Showing posts with label Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Christmas Countdown – Day 16

 Stained Glass – A Love Story

If you’ve been reading my posts, for awhile . . . and let me just pause to share my gratitude for that . . . it might be pretty obvious that I’m a bit traditional in my personal lifestyle.  As an interior designer, it doesn’t mean I’m limited to one style.  I’ve got several clients who prefer modern lines and feel I totally “get it”, when it comes to designing their interiors.  It simply means that I embrace the concept of relating to the past, while looking towards the future.  I prefer a concept of tradition, different from being overly conservative or stodgy.  To me, it means depth, warmth, and being wrapped in a sense of place.

dukechapel1

That sense of place began in a smaller southern city, Durham, North Carolina.  My father was born and raised there, as was his family before him.  He attended Duke University, where he met his future wife, (my mother), who was a newly capped nurse at the time.  Their eyes caught one another while she was awkwardly trying to light a cigarette in order to appear a bit more intriguing - perhaps a little flirtation to have him offer her a light.  (I know, it’s a bad habit, but back in the day . . .)  Durham, after all, began as a tobacco town, and the name, ‘Duke’, was related to that industry.   

Fast forwarding, a couple of years later, my father was in the waiting room trying to finish studying for a final exam, while my mother was in the delivery room, giving birth to their eldest child.  (Again, it was a different time . . . )  Years later, that daughter, who had begun to appreciate things of beauty – music, architecture, and art – would go to the Duke University campus, so she could sit in a chapel, (which seemed to be from a world away), to listen to the organist practice on Saturday evenings, for the next day’s service.  Something about the raised, groined vaulted ceilings, the sounds of the massive pipe organ, and the stained glass windows made it a truly holy experience. 

As you have probably surmised, that daughter is the one who is penning this post.  Though quite a few years have passed since those Saturday nights at the chapel, I recall them vividly, and especially the richness of the stained glass windows.  It was love at first sight!

ADAM GERIK/JOURNAL STAR  Finished in 1932, the 210-foot-tall Collegiate Gothic Duke University Chapel features three pipe organs, 77 stained glass windows, and seating for approximately 1,600 people. Although originally associated with the Methodist Church, Duke University is now secular and the chapel remains as an iconic part of the campus.

The interior of Duke Chapel.  It’s an architectural feat of over two hundred feet of ceiling height.  Not only were churches of this period, (Neo-Gothic), designed with soaring height so one would feel a sense of being lifted upward, they also emphasized the smallness of man, in the scope of the universe.  (Image:  Adam Gerik)

ADAM GERIK/JOURNAL STAR  Finished in 1932, the 210-foot-tall Collegiate Gothic Duke University Chapel features three pipe organs, 77 stained glass windows, and seating for approximately 1,600 people. Although originally associated with the Methodist Church, Duke University is now secular and the chapel remains as an iconic part of the campus.

The Chapel holds up to sixteen hundred people.  Just imagine sitting in the front row, for your own private concert!  (Image:  Adam Gerik)

aeolian

Behind the façade, pipes, and carved oak screens, the Kathleen Upton Byrns McClendon Organ is lodged in chambers on both sides of the chancel. It remains Duke Chapel’s original organ, built and installed in 1932 by the Aeolian Organ Company of New York.  The pipes visible from the nave only hint at the Aeolian’s size, for approximately 6,600 pipes are located in the large chambers.  (Cited from:  Duke University Chapel Website.)

stainedglass

The Chapel’s 77 stained-glass windows were designed and composed by G. Owen Bonawit, of New York, working with fifteen other artists and craftsmen. The Chapel’s windows depict every major scene in the Bible and contain an estimated 800 to 900 figures, including 301 larger-than-life-sized figures in the chancel and transept windows. The largest window measures 17-1/2 by 38 feet. All of the ruby, and most of the blue glass, was made in the United States, and the glass of other colors was imported from Europe. (Cited from:  Duke University Chapel Website ) (Image:  Adam Gerik)

IMG_20101205_170128 

Just recently, I visited Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens for an afternoon Christmas tea.  In the main entry, there was a stained glass dome, encircled with a series of crests.  While not quite the same as the chapel, it’s still a heavenly work of art!

stained-glass-cookies

If a cathedral, basilica or chapel is not within local driving distance, you could bake your own little slices of heaven!  They are edible, but I can’t imagine crunching into their divine beauty.  From:  Simple Recipes

To this day, I appreciate the beauty of stained glass.  I’ve used it in several design applications, especially in windows where the view needs to be more beautiful than what could be created in nature, or to create privacy while still allowing light to pass through.  Most of all, I appreciate the memories of past holidays and being able to share them with my parents.  I’m thankful they are still with me, to reminisce and laugh about the beginning of my story.

“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty is revealed only if there is a light from within.”  Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

All my best! ~ Wanda

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Christmas Countdown – Day 6

Taking A Holiday Break – Tea Time

One of the things we have to remember, in the midst of all of the holiday hoopla, is to schedule in time for a little respite from the decorating, shopping, baking, shopping, wrapping, more shopping . . . well, I’m sure you can relate.  It doesn’t have to be like flying away to a tropical island, although, that might be pretty nice with our recent weather chill! 

I look for places, within an hour’s drive, and where there might be a special activity to share some one-on-one time with a friend.  It’s easy to let the holidays overtake our schedules, but I treasure the gift of companionship, more so than having a pile of gifts under the tree. 

Today, I met my friend, Davetta, for an afternoon holiday tea at Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens, in Belmont, NC.  (Belmont is home to Belmont Abbey College and the Belmont Abbey, which has housed Benedictine Monks since the late 1800’s.)  The Daniel Stowe Botanical Garden is a 450-acre world-class garden located southwest of Belmont.  Daniel J. Stowe, a retired textile executive, set aside the property and established a foundation to develop the garden. The first gardens opened to the public in 1999.

I’ll delightfully take you on a photo tour of my afternoon.  It was a great escape and the tea was wonderful, too! 

203770445Greeting us, in the main hall, was a beautiful 16’ tree.  From a distance, I could tell the colors of the decorations perfectly suited the stained glass dome, above it.

203769781A closer look at the dome.  I almost felt as if I could be in a basilica, instead of a botanical garden! 

IMG_20101205_142851As we approached the tree, I realized it was created entirely of live orchids and ferns!  I couldn’t count them all.  Luck would have it, the plaque to the left told the story.  More than 300!

1291577378937

1291577355888   1291577344919

I wish I had brought a better camera but I wanted to travel light for the tea.  All of these were taken with my Droid phone’s camera, with the exception of the top photo.

1291577455975There was a vast display of urns and wreaths.  They were sprinkled in the jeweled tones of the orchids.

1291578582819 

A couple of side rooms held more treasures.  We had a few minutes before our tea was served so we took a sneak peek!

1291578324909Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens often hosts weddings and events.  This stately room was open at the time of our tour.

IMG_20101205_144406 1291578316255My photo is a little fuzzy.  The flocking on the tree reminded me of stories my husband would tell me about how he and his father and brothers would head to the tree lot, each year, and wait while the “snow” was added to a large spruce tree.  In the south, it’s rare to have snow at Christmas, so this was the next best thing! 

1291578425275 The tree was loaded with ornaments.  Christmas is the one time of year when less isn’t more, in my book!

1291578403214I wonder how many little ones have to be pulled away from the pile of presents?  It’s just too tempting!

1291578257629The theme was carried to sconces, flanking the side of the china cabinet.  Lusciously lovely!

1291578781031 And then there was the tea!  Four different kinds!  Vanilla Chai Spice, Berry Fruit Cocktail, Chocolate Rooibos, and Sugar Plum.  The ladies from Savannah’s Room certainly know their tea and shared a lovely tutorial.  The tea sandwiches were delicious and the scones were absolutely delectable with lemon curd and clotted cream.  I swooned!

IMG_20101205_165741Although not a part of our tea, I just had to photograph these fun Rudolph cupcakes being sold at another part of the venue.  They were from Brenda’s Cake Gallery and they looked mouth-watering.  (The exception being that I was still sated from the tea treats!)IMG_20101205_162739After the tea, Davetta and I toured the orchid conservatory.  Since the temperature was in the low forties, the warmth was most welcome.  A veritable tropical get-a-way!  (Almost like that island idea, I previously mentioned.)

1291585030652 A different kind of window shopping.

1291584879102A purple bromeliad was nesting cozily in the verdant foliage. 

IMG_20101205_164020  I loved this red mesh lantern!  It was one of many hanging throughout the conservatory.

1285510391933Look what was circling the tracks!  They really covered every detail for the attendees’ interest.

1291585807866You might be wondering how wisteria could still be blooming.  The ingenious designers clustered purple lights to appear as blossoms.  As it became darker, the pergola took on a magical twinkle.

IMG_20101205_171956  It must have taken months to cover so much territory.

1291587957108 A holiday wonderland!

1291587975383 For kids, big and small!

IMG_20101205_170406  Back indoors, we enjoyed many trees decorated by local schools.

IMG_20101205_143601How proud the students had to be to see their handiwork!  (The cardinal is our state bird.)

1291588161364 As nightfall arrived, all I could think of was this:

~But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,
"Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night."~

Merry, Merry! ~ Wanda

IMG_20101205_163940

20 Days and Counting! ~ All my best! ~ Wanda

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...