Today is Day 9 of #septemberspookyseason24 on Instagram. Daily posts and some giveaways via @wyrdworldminiatures.
* Follow me also - @cwrite12. I'll try to post my daily (hopefully) Halloween inspiration here also with a reminder. Join in!
Today is Day 9 of #septemberspookyseason24 on Instagram. Daily posts and some giveaways via @wyrdworldminiatures.
* Follow me also - @cwrite12. I'll try to post my daily (hopefully) Halloween inspiration here also with a reminder. Join in!
Remember that rhyme? Lizzie Borden took an axe...
Today is Day 8 of #septemberspookyseason24 on Instagram. Daily posts and some giveaways via @wyrdworldminiatures.
* Follow me also - @cwrite12. I'll try to post my daily (hopefully) Halloween inspiration here also with a reminder. Join in!
Today is Day 5 of September #septemberspookyseason24 on Instagram. Daily posts and some giveaways via @wyrdworldminiatures. * Follow me also - @cwrite12. I'll try to post my daily (hopefully) Halloween inspiration here also with a reminder. Join in!
Through alternating perspectives presented by two sisters, the Thornton saga unfolds in a whirlwind of surprising revelations, unexpected drama, adventure, and glamour. Just imagine beautiful models, pin-up girls, Hollywood royalty—Thornton was a true trendsetter. This book unveils the captivating story of Thornton's rise from an orphan to a charismatic male model, to a visionary who transformed advertising by founding the first-ever agency for advertising models. But hold onto your hats because there's more! Get ready for dramatic twists, encounters with models who transformed into Hollywood legends such as Lauren Bacall, Susan Hayward, and Grace Kelly, and a hint of McCarthy-era intrigue—it's a gripping tale worthy of the silver screen itself!
** Purchase a copy of The Merchant of Venus: The Life of Walter Thornton on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Bookshop.org. You can also add it to your GoodReads reading list.
They can be boring, self-indulgent and short on any unique facts. Don't stop reading here because I said that. This book is different.
I was drawn to The Merchant of Venus, The Life of Walter Thornton by Nancy Thornton Navarro and Adriana Thornton-Cornejo with Philip Mershon, as I love old Hollywood, like history, and this is a topic and subject I didn't know much about. I'm glad I agreed to read it.
This is definitely worth reading ,with tidbits about such people as the beautiful Susan Hayward and even the legendary Lauren Bacall and Grace Kelly's beginnings as Walter Thornton models... to a sprinkling of other lesser known stars.
An intriguing, fun fact is that Robert Thornton---the subject of the book and originator of the well known and well regarded modeling agency, which started the trend for managing and advertising models--- was a model himself. And pretty well known. Remember seeing all those vintage magazine ads with the dapper guy in the spiffy hat? Yup, that was him. Thornton's near-perfect classic features put him in the place of being the most requested and highest paid hat model in the industry.
What I found amazing was that after the daughters were grown, they were lucky enough to find their father's papers and photos still hidden away in the former family home.
There's also a unique family mystery his daughters try to solve along the way about why their father was in a Depression-era photo with a sign saying his car was for sale as he needed money. It turns out they found he never went broke and in fact seemed to weather the Depression well.
If you like old Hollywood, history, and more, you'll enjoy this book. It's an interesting, compelling, and easy read. Hat's off! I give it 5 stars, or more appropriately, let's give it 5 hats. 🎩🎩🎩🎩🎩
About the authors:
Nancy Thornton Navarro is a former trademark and copyright attorney who has also served as the Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Irving, Texas Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. Nancy currently lives near Dallas with her husband and is a proud mother of three.
For fun: (Click to see full size.) #SEPTEMBERSPOOKYSEASON24
Another month and a new post! Where does time go?
I've been working on making some furnishings and decorating the half-scale Greenleaf Van Buren Halloween dollhouse I finally got back to last month. It had been sitting awhile so I decided to finish the trim and top roof trim, and I have to admit, it looks pretty nice. I realize I still have to add some cobwebs to the inside ceilings, too. (See last post - abandoned room. Click photos for full size.) ** See end for the Instagram #septemberspookyseason24 game photo!
I kept looking at it (or was it peering at me?) and finally decided to start adding some art/pictures, which really makes a difference. We'll see how well I can get photos as some may be hard to see. I make a lot of pictures like the eerie landscapes below as they're fun to do and just to have them on hand, even if I don't use them all right away.
Sadly, I just heard that a favorite author, Victoria Thompson, passed away. I enjoyed her Counterfeit Lady 5-book historical mystery series, beginning with City of Lies, and have been reading gradually through my favorite series of hers, the Gaslight Mysteries.
The Gaslight Mysteries focus on midwife Sarah Brandt, who also is daughter of one of the richest men in the city, and is one of the founding Knickerbocker families in 1890s New York. Her somewhat unconventional life of supporting herself after the death of her late non-society doctor husband has Brandt now helping women in childbirth and occasionally helping Police Sgt. Frank Malloy solve crimes she may hear about or come across in her work. While fiction, the books do focus on realistic events of the time period.
The series starts with book 1, Murder on Astor Place, where Brandt discovers a girl from a prominent family has been killed and helps Sgt. Malloy uncover who did it before another death occurs.It's a fascinating series, with each book (27 in the series) often featuring crimes related to different issues of the period and societal problems that are still relevant today. It's been interesting to read about the suffragettes, to the prejudice against the early Chinese settlers and mixed marriages, to drug abuse (opium/laudanum), other crimes, and more.
It's nice to read a multi-book series and I'm glad I have a ways to go until the end, though it's sad that it will end with book 27, A Murder in Rose Hill, which just came out in April. Unless.... I wonder if she did write another?
I'm just sorry I didn't email her to say how much I've enjoyed these books. A lesson: contact that author you love reading. I know I appreciate when someone lets me know they like something I've written.
Ta-dah! I love-love-love this room!
This was really a fun project to do. Relatively quick and the best part is you don't have to really worry if you mess something up! haa! (Click photos for full size.)
The room (see the start of it here) is set in a photo box (5 1/2" h, 8 1/2" w, 3" d) that I picked up cheap at Goodwill. I find these and set them aside until I think of something to put in there. Once I saw my friend Gigi's teensy abandoned room it seemed like the perfect project idea. Easy enough project just using junk and stuff you have lying around, plus scrapbook paper and part of a wood placemat.
To finish it off, I decided to glue a scrap of old lace hanging over one window and added dirty cobwebs on the walls. I put in some garbage, abandoned flowerpots, a broken pot, a soda can, books, old newspapers, and a forgotten painting. I still want to add a teensy mouse in the one pot next to the couch once I find one. I didn't glue all that stuff down yet, but I think I will as I don't want to keep putting it back in place. I may yet add a small broken looking light on the table so there's a bit more light as long as it's not too bright.
The whole room lightened to see it better.The best part, I think, was adding a flickering light (the base from one of those cheap tea lights) behind the couch to look like a flame. I thought it looked like a fire was starting behind the broken old couch. Cool, huh?
The big question: now what do I do next???? 😉
* Thanks again for visiting. Stay tuned for more projects and Halloween posts coming soon! Don't forget - you can subscribe to post headline updates via email in the left column. *
With Halloween season underway, I'll be ramping up posts, some short, some revisits, as I have quite a few projects I've done over the years.
For now, I almost forgot about the neat poison plants I was working on! I start or finish stuff, then put it away and forget about it. haa!
I finished these Poison Ivy plants from an SDK Miniatures kit. They really turned out great. I still have more leaves left over and a couple other plants to do like this Poison Sumac. Haunted houses need the right plants, you know. 💀. All are half-scale, 1/24th. (Click photos for full size.)
Then, as I'm still working on the Abandoned Room project made in a small photo box, I found a few more of these plastic Victorian chairs and couches I'd stashed away. As this one had broken legs already, I decided to remove the faux red velvet fabric and reupholster it with dirty, torn fabric to match the rickety couch.
I had this little table I might add, too, and I'll be looking for a smaller LED lamp I can put on it, unless I find the right parts to make one. It does need a bit more light.
I also want to add the torn books yet plus some junk and garbage lying around. Getting there!
Funny, as it turns out I switched the windows by mistake, though it doesn't really matter. Either side worked for either window. The photo below is to show the lights as it's hard to take a pic of it lit up.
I know, it's so small, what's taking me so long? Well, I decided it needed another light, and the problem I had was getting the corner lantern lit... I couldn't seem to get the push-button connector to work for some reason. It lit if I touched the light wires to the battery itself, but wouldn't work otherwise. Hate when there's a hold-up - this was giving me fits! The solution: always works - soldered the connections and now they'll stay.
It's not real bright; probably would be brighter if I'd used AA batteries but that's okay. It'll work. I didn't want it super bright. I made the lantern using one of those plastic Christmas lanterns, then drilled a hole in the bottom and glued painted mat board around the bottom to cover the wires. I put a painted jewelry finding on top, though it's not really visible. There also are two yellowish-tone LED lights behind the windows.
I do have some of the furnishings figured out. Just have to age and destroy them. ha! It's a good way to dig in my stash for things that got messed up or I don't mind dirtying up. That'll be next.
Got the couch done, so thought I'd share. Made of mat board, rickety, broke... and a dirty rug.... That really adds a dingy touch! 💀
More photos as more stuff is added! Pretty cool, huh? I'll be adding more cobwebs in the room, too.
I hate that summer is almost over, but I am sooo ready to go to a miniatures show! The next one is a ways off yet, however - not until Nov. 8-9 in Elk Grove Village, Ill. I really look forward to these events!
* Thanks again for visiting! Don't forget, you can sign up for the email headline updates in the left column. I plan on doing more Halloween-related posts soon!