Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Thursday, March 11, 2021

 Deaming in Green


I am still dreaming about my next trip to Ireland, some day in the future. I can't help it, I have had only wonderful experiences there and I can drink in that countryside all day - and the towns and cities, too, for that matter.



Twice my husband Dave and I have sailed into the port of Cobh, once named Queenstown in honor of a visit from the British Monarch Queen Victoria. And to greet us, the towering spire of Saint Colman's Cathedral. The woodwork, the tile, the stained glass windows, the pipe organ (undergoing restoration)  ~ magnificent. Construction was begun in 1868 and completed in '79 and it was concecrated in 1919.

It is fitting I think for a catherdral in a harbor to include a depiction of Jesus calming the waters.  When I visit I always lift up a prayer beneath that window for my oceanic ventures. I am sure my prayers have not been the only ones as Queenstown/Cobh was the last port of call for the HMS Titanic on her maiden voyage April 11, 1912. Titanic boarded 123 passengers in Cobh; 79 perished. 

  


Commemorating  HMS Titanic ... In special memory of the Irish emigrants and all those who lost their lives in this great tragedy.   


The Queenstown Heritage Center located at the cruise piers/train station tells the Titanic story, along with the stories of thousands of emmigrants leaving the Irish shores for the US shores and Ellis Island. Although questioned by historians, the story is told of a young Annie Moore traveling with her two brothers as the first emmigrants to leave Queenstown, arriving in New York on January 1, 1892.  A happy ending ...


May your days be blessed with happiness and safe adventures.


This little card was reworked a couple of times for you ~ it requires a wee bit of math and there was a fiesty little leprechaun stealing me hearts and playing with me stamp. 
I used a surprising combination of Pear Pizazz and Granny Apple Green colors and designs from the 6 x 6 Designer Series Paper Assortments. It takes only a bit of paper, scraps almost, to create the windmill. 
I cut 2 Pear Pizazz squares  2 7/8; 2 Whisper White squares at 2 3/4.
Layer a white on a green, twice,  and place one new square diagonally on top of the other.
Choose 2 coordinating designs of DSP and cut a 2 5/8 sqaure from each.
Cut each 2 5/8 square into fourths for 8 8 squares.
Start at top point and adhere one square, on teh diagonal, guiding it into the corner  ~
glue down only the right side.
Alternate the 7 remaining squares  - the last will slide half way under 
your first placed square.
I created the shamrocks by punching the reverse side of one of the DSP patterns 
with a heart punch (retired ~ use any die or framelit that will fit, or draw and cut).
Lucky golden gems sparkle from the middle of the shamrocks. 
I think there is still one other rework in the furture of this greeting card.

But I think I need a nice cuppa of strong Irish black tea before I continue. And maybe a little something on the side ...


Care to join me?

Don't forget, you may order any Stampin' Up! supplies right from this blog ~ 
click on Shop Now! I am also happy to order for you if you'd prefer. And I am happy to make any suggestions, should you need. 

Let's stamp!




















Wednesday, March 3, 2021

 An Irish Blessing


No, I am not Irish but I have been lucky enough to have visited the beautiful Emerald Isle several times ~ by ship, by plane, by train.  And I will happily venture that way again whenever the opportunity arises.  

Why Ireland? The drama of the landscape, Irish Breakfast Tea, Belleek china, Aran Isle Sweaters, fiddles, scones, castles, Guiness, shepherd's pie, Oscar Wilde, Maeve Binchey ... 

Like all wonderful destinations there is much to see between cityscapes and countryside.  Do I ever tire of hills dotted with sheep? No! 


On one guided train tour through parts of Ireland I had the good fortune to visit a sheep farm and meet the shepherd and his herd and his dog. The shepherd had species of every sheep known to live on the island. They are indeed less than bright animals and they are scaredy-cats  ~ easy for the dogs to herd.





Blarney Castle is in the middle of the woolen mills of Blarney, County Cork. Did I kiss the Blarney Stone? No! Some will say that I already have the gift of gab. But the line up the tower was incredibly long so we chose to stroll through the gardens and glens of the castle ~ with thrilling bagpipe music in the background. 

Lush Bluebells were everywhere, but I saw no faeries. Curiously, the Poison Garden was the closest garden to the castle ... In the small village, several woolen mills were rehabed into wollen retailers, shops and pubs! Fish and chips, a guiness and a fisherman's knit sweater ~ made us the last ones back to the tour bus and our seats had been taken by a group of tourists who evidently were not familiar with motor coach etiquette. 

As long as we are talking about food and drink and I am not finished gabbing, one of the country's best offerings to mankind is Baileys Irish Cream. One nippy spring morning on tour we were treated to a Bailey's Hot Chocolate at a lone roadside attraction and inn, The Red Fox. Baileys is a staple in our house, and with a bit of experimentation and reliance on another Irish spirit - Jameson Whiskey - we enjoy home crafted Irish Cream now. And here is the recipe ~ as good as the Blarney Stone for imparting the gift of gab:


Irish Blessings in a Bottle 
1 can sweetened condensed milk
1 cup half and half
1 Tbs. Vanilla Extract
1 cup Jameson's Irish Whiskey
2 Tbs. instant coffee granuels
2 Tbs choclate syrup
pour all into blender ~ blend 60 seconds
enjoy straight up, on the rocks, in hot chocolate, martinis, or ...

In the mood to try some punch art tonite, I searched for little sheep created from various sizes of scallop, circles and ovals punches. So here is my variation on that theme:


Two little ewes doing an Irish jig. I should have crafted little green bowler hats. I save scraps and recycle and reuse. The DSP is Paper Blooms from Sale-A-Bration; I have barely cut into it. The lambs wool is curly and fluffy thanks to the Ornate Garden Embossing Folder. The little fluttering butterflies are brand NEW from the Butterfly Brilliance Collection released just today! You can find it in my online store - check Shop Now.

Leaving the sentiment off till I know the recipient ~ but I am thinking grandchildren.

Let's see your take on these little guys. Go ahead, pull out your green cardstock and punches and pearls ~ make your scraps work for you. 

 
                 May the luck of the Irish be with you all month long! 


  







 

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