"Turmoil": acrylic painting and digital. |
Want music?
Click here for Aretha Franklin, Until You Come Back to Me.
Grandhunk #1 and I went for lunch Thursday at ...
A Japanese restaurant in Tustin. We were able to eat inside after using hand sanitizer and having our temperature taken. Again, I didn't do a good job taking photos of the food, but I will show what I did get.I had the Tonkatsu Bento lunch box. We split orders of gyoza.
The best gyoza, ever. Charred on a sizzling iron plate.
GH#1 had two orders of sashimi, and said they were good.
Last week, Jordan was with me as I finished up Pandemic Postcards.
He picked his favorite, and I mailed it to him. It arrived today, and
he took this picture for me. Our whole family is nuts?
2GN2S
Tsukimi (月見) or Otsukimi (お月見), literally meaning, "moon-viewing", also known as Jugoya (十五夜), are Japanese festivals honoring the autumn moon, a variant of the Mid-Autumn Festival.
The celebration of the full moon typically takes place on the 15th day of the eighth month of the traditional Japanese calendar; the waxing moon is celebrated on the 13th day of the ninth month. These days normally fall in September and October of the modern solar calendar. The tradition dates to the Heian era, and is now so popular in Japan that some people repeat the activities for several evenings following the appearance of the full moon during the eighth lunisolar month.
Tsukimi traditions include displaying decorations made from Japanese pampas grass (susuki) and eating rice dumplings called Tsukimi dango in order to celebrate the beauty of the moon.[1] Seasonal produce are also displayed as offerings to the moon. Sweet potatoes are offered to the full moon, while beans or chestnuts are offered to the waxing moon the following month. The alternate names of the celebrations, Imomeigetsu (literally "potato harvest moon") and Mamemeigetsu ("bean harvest moon") or Kurimeigetsu ("chestnut harvest moon")
are derived from these offerings.
• An important under 2-minute video, RBG, here.
• A noisy 3-minute video, Capybara/Pumpkins, here.
• A surprising 3-minute video, Spaghetti or dessert?, here
Thanks for visiting today.
4 comments:
I love the color given to the ink brush stroke. :-)
Thanks, John, Have a great weekend! ;o)
Turmoil is fabulous!
Of course I love the photo of your grandson. It is so wonderful how young people can make fun anytime, no matter how difficult times are. They always brighten our days.
Have a wonderful weekend, dear Jacki.
Thank you, dear Elenor, you always brighten my day!
Wishing you a wonderful, healthy, safe weekend.
Post a Comment