sweet abc

#39 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

A little something to satisfy your sweet tooth: edible letters made from sugar and gelatin created by Spanish graphic and industrial designers Aranxa Esteve and Lucia Rallo.

 

 

 

Just my type! ☺

*licks chops*

♥ See more of their work at m-inspira.

♥ More alphabetica here.

Certified authentic alphabetica. Handmade for you with love and boing.

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Copyright © 2012 Jama Rattigan of Jama’s Alphabet Soup. All rights reserved.

abc prezzies

#37 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

Ho Ho Ho and a bottle of rum!

Wait a minute. That should be Ho Ho Ho, Fa La La, and Jingle Bells!

‘Tis the season of giving, gifting and going crazy.

I will not panic, I will not panic.

At least that’s what Lisa Schroeder said.

She told me to BREATHE. Inhale, exhale . . .

December just kind of rushed in all of a sudden. Those of you who’ve already finished your holiday shopping, please go away.  I’m totally in awe envious of people who are always so organized and ahead of the game.

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alphabets abroad

#36 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

Today I’m happy to share two fine examples of alphabetica discovered by blogger friends on recent trips abroad.

Mary Lee at A Year of Reading visited Ghent, Belgium, this past summer and encountered this alphabet set on the side of a building. Isn’t it lovely? So glad she snapped a pic. She says she thought of me when she saw it. Sigh. I hope she also thought of me when she ate Belgian chocolate (LOVE that stuff) and french fries (in a paper cone)! ☺

Melodye Shore at Joyful Noise, whose essay is included in the highly acclaimed anthology, Dear Bully (HarperTeen, 2011), traveled to Europe earlier this Fall and was very fortunate to see “La Grande Nomade” while touring the French Riviera. The Man of Letters, an amazingly cool sculpture by Spanish artist and sculptor Jaume Plensa, overlooks Port Vauban in Antibes.

 

Here’s a bit more about this remarkable installation, which consists of a stainless steel alphabet latticework:

“On the terrace, facing the sea at the corner of the ring wall, is this monumental sculpture eight metres high of a squatting figure. It used the formal vocabularly developed by the artist over the last few years, based on letters. With this vocabulary,  Plensa is suggesting that, beyond its simple mission of communicating a meaning, spoken or written language can also be seen as a kind of envelope covering the matter and energy that constitute us. “Like bricks,” he says, “letters have a potential for construction. They enable us to construct thought.”

 

Visitors are invited to step inside, and travel within it. More from the artist:

I always imagined that our skin is permanently tattooed with text – our life, our experiences – tattooed, but with invisible ink. And then suddenly, somebody is able to decipher these tattoos; that person becoming a lover, a friend. That is probably why I work with sculptures like this, this human form composed solely of letters, like cells. It’s almost biological.

*Swoon* Apparently, there are other Plensa Men of Letters around — one in Des Moines, Iowa, and a grouping of them in Wakefield, England. I think every city should have one!

*drifts off in alphabet reverie*

Thanks so much, Mary Lee and Melodye!

♥ Don’t forget — if you have any notable alphabetical encounters, whether a piece of art, a song, video, abc book, fashion accessory, etc., please let me know so I can add it to my collection!

♥ More alphabetica here.

Certified authentic alphabetica. Made by hand with love and inspiration from foreign lands.

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Copyright © 2011 Jama Rattigan of Jama’s Alphabet Soup. All rights reserved.

alphabetical impressions

#35 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

To get your week off to a good start, a Celebrity Alphabet compliments of actor/comedian Jim Meskimen. Love that Letter C! I was thinking that if you invited Jim to dinner, it would be like having at least 26 famous people at your table. He probably does a good Dylan impression,too. ☺ Thanks to Diane deGroat for the link.

Your assignment, should you choose to accept it, is to talk like someone you admire all day. Who will it be?

♥ More alphabetica here.

HAPPY MONDAY!

Certified authentic alphabetica. Made by hand with love and admiration for people with good vocal chops.

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Copyright © 2011 Jama Rattigan of Jama’s Alphabet Soup. All rights reserved.

bare, naked and crazy abcs

#34 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

Nothing wrong with the traditional ABC song, but once in awhile it’s good to go crazy. Can you think of some head-turning words for each letter of the alphabet? When in doubt, go to the Barenaked Ladies for inspiration. Prior to listening to their “Crazy ABCs,” I hadn’t heard of “phon” or “qat.” And isn’t “vraisemblance” simply wonderful?

Goodbye mundane, hello pencil thin mustaches, a sip of cognac, warm brie.

What are you having for dinner tonight?

Filet of vraisemblance avec haricot verts.

Who brings your mail?

Monsieur Vraisemblance. Toujours un cadeau.

What are you writing about?

Vraisemblance, naturellement. Toujours, toujours!

See what I mean? It’s all good.

Knock yourself out.  And you gotta love a group who names an album, “Snack Time.”

Oh, gotta mention this: How do you pronounce “llama”? I always thought it rhymed with “drama.” Maybe it’s a Canadian thing . . . or the same people who think “Jama” rhymes with “drama.” ☺

♥ More alphabetica here.

Certified authentic alphabetica. Made by hand with love and beaucoup vraisemblance.

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Copyright © 2011 Jama Rattigan of Jama’s Alphabet Soup. All rights reserved.