Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Back to School Organization




 
The school year is right around the corner. Want to get your kids excited about going back. Recreate their closet 
space. I know they have been asking you to take them shopping for some newest trends, but before they can go 
shopping ask them to get what they have organized. Have them go through their closets and sort their clothes, what 
fits and what doesn't.  Through out the years children and teens can collect a lot of clothing.  Sometimes its hard
to throw away a shirt or your favorite jeans, but if you haven't worn it in a year you probably won't. Let them donate 
their clothes that don't fit to Goodwill or the Salvation Army. You can also take the clothes to Platos Closet which is 
for teens or Once Upon a Child, both of these stores buys back clothing.  All great places to start for donating clothes.
 
 
 
 
 
If your closet isn't already separated with organizational products, you can go to your local Bed Bath & Beyond, 
Target,or Walmart to find great products for organizing. Now that a lot of college students are going back for another 
semester these stores offer great deals on organizational products. Make this a fun activity for your child/teen, while 
secretly teaching them how to be organized.
 
 
 
 
 
After all that organization I'm pretty sure you have cleared out some space in their closet and its time for some 
fun and a little quality time shopping with your kid.  

Think money well spent to get you child/teen motivated to start the new school year.




 

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Historic Garden Week

The House and Garden tours are offer statewide from April 21st-28th 2012. The tours feature more then 250 Virginia Gardens and homes. The Historic Garden weeks allows us to get a peak at Virginia's most beautiful and historic gardens and homes. Each house within its beauty displays fabulous springtime flower arrangements. This is one of America's largest open house.

This week the tours are in Richmond from Tuesday the 24th – Thursday the 26th . If you missed it on Tuesday they showcased 6 house in the Richmond: Ampthill / Wilton Area. It includes the manor house of Ampthill Plantation and the Wilton House. Wilton house is now used as a museum, and the headquarters of The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia.Ticket includes admission to the following 6 locations:
  • Gullquist home and garden, 203 Ampthill Road
  • Johnson III home and garden, 215 Ampthill Road
  • Johnson home and garden, 5301 Kenmore Road
  • Hetzer home and garden, 118 Paxton Road
  • Clark home and garden, 206 South Wilton Road
  • Boyd home and garden, 4 South Wilton Road
Today, Wednesday the 25th, there will be a walking tour in the museum district on the Boulevard. The Boulevard is the avenue dividing Richmond’s Fan District and Museum District. Its feature this year will be the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, which completed a contemporary wing and redesigned its gardens in 2010. This walking tour offers views on the families homes that live on this street. The tour displays the creative art, architecture and history of the Museum District. Ticket includes admission to the following 9 locations:
    DeBiasi home and garden, 7 S. Boulevard
  • Brooks home and garden, 1 N. Boulevard
  • Martin home and garden, 6 N. Boulevard
  • Spencer-Ziehl garden only, 10 N. Boulevard
  • Glick home and garden, 105 N. Boulevard
  • The Confederate War Memorial Chapel, 2900 Grove Avenue. Open until 4 p.m.
  • Austin home and garden, 409 N. Boulevard
  • Wells-Clements home and garden, 509 N. Boulevard, #14 at The Tuscan Villa
  • Moss-Maddix home and garden, 2701 Park Avenue
On the final day, Thursday the 26th they will be showcasing 7 houses on the tour of Richmond: Three Chopt / Westhampton Area. This tour features beautiful homes and gardens along Three Chopt Road and some of the neighboring streets. Before this area was know for its beautiful homes and gardens, it was once an old Indian trail. Ticket includes admission to the following 7 locations:
    Massie home and garden, 602 Levering Lane
  • Fox home and garden, 6310 Three Chopt Road
  • Van der Wolk home and garden, 6426 Three Chopt Road
  • Kempe home and garden, 6615 Three Chopt Road
  • McKinney/Tolliver home and garden, 30 Old Mill Road
  • O’Hagan home and garden, 25 Towana Road
  • Cain home and garden, 53 Towana Road
You can buy your tickets in advanced for $35. All the tour proceeds fund the restoration and preservation of Virginia's historic gardens.

Find out more at nbc12.com under “all access”

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Inside the House of Maya Angelou


Maya Angelou
Maya Angelou in her heavily restored Harlem house.

Poet, educator, author, playwright, activist,historian, producer, actress, director Dr. Maya Angelou is one of the most renowned and influential voices of our time.

Born Marguerite Johnson on April 4, 1928 in St. Louis, Missouri and raised in Stamps, Arkansas. Here Maya Angelou experienced the brutality of racial discrimination, but she also absorbed the unshakable faith and values of traditional African-American family, community, and culture.

As a teenager, Dr. Angelou’s love for the arts won her a scholarship to study dance and drama at San Francisco’s Labor School. At 14, she dropped out to become San Francisco’s first African-American female cable car conductor. She later finished high school, giving birth to her son,Guy, a few weeks after graduation. As a young single mother, she supported her son by working as a waitress and cook, however her passion for music, dance, performance, and poetry would soon take center stage.

Maya Angelou's five-volume autobiography commenced with I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings in 1970. The memoirs chronicle different eras of her life and were met with critical and popular success. Later books include All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes (1986) and My Painted House, My Friendly Chicken and Me (1994). She has published several volumes of verse, including And Still I Rise (1987) and Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou (1995). Her volume of poetry, Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'Fore I Die (1971), was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize.

Maya Angelou currently owns three homes. One in Winston-Salem, the other two are townhouses in Harlem New York. Maya Angelou has lived in New York many times. She has had apartments in Brooklyn and on Central Park West and Riverside Drive. But in 2003 she decided it was time to buy a brownstone in Harlem. It was to be a retreat from her full-time residence, an 12-room house in Winston-Salem, N.C. This is a neighborhood where ravaged brownstones bought for $67,000 in 1996 sold for $500,000 in 2004. Maya Angelou's property is worth well over $3.4 million today.

Maya Angelou wanted a space in which to entertain her legions of friends in New York. Unlike most second-home owners, she was looking for a getaway to the city, not from it. And she soon found it. This was the first and only house she looked at in Harlem. A four-story brownstone Built in 1881, the house is nearly 4,000 square feet and sits on a historic block of 120th Street in the Mount Morris Park neighborhood, the most-sought-after area in Harlem. It took a gut renovation to turn the shell into the stunning, high-ceilinged home it is today, with five bedrooms, three full bathrooms and two half bathrooms. Her Harlem home is largely decorated with objects of art from Africa and works that reflect the experiences of African-Americans.

Her front parlor is vivid and a little larger than life. Oversize armchairs and couches are upholstered in raw silk in shades of lime, tangerine, cherry, grape and bright yellow. The grouping gives new meaning to the phrase eye candy. It is said that Maya Angelou wanted this room to look like a bowl of summer fruit. The dining room is behind the parlor, dominated by a round glass-topped table that seats 10 in bright red lacquered chairs. Painted clouds drift overhead on the light blue ceiling.

At the back of the house is the breakfast nook. It is sunlit and painted marigold with terra cotta-colored trim. An elegant stairway arises from the front entryway that carries you directly to Maya Angelou's blue master bedroom. On the top floor are a laundry room and the two other bedrooms.

Inside, eye-catching artifacts of rarer quality are on display everywhere. They vary from luminous paintings of African women ferrying babies in slings to charming drawings of little African-American girls wearing yarn ribbons in their hair, resembling illustrations from the 1950s. African masks, quilts, photographs and sculpture sit on tables, hang on walls, line stairways. Collages by Phoebe Beasley are scattered through the rooms.

Her Harlem house is much more than a vacation place or a simple change of scenery. It’s a true second home. In a article written about Maya Angelou's Harlem home she states, “I never agreed with Thomas Wolfe. I never thought you can’t go home again. I’ve been coming home to Harlem for 50 years.”

Maya Angelou’s words and actions continue to stir our souls, energize our bodies, liberate our minds, and heal our hearts.

I long, as does every human being, to be at home wherever I find myself.
-Maya Angelou


sabrina


Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The House of Hattie McDaniel

I thought I would finish this black history month with a week of some of the famous African Americans that have become historic figures in America.  Also getting a glance at what their homes where like when they were at their prime.

Hattie McDaniel

Hattie McDaniel was the first African-American actress to win an Academy Award. She won the award for best supporting actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind a film from 1939.

Hattie McDaniel was born June 10, 1895, in Wichita, Kansas, to former slaves. She was the youngest of 13 children, here she grew up to become one of the most controversial and historic figures of film.

In McDaniel's time, America was segregated in virtually every respect in terms of race. Hollywood was not color blind and relegated black performers to strictly subservient roles where they played maids, butlers and dim wits that were superstitious and un-educated. McDaniel infused her subservient roles with a bombastic personality that she enhanced with impeccable comic timing. Despite her success she was not without her critics.

The NAACP charged her with degrading herself and her race to which she responded “I would rather play a maid and make $700 than be a real one for $7.” The NAACP’s remarks started a contentious debate over whether McDaniel was a trial blazer or merely perpetuating racial stereotypes.

Despite others thoughts the academy award winning actress broke the color barrier in film, and covenant laws, to buy her house on Harvard Blvd. in West Adams. In the heart of what was Sugar Hill on Harvard. When McDaniel started making good money she, along with other wealthy African American entertainers and business people bought homes in the spacious and tidy neighborhood known as West Adam Heights. In 1938, old colonial mansions in Los Angeles, California ranges from $15,000 and up.

McDaniel had purchased her white,sprawling two-story, seventeen-room mansion in 1942. The house included a large living room, dining room, drawing room, den, butler's pantry, kitchen, service porch, library, four bedrooms, and a basement. McDaniel had a yearly Hollywood party in what was know as Sugar Hill.


Hattie McDaniel's house on Harvard Blvd. in West Adams where she through yearly Hollywood party.


  

Hattie McDaniel's in her house holding her Oscar,she won the award for best supporting actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind a film from 1939.






sabrina