Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Soft and Sturdy: Quilts and Blacksmithing at their Finest

Members of the Missouri Community Scholars Network began a recent field trip on an old gravel road leading to the home and workshop of Patti and Bernie Tappel. They documented the visit with photographs and audio recordings. Later, they took time to quickly draft a blog post about the morning at Osage Bluff. Here's their account of the trip. 

Little did we believe that our day would develop so interestingly. The couple's devotion to art and history inspired us. We were intrigued with how each artist's interest began as seeds planted when they were children and then enhanced over a lifetime. The Tappels complement each other beautifully, and their love and respect for each other is obvious. Their passion for their art indicates how eager they are to share and impart their knowledge with others.




Patti's interest in sewing machines brought back childhood memories for many of us. We realized the patience it takes for her to create the quilts--with all quilts having a story--where the fabric came from and what it meant. A quilt turning (turning layered quilts on a guest bed in her home) took place. Patti revealed a quilt, told its story, and turned it down to the next example--each one more interesting than the last.




Walking into Bernie's workshop created an amazement to all. "Did Bernie make all of the items in his home?" group members wondered.  Community scholars were curious about the machinery in his workshop.
Everyone had a better understanding of the art of blacksmithing following the visit.






As we traveled back down the gravel road to the city, we realized how their art pervades their lifestyle--yet how comfortable and content they are.





Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Deloris Gray Wood and the Trail of Tears

Deloris Gray Wood of Salem, Missouri is President of the Missouri Chapter of the Trail of Tears Association and serves on the board of the National Trail of Tears Association. She is responsible for getting all the trails marked in the state of Missouri. A participant in the Missouri Folk Arts Program's Community Scholars project since 2010, Ms. Wood reports that her next volunteer project is in the Marcoot Lookout Tower area--just across the road from where she stands in the photo below, on Reynolds County Road 907 and Highway 72.  

Ms. Wood notes that since the leaves have fallen, and hopefully the snakes, ticks, chiggers, and mosquitoes in the Scotia Pond are are gone, she will work next to locate the old Centerville Road of the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail into Dent County in the Mark Twain National Forest



 Mark Twain National Forest vehicle driven by park attendant who unlocked the gate to this trail. 


A historic survey marker (looks a bit like a coin), and it's right beside the gate above. 

This is some of what Deloris Gray Wood does as the Missouri chair of the National Trail of Tears project. 

How to use blogger

  

Hi, everyone.

I use Blogger because it's free and maybe the easiest blogging tool to use.  There are lots of other tools, and you can look around and see what works best for you.  But as a start, Blogger...

The one big hurdle is that you need some sort of Google account to use this.  We found out that Lisa's Google+ works, while I just access this through my gmail.

One past that, go to blogger.  Might look at that little square of squares in the upper right of your email, up by your name.  Click on that and keep going till you find Blogger.  Click on that.

When Blogger opens up, you have a few quick decisions.  The hardest one, for me, it to name the new blog!  Pick a name, and then in that address box underneath, type the name without spaces. 

The other big decision--pick a template.  There should be 7 or 8 immediate choices.  This sets up where the writing space is, where other pieces appear, colors, all that.  Pick one...

and then hit "Create Blog."  And that's that...

Ok.  In your blog, cruise around the buttons to see how it all works. 
"New Post" lets you start writing, and has buttons to add pictures, links, videos, all sorts of things.
Layout lets you add "gadgets"--pictures, a place for followers, lots of stuff.
Settings does a lot of things, among them, letting you invite more people to write, and controlling who all gets to see your blog.

The rest is mostly you deciding what to write...




later, bob