Sunday 1 December 2019

A place to doodle



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 6/30 - Prompt: Margin

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

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Website: alisondaydesign

Tell me the truth



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

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

Photo & text: @alisondaydesigns

Instagram: alisondaydesigns
Website: alisondaydesign

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

Instagram: alisondaydesigns
Website: alisondaydesign

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

Instagram: alisondaydesigns
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.

Instagram: alisondaydesigns
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

Instagram: alisondaydesigns
Website: alisondaydesign

Monday 31 December 2018

Smartie Pants



When I was a child, every Wednesday my maternal grandparents would come to visit. First to arrive was my Grandmother, Freda. She would arrive with a rustle of bags, on a celery scented wave, having just been to the local fruit and vegetable market in Oxford. Of course her bags had goodies for us too. Comics such as: Whizzer & Chips and Diane and there was always a big bag of cheesy shapes –savoury biscuits in mini diamonds, triangles, hearts and clover leaf shapes. They were very popular and disappeared by the handful into our hungry mouths.
This would keep us quiet for a while, but as we neared the end of the afternoon, our excitement would grow at the imminent arrival of our Grandfather, Joe.  Ex-Merchant Navy and publican of a local watering hole in his home town, before he retired, he wore a brown checked sports coat with deep pockets. From these he would produce three tubes of smarties – one for each of us. Popping off the coloured plastic lids, first we would compare the alphabet letters on the underside of the lids. Then we’d upend the tube so that the multi-coloured smarties would slide down into our hands, like a conveyor belt. There was an art to eating them and favourite colours were always saved until last. Once the Smarties were gone, the tube was still fun. Replacing the lid, if you blew hard enough down the tube, you could get the lid to shoot across the room like a pop gun.
Then there came the week that Grandad turned up with the devastating news...

‘No Smarties this week, your Mum says I’m not allowed to give you sweets every week,’ 

he said. Of course we didn’t believe him and searched his deep pockets, but this time they were empty. But Grandad was the kind of soul who played by his own rules and couldn’t bear to look at our downcast little faces for long. As if by magic, he would produce three unopened tubes of smarties from an inside pocket. On future visits, if he said he hadn’t got any Smarties with him, we wouldn’t believe him. It turned into a game, to search his pockets for the forbidden tubes, until giggling we found them. 



Although these were never as fun as the tubes, Smarties also came in small boxes too. I’m delighted to say that one of my illustrations, of a retro Smarty box has been included in the delightful Uppercase Magazine: Packaging Portraits, issue #38.