Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Maria Paoli

Joe's mother, Maria, at Realistic Display Products on 54 Bond Street in New York, along with her nephew Emil Di Mattia who owned the company. Maria's job involved pasting silk leaves on green wires that had been dipped in glue.

An interesting story about Maria is that in 1962, at the age of 90, she paid for a honeymoon cruise to Italy for a granddaughter and her new husband... and sent herself along as a chaperone.

Here she is aboard the ship Cristoforo Columbo, greeting the Captain:

She did this from the savings of what must have been very meagre earnings at her job. Once my mother asked her how she managed to save up that kind of money, and Nonna's answer in her broken English became a byword in our family for avoiding frivolous purchases:

"Don't-a buy-a hotdog onna street-a!" 

Not that I've ever really been able to follow that good advice, but I remember it all the same.

My grandparents were not unfortunate looking:

I love sharing family stories and photos. If you have an interesting family member and have some old photos to share, please write to me. Those of you on the LittleLameLetter List know how to contact me. Click on Maria's name above to read the previous post introducing her, her son, and grandson (The Old Wolf).

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Monday, November 2, 2020

Episode 1 of A Sam Basset Mystery (Cleo and Company)


Grace the Face makes an appearance on Cleo and Company.

I can't even (Midnight) express how much I love this depiction of our own Grace the Face on Cleo and Company. Grace has appeared in other comics before (The Adventures of Queen Victoria), but no gig has been better than this one. Thank you, Bryan and Candace.
See the comic in all its glory here.



See this installment here.

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Sunday, November 1, 2020

Horses





























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Baby names in U.S. 2010-2019











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Ugly Christmas sweaters


The hole is for one's actual breast, it is not plastic

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Dollhouse miniatures

 



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Decoloniality

... is a school of thought used principally by an emerging Latin American movement which focuses on untangling the production of knowledge from a primarily Eurocentric episteme. It critiques the perceived universality of Western knowledge and the superiority of Western culture. Decolonial perspectives see this hegemony as the basis of Western imperialism. See also Decolonization of knowledge.

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Dunkin Donuts with Pacino

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