VINTAGE COLORADO INTERVIEWS ELLYNANNE

vintage colorado logo from rmpbs

It was quite the exciting day when Rocky Mountain PBS producer Lisa Olken and her exceptional crew arrived at my home to film my love of aprons as a segment in VINTAGE COLORADO.  It was a wonderful visit – chatting on end about the aprons in my collection and the women who once tied them on. The hours of our conversation have been edited into a fabulous video, which I’m so excited to share!

“Aprons” is one piece of VINTAGE COLORADO. Here is the link to the entire series:  http://www.rmpbs.org/vintage/ , which includes collectors of dolls, trailers, electronics, jewelry and salvage redo.

RMPBS is in the running to receive a prestigious Denver People’s Choice Award. Voting for the award is open to everyone everywhere and takes but seconds.  Just click Rocky Mountain PBS, KUVO, KUNC/KUJZ Join Forces for Culture and scroll to the bottom to cast. Thank you for taking the time to support this collaboration.

ea lisa www

And much hugs and love to Lisa and crew for letting me share my passion for Aprons, which don’t hold us back, they take us back.

xxEllynAnne

Mending Socks and Heart

A sewing box was once basic to every American home, its contents an assortment of buttons purchased and rescued from worn out clothing, spools of thread, straight pins, needles in multiple packets and sizes, a pincushion, marking chalk, measuring tape and a variety of scissors.

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Keeping her family’s clothing tidy and holey socks mended was a task many homemakers set aside for Wednesday. As supper cooked in the oven, she might turn on the radio, sit for a bit and dig into the mending pile.

Wed is sewing_DOW towels www

As a collector of vintage, I find a sewing box an irresistible purchase.

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Always affordable, it is the contents that beckon. green flowered box interior www IMG_0091

But in the bottom layer of this box, nestled among the threads, a surprise: two letters.

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Postmarked December 1949 and January 1950, the letters appear as timely holiday correspondence.

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But upon reading, the sentiments are of condolence and consolation from two sisters to their recently widowed sibling. Living a thousand miles from one another, they offer comfort to their grieving sister through letters. green w flowers letters opened www IMG_0095

“I so wish,” wrote Ivy, “that you will wake up some morning and find it all a bad dream.” “I’m glad you got the thread,” wrote Sis. “I bought some for me,too, to finish that quilt top I started some time ago.”

There’s no mention of a phone call – long distance costing far more than a three-cent stamp. But the realities of the times had many families pinching the penny and squeezing the nickel just to make ends meet.

Unlike a call, the letters could be read again and again. And storing them inside her sewing box, a grieving widow kept her sisters within her reach.

My mother used an empty candy tin as her sewing box. I asked her about it once, and she said it held sentimental value as a long-ago holiday gift from elderly neighbors, who’d taken my parents under their wings when they were newlyweds and living far from their families.

A sewing box with needles and threads can mend a sock and just by lifting the lid and peeking inside, can heal a heart.

xxEllynAnne

Tie One On…an apron, of course!

Fashion Off the Vine

When I hold a Pixie just so, it resembles a little purse.

watermelon apron

A friend commented the melon really resembles a Judith Leiber bag, but it’s better because when I tire of carrying it, I can eat it!

I purchased this apron already sewn of a fabulous seed sack. I’ve considered undoing the seams and re-stitching into a less poofy design, but the zigzag is so tight, the effort may be better put toward eating some delicious Rocky Ford melon.

xxea