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A Wedding & Burning Man

August 2017, Don & Era go to a wedding in Seattle then stir up the dust at Burning Man

Hi everyone,

First of all, for those of you who were afraid we might have frozen to death or were stuck sleeping in a snow-covered airport, we are still warm-blooded, pliable and breathing fairly freely in Spain. I (Era) did jump off a stone wall onto some stone pavers for some completely mad reason. I seemed to have forgotten that I was a woman of a certain age, and thought I was still a youngster. Luckily no permanent damage seems to have been suffered. My knee was very sore that evening, but I walked all over, up and down Toledo the next day (yesterday). I thought of my friend, Hung, who is recovering from knee surgery. Don said it's a sympathetic sore knee.

But I'm jumping the gun. One more picture of Paris before we go to Belgium. This is looking out one of the windows of the Louvre.




Took the fast train (or Thalys - they give names to all these fast trains) to Brussels from Paris Gare du Nord. The plan was to meet up with Chuck and Company in the Brussels Train Station, near the Hertz car rental. The Brussels Midi train station is so poorly signed and posted that it took about 15 minutes to find the toilets and about 20 minutes to find the Hertz car rental. Fortunately, Chuck's train (the ICE - travels from Stuttgart, Frankfurt to Brussels) was late, so we had time to spare, and were able to determine exactly what track they would arrive and when.





We had rented a smallish van - big for Europe - and were a little nervous about fitting 5 people, luggage, camera equipment and wheelchair into it. Fortunately, everybody packed light. Everybody is 6 ft 2 Don; 6 ft 4 Chuck; 6 ft 2 Sienna, video artist and former fashion model; normal-sized Carol, who is Chuck's nurse, and 5 ft 1 me. We had no room to spare.

Drove straight to our hotel, Hotel Oud Huis de Peellaert, in Bruges from Brussels. This is a beautiful hotel, comfortable, great service, very good breakfast, and not at all expensive. I am convinced that their quite odd name, for those who don't speak Flemish, keeps their prices down, as people can't pronounce or remember their name. Anyway, highly recommended. We met up with Tim Marlow of the White Cube Gallery in London. "You'll love him," said Chuck. "Everybody has a crush on Tim." I asked around, yes, everybody had a crush on him. Just because he's handsome, charming, smart and bought us all dinner? Which was very good by the way.







Surrounding Chuck (L to R) Sienna (with lobster bib), Carol, Tim, Don and Era.

Next day, bright and early, had a lovely, if a bit hurried, breakfast at the hotel, piled into the van (except for Tim, who had to get back to London) and we were on our way to the mill, Don driving. I don't know about the others, but Don and I are still jet-lagged, waking up in the middle of the night, and operating on 5 hours of sleep.

The mill had kindly cleared their schedule to work on our experiments. It was great as Chuck got to see in person what happens at Flanders Tapestries when his tapestries are woven. He got to look at the different thread colors and choose what he wanted, to some extent. Some of the threads can not be changed. Don and Chuck had already laboriously created the weave files for Loom 3. Then using new palettes, beautiful tests were made on Loom 1, a larger loom. Keep in mind that not all you see has been approved by the artist; it's all experimental.












Chuck decided to use a different gray scale palette and the change was made with a lot of help from Marcos and Flanders. Here shown L to R are Marcos, Roland and Christian (the brothers who own the mill), Don and Chuck.





Lucas is rewoven.





We dropped Chuck, Sienna and Carol off at the Brussels train station; they left a day earlier. We soon realized to our horror that we had dropped them off at the wrong train station, Central instead of Midi. We parked, rushed into the station and looked all around, but they were already on their way. We had heard of Brussels Midi and Brussels Central, and thought they were the same station (there are a number of other Brussels train stations also). Fortunately, being smart and resourceful people, they found their way to Brussels Midi. Meanwhile, we got hopelessly entangled in Brussels rush hour traffic. We were thinking of turning the van in, or trading it in, but couldn't begin to find our way to Midi through the traffic snarls. We did manage to drive back to relatively sleepy Bruges.


Happy Holidays!

It snowed the day we left Bruges.




Love,

Era and Don
Hi friends and family,

Finally, a travel blog! We've been on the road for about a week, but it's been mostly busy schedules, work and 5 hours sleep a night, jet lag, different emergencies, so no time or energy to pound the keyboard.

We wouldn't normally choose to travel to Europe, especially Northern Europe, in the middle of winter, but the opportunity came up to meet Chuck Close in Belgium to do some weaving/filming, while at the same time we are having major work done on our house, so it wasn't too hard to convince us to go.

First stop was Palm Springs, where Deborah Oropallo is having a show, and where the gallery, Melissa Morgan, was also showing a number of Magnolia tapestries. The Palm Springs Museum of Art has a Deborah Oropallo tapestry and is pondering acquiring another major tapestry. The Museum's collectors group had a wonderful holiday dinner at the gallery. Dining at a long table, surrounded by tapestries, gave the banquet a festive, quasi-medieval feel. Don and Deborah were invited down to give a short talk. As well as Deborah, Stephen Nash was there, now director of the Palm Springs Museum, so some old friends.
















Oropallo pieces seen in foreground and on side walls; Chuck Close tapestry on the other side of banquet table. More tapestries to either side of Chuck.

Left after the feast and drove to LAX, in preparation for a 6:30 am flight to NY (which as you can imagine means getting up at 4:30 am). Short layover in NY, while we waited for our Open Skies flight to Paris. This is a relatively new all business class airline, which I was excited to take. We had just settled into the Open Skies lounge when Don checked his messages. One of our credit card companies had called; apparently one of our major credit cards had been compromised. Someone had managed to get our card information and was using it fraudulently. Fortunately, for us, they weren't too bright, as the first thing they did was buy some porn, which sent up a red flag. The credit card company had to cancel our card and FedEx another one to the Belgian mill. Fortunately, we had brought some other cards.

For those who were curious, the Open Skies flight was very nice, very comfortable, especially after we figured out how to adjust the complicated seats. Here is Don enjoying his seat. Open Skies prices are much more reasonable than a regular business class seat.



















Seats recline way back, but not totally flat. There is a small section with seat beds, but they were sold out. Food and drink is better than decent.

And here is a shot of our house construction. As you can imagine, a lot of both dirt and concrete dust, which permeates the entire house. This is a picture of our downstairs. Our construction crew refers to it as The Pit of Despair. They've been digging down there for weeks, along with pouring new foundations. There will be three huge loads of concrete altogether, in three separate pours. Our daughter, Marisha, is staying behind and supervising. What a trooper. She is also our architect on the project; she's in the midst of the masters program in architecture at Berkeley. What a grind that is; talk about the pit of despair.







































We spent our first few jet-lagged days staggering around Paris. Beautiful, but cold weather; snow on the ground. Staying right around the corner from Rue St. Andre des Arts, Allard's, Malongo (our favorite coffee place in Paris) and a Mariages Freres. Brilliant location, but a teeny apartment. However, it had a comfortable bed and plenty of hot water, so no complaints. 
















Louvre at night, which happened around 5:00 pm.

The food section: Taking a tip from What the Wild Things Ate by restauranteur Michael Wild, David and Jill Wild (available thru the Magnolia Editions web site under Books and Publications and also from Blurb), we chose a restaurant near the Louvre, La Regalade Saint Honore. We were helped in this choice by our sister-in-law Karen. Thank God we had given her a copy of What the Wild Things Ate as our copy didn't make it into our suitcase and we were able to email Karen, who kindly sent us all relevant Parisian restaurants. Following is for our foodie friends, who have actually complained that our more recent travel blogs did not have enough food content.

































La Regalade starts everyone off with a paté - I think it was duck, pickles in a little jar, and baguettes. Great with our Bordeaux.

































Don's appetizer: calamari cut into thin slices so that it resembled noodles, with pieces of bacon and croutons, over a black squid ink risotto. Delicious. Can't see much of Don, but enough to see that he's smiling.




























My appetizer: scallops poached in a fabulous sauce also with chunks of bacon and croutons with parmesan. Also delish, but I think Don's was more inventive and maybe a bit more scrumptious.

































Pork belly with a crispy finish on lentils. This won rave reviews from a food blogger. I think Don thought it was a bit heavy with all his other food.




























My main course: Sea bass on baby potatoes. Flawless. 

And for some reason I neglected to take pictures of the desserts, which were a pear and apple crumble for Don; and a pot de creme with passion fruit purée for me. They actually gave me two, and I had to give one to the table next to us. A couple of Parisians having a business lunch, who didn't look the least bit overweight, but managed to eat all their courses. La Regalade also gave us madeleines at the end of the meal, which nobody seemed to eat. We took ours "home" and had them with next morning's coffee. 

Had a conversation with the waitresses about California food and produce. We have quite a reputation; they were sufficiently awed, especially for Parisians. Told them that Michael Wild of Baywolf recommended La Regalade to us. One waitress seemed to have heard of it.

On to Belgium.

Much love,

Era and Don
Hey, you guys,

Thanks to some of you for writing in your embarrassing dining stories, which we enjoyed so much (and which Don especially very much appreciated). I am copying a few here. The names have been deleted to protect the innocent.

Hello Don and Era,
We both enjoyed your travelogue.  Especially enjoyed the story of the unshucked shrimp!  I have a similar story of a pea being sucked into the nasal cavity accidentally, and then exiting in a sneeze and landing on the plate of the Duchess of Something or Other.  And being terribly polite, she simply ate around it.
Vicarious travel is great, and such a bargain.


Dear Era and Don,
It's great being on your travel blog. It is almost like being there. Don's shrimp faux pas is the kind of thing I usually do. But usually mine involves spilling a glass of wine (red of course) on my dinner partner (usually a woman and always her glass since I don't drink).

Dear Era,
You may remember the story of my waitressing days: when holding a tray overhead to clear some passing diners, I inadvertently allowed a full plate of enchiladas to slip off the tray behind me, landing on the unsuspecting head of a businessman who was in the middle of a business lunch. It proceeded to slither down the back and front of his gray suit. His fellow diners got a good laugh out of it and thankfully he had a sense of humor also. I was mortified.


Thank goodness for good humor,

Era and Don
Hi all,

Rather annoying, but my fully formed last email disappeared before I could send it out. So this is a rewrite.

On our last day in Stockholm (we were only in Stockholm for 4 nights), we took a ferry ride on a beautiful day which took us through a couple locks and into both Lake Mälaren and the Baltic Sea. Stockholm is built across 14 islands.

Took these photos of an area with new and ecological housing; they are deriving much of their power from methane extracted from their sewage. The combination of older boats and new housing seemed peculiarly Swedish to me. In fact, we saw mostly older boats on our little excursion.





Our recorded tour guide told us that Stockholm's archipelago is made up of 30,000 islands. We found that a little hard to swallow, so I googled it and it does appear to be correct (from the sacredearth-travel web site):

Yet, one would almost not believe that Stockholm is actually facing the Baltic - it is exceedingly well protected from the tidings of the sea by the plethora of large and small islands that are scattered all around it ... Estimates run from 24,000 - 30,000, but nobody is quite sure. Some are mere rocks poking out above the water; others are fully fledged islands, with villages and all. Others used to be islands, once upon a time, but over the years have become peninsulas - for Sweden has a unique geological feature - unlike other landmasses, which are disappearing under the rising oceans, Sweden continues to lift itself out of the waters of the Baltic Sea - at a rate of about 1 cm per hundred years. This is due to the fact that the glaciers which covered Sweden during the last ice age have all melted away, relieving the land of an enormous weight pressure and allowing it to slowly rise, centimetre by centimetre.


That oddly angled red and black building towards the right is the Vasa Museum, which houses the reassembled, highly decorated ship fished out of the waters after sinking 300 years ago.


 Lewis told me when he first came to Stockholm, it reminded him of Paris. I couldn't see it, but this scene does look a bit French to me.

We were not looking forward to the long trip home (which did involve Ryanair), but it turned out to be pretty tolerable. We stayed overnight at Connect Hotel across the street from Skavsta Airport (early morning Ryanair flight). A bit like staying in an Ikea showroom, but actually very well-designed and comfortable. Also super reasonable, especially for Sweden.


Connect Hotel has many lounges and public areas, probably because the hotel rooms are so small. It is very well thought out.


Don't know if you can see this from the photo, but the shower doors swing flat against the tile walls. When you want to take a shower, you pull them out and they interlock easily. Very important to us: the beds are very comfortable. The Diplomat in Stockholm quite possibly has the most comfortable mattress we have ever experienced, but Connect Hotel comes in second place for the trip. Our bed at home beats it out.

Survived the control freaks at Ryanair and arrived in Germany, again staying near the airport because of an early morning flight. The hotel in Kelsterbach was comfortable, but nothing remarkable. We took a walk through the small town and ended up hiking along the River Main.


River Main, looking towards Frankfurt.


No weight loss occurring here. Early dinner at Zum Schutzenhof, which has possibly been a restaurant since 1611. At least the building has been around since 1611. My German is nonexistent, so couldn't quite tell what the story is. The walls are festooned with antlers and deer heads. Here, we are eating a chicken cordon bleu with frites, washed down with German beer, heavy, straight-forward and pretty darn good. We did have a salad beforehand with some very well prepared sauerkraut.

Lovely comfortable flight to NY on Singapore. Economy, but we did pay for extra leg room (well worth it). Long layover at JFK (about 5 hours), and then a minor misery of a flight home on Virgin America, where we were squeezed into the back of the plane - the result of last-minute schedule changes on our part.

So we're home, back at Magnolia, and recovering, not too rapidly, from jet lag.

Love,

Era and Don
Hi all,

Random pics, drawing to a close:


This bronze statue is heated and not far from our hotel. It's a public service; we figured it has probably saved people's lives. It is friggin cold. I am wearing about 5 layers, just about everything I brought with any warmth value. Shown huddling around the warm bronze lady are: Don (who doesn't look very cold; he has a Norte Euro sort of heritage), Lewis deSoto, Squeak Carnwath and Era (all artists showing in The Missing Peace).


Lewis enjoying his food (swallowing a hot dog). Judy, Chandra and Era are enjoying it as well.

We spent an hour or so at a high-end coffee shop watching the Stockholmers go by. As Chandra said, it looked like a fashion runway. It seemed they were all tall, slim and good-looking, stylishly dressed.


Most of our friends left, and Don and I were "alone" in Stockholm. We did have drinks with Filippo di Sambuy and his wife, Patrizia - heard a little about the art world in Italy. We told him about The Missing Peace in Romania. Wanted to visit Galleri Astley, recommended to us by our friend Abby, but it was some distance away and we would have to stay overnight. Nervous about missing the plane.


So now we have to entertain each other. Here is Don eating flat bread and looking excited to see me; wouldn't you say? The Diplomat has a great breakfast buffet.

Email from Darlene; she and Ron were in Mumbai already. So strange that they could be in Sweden with us one minute and India the next. She said that the man standing next to me at The Nobel Museum is named Olov, the Museum's director (see first Stockholm email) and the singer she thinks is Kesang.


Shopping alone, almost, at the covered market, up the street from our hotel. Sometimes this market is so crowded that it is difficult to push your way through the aisles.


Checking out the bakery. They had the most delicious cardamon croissants. Don't ask about my outfit; I'm just trying to keep warm.

We walked out of our hotel and were greeted with the sound of fife and drum. Who can resist a marching band and soldiers strutting their stuff? especially in these outfits.



We followed them all the way to the Royal Palace. As Don says, a much more satisfactory way of generating patriotism than some others (like starting a war).

One more to come.

Love,

Era and Don
Hi everyone,

I should add that one reason spirits were so high at The Nobel Museum was that all that week the Nobel Committee had been announcing the winners of the various Nobel prize winners for 2010, one a day. The day of the opening the Nobel Committee in Oslo announced the winner of the Peace Prize, Liu Xiaobo, the Chinese human rights activist, now imprisoned in China and serving a term of 11 years. Liu Xiaobo has been an activist in China since at least Tiananmen Square; he seems to have always been nonviolent and seems to be a very courageous, moral and well-deserving person, really a hero. So wonderful that he and the dissident human rights movement in China have been given this recognition.

I saw an interview with Geir Lundestad, Secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. When asked, he stated that the Chinese government did try to pressure the Nobel Committee to choose a different winner other than Liu Xiaobo. He also said that they are an independent committee and it would be wrong of China to try to punish the Norwegian government for the Committee's choice. He stated that China is now a world power and can be expected to be under increasing scrutiny, as is the US, and that this is only right. He also said that they are very proud of their record of Peace Prize winners. I should say so; with good reason.

We went back to Gamla Stan (Stockholm's old town) to get a better, more complete picture of the Nobel Museum. It's a beautiful building, and we just didn't feel right about having only a small section of it to show you. Don ended up taking a panorama of 3 sides of the small square. The red banner hanging in the front is advertising The Missing Peace. The image is from Spanish artist Salustiano's piece in the show.


A group of us stayed at The Diplomat Hotel in Stockholm, very posh but snug rooms, especially after our roomy apartments in Florence. When we took a tour by ferry the recorded tour guide called the street The Diplomat is on the most posh address in Stockholm. I doubt that, but it is a great location, central and on the water.


The Diplomat is the one with the orange awnings.


I love their elevator.

We arrived in the afternoon before the opening and went to dinner with Gary and Squeak. Gary and Squeak had been in Stockholm for almost a week. They took us to a seafood place which had been recommended to them by Stockholmers (actually, collectors of Squeak) and which Squeak and Gary had tried and liked. It had been open for only 3 weeks. The owner was very friendly and spent quite a bit of time with each table, making pleasantries and telling us about the specials. We had some green oysters, which were a rare delicacy, with a price tag to match, and some more normal oysters. All delicious. Squeak and I had monk fish, Gary had duck, and Don has mussels and frites. Don and I always split everything. We had a very nice dinner, catching up on what everyone was up to, and S & G's recommendations of what we should do and see in Stockholm.


As we were leaving the restaurant, we noticed the owner having a sumptuous feast at a table alone. He had crab, lobster, a huge pile of shrimp, and a large crouton with what looked like a paté spread with slivers of roasted red peppers set on the table alongside his plate. He urged us all to try one of his shrimp, and they did look delicious, but we were all too full, with the exception of Don, who accepted a shrimp held up at arm's length from the seated proprietor - and popped it in his mouth. Don didn't have his glasses on and hadn't realized that the shrimp still had their shells. So he had the dual problem of a mouth full of shells, which he was doing his best to masticate, and a shrimp head which he was holding in his hand. Much to my horror, he carefully and delicately dropped the severed shrimp head onto the restauranteur's crouton; not right on top, to the side, but unfortunately touching it. I gasped "Don!" but quickly turned my back as I started laughing, fairly hysterically and almost silently. I couldn't stop. Realizing his faux pas, Don delicately removed the severed head from the crouton and - squinting the proprietor's plate into focus - found the actual pile of shrimp shells which the proprietor had mounded on the same plate he was eating from. A conversation ensued and Don kept eyeing the door, thinking he could slip out and extricate the masticated shell unobserved, but due to the length of the exit conversation (something about Squeak's lost hat) Don was forced to swallow the rich calcium purée, choking it down, slowly, in six swallows. Mr. Bean could not have done it better... Don later explained that he thought he was dropping his shrimp head onto a pile of discarded shrimp shells off the plate piled on the table, not the delicious-looking crouton. He didn't realize anything was wrong until he noticed me bouncing up and down with suppressed laughter.

Fortunately, the restauranteur was a casual type; wearing a cowboy hat and boots (so I guess he wasn't totally averse to Americans, at least not up to this point). Don said after the man's intial wide-eyed shock, he made a quick recovery and didn't appear very put out. In Don's defense, he wasn't wearing his glasses, the large crouton was on the table, not on the restauranteur's overloaded plate, and it did have those little slices of red pepper on it. This episode gave me the giggles for days afterward, whenever I thought of it. Don initially begged me not to put this into the travel blog, but later relented as it lost its sting and he began to see the humor of it.


Don standing in front of a schooner which has been converted into a youth hostel. He and his brother, Roger, stayed there when Don was 15. As he relates, David Tunick, now a famous old masters graphics dealer, slept on the upper bunk.



The Vasa Museum, a reconstructed highly ornate ship from the 17th century. The pride of Sweden. It took its maiden voyage out of the harbor, and after several minutes, in full view of the admiring crowd, tipped over and sank. It turned out it was too top-heavy. It was buried in the cold Swedish waters for over 300 years, discovered in the '60's, if I recall correctly. It's an ongoing project of fishing out all the pieces, cleaning and preserving them and fitting them together.


An exhibit of Chinese terra cotta warriors was showing at the Stockholm Asian Museum. The exhibit was presented very dramatically in caves under the Museum. The caves had been used for military purposes during WWII, and this was the first time they had been used for a major exhibition. It did give one some small sense of how it might have felt to uncover these sculptures from their tomb beneath the earth. It must have been just awesome.

We saw a video which accompanied the exhibition which said that the Qin Dynasty, the people who were more or less responsible for unifying China, and who gave their name to China, were at war for 500 years. Let's hope generations to come won't be able to say this about us, the American experiment.

Much love,

Era and Don
Hi everyone,

What a beautiful city Stockholm is. Located over a series of islands, it reminds us a little of a cross between Vancouver and Amsterdam, with some Seattle thrown in. We came here to attend the opening of The Missing Peace at the Nobel Museum. Staying at the Diplomat Hotel with Squeak Carnwath and Gary Knecht, and Lewis de Soto and Chandra Cerrito and Chandra's mom, Judy Cerrito. Quite a few artists have shown up for this one, and also a curator from Romania, Anca Mihulet and her installer boyfriend Sebastian, so it was a bit like a summer camp reunion.


The day we arrived it rained, but the next day, the day of the opening was quite lovely. Today is very bright and sunny and cold.


The Nobel Museum right before the opening reception. That is Michelle Townsend working away, doing her condition report.


Another view of The Missing Peace before the opening. There is an aerial track strung from the ceiling where banners of Nobel prize winners drift by on a regular basis.


A Tibetan singer, didn't get his name, who performed a beautifully haunting song. Starting L to R with the people wearing the golden scarves: the man with the beard is their very innovative installer at the Nobel Museum, who did the moving banners of the Nobel prize winners on the tracks, the two blondish women are Karin and Anna, curators at the Nobel Museum who we met in Romania; wearing the white scarf is Era, and the last golden scarf wearer is someone important at the Museum, but don't know his name. Pinch me, we're exhibiting at the Nobel Museum.


Katarina Wong, looking as if she is getting ready to take off, along with her piece.



The exhibition is beautifully installed and lit.




Two-fisted toasting.
 




Dinner party after the reception. That is Ron Haak in the center foreground; at one table back can be seen Squeak Carnwath, Lewis deSoto and Chandra, part of Judy's (Chandra's mom) head, Gary Knecht, Tenzin Tethong, part of my head (I'm next to Squeak), part of Gabriella Morawetz's head, and the back of Pancho's head.

Back table has Anna, the Nobel curator, Filippo di Sambuy, Hijin and David Hodge, Katarina Wong, Filippo's daughter and wife, Patrizia, and Dani, Katarina's sister. Not in that order.  Darlene is standing to the right of the photo.

The front table, besides Ron, has Anca Mihulet, the Romanian curator (not shown), Karin, the Nobel curator (not shown), Sebastian, Anca's boyfriend, shown very fuzzily, and some Nobel people I didn't meet.

Love,

Era and Don
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About Me

Donald and Era Farnsworth
Donald and Era Farnsworth are collaborators in art and life. Married over 30 years, they co-direct Magnolia Editions and The Magnolia Tapestry Project, based in Oakland, California. Both artists are products of the SF Bay Area. Shortly after receiving his M.A. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1977, Donald Farnsworth met Era Hamaji. They married and immediately set out for Dar es Salaam, Tanzania where Donald designed and helped build a handmade paper mill while Era worked with artisans, teaching and developing new craft products lines. In 1980 the Farnsworths returned to California and were founders of the art projects studio Magnolia Editions, known for its innovative techniques and innumerable collaborative projects with artists.
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  • Tokyo, The Missing Peace
    Hi folks, We came to Japan to attend the reception of The Missing Peace in Tokyo. The location is Hillside Terrace, an art space near Shibuy...
  • Japan Email #9 Hokusai and Kurashiki
    Dear Friends and Family, Seems that many people enjoyed those Miyajima posts. Miyajima is considered to be one of the 3 most scenic sights /...
  • Tokyo, mostly pictures
    Hi Friends, It's been said a million times, I'm sure, but Tokyo is a city of great contrasts. We're going to tell this story mos...
  • NY-London
    Dear family and friends, Thanks so much for commiserating with me so touchingly and beautifully about the loss of my mother's ring. I ha...
  • Japan Email #8 - Miyajima 2 - the long trek
    Dear friends and family, More Miyajima; it was a very full day.  Era in purple.  Don finds it difficult to pick me out of crowds here. I may...
  • Kiyomizu-dera and Higashiwara District Kyoto
    More Day 4 in Kyoto and Morning of Day 5 After Fushimi-Inari, the place of the 4,000 red Torii gates, I dragged everyone to Kiyomizu-dera, o...
  • Paris, Encore, Encore!!
    Dear Friends and Family, Okay, one more. Had too much material, so last post was all Right Bank and this one will be all or predominantly Ri...
  • Christmas dinner in Paris
    Dear Friends and Family, It was supposed to rain on Christmas. We spent the morning holed up in bed, reading and napping. We ventured outsid...
  • Inside Magnolia Editions - and another trip
    Dear friends and family, We had a fabulous time at the opening for the Inside Magnolia Editions - Innovation and Collaboration exhibition a...
  • Gran Canaria 2, Email #10
    Dear friends and family, Canary Islands continues: Warm enough to eat outside at night. These pieces were printed on aluminum panels at Magn...

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