About barbara

I'm sure you are wondering how the blog was named, "The Enchanted Manor". Well, this blog will be like home to me and I wanted a name that reflected my different interests. During a normal day you can find me in several rooms of the house. Maybe I'll be in the living room decorating, or in my craft room working on a project, or in the dining room planning a great dinner party or at the computer in my office planning a great vacation. When you come to visit my blog you might find me in any room! Please return often for ideas and inspiration because this blog will be about decor, craft, celebration and travel. So, welcome to the "Enchanted Manor". Come in, sit down and let's talk!

Decor – Thanksgiving Table Decorations

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This season while shopping at the local craft stores I noticed that many home decorations featured different uses of burlap material.  So, this year I decided on a very different style of table for our Thanksgiving dinner.  Normally, I would set the table in a very formal style with our beautiful china, silver, crystal and lovely linens.  This year the table will be set in a more casual way with rustic decorations incorporating burlap materials  and softer colors, such as pale blue, sage green, ivory and brown.

The first of several layers of table linens was  an inexpensive ivory tablecloth.  Next, I added an overlay of burlap material in a lovely pale blue.  This unexpected color for the fall season goes beautifully with the chair pillows and other decorations in our dining room.  I was also creating a table centerpiece with artificial hydrangeas in a similar blue color which coordinated with the color of the burlap.  To finish the table linens, and too add a touch of softness, I added a vintage crocheted doily in ecru color.

The main decoration of our Thanksgiving table will be one of this month’s craft posts.  During the spring my husband/father-in-law were clearing out some of the trees in the forest next to our home and I had them save one of the logs for me.  I wanted to use the log as a base for a floral decoration and I thought Thanksgiving would be a great opportunity.  I used blue, gold hydrangeas and greenery to create the floral decoration and I found some inexpensive artificial mushrooms at the local craft store and scattered them among several candles placed on either side of the centerpiece.  I think the colors I used complement the table linens beautifully!  (Please check out the Craft Post, Rustic Table Centerpiece, for a supply list and instructions for the floral decoration)

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Next, I set each place setting with an ivory dinner plate, another smaller green plate, green salad bowl, silverware and glassware.  I used an ivory napkin with a green leaf napkin ring and placed a small burlap bag filled with candy into the salad bowl for a party favor.  It is always a good idea to have something special for your guests to take home after a luncheon or dinner party … of course for Thanksgiving our guests will also be taking home containers filled with leftover turkey, etc.!

To finish the table decorations I tied two colors of burlap “ribbon” to the dining room table chair backs.  I used the traditional brown color of burlap and a sage green color of burlap “ribbon” tied with green string.  This was the perfect way to finish the table decorations while adding another rustic element and also another way to incorporate burlap material into the table design.

The other decorations in the room included several glass acorn ornaments hanging from the chandelier on brown ribbons and the gold floral arrangement that is usually displayed on the dining room table throughout most of the year was place on the tea table across the room.  In the china cabinet, is a display of three Currier and Ives porcelain houses, small artificial pine trees and figurines set on a silver mirrored tray.

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Finally, I would like to mention three craft projects – the first two craft posts are Framed Floral Decorations and Glass Dome Arrangement which were posted in the month of August and one October craft post Jeweled Pumpkins.  The Framed Floral Decorations are hung above the side chairs on either side of the china cabinet, the gold roses and autumn leaves are the perfect decorative accent for the holiday.  The Glass Dome Arrangement now sits on the tall cabinet across the room and the rustic elements coordinate with the dining room table decorations.  The Jeweled Pumpkins are on display in the china cabinet.

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Classic Jeweled Pumpkin on display in china cabinet

Carl Sagan’s Birthday

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As you may have realized by now, Barbara is extremely organized.  As she was going over topics for her blog last month she noticed that November 9th was Carl Sagan’s birthday.  I only know a little about him and begged Barbara to let me write this post so I could get to know more about this American icon.

Carl was born in Brooklyn, NY on November 9th, 1934 and died December 20th, 1996.  By all reports he was an inquisitive child with an interest in space from a very early age.  Key to his early development were a trip to the World’s Fair in 1939 and his parents providing him with both a sense of wonder and skepticism.  His family moved to New Jersey in 1948 and he graduated from Rahway High School in 1951.  He attended the University of Chicago where he earned degrees in physics, astronomy and astrophysics.  While there he also worked with notable scientists such as Gerard Kuiper and Melvin Calvin.  After college he was one of the first groups of Miller Fellows at the University, a fellowship that is only awarded to eight to ten of the most promising scientists each year.

After his 3 year Miller Fellowship he worked at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory before lecturing and researching at Harvard.  When he did not receive tenure at Harvard he went to Cornell University where he became a full professor in 1971 and where he became the director of the Center for Radiophysics and Space Research.

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Being one of the brightest minds in the country and passionate about space, Sagan worked with the US Space program from its beginning.  Among his many contributions to the space program were the messages included in the Pioneer and Voyager missions.

NASA_Distinguished_Public_Service_MedalSagan also supported the search for extraterrestrial life, lobbied to get funding for and was on the board of Trustees of the SETI Institute,  an organization where signals from radio telescopes are searched for signs of intelligent life.  You can help with this search by signing up for Seti@home and letting your computer process signals while your computer is sleeping!  He also helped write the message aimed at informing potential aliens about earth sent out by the Arecibo radio telescope on November 16, 1974.  In addition, he “co-founded The Planetary Society, the largest space-interest group in the world, with over 100,000 members in more than 149 countries, and was a member of the SETI Institute Board of Trustees. Sagan served as Chairman of the Division for Planetary Science of the American Astronomical Society, as President of the Planetology Section of the American Geophysical Union, and as Chairman of the Astronomy Section of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).” [Wikipedia]  He won many, many awards and honors over his life including the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal, A Pulitzer prize for General Non-Fiction, the Oersted Medal and the National Academy of Sciences Public Welfare Medal.

Despite his tremendous scientific and academic achievements, Carl Sagan was best at, and is most known for his ability to popularize complex scientific concepts.  He wrote a number of bestselling books including “Cosmos” and the fiction work “Contact” which was made into a major motion picture.  Cosmos was turned into a 13 part PBS program which was watched by over 500 million people in 60 countries.  This series won both a Peabody award and an Emmy.


I’m glad Barbara let me research and write about Carl.  He is the kind of person the scientific community needs around to help people understand what they do and keep interest in research alive.  I wish I could have gotten to know him in person, but at least we have his books and television programs to inspire us.  Thanks for reading and if you want to help with any scientific research check out Seti@home or the Galaxy Zoo.

Sincerely,

Jeff Jones

Margaret Mitchell’s Birthday

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Margaret Mitchell (born: November 8, 1900 died: August 16, 1949 is the famous author who wrote the novel, “Gone with The Wind”, about life in the south before, during and after the Civil War. The book was published in 1936 and later the book was made into a motion picture starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh and the world premiere was in Atlanta, Georgia in 1939.

I remember seeing the movie when it was re-released into theaters in the 1960s for a limited time. Later, I read the book and enjoy the mixture of history and a wonderful love story. Recently, we have visited Atlanta twice in the last five years. The first time we went to see Margaret’s family home just outside the city which is said to be the inspiration for the home of the O’Hara family in “Gone with the Wind”, the iconic Tara. On our second visit, we went to the Margaret Mitchell House located near downtown Atlanta and is where she wrote the famous novel at a table sitting near the window in her downstairs corner apartment that she affectionately called “the dump”!

Margaret’s paternal family came from Scotland and settled in Georgia in 1777. Her great-grandfather served in the American Revolution and her grandfather enlisted in the Confederate Army and was severely wounded during the Civil War. Later, he owned a lumber company that made a small fortune supplying wood to Atlanta as the city rebuilt after war. Margaret’s maternal great grandfather emigrated from Ireland and eventually settled on a plantation near Jonesboro, Georgia. Her grandfather was a Captain in the Confederate Army and after the war he was a prosperous real estate developer.

Margaret was a born in Atlanta, Georgia. Her father, Eugene Mitchell, was an attorney and her mother, Mary Isabel Stephens, was a suffragette and a very strict disciplinarian. Margaret has a relatively normal childhood but growing up without a sister and only an older brother, Stephens, she was a tomboy who loved to ride horses and very rarely played with her dolls. She was an avid reader who enjoyed the classics, romance and even adventure stories. She had a wonderful imagination and developed a talent for writing short stories and performing in school plays. Margaret grew up listening to stories of the Civil War from her grandmother, great aunts and the old Confederate veterans that would visit her relatives. Her mother would take her on rides through the Georgia countryside where she would see the ruins of the old plantations, some with only their brick or stone chimneys remaining. She became fascinated with the hearing about life in the old South, the Civil War battles and the Reconstruction period after the war. She would remember these stories and use them later when she wrote “Gone with the Wind”.

Margaret attended the prestigious Washington Seminary, a private school for girls in Atlanta, and she soon began using the nickname Peggy. After graduating from the Washington Seminary and despite the objections of her father who believed that women should not receive a higher education, she went to Smith College a private liberal arts college for women located in Massachusetts. By this time, World War I had started and many of her friends went off to fight in Europe, including her brother and her fiancé, Clifford Henry. Sadly, in the fall of 1918, she received news that Clifford had died and the following year during the Spanish Flu epidemic her mother died. Margaret made the decision to leave college and she returned home to Atlanta to care for her father and brother.

It was now the Roaring 20s with jazz music, gin drinking and flappers. Margaret had made her society debut in Atlanta and she was starting to express herself in some wild ways, at the 1921 Debutante Ball she performed the scandalous “Apache dance” and shocked those in attendance. She was also seeing two men, one named “Red” Upshaw who had recently resigned from the U.S. Naval Academy and was unemployed. The other man was John Marsh, Upshaw roommate. Despite her family’s disapproved, Margaret and Red were married in 1922. (Marsh served as the best man at the wedding) A few months later, suffering physical and emotional abuse due to Upshaw’s alcoholism and violent temper, the couple separated and were divorced in 1924.

After separating from Upshaw, but before the divorce was legalized, Margaret took a job writing articles for the Atlanta Journal. She wrote about a variety of topics ranging from current fashions to the discovery of King Tut’s tomb to interviewing actor Rudolph Valentino. But Margaret’s journalism career was very short and only lasted from 1922 to 1926 when she quit due to an ankle injury.

During and after Margaret’s brief marriage to Upshaw, John Marsh proved to be a very supportive friend. Eventually Margaret and John married on July 4, 1925 and they moved into the downstairs corner apartment (No. 1) in the Crescent Apartment building located near downtown Atlanta. Still recovering from her ankle injury and convalescing at home, Margaret began writing a novel set during the Civil War. She remembered the stories she had heard during her childhood and she extensively researched every detail of life on the plantations and she painstakingly verified specific information concerning battlefield conditions and military techniques along with the history of the old South during the Civil War period. It took her three years to complete the book.

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“Gone with the Wind was published in June 1936 and quickly sold one million copies in the first six months. Margaret was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for her novel in May 1937. Even before the book’s publication, Hollywood producer David Selznick had secured the film rights. By popular demand, Clark Cable was cast to play Rhett Butler and after a nationwide search for the actress to play Scarlett O’Hara Vivien Leigh was given the part. Olivia de Havilland played Melanie Wilkes and Leslie Howard played Ashley Wilkes. On December 15, 1939 the movie premiere of “Gone with the Wind” was held at the Loew’s Grand in Atlanta. The film received ten Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Screenplay, Best Actress to Vivien Leigh and Best Supporting Actress to Hattie McDaniel who played Mammy. McDaniel was the first Africian American to win an Oscar.

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On August 11, 1949 while Margaret and John were leaving a restaurant on the way to see a movie near their apartment, Margaret was hit by car while crossing the Peachtree Street. She was taken to nearby Grady Hospital and died five days later without regaining consciousness. She is buried in Atlanta’s Oakland Cemetery.

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Margaret Mitchell’s novel had been translated into over forty languages and remains one of the best-selling books of all time. The movie is a great commercial success and still remains popular worldwide almost 75 years later.

Travel – Georgia Aquarium

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On our way back from a summer road trip to Florida this year, we made an unscheduled stop in Atlanta and visited the Georgia Aquarium.  Our family enjoys going to aquariums during our travels across the United States, there is always something interesting to see and learn about the animals of the oceans, lakes and rivers.

In 2001 Bernard Marcus, a local Atlanta businessman, announced a $250 million donation for the purpose of building a world-class aquarium that would benefit the city of Atlanta economically while providing an educational experience for the community, an additional $40 million was obtained through corporate sponsorship.  After 44 months of design and construction time, the Georgia Aquarium opened in 2005 and is located near the World of Coca-Cola and within walking distance to the Centennial Olympic Park in downtown Atlanta.

The Aquarium building is more than 600,000 square feet and has over 110,000 fish and sea animals that represent more than five hundred species that are displayed in six different exhibit areas.  The largest is the Ocean Voyager exhibit which contains a 6.3 million gallon water tank that measures 284 feet by 126 feet with depths between 20 and 30 feet and includes a 100 foot underwater tunnel that visitors enter for an amazing view of thousands of fish, it is the largest indoor aquatic habitat in the world.  The exhibit is designed as the centerpiece of the aquarium and features several whale sharks and it is the only institution outside Asia that has these massive fish on display.  Also featured in this large tank are several manta rays, in 2008 when these rays were first put on display at the aquarium it was one of only four sites in the world to keep them in captivity.  (The long entrance tunnel gives visitors a very unusual view that feels like being underwater with these sea animals and near the exit of the exhibit is a series of very large observation windows for more amazing views.  I could have stayed there for a long time just watching the fish swimming by!)

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To left of the entrance of the aquarium is the Georgia Explore exhibit with displays that are especially created for children to explore and there are several “touch tanks” with rays and sharks. Other tanks in this area of the aquarium features sea turtles and an interesting displays of several different sea animals that can be found in a National Marine Sanctuary called Gray’s Reef just off the Georgia coast.

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Nearby is the River Scout exhibit of the aquarium which features an overhead river tank where visitors have a view of several different varieties of North American fish from the bottom up.  Other tanks in this area display piranha, electric eels and other unusual freshwater fish.

The most recent addition to the aquarium opened in 2011 and it is the Dolphin Tales exhibit which features an indoor dolphin show that is included in the cost of a general admission to the aquarium, visitors are required to select a specific time for one of the three dolphin shows held during the day.  Construction on the $110 million expansion began in 2008 and includes over 84,000 square feet of exhibit space that contains a 1.3 gallon water tank, a large stadium seating area and observation windows where visitors can see the dolphins during non-show times.  The Dolphin Tales show is an elaborate production of musical numbers featuring numerous performers and several bottlenose dolphins.  (The show is absolutely wonderful and was the highlight of our visit to the aquarium!)

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Another area of the aquarium is the Cold Water Quest exhibit area which features beluga whales, penguins and sea otters.  The final area of the aquarium is the tropical Diver exhibit which features a 164,000 gallon tank containing a large reef with several species of tropical fish, the aquarium actually “grows” their own coral for the display.  Other sea animals found in this exhibit area are different tanks containing sea horses, jellyfish, shrimp, and lobster.

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Travel information for visiting the Georgia Aquarium

  • Tickets are available at the ticket booth or can be purchased in advance online at www.georgiaaquarium.org or by phoning the Call Center at 404-581-4000.  General Admission includes both the Dolphin Tales show and the “Deepo’s Undersea  Wondershow” movie at the 4D Theater.  (Travel note: When purchasing general admission tickets be sure to select a show time for the Dolphin Tales show and arrive early prior the scheduled time to assure a good viewing area as the stadium seating does fill very quickly!)
  • The Aquarium can get very busy and crowded, especially during the summer months, so we advise arriving early in the morning.  If you want to avoid the crowds, consider visiting the aquarium during the fall or winter seasons.
  • Allow at least 3-4 hours when visiting the Aquarium, this will provide plenty of time to visit all the exhibits and to see the Dolphin Show and 4D movie.  (Travel note: When arriving at the Aquarium check for the posted feeding times for the animals on display, the animals diet is generally food normally found in their natural environment and watching the animals being feed can be an interesting experience)
  • There is an on-site food court, the Café Aquaria, which offers visitors a wide variety of menu items.  If there are dietary concerns and requirements, please check ahead on the Aquarium website for more information and a detailed menu at www.georgiaaquarium.org
  • Take advantage of the guided tours that are offered at the Aquarium.  The “Behind the Scenes” tour is limited to visitors 10 years or older and can be reserved prior to a visit and can be purchased tickets online or by calling the phone number listed above.  The one hour “Behind the Scenes” tour takes visitors into the areas of the most popular exhibits that are generally off limits and also to the Veterinary Clinic where the Aquarium staff cares for the animals and the Commissary where they prepares the food for the animals.
  • For visitors looking for a closer look at the Aquarium’s animals and a very unique experience, consider one of the Animal Encounters programs,  such as the “Dolphin Encounter”, the “Sea Otter Encounter” or the “Penguin Encounter”.  There is also other opportunities for visitors and animals to interact, such as the “Journey with the Gentle Giants” where visitor swim or dive with the whale sharks, manta rays and other sea animals in the Ocean Voyager exhibit or  the “Beluga & Friends interactive program” that provides an exclusive experience.  (Travel note: Check the Aquarium website for more information, prices, restrictions and limitations for these programs)

Decor – Fall decorations

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For this post I am going to give everyone a glimpse of the fall decorations that we had used in our house in California several years ago.  When I start my seasonal decorations, I always begin with a door wreath to set the mood for the decorations that our guests will find in the interior of the home.  Our California house was no exception and for the front door I used a very unusual wreath, instead of a circular one it was an artificial pine teardrop shape wreath with several sunflowers and a festive matching ribbon.  Although this door decoration is very traditional sometimes going with the unexpected form or style can spark some creative ideas.

In the living room of our California home there was a large oak entertainment center that is now in the basement of our Midwest home.  On the top of the entertainment center I used a long pine garland intertwined with lights that would remain for both the Fall and Christmas seasons.  I had planned on keeping the pine garland in place on the entertainment center and switching out the Fall decorations for Christmas decorations after Thanksgiving, so that is the reason the lights were pre-strung onto the pine garland. For the Fall season, I decorated the garland with autumn leaves, berries and golden roses.

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Adjacent to our living room in California was the dining room, which was separated by the staircase leading to the upper floor and beneath the staircase was a space with an oak curio cabinet.  In keeping with my design concept of changing my seasonal decorations from year to year, the floral decoration on the curio cabinet in our California house changed from year to year.  One year, I used a floral decoration which started with a layer of greenery and I added red roses, blue flowers and turkey feathers.  The next year, I used two wooden pumpkins and autumn leaves.  (If you look at last month’s Décor post, Halloween decorations, you will see the same pumpkins used in the family room bookshelves of our Midwest home … just another example of re-purposing holiday decorations!)

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In the dining room is a lovely oak china cabinet with a beautiful still life painting hanging above.  On the top of the china cabinet, I used a long pine garland intertwined with lights the same way that I did in the living room.  I layered autumn leaves and gold berries onto the garland and added artificial fruits such as red apples, green pears, oranges and lemons.  I think the fruit garland compliments the still life painting beautifully!

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The final room I had decorated in our California house was the family room which adjoins the kitchen.  Above the fireplace are three wildlife prints, the large one is of mallard ducks and the other smaller ones are a pheasant and quail.  On the fireplace mantel, I used another long pine garland intertwined with a string of amber pinecone lights.  Next, I layered an autumn ribbon throughout the garland and added small artificial pears and apples clusters.  For a finishing touch, I added several artificial quails to keep with the wildlife theme used in the framed prints.

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