Sepia Saturday 485: A tisket A tasket


It has been a ridiculously long time since I blogged.  All work and no play makes Alex a very dull girl indeed.  And I do miss blogging.  Particularly Sepia Saturday.  So here goes.  A short post about a basket.  

I picked up the nearest old photo album I could find and found this on about the third page.



Dated August 1950, my mother would have been 14 years old - a couple of months shy of 15.  The photo would have been taken by her BFF Val.  And I love this photo because it is of my mother painting and she was very good at drawing and painting.  See previous post here.

So there you are.  You can carry a sketch pad and paintbrushes with you in a basket.  And there I was thinking it would be food.  Well, there was probably food too.  Starving artists notwithstanding.

And I am completely fascinated by what she is wearing.  My mother always loved a good kilt.  Scottish heritage and all that.  For more about Scottish ancestors go here.

Being a knitter I am particularly intrigued with the jumper or sweater as they call them overseas.  The photos are very old and not so clear with the lighting.  This photo gives you some idea of the detail.



I've enlarged it as much as I can so its a bit blurry.  Cute huh?  It would be great to find a clearer photo or pattern of the original.  I wonder if it was knit for her, by her or a bought one.  I found a great website with vintage patterns on it. Oh and here is another.

Here's a photo of Barbara and Val together back at Barbara's family's flat in Summer Hill.



Whenever you say basket I'm reminded of the old rhyme "A tisket a tasket".  I did not know it was made into a song by Ella Fitzgerald in 1938.

Here's the rhyme (according to Wikipedia - of American origin apparently which is probably why I can't find it any of my nursery rhyme books which had a very English focus) :

A-tisket a-tasket
A green and yellow basket
I wrote a letter to my mom
And on the way I dropped it,
I dropped it, I dropped it,
And on the way I dropped it.
A little boy he picked it up

And put it in his pocket

And here's Ella 



And here's a blog with a story about Ella and A Tisket A Tasket.

So - happy weekend to you.  I hope you aren't feeling dull and dreary but that you have a basket full of something: memories, knitting, pencils and paper or at the very least some scrummy food.  For more basket cases - er...stories about baskets go here....

Comments

smkelly8 said…
Glad you're back blogging
Kathy said…
We were singing the same song as we wrote our posts! Glad to have you back! I'm not always consistent these days, but I hope to be more so in about a month. Nice to know that SS is still here for us to return to. Love the photo you found and you mom so occupied with her painting.
Alex Daw said…
Thank you SusanK and Kathy- it feels good to be back in such excellent company. :)

Barbara Rogers said…
Oh Alex, I'm so glad you've joined SS again! I remember when I first read it, there you were, and I looked and was surprised to see you were a woman! Duh. My cousin named Alexandra goes by Sandra. See you in the funnies again soon I hope.
La Nightingail said…
Ah - a fellow knitter. I used to knit sweaters long years ago - much of the time on the bus heading for work across the bay in San Francisco, or coming home. If we got caught in traffic it simply meant I'd get a few more rows done! :) These days I knit blankets or squares to be made into blankets for orphaned children in South Africa.
Charlotte said…
Great to see another blog post from you Alex - always fun to read. And baskets - well, do we have a few in our family! Check out this basket shop in Pitt Street in about 1858. David Wiley (in the Very Tall Hat) assisted his brother (my 3xgreat grandfather) and family to emigrate to Sydney from London.
http://digital.sl.nsw.gov.au/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=FL1660807&embedded=true&toolbar=false
Nice to have you back blogging! Hope you will be able to keep it up :-) A great selection of photos for the basket prompt. That sweater (jumper) in the second photo is gorgeous. It appears to have pine trees on it. Could it have been a winter holiday sweater?
Geniejen said…
How lovely to have those wonderful photos of your mum as a young woman
Mike Brubaker said…
A nice post to renew blogging. It's very interesting how Ella's popular song (or the nursery rhyme for that matter) gets preserved in the memory of so many people. The catchy tune and clever lyrics are not enough I think. It's how Ella's voice captured our imagination and left a permanent association between the words and the thing, the basket.
Alex Daw said…
Barbara - it feels very good to be back.
La Nightingail - I think knitting jumpers has to be one of my greatest achievements - probably only 2 or 3 all up but still a mammoth effort on my part :)
Charlotte - that photo is wonderful - in particular the very tall top hat and how lovely to have a family connection to it.
Molly - Yes I think it was a winter holiday sweater - 1st September is the first day of Spring for us so it would have been the end of winter when that photo was taken
Geniejen - I am very lucky indeed that she loved photography as much as she did
Mike - I completely agree - it is the way she sang the song. She told a story and I was captivated.
Hey Charlotte, I'm interested to know more about David Wiley. From his regular correspondence printed in the SMH always under the title "THE OLD HOUSE IN PARK-STREET", I found this interesting poem about saying farewell to Manly. I know that he passed away in Manly, 1876 but that was many years after this farewell to Manly poem. I'd love to understand why he was saying such a heart felt farewell.

Regards, David Bell

THE OLD HOUSE IN PARK-STREET
FAREWELL TO -
Farewell I farewell! how long the fond heart lingers,
When doomed to sigh a final “Fare thee well;”
As doth the harp’s last tones when fairy fingers
Have ceased the strain that bound us in its spell.
Farewell! farewell!!
No tongue can tell
The fond heart's feelings doomed to sigh a lost farewell.

Yet there is One, the fairest of the fair,
On whom my heart and tongue could linger long;
Whose bright blue eyes and rich luxuriant hair
Would grace the theme of romance or of song-
Whose own may tell
The feelings of the heart that sighs this last farewell.
Farewell, fond youths, whose wit and artless wiles
Full many an eve have cheered our festive hearth;
And maidens fair, whose happy, happy smiles
Have beamed the brighter at their harmless mirth.
Who sigh, “Farewell!!”
Doth hope those smiles shall beam so long as ye shall dwell,

Farewell, fair Manly, and thy Fairy Bower,
Where oft we've roamed in goodly company;
Farewell those gorgeous scenes from Camara Tower,
Or, o'er the placid bay or restless sea.

Farewell, the Phantom, never, never more,
With happy heart shall I patrol thy deck,
And view the landscape, grand on either shore,
In blissful ignorance of the coming wreck.
Why longer dwell
On themes that break the heart that sighs to them-
Farewell.
David Wiley - The Sydney Morning Herald 25 Nov 1861

Hey Charlotte,
I'd love to know more about your x3 Great Grandfather. In 1861 he wrote this wonderful farewell to Manly and I'm curious as to why he was saying such a heart felt farewell to Manly.

Regards,

David

THE OLD HOUSE IN PARK-STREET
FAREWELL TO -
Farewell I farewell! how long the fond heart lingers,
When doomed to sigh a final “Fare thee well;”
As doth the harp’s last tones when fairy fingers
Have ceased the strain that bound us in its spell.
Farewell! farewell!!
No tongue can tell
The fond heart's feelings doomed to sigh a lost farewell.

Yet there is One, the fairest of the fair,
On whom my heart and tongue could linger long;
Whose bright blue eyes and rich luxuriant hair
Would grace the theme of romance or of song-
Whose own may tell
The feelings of the heart that sighs this last farewell.
Farewell, fond youths, whose wit and artless wiles
Full many an eve have cheered our festive hearth;
And maidens fair, whose happy, happy smiles
Have beamed the brighter at their harmless mirth.
Who sigh, “Farewell!!”
Doth hope those smiles shall beam so long as ye shall dwell,

Farewell, fair Manly, and thy Fairy Bower,
Where oft we've roamed in goodly company;
Farewell those gorgeous scenes from Camara Tower,
Or, o'er the placid bay or restless sea.

Farewell, the Phantom, never, never more,
With happy heart shall I patrol thy deck,
And view the landscape, grand on either shore,
In blissful ignorance of the coming wreck.
Why longer dwell
On themes that break the heart that sighs to them-
Farewell.
David Wiley


The Sydney Morning Herald 25 Nov 1861

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