Showing posts with label teacups. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teacups. Show all posts

Sunday, September 9, 2012

One lady's trash . . .

. . . is another lady's treasure.
 
Maybe so; maybe not.
 
Come see what I've found.
 
Some nifty china and porcelain containers
for future wool pincushions that I like to make.
 
 
 

A small blue and white plate
 for my blue and white kitchen.
 

Pretty pink plate to use for a dessert plate stand
after I add the crystal candlestick to the bottom.
 
 

Really nice advertising piece.  The advertising information
is printed on the back of this small trinket dish.
I'll probably share the advertising side of this plate in a future
Friday's Find.
 


Vintage West Virginia Souvenir
The old stove holds a secret -- a pull out measuring tape.
 
 




Little vintage bottles.  One is a prescription bottle.
The taller tin holds this amber glass bottle.


A lovely piece of finished stitchery.  I'll either resell the nice piece
or make it into a pillow or wall hanging.
 
 


A nice older book 
 



 
A lovely old book of stories and illustrations
 in not-so-good condition.
 
The title page is missing from this collection. 
Someone had written inside the cover "1913",
 but I found a reference to the year 1920 in one of the stories.
 

I can still use the great graphics and illustrations.
 

Lovely German teacups.  The teacup in the front
includes a place to store your tea bag once your done steeping
the bag in the water.
 
What have you found recently?
 
Please share.  I'd love to know.
 
Amy

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Tea with the Kings . . . Part One



Each summer, I open the doors of my glass fronted cabinets and gently bring out my teacups from storage.  Each cup and saucer gets a good hand-washing before its bundled up and taken with the others over to my church.

There, for one summer month each year, the ladies and I will have a special tea and Bible study.  When the ladies come into the Fellowship Hall, they love to choose the seat that has the cup they really want to use for the evening.  Each year we try new teas and recipes while we study God's Word. 

At the end of each study, the ladies bring their teacups into the church kitchen.  Usually one or two attendees will stay behind and perform twenty minute dish duty to handwash them all again.  Every once in a while, one of the ladies will say to me, "I'm so afraid that I'm going to drop my cup."

I try to assure the speaker that they are much more important to me than the teacup which can be easily replaced.  Over the five or six years that we've had these teas, not one cup has been chipped or broken.  I have so many memories of the different ladies, some who are no longer with us, who have used these teacups that I think we've gotten more than our fair share out of any one of them.

This year, we're studying the book of Daniel.  Daniel served some interesting Kings during his captivity in Babylon -- hence the name of the study "Tea with the Kings."   While I cannot share all that I'm teaching in the classes, I will pass on the handouts to you which lend themselves to personal devotions.



Daniel was a very young man when taken out of his home environment to serve Nebuchadnezzar.  He was tested right away to break Jewish dietary law.  Daniel 1:8 says, "But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with the portion of the king's meat."

Daniel made a decision that he would obey God's law for the Jews of his day even though probably no one would have faulted him for obeying Nebuchadnezzar while in captivity.  He took a stand for something most of us would have considered trivial . . . not worth the risk. 

The rest of his life, he based on the spiritual foundation given to him by his family.  As far as we know, Daniel had no Scriptures with him while in Babylon.  Anything he knew of God's Word was something he had been taught as a child, yet we know from the whole book of Daniel that he continually chose to follow God through any trials he faced.  What a true spiritual heritage his parents had passed to him!

Have you recently been tested?

Most of us have.  Chances are, if you haven't already purposed in your heart to follow God's Word, you probably didn't respond well.  Let's learn from Daniel the importance of having already decided to follow God before the testing comes . . . .

Wishing you could join us for tea.

Amy



Friday, June 15, 2012

Friday's Find


This Friday's Find is a little different.
Most of the time I own my Friday's Find.
Today, I'm sharing a find.

Last weekend, I attended the
West Virginia's Writers' Conference
at

 
While I was eating in the dining facility,
I noticed a large rug displayed on the wall.

 
It looked somewhat odd as a display piece
in a rather informal cafeteria.

After eating,
 I went over to read the plaques displayed beside the rug.
Imagine my surprise to see Pearl K. McGown's name!


If you didn't catch my post about Pearl K. McGown and her
great influence on the rug hooking craft,


The Conference Center features unique handcraft workshops like basket making, pottery design, stained glass how-to's.  The fact that rug-hooking at one point made its way to the Center as a workshop made sense after I thought about it.  I wonder if Jane McGown Flynn was involved with that workshop.  Jane is Pearl K. McGown's daughter.


One side of the dining facility is in honor of both Pearl and Jane.


This photograph gives a better perspective of the handhooked rug's size.

From what I could discover,
 the Southern Teacher's Workshop
was still meeting in the area as recent as 2010.

Really interesting.




I've finished some more teacup
pincushions.
The cashmere aqua rose is in a small
1965 souvenier World's Fair teacup.




What projects have you finished recently?


Amy