...all things pertaining to the warmth and coziness of home

Wednesday, 24 December 2014

Christmas Blessings to You!



I pray that you have a very blessed and warm Christmas with those that  you celebrate with.
Treasure each moment.
Relax
Thanks for visiting.



Monday, 8 December 2014

Chalk Paint Class and Shop

We have a new shop in town called The Dandelion.
They just started selling Annie Sloan Paint and supplies.
They have been offering classes and so a friend of mine and went this past Saturday.
There were six in the class and each station looked like this.
We did different techniques and I am so glad I took the class.
The couple who own this shop are so nice and helpful.
Sherry holding up her painted piece.
We got a 10% off purchases made after our class.
I bought a medium brush and a small sample of paint
for a few small winter projects (like a picture frame).
They sell lovely home décor as well.
Here is a tour for you. Enjoy.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
So many lovely things in this shop.
Hope you enjoyed the tour.
 
Blessings,


Tuesday, 2 December 2014

Talk on Tuesday

Handel's Messiah  
Tonight's talk with the ladies (for more information on who the ladies are go to my page above)
 was on George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)
He was born in Halle, Germany and moved to England in 1712.
This was a time when musical activity and Italian opera ruled the day.
Handel wrote approximately 40 operas and 26 oratorios.
 
Handel was twice bankrupt but never gave up.
In 1741, his situation was so bleak, he seriously considered going back to Germany.
(Don't you just love the hair! They all seem to have a similar look.)
A friend of his, named Charles Jennens, wrote a script and presented
it to him requesting that he would compose it.
This script was an oratorio that included Old Testament scriptures related to the coming Messiah;
the birth of Christ; the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ; and His return.
 
Handel composed the Messiah in 24 days.
He never left his house and often went without eating.
While writing the  "Hallelujah Chorous", his servant discovered him with tears in his eyes.
He exclaimed, "I did think I did see all Heaven before me, and the great God Himself!!" 
 
That just gives me the chills. Every time I hear the Hallelujah Chorous,
 I know that all of heaven was involved in the composition of that music.
 
This video takes place at a food court in a mall.
Unsuspecting shoppers receive a heavenly serenade.
 
John Wesley said of Handel's Messiah, "In many parts, especially several of the chorouses,
 it exceeded my expectation."
Beethoven once said: "Handel was the greatest composer that ever lived. I would uncover my head, and kneel before his tomb."
King George 111 called Handel "the Shakespeare of music."
George Bernard Shaw commented that "Handel is not a mere composer in England: he is an institution. What is more, he is a sacred institution."
 
At a Messiah performance in 1759, honouring his 74th birthday, Handel responded to enthusiastic applause with these words: "Not from me - but from Heaven- comes all."
 
George Handel had one desire--to die on Good Friday.
He died the day after on Holy Saturday,
 April 14th, 1759.
He is buried at Westminster Abbey.
 
For the postcard for this talk, I found a vintage card of children singing
and then on PicMonkey added a frame and typed in the words.
 
 
This is the back of the postcard.
I enjoyed researching this.
The Messiah and especially the Hallelujah Chorous has so much
more meaning to me now, knowing more about how it came to be.
I'm sure Handel never dreamt in a million years that in a mall in North America a group of people would do a flash mob to his composition of the Hallelujah Chorous.
The ladies enjoyed the talk, I hope you did too.
 
For more information you can go here.
 
Blessings,