julia Donaldson.  I wonder where all of these eats will feature in the story?

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‘The Tiny Book of Tiny Stories.  Volume One’ by HitRecord and Joseph Gordon-Levitt.  I have read a few of the tiny stories and this is a great little, no, tiny book.  Full to the tiny brim of wonderful ideas.  One of my favourites is –

‘The sun is such a lonely star.  Whenever he comes out to see his friends, they all disappear.’

Any recommendations?  We read all sorts in our house.  I do like my books on paper though, the ole fashioned way!

4/52 Weekly Photos

February is only a week away.  Phew hold onto 2014, it is flying by!  Are you managing to keep up? I am keeping up with a few new things which I am pleased about.

A new thing I found over at Hula Seventy was the weekly colour photo join-in-along with Xanthe.   Last week was Red, so here are my red photos.  I like red as a highlight colour, red boots, red bracelet or red hair, not so much an all over colour.

I don’t like red pens at all, not even as a method of highlighting.  I will only use a red pen if I need to draw a red something, a poppy or a heart.  Never never never for writing or communicating, too aggressive on the page for my liking. Maybe too much of a flashback from school homework marking, red pen all over the place.  Positive or negative, all red pen.  Green pens would have been be a way more pleasant way to communicate especially on kids homework.  I wonder if I would reject all green pens if that was the case?

Anyway, want to see my red photos?  Here they are, a combination of iPhone photos and some taken with my Canon DSLR.

The rest of the week’s photos consist of distractions, jewelry, sunsets and a cool old cake tin.  The weather was all cold/freezing/cold/freezing/cold/warm/polar bear, and that is why I am not a weather forecaster.

I took some photos of CatsEatDogs jewelry and I am adding it to my Etsy shop as we speak.

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How was your week?  Excellent in all things I hope.  This week, I am going to make some jewellery and read some magazines (I have a pile of Frankie, Women’s Health and Mollie Makes to get through).  Photos will be taken and blog posts written.  See you then!

Six Word Saturday

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I picked up the photos today which I took on my ‘Diana F’ camera in December at the Missouri Botanical Gardens last year.  I was pretty happy with them, nice big square prints and even the ones I messed about with multiple exposures turned out.  Yay!

I enjoyed revisiting the feeling of taking in a film and collecting the photos not knowing exactly what they will look like.  Just like the old days of taking pictures and not seeing them until a few days or weeks later.

Can’t wait to take more!  If you have a Six Word Saturday, share in the comments or put it on a photo in Instagram and hashtag #sixwordsaturday.

Happy Weekend!

 

 

Multicultural Children’s Book Day-Celebrating Diversity in Children’s Literature

I talked a bit about Multicultural Children’s Book Day-Celebrating Diversity in Children’s Literature this week and about the book I am reviewing for this event – The Girl with a Brave Heart.   January 27th is the big day, so pop to the library and grab a book about a different culture to read to the kids.  If you need any ideas for books, check out any of the links at the bottom of this post or visit Pragmatic Mom or Jump Into a Book.

When ‘The Girl with a Brave Heart’ by Rita Jahanforuz and Vali Mintzi arrived from Barefoot Books, the first thing that struck me was that it is a gorgeous vibrant book with fabulous colorful illustrations.   Is it me, or does every book published by Barefoot Books consist of wonderful read aloud stories alongside stunning illustrations?  I can’t thank them enough for letting me read and review this book.

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We read the book as soon as we received it and we tried to guess what was going to happen in the story and why.   The story is a successful mix of well loved fairy tale and folklore but doesn’t rely on these traits, it takes it’s own path and the end has a sound moral.

‘Two thumbs up’ was our verdict for the story and the wonderful illustrations.

I also read the book to the third grade class this week and they all went wide eyed as soon as I started as they recognized lots of the beloved classic fairy tales especially ‘Cinderella’ in the first few pages. As the book went on, they were drawn into the unexpected turns of the story.

‘Is it the same house? The same lady?’ Some of the children asked as they tried to figure out the story.
Lots of ideas about whether the lady in question was magic or were the pools magic and lots of satisfied gasps and exclamations at the last page where the ‘moral’ is explained.

This is the most important page of the book for the kids to understand and wholeheartedly agree with the story.  It confirms the message in a very positive way which the children can relate to and agree with.

‘The story sounds as if it has been passed down through generations’  was one comment,  ‘If someone is sad, they act and feel differently to how they normally would’ was another.   I was impressed at how the children listened and responded to the book.

Some of the boys thought she should have done as she was told and smashed everything but most of the kids were horrified at the smashing by Monir and related this back to their own houses and china and glassware. ‘It would be dangerous to smash glass’ they agreed.

I love that they all spotted different things and had many opinions and thoughts about the book.  I would say that is a sign of a good story.

Want some more ideas for books to read this Multicultural Children’s Book day?  All of these wonderful sites have suggestions and reviews.  Go see!

2GirlsLostInaBook · 365 Days of Motherhood · A Bilingual Baby · A Simple Life, Really? · Africa to America · After School Smarty Pants · All Done Monkey · Andi’s Kids Books · Anita Brown Bag  · Austin Gilkeson · Barbara Ann Mojica ·  Books My Kids Read · Bottom Shelf Books · Cats Eat Dogs · Chasing The Donkey · Children’s Book-a-Day Almanac · Children’s Books Heal · Church o Books · CitizenBeta · Crafty Moms Share · Discovering The World Through My Son’s Eyes · Early Words · Flowering Minds · Franticmommy · Gathering Books · GEO Librarian · Gladys Barbieri · Going in Circles · Growing Book by Book · iGame Mom · I’m Not The Nanny · InCulture Parent · Itsy Bitsy Mom ·Just Children’s Books– Kid World Citizen · Kristi’s Book Nook · Mama Lady Books · Mama Smiles · Mission Read · Mother Daughter Book Reviews · Mrs AOk · MrsTeeLoveLifeLaughter · Ms. Yingling Reads · Multicultural Kids Blog · One Sweet World · Open Wide The World · P is for Preschooler · Rapenzel Dreams · School4Boys · Sharon the Librarian · Spanish Playground · Sprout’s Bookshelf · Squishable Baby · Stanley and Katrina · Teach Mama · The Art of Home Education · The Brain Lair · The Educators’ Spin On It · The Family-Ship Experience · The Yellow Door Paperie · This Kid Reviews Books  · Trishap’s Books · Unconventional Librarian · Vicki Arnold · We3Three · World for Learning · Wrapped in Foil 

Here are the sponsors of Multicultural Children’s Book Day, they made the whole thing possible and amazing. So, thanks to –  Wisdom Tales PressLee & Low Books and Chronicle Books, along with Susan Daniel Fayad, author of My Grandfather’s Masbaha .

Full disclosure: Barefoot Books provided a copy of ‘The Girl with a Brave Heart’ to review.  All opinions expressed are my own.

Through the Lens Thursday. White.

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I am enjoying participating in Through the Lens Thursday.  It makes sure I use my camera at least once a week and on manual only.  I do only use manual now, sometimes I seem to take terrible picture after terrible picture, but I don’t flick back to auto.  I either persevere or grab my phone!!!  Ha, what a cheat!

I think this picture worked though, I like the white (cream I suppose) vintage thread on it’s lovely wooden reel with the white snow as background.

I also spotted this white (once) stool at school yesterday when I was taking some photos of jewelry in the art room.  The room has great light, so I thought I would try taking some product photos in there and of course I can never focus on just one thing so I snapped a quick pic of this stool.  I love that it is clearly an art room stool and well used.

Next week’s theme is ‘Reflection’, so I need to keep my eyes open and my imagination alert for that one.

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Multicultural Children’s Book Day is coming

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Next Monday, January 27th 2014 is the very first ever in the whole wide world –  Multicultural Children’s Book Day.

It is the wonderful brainchild of Mia at Pragmatic Mom and Valarie  of Jump into a Book, both blogs are chock full of book recommendations, go and have a look.  It will be a day to begin many days of reading about different cultures and the stories within.  Or even well known stories set within a new culture.  I think we have read every connotation of the Cinderella story over the years and enjoyed them all.

I received an e mail a few weeks ago to see if I  wanted to be part of this extravaganza of reading, and  review a book connected to  Multicultural Children’s Book Day here on my little blog.   My pleasure.

I love books and I love love childrens books and I love love love picture books. In fact I am hanging onto any situation where I can pull out a pile of picture books to read to my kids, ok, now just the youngest.   We just had our share of flu (boo) and out came a whole heap of Scooby Doo books and we read them all plus a load of other books.  Yay!  What will I do when he no longer wants to be read to? Throw myself at the mercy of the younger grades at school or offer my services to the children’s library, that’s what!

Want a book reading aloud? Pick me!

So I considered it my lucky day when our third grade teacher agreed to let me read ‘The Girl with a Brave Heart.  A Tale from Tehran‘  by Rita Jahanforuz and Vali Mintz to the class tomorrow.  This book is still full of gorgeous illustrations, but also lots of story, so a good compromise for the older kids.  We are going to have a read and then a little chat about the book and what they all think and what it made us all think about.   We have a pretty multicultural class so it will be interesting to hear their views and thoughts.  The book is a classic fairy tale  story with a couple of interesting twists and turns along the way which I will be interested to see what the kids make of it.

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What are your favourite multicultural books?  Look for my (with a little help from third grade) review of ‘The Girl with a Brave Heart’ on Monday – Multicultural Children’s Book Day 2014.