Tag Archives: Eleanor

Why I Blog

ZapCar . Burning Man Car

Right now, someone is particularly angry at me for not communicating through the means she prefers. She wrote me an email saying that she wants letters on paper and will read email but thinks blogs are impersonal and not worth her time.

So, why write blogs?

  • I work two jobs (for TechWomen and Huawei), each of which is interesting and worthwhile
  • I love a distractingly wonderful husband, two remarkable kids in college, two dogs, a cat, and two birds, each of whom would like and deserves more of my attention
  • Our daughter is getting married in six weeks, with over a hundred guests
  • I am working with my brothers to advise and support two interesting parents (both over 80) whose health is failing
  • I am on several volunteer Boards and I teach a group of twenty adorable kids three hours a week in an after-school program, all of whom have justified expectations of my time and nurturing
  • I have plants that expected better when they came into my garden, and weeds that are much happier than they should be
  • I have a stack of well-written and highly-recommended books that leak guilt at me when I look in their direction

I am over-committed and over-scheduled doing work I love and do well.  When my daughter went to college, she made a wise decision. She could either try to keep in touch with her large circle of friends and relations individually, and do nothing else. Or, she could blog and hope that her admirers would follow her news in a less-direct but more complete way.

Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact man.
Sir Francis Bacon (1561 – 1626)

When I don’t blog, I find that I drop out of touch and actually spend more time communicating to worse effect. I love writing and taking pictures and I think sharing what I see with my readers benefits both. I am frequently contacted by interesting people who ask to use one of my pictures or want to continue a discussion started on my blog.  For example, I was on the local TV news last week because of my blog entries last year about FEMA.  I have included recent pictures of strange local cars and old metal signs for you today – just for fun! Publishing here makes me consider more deeply and starts many of my conversations with my family and friends in the middle of current experience, instead of spending half of each meeting catching each other up.

Orchard Supply Hardware old sign . Western Hotel old sign

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Happy 59th!

Wade and Eleanor Dickinson

My parents will celebrate their 59th wedding anniversary this Sunday. My father recently had a bad fall and has been in the hospital – we are thankful that he got back home today.  Happy day folks!

Wade and Eleanor Dickinson . Wade and Eleanor Dickinson 1951

Images Copyright 1951-2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Win Ng Chicken, Cube

In 2008, I wrote a blog entry about the hand-made ceramic Win Ng Chicken cooker my mother gave me. This year, she gave me the Win Ng ceramic cube that used to grace her back deck in San Francisco. This is a handsome and exceptionally sturdy sculpture, used as a favorite family seat since I was a child. It continues in this beloved and useful role in my San Jose living room.

Win Ng Chicken Cooker . Win Ng Cube

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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He will live at our house…

Gilroy the dog by Katy Dickinson Gilroy and Tino by Katy Dickinson

Growing up in San Francisco, my brothers and I had far more pets than you might think. From time to time, we had a rescued baby crow in the breakfast room, toads and frogs in the tub, iguanas and bunnies in the basement, a boa constrictor in the bathroom, and cats wherever they pleased to go. My mother’s motto about all of this was from the Dr. Seuss book One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish:

Look what we found in the park in the dark.
We will take him home, we will call him Clark.
He will live at our house, he will grow and grow.
Will our mother like this? We don’t know.

At my home in San Jose, we have a more modest menagerie (2 dogs, 2 birds, and a cat) but since we live on the Guadalupe River, we are often invaded by hoards of squirrels, flocks of finches and other songbirds, geese, ducks, and hawks, weird horsehair worms, opossums, raccoons, lizards, and Jerusalem crickets, among others. Our new puppy Gilroy is delighting in all of it during his first week with us. His adopted-big-sister Redda is bored with squirrels but Gilroy still barks at them joyously.

alligator lizard by Katy Dickinson horsehair worm by Katy Dickinson John, Redda, Gilroy

cockatiels by Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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How to Make an 80th Birthday Video

My mother, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, turned 80 last month. To celebrate, I made a video from pictures of her life provided by many members of the family. The video contained a selection of the 1,346 best pictures I found from the last 150 years. Recent photos were available in digital form but older images had to be scanned. I was able to use some pictures from the 80th birthday video I made for my father, Wade Dickinson. However, scanning technology has improved so many of those 2006 photographs had to be re-scanned.

Here is the process – how the video was made, with generous technical support from my husband John and music advice from my daughter Jessica and brother Pete:

  1. Decide when the story starts: establish the historical, social, and geographic context
    • I started 80 years before my mother was born, with ancestor pictures.
    • I included pictures from my mother’s parents’ childhood, courtship, and marriage.
  2. Collect many many images
    • Include pictures from each decade, if possible.
    • Show important people and places: siblings, the house where she grew up, where she went during the summer.
    • Scan yearbooks, invitations and announcements, certificates, awards, diplomas and other documents important to her life.
    • Presenting both formal and informal pictures tells a fuller story.
    • Include images from both family and work life. My mother is an artist, so I included pictures of her drawings, paintings, and sculptures.
  3. Scan pictures
    • Crop if needed to focus on what is important in the picture.
    • Leave off photo borders and frames (not always possible with old fragile photos).
    • Scan many more than you will need so that you have a choice of images with both landscape and portrait orientations
  4. Put the images into a web page photo arrangement template.
    • I used the “Keepsakes” photo layout pages which are part of Apple iPhoto – there are other programs available.
    • I included a variety of page layouts for one to six pictures per page – keeping the same color background for each page for continuity.
    • I wrote footer notes with dates and names and key places – sparingly, not on every page.
    • I had planned to display the image sequence using iMovie but that application badly degraded the image resolution, so I used iPhoto instead.
  5. Collect music to go with the images
    • We wanted a music  medley with tracks from several periods in my mother’s life.  Some songs I bought from iTunes. Jessica sang others and sent me the recording.
    • We wanted the music selections timed to start and end as certain images displayed.  This required much work.
    • John exported the iPhoto slide show into iMovie to create a timed sound track. He then exported the sound track back into iPhoto for the image display. This was complex but created the best sound/image combination using the tools we had.
  6. Decide how long the show will be – we aimed for 20 to 30 minutes.
  7. Show early versions to friends and relations and ask for feedback.
  8. Make a paper book of the video for a lasting momento. This is very easy to do with iPhoto Keepsakes but there is a 100 page limit. The resulting book arrives quickly and is of good quality.
  9. This project took about 40 hours of work over two months to complete.
  10. My mother loved it!
IMG_0556 . IMG_0557
IMG_0621 . IMG_0831

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson
28 March 2014 – links and references updated

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Elkmont Tennessee

Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, my mother, turned 80 this week. My husband and I have been putting together a video of her life to show at the big party next weekend. Rummaging around in thousands of old family photographs has been a time-consuming and moving experience. The pictures can be sorted in many ways: by family line, by age, by geography, by topic. I was surprised at how many pictures I have of family members visiting the Grand Canyon since 1941, how many photos feature animals (especially cats), and how many were taken at Elkmont.

Elmont was a vacation community near Gatlinburg in the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee. My great grandparents built a cabin there before the the Great Smoky Mountains became a national park in 1934. Later, the Elkmont camp ground was built across Jake’s Creek behind our cabin. In 1994, my mother helped to create the Great Smoky Mountains Elkmont Historic District that preserves some of the cabins from destruction. She developed a book about Elkmont in 2006.

You can tour Elkmont by video on Ghost Town Elkmont Houses – Smoky Mountains Tennessee (2007) and National Park – Great Smoky Mountains Elkmont Historic District Update (2008). Here are some of our family pictures of Elkmont and “Dear Lodge”, cabin number six also called the Creekmore Cabin.

1925 Elkmont swimming hole
1925 Evelyn and friends, Elkmont swimming hole

1915 Walter and Ellen Van Gilder
(my great grandparents)
1890 Walter and Ellen Van Gilder at Elkmont
. 1915 Hanging Bridge
Over Jake’s Creek
1900 plank bridge Jakes Creek Elkmont TN
1916 Appalachian Club Members
at the Wonderland Hotel
1906 Appalachian Club Members, Smokey Mountains Tennessee
. 1965 Elkmont
Cabin 6
1965.Elkmont
1965 Uncle Richard, Aunt Mary,
Aunt Louise at Jake’s Creek
1965.Richard.Louise.Mary
. 1967 my mother
Eleanor
1967.Eleanor.Elkmont
1977 my brother Peter
with Grandma on the cabin porch
1977.pete.evelyn.elkmont
. 1980 Inside Cabin 6:
Grandma, Aunt Mary, J.T. Higdon
1980.evelyn.mary.JT.elkmont
1991 My Mother’s Trophy for
Elkmont’s Most Original HorsDoeuvres
1991 Elkmont award
. 2008 J.R. and Midge Higdon –
Elkmont Cemetery
2008 Elkmont6 Cemetary Higdon Stone by Jessica
2008 Elkmont – Creekmore Cabin
IMGP0277
. 2008 Elkmont – Cabin 6
2008 Elkmont5 Creekmore Cabin by Jessica

2008 Great Smoky Mountains
HPIM0265
Images Copyright 2008-2011 by Katy Dickinson and Jessica Dickinson Goodman

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Happy Year of the Rabbit

1980 Walter Hopps rabbit 2008 studio Iguana-2

Working for Huawei means that I am much more aware of Chinese holidays and traditions. Happy New Year! This is the first day of the Year of the Rabbit in the traditional Chinese zodiac. Yesterday, Huawei had a big party for staff and their families, complete with dumplings, seeds, sweets, balloons, plus a dance and variety show from China TV on the big screen in the cafeteria.  Today, many people wore their dressy clothes to work.

In honor of the new year, here is my favorite rabbit story:

My mother used to have two large pets in her San Francisco art studio: a rabbit and a six foot long iguana lizard. Both were vegetarians and they loved carrots for their leafy green tops. One day, my mother put a large carrot on the floor and both animals started for it. They stopped on either side of the vegetable and eyed each other.

You need to know that rabbits show aggression by growling and thumping their back legs. A combative iguana jerks its head up and down and turns its skin from green to orange. So, the grey rabbit was on one side of the carrot growling and thumping, and the lizard was on the other, bobbing and changing color. Fortunately for the peace of the studio, both animals were very stupid. Eventually one wandered off and the other sat on the carrot.

Here are pictures of the food at the Huawei New Year’s Party:

New Years Sweets New Years Seeds Chinese Dumplings

Images Copyright 1980-2011 by Eleanor Dickinson and Katy Dickinson

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