Hope you’re hungry—continuing this week of special focused Magpie Monday posts, I’m serving up Someone’s in the Kitchen…!
I hope Dinah would be proud!
Hope you’re hungry—continuing this week of special focused Magpie Monday posts, I’m serving up Someone’s in the Kitchen…!
I hope Dinah would be proud!
I’d been hoarding links for some focused posts, and I thought it would be good to get them on the table before they get even colder than they already are. I hope everything still tastes fresh.
Today’s focus is Domestic Bliss!
My friend Bonnie shared this photo of Alcazar Castle in Segovia, Spain, in winter with me on Facebook—I die, I faint, I fail! The photographer is Javier Javisego. Click to see it full size!
It’s the return of Magpie Monday! Happy Memorial Day, everyone!
♦ I’ve written about her before, but she bears repeating: photographer/model Ellie Lane (you can follow her on Facebook). I really like her work, whether she’s photographing herself or other models or being photographed by other photographers. Her images are just what I’m drawn to: weird, strange, sometimes creepy, always beautiful. Take these two recent photographs, for example. The first, a self-portrait, is titled I Speak Coldly of Her Now, and I love the story that the image brings to mind, the tangling or separation of selves (click both images to embiggen).
Here’s another photograph of Lane, Prestidigitation, taken by DividingME Photography. I love the use of multiple images of Lane, the poses of each character, the setting, and the distance of the shot.
Remember on April 1st when I said I would be taking a hiatus from Magpie Mondays until late May but that I would post some interesting bits in the meanwhile? Yeah, that all went down the drain. Not even a Video Friday last week! But I can see the light at the end of what has been a terribly long tunnel at work, and I’ll try to be better for the next couple weeks.
Today I offer a charming short film, The Last Bookshop. Here’s the official description from youtube (but also check out the website):
The Last Bookshop imagines a future where physical books have died out.
One day, a small boy’s holographic entertainment fails, so he heads out to explore the streets of abandoned shops outside. Down a forgotten alley he discovers the last ever bookshop. And inside, an ancient shopkeeper has been waiting over 25 years for a customer…
Produced by The Bakery in the South-East of England, filming took place in 2011, with post-production completed in 2012. The music was composed by Owen Hewson and performed by Arlet.
Veteran actor Alfred Hoffman stars alongside youthful co-star Joe Holgate.
It is written by Richard Dadd, who also co-directs alongside Dan Fryer.
We love bookshops. But we saw that many are going through tough times.
We wanted to contribute to the cultural debate with our own celebration in support of these glorious independents and their shelves of treasures. So with the help of some remarkable independent bookshops, and a lot of talented friends, we have been able to make our idea for The Last Bookshop into a reality. We hope you enjoy this film and share it with your friends…
So here I am, sharing it with my friends: