Category Archives: Maine Musings

COSTUMES AT THE VENICE CARNIVAL – Saturday, 23 April 2011

In 2009 we sold a small amount of the Faberge egg fabric to a man in Germany. Aways curious what people plan to do with fabric, we inquired what its use would be. The answer was a true surpise.

The man buying the fabric was Horst Raack, a goldsmith, and costume designer. He was doing a series of costumes for the Venice, Italy Carnival costume contest in 2011. The theme was Faberge. And he won! All of his costumes received first prizes!

Continue reading COSTUMES AT THE VENICE CARNIVAL – Saturday, 23 April 2011

SUNDAY in MAINE – Sunday, 17 April 2011

Well, yesterday it was 26 degrees F. when we got up. It was just plain cold! Frost on the fields, grey skies. Is Easter really just a week away?? And then it started to blow, and did it blow yesterday evening, and throughout the night. Rain lashed the windows, and the wind howled through the still leafless trees. It is funny how you can hear the wind when the trees are leafless, but not when they are leafed out in the summer. Outside the primroses are still shining through it all, but the crocuses are closed up tight. Down in the lower fields there is standing water. A good day to make soup!

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Happy Friday! – Friday, 08 April 2011


A beautiful day! The sun is shining, and the ice and snow are almost gone. Spring comes to Maine.

 

 

The spring clean up is finished outside, and the very early spring crocuses are open- not the large Dutch hybrids, but the smaller species. They lend a gentle, subtle color to the yard, emerging through old brown thatch.  A woodpecker can be heard in the woods. There are four different types living here- the downy, the hairy, the red bellied, and the pileated. Other signs of spring is the sound of the white throated sparrow, and the yellowing of weeping willow trees.

Now is a good time to order any seeds that have not been ordered-  and get one’s plant orders in also. With the winter having lasted so long, when spring growing starts it will start fast! Get those peas, and sweet peas in the ground! And if you have plants that need liime- now is a good time, before the next rain. Hydranges- if you like them pink, lilacs, dianthus, hellebores all like lime! For things that are starting to break the surface, a quick shot of liquid fertilizer gives the plant a boost, while solid fertilizer gives a slow release effect. Liquid seaweed for those of us in Maine is a true asset. Always read the analysis of a fertilizer package…. you would be surprised at what is in some…. and if there isn’t any analysis… pass it by. Chances are, even with a fancy name it is not worth buying. Other spring chores are pruning back any winter kill, and broken branches. If plants have heaved dig up and replant right before a rain, so that you don’t need to mud them in. Remember to root prune them to stimulate new growth.

If you are looking for an early perennial that is about as hearty as it can be think about Primula vulgaris. The buds start breaking through the ground the second the snow is off of them. They have wide pale yellow flowers that are meltingly pretty.  Their blooms seem to last for a very long time- 3 weeks, maybe longer.  And the folliage elongates to look like a large lettuce after they have finished blooming. If being planted where they will be viewed from a distance plant them in clumps of three. Surry Gardens, up in Surry, Maine usually has them in stock.

PRIMULA VULGARIS
Picture curtesy of Wikipedia

 On another note: the very sweet Shakespeare toile fabric with butterflies is down to 9 yards. This was bought on a buying trip at a warehouse, and the company that produced it is no more. If you like it, now is the time to get it, as once it is gone, it is gone!

SHAKESPEARE TOILE FABRIC with BUTTERFLIES
Enjoy your weekend!

 

A BIT ABOUT MAINE

 OCTOBER 31, 2010   

      It is halloween! Happy Halloween to all!

FALL at BRICK HOUSE FABRICS

As fall days shorten, and the leaves tumble off of the trees, it is a great time, when traveling to see more of Maine than one does in the summer! With the leaves off of the trees and bushes one can see through to the granite ledges and stones that Maine is made of. And one can see also, ponds, lakes, rivers, tidal zones, and the ocean in places that are hidden during the summer. The colors of Maine at this point in the year are the bright yellows of birch trees, with colorful maples, russet oaks, against which the ever greens stand out sharply. Now is a great time, before the snow flies, to explore the byways and smaller roads of Maine. Continue reading A BIT ABOUT MAINE