Now "Strawberry Girl" is in her forever home
with her sister "A,B,C,D...E!" and her brother "Storytime."
I learn so much when I watch her paint and listen to what she's doing and why she's doing it. I'm not sure she knew she was in for it, but I showed up with a plan. Part of that plan was for her to give me a lesson. I brought "Strawberry Girl" because I wasn't satisfied with it and knew she could help. Ha ha ha... oh, how I've missed learning from the best! We worked that little painting over top to bottom! In the picture (right) Cheri is probably saying something encouraging, sandwiching in the lesson on what she's doing, then finishing it off with another word of praise for what she sees that I've done. (It's that middle part... the lesson that I need so much... well, along with the encouragement...) Let's see... we worked on the cheek, the chin, the neck, the nose, the forehead, the hair, the dress, the flowers, the strawberry, the hand, the background... yep... pretty much every bit of it... Now, I have a little homework to finish her... again. :)
Strawberries have pretty much been the theme of my summer. I've eaten them, picked them, eaten them, frozen them, painted them, eaten them... 

So we picked and picked and picked; he was a good strawberry pickin' partner. We ended up with way more than we needed, but it was just so hard to stop! And, yes, we did indeed stop at the store on the way home for a tub of vanilla ice cream. :)
It starts out as a gorgeous cedar box, but it just keeps getting better and better with each discovery!
When you hold it up to a light and look through it...
I know him, her grandfather...
Yes, it does have secret compartments.
So, how did I... a country girl from the farm, end up with a city boy from country-club family? That's a good question. I'm not sure I have the answer, but we sure have had a good time.
When our house was being built, the builder asked if we wanted to keep the scraggly tree beside the deck. He said, "It kinda got banged up. Don't know if it'll last more'n a year or so." We kept it. And we were delighted the next spring (and every spring since) when we discovered it was a dogwood.
If you look closely you'll see the white blossoms hanging down behind my herbs... my herbs that I'm having fun growing, but am just learning how/what to cook with them...