Photography

Nica

Dress Up
Missy, Jenny, and Nica Playing Dress Up, circa 1980

Because my family moved so much, I’ve only kept in touch with a tiny, tiny handful of friends from my childhood. I found out Monday that Nica died last weekend, so now my little clutch of childhood friends is even smaller. It’s hard to believe she’s gone. I keep forgetting, and then remembering, and every time I do, I tear up again. I know a whole lot of people are missing her like crazy, so I’m in good company.

This is one of my favorite photos of Nica, from when we were kids.

Photography

Pennies

IMG_0800

Once upon a time, when I was a wee ‘un, I’d save all my pennies until I had enough to buy concert tickets. I went to dozens and dozens of shows with my pennies. I still save my pennies, but with the price of tickets these days, it’d take me the rest of my life to accumulate enough to buy just one.

Photography

Are You There Ceiling Cat? It’s Me, Shelly.

IMG_0478

My high school was in an old building that was literally falling apart. There were giant cracks in the floors (as in, the floors, not the floor tiles), and the ceiling tiles were constantly falling down. Sometimes they had a little help from the students, because the tiles were the perfect size to wedge into the lockers as shelves. So, when I got to work the other morning and saw the above, it reminded me of high school.

February was a terrible blogging month. March will be better. I should be getting a GPS unit sometime this week, which will hopefully mean more photo ops. I really hate driving to new and unfamiliar places, which makes exploring difficult. Weird but true. And if the weather ever improves (I think the sun moved away and left no forwarding address), I might even be motivated to go outside and play.

Photography

Cleaning

2IMG_0318

I finally decided to clean the studio today. Yowza! It’s about 90% finished. I probably won’t get around to vacuuming until tomorrow, but at least the majority of the work is done. While I was sorting through drawers and boxes and piles of junk, I came across an old folder from a humanities class I took in high school. It’s hugely embarrassing, but I thought I\’d post a photo of it anyway, for I have no pride. Most of the writing is old school goth (back when it was called death rock) and punk lyrics and song titles. I think it was probably 1985 or 1986.

Art, Paintings

Big Al’s Birthday

It’s Big Al’s birthday. I remember the date, because it was the database password when I worked at the art museum. Altogether, I worked there seven years, so that string of numbers may be permanently tattooed on my brain. I often can’t recall my phone number, the last four digits of my social security number, or my checking account number, but I will always remember Alain’s birthday.

So, happy birthday, Big Al. You were the best and most infuriating boss I’ve ever had. I will always remember you chain smoking, cussing up a storm, and chugging warm Tab from a 2-liter bottle. You made me laugh and cry and I’m pretty sure I wanted to kick you in the shins at least once a week. You also let me create my dream job, turning what could have been a boring data entry position into one where I got to research, write about, and play with art. And when I graduated and was no longer eligible for student employment, you wrote a grant to keep me on full time. I will always be deeply appreciative for that. Not only was it a wonderful way to finish off my work there, but it let me segue into another university job, which in turn was a stepping stone to the job I have now. Thank you.

This is one of my very favorite paintings. I love the Fauves, and this one is, as Alain would say, “seriously cute.”

Under the Trees I (Sous-Bois I)
André Lhote, Under the Trees I (Sous-Bois I), 1906, oil on canvas, 28 3/4 x 23 5/8 inches (73.02 x 60 centimeters), Ball State University Museum of Art, Gift of David T. Owsley

Uncategorized

Comfort Food

Like most people, I think, I have a whole list of foods that I think of as “comfort foods.” Mashed potatoes, hot chocolate with toast, soup, etc. I was thinking about it last week, and realized that when it really comes down to it, no matter how much I think I might want one of the classics, I almost always end up making either buttered popcorn or buttered noodles. Apparently I can blame my dad for that, because those were the two things he used to make when I was little.

And that makes me think of fried eggs. No, really. I have always had a complicated relationship with eggs. I hate them scrambled, and only a few years ago learned to enjoy them that way, with cheese and lots of veggies. Sort of like a messy omelet. I don’t like hard yolks or whites that are not thoroughly cooked. I do like them hard-boiled, especially if they are dill pickled. I also like runny fried egg yolks, but not so much the whites.

Which brings me to something I had completely forgotten about, but was recently reminded of. I have always eaten fried eggs (over medium and unbroken, please, with no crispy bits), whites first, with buttered toast. Cut off a bite-sized section of white, place it on toast, and nom. When the white is gone, quarter the yolk, place each section on a piece of toast and nom. Mop up the spilled yolk with the rest of the toast.

I learned that from my dad, too. I remember, when I was about four years old, sitting at the kitchen table, refusing to eat my egg and toast because the whites were disgusting. He told me to eat the white first, with the toast, then the yolk, which I liked, would be my reward. To this day, that’s how I eat fried eggs.

Uncategorized

Cheer-io-ios

My mom never bought junk cereal, so we always had stuff like Cheerios and Grape Nuts and Shredded Wheat. If we wanted junk cereal, we had to buy it ourselves.

One of my favorite food commercials from that time period is for Cheerios. I love the little yodeling stick figures.


Cheerios Animated Blackboard Stick Figure Commercial #1 (1978)


Cheerios Animated Blackboard Stick Figure Commercial #2 (1978)

It’s as cute as I remember it. And the packaging hasn’t changed, has it?

I don’t buy cereal very often, and when I do, it’s almost always Cheerios. With milk and a little sugar, it’s a tasty sweet treat. If you want something savory, it works for that, too. When I was a kid, we made buttered Cheerios. You drizzle melted butter over Cheerios, then toast them over medium-low heat until golden brown. We used a sauce pan, but a wok or even a skillet would work. I add a little soy sauce, worcestershire sauce, a little garlic and onion powder, and a pinch of ground celery seed to the butter. It ends up tasting like Chex mix. Mmmm. (I often add the same seasoning medley to my popcorn butter, too.)

Uncategorized

On the Subject of Food

Do you remember Butternut bread? It came in a blue and white checked wrapper and was soft and moist and squishy. When we were kids, we used to tear off the crusts, then roll it into dough balls. Butternut bread made the very best dough balls. I’d forgotten about doing that. My favorite was to dip the dough balls in creamy peanut butter. Mmmm.

And that reminded me of a new favorite sandwich: cheese and peanut butter on toasted bread. It sounds disgusting, but it’s damnfinetasty. You have to use real cheese. The fake stuff, like Kraft singles or Velveeta, would get lost–flavor-wise and texture-wise–in the peanut butter. Sharp cheddar works best, I think.

Photography

Old Photos

My uncle Paul sent my mom a bunch of old family photos awhile back. Most of them were ones I’d never seen before.

FP012

FP010

These two are my favorites. I can’t stand having anything on my head, even when the weather is sub-arctic. But that hat in the second one is made of awesome. And who wouldn’t want a crown?

FP015

That rocking chair used to scare the hell out of me, because it would rock so far back that you felt like you’d fall over. I used to stick two large dictionaries under the backs of the rockers, to stop it from tipping backwards.

FP014

When we first saw this one, my brother and I couldn’t figure out where it was taken (our dad’s house). I had absolutely no recollection of it, though I remember that that was my favorite top. We won’t speak about the rolled up jeans, knee socks, and sandals, m’kay? The less said about them, the better.

I still stand with my feet like that, by the way.