Canada Day weekend

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Hope Canadians had a great Canada Day yesterday! It was thankfully a dry, warm and sometimes sunny day around Vancouver for those out to see parades and fireworks or going to backyard pool and BBQ gatherings with family annd friends. Today has been back to cold and wet. I feel sorry for those camping on this long weekend which started with an unusual and beautifully atmospheric fog on Friday evening and overnight – I wish I had captured photos.

We continue to be busy with home projects, especially husband who is also helping youngest daughter fix up her apartment before moving in (and moving out). Work never ends it seems when one is a homeowner yet we take deep pleasure in our home. The garden is a washout though…

We are looking forward to a visit tomorrow from friends whom we have made (and met before) through blogging. I will be baking a cake! More later, must remember to take photos.

pause

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Life is happily busy with family. As you probably know, our ‘English’ family arrived over two weeks ago. Yesterday our eldest daughter arrived for a weekend visit from where she lives about five hours away by car, so all our ‘girls’ are here: three daughters and two granddaughters. I am at home alone for a couple of hours while everyone has gone over to see youngest daughter’s just-acquired and being-fixed-up apartment and to get groceries. I’m enjoying a much needed pause and breather and do a quick read of blogs and a short post. I try to work in the garden on our rare dry days, sometimes to the point of exhaustion. No gardening today, it is raining again. Added to the list are some garden renovations along some sections of the property line shared with our new neighbours whose new fence/wall and house construction continues. Home renovations and reorganization continue so not much time for art!

Tomorrow is Father’s Day! (Miss you, Isä!) May it be a happy Day for all!

still here

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…and still busy with the spring projects. The new wood floor in the bedroom is done; work on the adjoining bathroom is in progress. The whole house is dusty and messy with displaced furniture and may be for a while yet until we finish. Gardening season is in full swing when the days are dry. Artmaking and further studio reorganization is on hold.

We did take time out last week to have a little celebratory anniversary dinner in Deep Cove and enjoy watching the activity of many different kinds of boats. Notice the class of kayakers in the bottom photo. Later today we are meeting good friends who have moved back to Vancouver. We look forward to seeing the progress on the beautiful house that is being built for them, and it will be interesting to compare it to the house that is developing next door to us here.

Last but not least, we are eagerly looking forward to the return of our daughter and granddaughters from England next week. Life is very full.

May flowers

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a part of a larger flower cluster of choisya, Mexican orange, with a heavenly scent

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a pretty wild creeper with tiny flowers and leaves that grows up rock walls and in the lawn, name unknown but much loved

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the heart of a yellow rhododendron blossom

Yesterday’s glorious sunshine, after two dreary wet weeks, beckoned me to leave the studio and go outside. My garden is at its most beautiful this time of year so I took a few photos to share here – of nature’s art instead of mine. Then I repotted all my tomato plants to continue to grow in the solarium for a little longer. Today’s lovely too so you will find me in the garden….

magic moments

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What an incredible sunset sky on Monday evening, April 23rd, taken from our back deck. Do you see the magnolia tree in the top two images? Here it is again below, taken this afternoon just when the sun came out after a few very dreary rainy days.

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Finnish ABCs 2

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As mentioned earlier about this old Finnish primer, I became most fascinated by the variety of fonts shown side by side. Imagine a young child just learning the ABCs and beginning to read, also learning to read along with what I would call a regular print text, a German Gothic or fraktur font and a copperplate style script. I used to be able to read the Gothic in my childhood because the Finnish church in Winnipeg had very old hymn books with that font. Now I struggle with some of the letters, though the little tales in this reader really help with context. Hand writing styles surely aren’t that easy for new readers either.

I’ve zoomed in on a few pages of the alphabet itself below, so you can see how complex it all is. Vieraat kirjaimet translates as foreign letters, that is, those not part of the native Finnish alphabet. Aakkoset is alphabet.

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(Apologies with the varied colours of each page as I struggled to make the letters appear clearer and sharper.)

I just had to go find my own Finnish Aapinen, printed in 1954, to check out its fonts. The first part of the book has all capital letters, then soon after the small case are introduced along with it. Though there are a few other fonts later in the book, they are all fairly standard and easy to read. One page near the end shows a handwriting exercise on ruled paper like we see even today. Gothic and copperplate were not to be found.

Finnish ABCs

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When I found my mother’s old Finnish cookbook, with it was a little aapinen, a Finnish ABC book or primer. A sad little thing without a cover, unlike this one, so I don’t know when it was published, possibly in the 1940s. I don’t recall if it was one of my books. Next time I will show you more pages of the fascinating fonts.

‘night ‘night

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sight: circles, bubbles, rings
taste: hot, slightly sweet, milky, cocoa
feel: warm cup, comfort, drowsy
hear: sleep tight!

a Finnish cookbook-2

a look inside my mother’s old cookbook:

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some pages on cake making

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a handwritten recipe on a blank page – a naughty habit of mine as well

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many loose bits of paper inserted throughout, some with handwritten recipes and some clippings from newspapers – also my habit

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traces of a child’s colouring with crayon – mine? my little brother’s?

Why do I find such beauty in disintegrating paper?

a Finnish cookbook

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This was my mother’s beloved cookbook, a 1948 edition, which came with her on our emigration to Canada many decades ago now. After her passing, I have kept it all these years safely tucked away. I’ve thought of photographing this well-worn artifact many times, especially after doing so with the similarly disintegrated English-Finnish dictionary.

As I wrote about that dictionary, this cookbook was in some ways also:
an immigrant’s tool, an almost-bible, a book of days
a history of heartache, homesickness, hope and a new home

I was recently re-inspired to finally do this when daughter Elisa asked for a certain favourite family recipe which she wished to post in the spring quarterly of her newsletter. (If interested you may request it from her!) I may put up a few more photos of the book’s interior in another post.

Remembered and added next day:
my beloved worn book of Grimm’s fairytales in Finnish
and my first Finnish alphabet book

Added later: Please visit part 2 for views inside the cookbook