Posted on 12/27/2013 11:24:17 AM PST by honestabe010
Paris fashion week comes to a fantastic conclusion.
Oh, yes! Be still, my hardening arteries!
When my brother and his second wife, the daughter of a Church of England priest, first visited us, I asked the North Carolina forum what we should make for brunch. The universal consensus was “grits casserole”! Ours had sausage in it, though, not bacon on it.
Gastonia fashion week ...
The artwork is Plexiglas. It was painted on the reverse side and then melted and formed into shapes. The artist also did some interesting pieces with wood, steamed and bent into curves. Some of them looked like one could impale a brother on them!
The Plexiglas items will be up in the orchid conservatory for the next year. Orchid displays near them will be color-coordinated.
Grits casserole,
The mind boggles.
I’ll drag the storage out and take photos of the inventory. You can show them to Asuncion, and if she isn’t interested I can send them to you for the Middle Schools Girls.
I even have some books that would be helpful. :o])
Aw, DANG, that looks good!
Call it polenta, if it makes you feel better.
The plexiglass art certainly works well.
Any idea on the paint type.
Don’t hurt yourself. Set me a price-plus-shipping, and I’ll buy it all, including the tools. Asuncion can take what she wants and we’ll give the profits to the Fonda por Obras de Caridad, and the Middle School Girls can have the rest and I’ll charge their mothers shares.
I hate to think of good craft supplies sitting in storage, when I have Middle School Girls threatening to engage in pyromaniac mayhem for lack of constructive activities.
The artist did not say.
This is Google results on the artist. Maybe somewhere it says what kind of paint held up on melting Plexiglas.
Yes,,, that’s the stuff I know from Zimbabwe as Sadza.
Very nice with bacon.
Now THAT, I would like an authentic recipe for! I know someone (besides me) who really likes grits!
It’s 63 degrees. I just walked out to the mailbox and realized someone fairly close had an encounter with a skunk. They seem to be rather common around here. I’m glad I have no south-facing windows...
The Plexiglas looks like fabric. I’m sure the paint had to be acrylic. Heat wouldn’t be good for oil-based paints.
Cornmeal mush.
I'll put up a recipe by tomorrow. I try to load mine up with vegetables, but some people don't go for that.
OK: Tomorrow’s challenge will be the bead/book/tool inventory photos. I will know better after I take a look what I have invested in it, but I suspect the price will be at least $50. (Not my investment, which was in the $100’s but the resale value.)
That also includes wires, findings and earrings.
Most of the latter are silver, so that is good.
You don’t have to give an inventory or photos, just a guesstimate on what it’s all - including books - worth to you right now, plus shipping cost. Just go with your instincts, imagining the thrill for a dozen dangerous Middle School Girls and a nice, 50-ish Mexican lady ... but don’t short yourself. You have an investment.
My mother used a lot of cornmeal (A lot of her dishes were Southern, but we couldn’t get grits, so cornmeal was the substitute.)
Some of the stuff I hear about brings back so many memories...My mother would pour the mush into a loaf pan and stick it in the fridge, and the next day, for one of the meals, we would have fried cornmeal mush with syrup. Don’t ask. We were dirt poor.
Wellden. I will pull it all out first thing tomorrow and give you an estimate. Some beads are glass, some are plastic and some are Swarovski crystals. I also have bracelet/necklace clasps, if I’m not mistaken.
Grits fry-up was a favorite camp meal for Dad, Russ, and me. With syrup.
They'll need that, too.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.