Monday, 19 May 2014

Camden market is on fire O_o

I skipped onto the news pages whilst I'm waiting for Traff to come home from work- the front "page" of the daily mail is images of Camden burning!
:(
I'm gutted- It's the good stalls and the food court that seem to be on fire- although the article says that 600 people were evacuated and no-one was hurt so that's certainly something.
I'll stop being selfish about awesome screen printed tops and moroccan food.


A fire is raging through one of London's most popular visitor attractions tonight.
Six fire engines and 35 firefighters and officers are attending a fire at busy Stables Market on Chalk Farm Road in Camden, north London.
A number of railway arches used as shops are alight. Around 600 people were evacuated from the area before the London Fire Brigade arrived.
Onlookers watch the flames licking up the side of a building at the Stables Market in Camden
Onlookers watch the flames licking up the side of a building at the Stables Market in Camden
Snoke fills the sky above the fire at Stables Market. Firefighters are currently tackling the blaze
Snoke fills the sky above the fire at Stables Market. Firefighters are currently tackling the blaze
The Brigade was called at around 8pm. Fire crews from Kentish Town and surrounding stations are at the scene.
The cause of the fire is not known at this stage. No one has been reported injured so far.
Borough Commander Richard Welch, who is at the scene said: 'When firefighters arrived they were faced with a fire in a range of shops under railway arches and the smoke could be seen from miles around.
'Firefighters are working hard to bring the blaze under control and stop it spreading further.
'Thankfully no one is involved and there are no reports of injuries.'
London Fire Brigade says the situation is now under control. Mystery surrounds the cause of the fire
London Fire Brigade says the situation is now under control. Mystery surrounds the cause of the fire
The world-renowned tourist hotspot attracts around 40 million visitors each year and has hundreds of retail, food and leisure shops. File picture
The world-renowned tourist hotspot attracts around 40 million visitors each year and has hundreds of retail, food and leisure shops. File picture
Phillie from Toastits, a food stall at Camden Market, said: 'There were fire men and water and police everywhere, it was like a warzone. It’s so sad because all the traders have lost everything.'
The world-renowned tourist hotspot attracts around 40 million visitors each year and has hundreds of retail, food and leisure shops.
A picture posted on Twitter shows thick smoke pouring out of an area of the market that contains a number of food stalls.
Talitha Cohen tweeted: 'My beautiful Camden is on fire! Making me so sad', while Cristina Narciso added: 'Poor #Camden... I hope the fire hasn't caused too much damage.'
The cause of the fire is not known at this stage. No one has been reported injured so far
The cause of the fire is not known at this stage. No one has been reported injured so far
The fire brigade tweeted: 'The fire at Stables Market on Chalk Farm Road can be seen from miles around. We were called just before 8pm #Camden.'
Officers from the Metropolitan Police and British Transport Police were also at the scene.
A spokesman said: 'Several buildings in the area have been evacuated. Road closures are currently in place.'
On the evening of February 9 2008, a large fire broke out in Camden Canal Market. After crossing the railway line, the fire spread to the Hawley Arms pub.
The fire was put out during the night by 100 firefighters. It was caused by a banned liquid petroleum gas heater which had been left turned on in a clothes stall.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2633099/Fire-rages-trendy-London-tourist-destination-600-evacuated-Camden-burns.html#ixzz32CTaZzQP
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Homemade Xmas challenge update

I can safely update this now, I will deffo not be doing any more crafting in this heat!

This month, as I predicted, I have made virtually no progress- I know what I need to do, I just need some free sundays to complete my last 7 presents!
And, as predicted, now that it's hot the very last thing I can be arsed with is crochet. Which is a shame really as 3 of the presents I need to complete are half made in the wool basket in the front room. it's just too hot and sticky.
Too much wool.
Too warm.
urgh.

I will do better next month, and I will finish all my main presents. I'll be a bit relieved when I'm finished to be honest.
I'd like to stop thinking about xmas whilst I'm all sunburnt. It's seasonally confused.


Months in: 1 (January)
Crafts tried: Crochet, Stamper making
Total items completed: 7
Presents completed: 1/25
Items started: 6

Months in: 2 (February)
Crafts tried: Sewing from a pre-made pattern, Pattern cutting, machine sewing, chocolate making, sweet making, candle making
Total items completed: 11
Presents completed: 2/25
Items started: 12

Months in: 3 (March)
Crafts tried: Soap making, Sugar craft, marbling, bath bombs, photography, silk painting
Total items completed: 16
Presents completed: 6/25
Items started: 19

Months in: 4 (April)
Crafts tried: Dress making, skirt making, tie-dye, granny square slippers, knitting, cookie making, banana bread, egg cup pincushions.
Total items completed: 40
Presents completed: 17/25
Items started 43

Months in: 5 (May)
Crafts tried:   Granny square slippers
Total items completed:41
Presents completed: 18/25
Presents started: 44

Sunday, 18 May 2014

100 Days happy- Day 93

Today we met up with James and Lis in the brecons in the daytime, we went to the George hotel as they do really good food, and they have a beer garden.
We sat outside in the sunshine allllll afternoon.

And I was super sunburned.
To get rid of the burn I went to boots and bought the cheapest foundation they sold- it was a loreal one- and my god the coverage was incredible!
I had to cover my shoulders, arms, chest and face- so I used pretty much £10 worth in one sitting, but I did not look at all red at the wedding.
phew!
I'll buy that foundation again.

Traff did an awful lot of babysitting. Like Hulk hogan as Mr Nanny.
Alice loves him because he's such a soft touch!

The only person more super at babysitting then Traff was beca because she managed to drink, play football, carry alice and look like a fashion model.


And then we went to Bri and Ben's wedding in the evening at the barn.

Traff took Alice to play in the soft play area- and managed to lose his phone in the ball pit so missed the vows and speeches!
I don't envy him at all. that ball pit was huge!

There were photos and bucks fizz on the lawn and the grooms band played in the barn- The bar was reasonable and everyone just did what they liked.
It was really laid back.
There was a hog roast for dinner, and the wedding cake was the most incredible chocolate cake I've ever eaten.
I'll admit to eating 3 slices, but as I'd started on the gins at 11am I'll also admit to needing carbs to soak up the alcohol.
:D
True story

Saturday, 10 May 2014

the V&A is opening an exhibition made up of teenage diaries :D

I'm really excited for this- I'm desperate to go! Anyone fancy a trip to London at the start of next month?
The V&A are exhibiting a massive collection of diaries from different periods in time- At the museum of childhood- Some of them are coded- so the codes will be cracked to allow for them to be read- which is a bit mental- I couldn't imagine needing to write my blog in code!
They're all from different people, in different places with very different lifestyles- So I suppose it's Living history.
Theres just something about diaries which makes people curious!
I don't know there people, but I want to see their diaries!


On 10 May 1814 - 200 years ago today - two boys made an escape attempt from their boarding school in Brentford. 
'Dixon Sr & Price ran away at 4 o'clock this morning,' one of their schoolmates confided to his diary, suitably impressed. 
'They put on the best clothes, borrowed some money and dropt from the window... It was not till supper that Morris (the schoolmaster0 was told that they had gone to Eton - There was a great jaw all day about it - They came back at bedtime.'
A new exhibition at the V&A will showcase the inner thoughts of teenagers over the past 200 years
A new exhibition at the V&A will showcase the inner thoughts of teenagers over the past 200 years
The young diarist was 14-year-old Raleigh Trevelyan, whose journal makes painful reading. His miscreant classmates were regularly beaten. 1 June 1813: 'Mitford and Rudge flogged,' he noted for posterity. 18 June: 'Heard from Mama. Had my neck washed.' 
Raleigh's diary, on loan from Wigan's Edward Hall archive, is the oldest in a new display of childhood and teenage diaries at the V&A Museum of Childhood, and some entries burn with a boyish sense of injustice. 23 September: 'Had a parcel & Mr M made me open it before him and stole some of the things,' he wrote indignantly.
    'So while he was reading the paper I tried to take it from him so he threatned [sic] to flog me. I mean to take things of his to make up for what he has stolen from me.' 
    Fortunately there were holidays to look forward to. Arriving home in London from his school in Middlesex in July 1813, young Raleigh found his family, 'All in a bustle packing for Ramsgate.' 
    It was a scratchy homecoming though: 'Did not get to sleep till near 4 in the morning on account of the fleas.' 
    It took more than 25 hours travelling by sailing barge from London to Ramsgate without any wind... but then there were donkey rides, crabbing, the shock of seeing a man drowning and the thrill of seeing a shipwreck towed in. 
    The new exhibition will explore the minds of teenagers across two centuries
    The new exhibition will explore the minds of teenagers across two centuries
    Sadly, less than a year later Raleigh is sent home sick from school. 24 May 1814: 'Took some rhubarb, castor oil and a saline draught for a head ake,' he complains, before taking a dose of red medicine two days later. 
    He doesn't sound well; the doctor comes to bleed him with six leeches. The final pages of the diary show traces of blood. Raleigh died not long after. 'It's not clear what he died of, but it's a tragic end to a short life,' says archivist Alex Miller.
    Most of the diaries come from the Great Diary Project Archive, which started from a collection of more than 1,500 rescued by historian Irving Finkel from house clearances, donations, on eBay or wherever they might turn up. In his day job at the British Museum, he specialises in ancient Mesopotamian script. 
    That explains Finkel's fascination with a 1940s wartime diary partly written in code by an anonymous teenage girl, which surfaced at a car boot sale. 'It's very rare to find a normal diary written in code,' he says. 
    He was determined to crack it. 'Because I work with ancient scripts, I wasn't going to let myself be beaten by a schoolgirl!' It appeared to be a simple substitution code, employing characters from other alphabets, including Greek. 
    'She must have got them from an encyclopaedia. You can see from the fluency that it was second nature - from which I deduced that she probably used the code with her friends.' He cracked the code with the word banana. 
    'There are few words in English with that pattern. She used to go dancing with GIs who treated the girls to banana splits.' It seems she used the code to describe her glamorous mother's activities as a prostitute. 
    Other teenage diaries capture that moment on the cusp of being a grown-up. Gill Caldwell illustrated her diary in 1952, when she was 14, portraying herself as a St Trinian's schoolgirl with a hockey stick and a cigarette in a holder. 
    She devoted a whole page to King George VI's funeral, and that night went to see a film of the funeral procession. 'It was terrific, but two and a half hours was quite enough! My behind was quite sore,' she said.
    Timelessly, schoolgirl diaries record innocent crushes on oblivious boys. In 1937, Joan Hall from Surbiton, who started her diary when she was almost 15, obsessed over every fleeting glimpse of a boy who wore glasses. 8 November: 
    '"There are few words in English with that pattern. She used to go dancing with GIs who treated the girls to banana splits." It seems she used the code to describe her glamorous mother's activities as a prostitute'
    'Saw Glasses. I do like him, yet I don't know if he likes me.' And the following day, segueing seamlessly from puppy love to domestic science: 'Passing my darling G - I came late with a saddlebag bulging, a music case on my handlebars and a satchel on my back... In cookery we did the Irish stew, which came out like water, plus water, mixed with water... Miss B actually thought that Joyce and I were going to eat it too.' 
    One of the Great Diary Project researchers is Laura Barnicoat, and her own grandmother Veronica Hadwen's diary makes up part of the archive. 
    At 12, Veronica was expelled from boarding school for reading Gone With The Wind. By 1947, as a man-mad 17-year-old living in Cornwall, her diary included sketches of her new wedge sandals and 'sensational' new platform shoes.
    A diary entry for April that year describes a flirtation with a Desert Rat returned from the war. 'The Desert Rat was affectionate to put it mildly - he says he's 36 and also has decided to remain a lone wolf for good, that is unless I decide to marry him - is this a proposal? Perhaps - anyway he thinks I'm beautiful which is something.' 
    She seems to have had a racy time on a holiday in Dublin the following month. 'Brian, I think, is slightly in love with me, or of course it may just be Irish blarney... As a rule, I don't like being kissed but Fintan's kisses were very pleasant... I left him feeling utterly knocked over. He is of course quite the most unsuitable person I could find...' He certainly was, as he had TB and she had only met him that morning. 
    Even the most mundane diaries are a resource for historians of the future, says Irving Finkel. 'When I was a child, a new diary was a standard Christmas present. 
    They belong to a handwritten world that is vanishing. Blogging is no substitute. Most of us think our own lives are uninteresting to anyone else, but imagine if we had hundreds of diaries from Shakespeare's time today!' 
    The Great Diary Project, V&A Museum of Childhood, from 17 May. www.thegreatdiaryproject.co.uk.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2624200/Confessions-crushes-stolen-kisses-200-years-teenage-diaries.html#ixzz31IR5JKkM
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