Showing posts with label writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writer. Show all posts

Sunday 22 December 2019

Prickly briar gallop




I hope you enjoy it and thank you for reading. 
And do let me know what you think in the comments.

Tiny daily poem for November - Day 15/30 - Prompt: Falter

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Nature’s Empire Falls



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 14/30 - Prompt: Late

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Formless and Fuzzy



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 13/30 - Prompt: Blur

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Realm of Hope



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 12/30 - Prompt: Hope

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Origins unknown




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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 11/30 - Prompt: Found

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Sunday 1 December 2019

How to lighten seasonal blues



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 10/30 - Prompt: Chocolate

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Double trouble



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Tiny daily poem - Day 9/30 - Prompt: Trouble

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Do we really listen?



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 8/30 - Prompt: Listening

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Website: alisondaydesign

Familiar like a maternal embrace



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 7/30 - Prompt: Home

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Website: alisondaydesign

A place to doodle



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Tiny daily poem for November - Day 6/30 - Prompt: Margin

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Tell me the truth



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Daily tiny poem, day 5/30 - Prompt: Truth 

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Thursday 14 November 2019

Pucker up and introduce yourself



This tiny autumnal November poem highlights the art of kissing and the types of kisses we share, as part of our communication and interactions with each other.

I hope you enjoy it and thank you for reading. 
And do let me know what you think in the comments.

Day 4/30 - Prompt: KISS 💋

Light as a feather introductory greeting 
Fleshy facial parts briefly touching 
A kiss and a hug setting the world to rights
Superficial air kisses missing their mark
Passionate lips, hot and heavy entwine
A blushing memory
Of what was

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Returning to the familiar a stranger




This tiny autumnal November poem highlights repatriation after a long residency abroad. U ensuing culture shock, emptiness and feeling lost is very real. You may speak the same language, but something essential has changed.

One can never fully return to what was and should never want to, but it’s possible to start a new chapter in a familiar place. This poem emphasises the benefits of how lost I felt and often still feel.

I hope you enjoy it and thank you for reading. 
And do let me know what you think in the comments.

Day 3/30 - Prompt: LOST 💫


Surrounded by my life in boxes and cases
Feeling empty like the house
Take a moment to reflect
Nearly three score years and 10
A full circle
Older, certainly
Wiser, maybe
Experience richer, definitely
Was this move necessary?
Yes
Is it the final one?
Depends...


Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Website: alisondaydesign

Weather that makes you feel like hibernating



If you’ve just discovered my blog, for the month of November, I’ve been writing a daily, tiny autumnal poem, inspired by prompts, set by Beth Kempton. 

To add to the fun, for each poem I’ve created a photographic visual to accompany it.

For day 2/30 the prompt is: RAIN ☔️


Morning warm duvet
Deep breath and wriggle toes
Listen
1000 hooves pound the street
Rhythmic gallop
Beat never ending
Autumn is arriving

Photo: #Rain by @alisondaydesigns



I hope you enjoyed it and thank you for reading. 


And do let me know what you think in the comments.

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Website: alisondaydesign

Time to pause and reflect



For the month of November, I’ve been writing a daily, tiny autumnal poem , inspired by prompts, set by Beth Kempton. To add to the fun, for each poem I’ve created a photographic visual to accompany it.


This poem emphasises the benefits of pausing and reflecting in our daily learning lives.

I hope you enjoy it and thank you for reading. 
And do let me know what you think in the comments.

Day 1/30 - Prompt: PAUSE 💫

Finish the sentence
Rinse the brush
Close the window
Away with the rush
Pop on the kettle
Mint from the garden
Clock ticking



Photo & words: #MoroccanMint by @alisondaydesigns

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Monday 31 December 2018

The Embroider


Every passing minute is another chance to turn it all around—
Vanilla Sky

Early 2018, I awoke one morning with the decision to throw my current life in the Netherlands to the wind. I’d been living on the continent for over 27 years and remaining there no longer served who I was and what I wanted out of life. 
I decided there and then that before my next birthday, in April, I would repatriate to my hometown area of Oxfordshire in the UK. So, I put my house up for sale at the start of March and began a major life laundry, clearing up, throwing out and closing down my life there.
The move was complex. A moving company took the bulk of my possessions to the UK and put them in storage; my brother drove over with his transit van and picked up me, my two cats and remaining possessions. The overnight journey by boat went well and the cats became expats.
Since then, re-activating my life has been complex: buying a house; finding a job and getting used to England again. The feeling that I’m on Mars has lessened, but it’ll take a while before I feel as though I belong. The urge to speak Dutch has vanished, although the odd Dutch word will still pop up now and again thwarting my flow.
Finding a job is the main task at the moment and Internet searches on job sites are interspersed by appointments with employment agencies. It’s a slow process and my enthusiasm goes in peaks and dales.



On my trips to the centre of Oxford, I notice the increase in the number of homeless people, living on cardboard box panels, under duvets. Over the years, it’s  increased exponentially and it’s a sad sight to see in what is considered to be such an affluent city. Alongside the street dwellers, are opinionated preachers, musicians and young people, showing off acrobatic or football skills, in the hope of a few coins from passers by. 
One person, however, stood out from the rest, and who actively seemed to be trying to make something more positive out of her circumstances. Sitting cross-legged on the ground, on a sleeping bag, she was totally absorbed in the process of sewing a picture on a large canvas, using brightly coloured, embroidery thread and wool. Ironically, her back was facing the outside wall of a well known bank. Her pictures are happy scenes embroidered onto material, guided by roughly sketched outlines. Every so often she would be forced to take a rest, due to the arthritic pain in her hands. The results of her labours are charming, colourful pictures, which have a naivety to their style.

Stopping to chat, I found out that this was Carol’s turf. She’d sat here every day for the past six years—sewing. Her pictures were not limited to canvases, there was also a large lamp shade that someone had thrown away, which she had covered with her creative stitches, plus a rather macabre looking doll. ‘I’ll sew on anything I can get my hands on’, she said. At one time, she made a series of small dogs, which became popular and sold instantly whenever she made them, but she found making things to order boring. That’s not why she sewed: ‘I do what I do, because I have to,’ she said.

Whenever the police tried to move her on she would say: ‘I’m not beggin’, I’m working.’ To the tourists who want to photograph her she says: ‘ If you want to take a photo of my work and help me do what I do—throw some coins in the box.’


I told her that I kept a blog and asked if she’d mind if I photographed her and her work for a blog post: ‘You do what you’ve got to do—at least you asked, most people don’t’, she replied. ‘I’ve been on telly and photographed before’, she added. As a raised my phone, she went quiet, adverted her eyes and bent her head to look at the ground. 

Like many artists, Carol was doing, in her words ‘what she had to do’. How she came to be there is of course another story and not relevant to my conversation with her. I was touched by the way she embraces her creativity as a means to survive on the streets, but ultimately shies away from the limelight.

If you’d like to see Carol’s work, or have a chat, you’ll find her sitting at Carfax, at the end of Cornmarket Street.


Thursday 25 May 2017

Jardin d'Amour


The love of Gardening is a seed that once sown never dies - Gertrude Jekyll


Roses journal cover and quote by Gertrude Jekyll: garden designer, artist and writer.

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Saturday 7 May 2016

Adventure on the Shelves



This highlight of this week was to hear that the American Book Center, Amsterdam has added my storybook: Sam & the Adventure to their shelves, along with the accompanying colouring book.

How cool is that?


© Alison Day 


Tuesday 1 September 2015

Story Launch






Today saw the launch of my Alison Day Designs !

In case you missed it, Sam & the Adventure is now available in softcover and hardcover versions. Along with picture magnets, there is also a colouring book, filled with all the characters and scenes in the story—see if you can find the extra one, not included in the story.



© Alison Day