Friday, April 15, 2016

Marblehead.Works Welcomes Aboard Patsy Kane!


Marblehead.Works is thrilled to welcome Patsy Kane's nautically inspired jewelry to our offerings!


Nautical Jewelry, bracelet, earrings, necklace, gifts

Working from her Marblehead Studio in Marblehead, Massachusetts, and inspired by the coast, Patsy Kane hopes her jewelry brings you a "bit of salt air, fair winds, sand and sunshine".

Patsy Kane summer Nautical jewelry
Summer Bracelets




These Summer bracelets are reminiscent of the rope bracelets worn all summer in days gone by.  These nylon cord Summer bracelets, handmade in her studio, come in a variety of colors and fasten with a working marine grade stainless steel or solid brass shackle, so you can take them on and off (if you want to!).



Nautical Jewelry Starfish Pendant Necklace
Marblehead Starfish Pendant

Patsy Kane's exclusive Marblehead Starfish pendant is a sweet little starfishie! Designed in our studio and cast in sterling silver - made with pride in New England!
Pendant comes with a sterling silver cable chain with three sizes to choose from, or, with a 16" sterling silver omega chain.




Patsy Kane nautical jewelry monkey fist earrings
Monkey Fist Earring



Monkey Fist knots were originally tied around a weighted object and used as the end of a heaving line on sailing ships. Patsy Kane's Monkey Fist Knot Earrings, constructed out of nylon cord knots on a base metal post, are available in six perfect colors to compliment your nautical style! Each pair comes packaged in our round silver tin. 






Marblehead.Works, an online boutique showcasing a curated selection of the finest wares from our coastal town's artisans and local businesses, will launch May 19th.






Thursday, April 7, 2016

Marblehead Hollyhock Garden - Northshore Home - Spring 2016





You can’t miss them. Drive by the Marblehead home of Pam and Paul Dougovito in July and you’ll notice the usual display of patriotic bunting, but that’s not what stops traffic. What causes the skid marks when passersby throw on the brakes is the megadose of hollyhocks beyond your wildest dreams. Imagine nine-foot spires touching the skies. Line those spikes with dozens of big, open-faced blooms in an otherworldly color range. And then multiply the whole shebang times 200 or more. Rumor has it that Marblehead was once rife with hollyhocks, but scant evidence remains except the wallop of towering blossom spires in the Dougovito front yard.
Pam admits that she didn’t see the hollyhocks coming. Sure, the house had the vestiges of some perennials in evidence when the realtor showed it off on Memorial Day of 1993. When they closed on the shoreline house in August, maybe seven or eight hollyhocks were in the picture. But coming from a hollyhock-deprived background, Pam didn’t really recognize the plants. Growing up in Ohio, she thought she’d been exposed to all aspects of gardening by the “sergeant general” of the local garden club (who came around to each home to perform white-gloved inspections and critiques), but hollyhocks were not part of the local agenda. For all those reasons, the hollyhocks took the Dougovitos by complete surprise when they began to spruce up and feed the front yard.
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Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Marblehead by Rebecca Lindenberg : The Poetry Foundation

Marblehead by Rebecca Lindenberg : The Poetry Foundation:



You take off your black
motorcycle jacket, hang it
on the back of a chair. It’s cold
from our walk along the sea wall.
Your pockets jingle with shells.
While we were gone, you left
the stove on low—some things
you do make me so nervous.
You graze the surface of sauce
simmering in a pan, shiny fingertip
held out for me to lick, you say
“What does it need?” Maybe nothing,
maybe honey to unbitter the lime.
Later that night you’ll bury your face
in my belly and sob. “I’m sorry,”
though I don’t think you are
always talking to me, my love.
But now lobster steam billows
up the window, you gulp
purple wine, your pinky sticking out,
and the round olives are the green
all green things aspire to be.
Rebecca Lindenberg, “Marblehead” from Love, an Index. Copyright © 2012 by Rebecca Lindenberg. Reprinted by permission of McSweeney’s Publishing.


Source: Love, an Index (McSweeney's Publishing, 2012)

Saturday, March 19, 2016

Big plans for Marblehead's Hamond Nature Center

MARBLEHEAD



By William J. Dowd 

A big push to restore the Hamond Nature Center to its glory days when nature programs brought droves out tops the Recreation and Parks' docket of things to do.
The center, formerly the Girl Scout Camp Shore Lea, sits atop a hill at the entrance to Wyman Woods and at the end of Everett Pain Boulevard.
"Our department is trying to let the town know about the nature center," said Travis Farley, assistant superintendent of the Recreation and Parks Department. "Not a lot people know it exists."
Or as Rec and Park Superintendent Tim Short put it: "It's a hidden gem."
Hidden is right. Until recently, the building was all but hid from view tucked behind bushes and brush.
The department began polishing the gem, however, after years of sporadic use. Farley put together the Hamond Nature Center Sub-Committee that convened its first meeting in January 2015. The group of residents and teachers are charged with studying the site's deficiencies and setting goals into a comprehensive five-year strategic plan.

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Big plans for Hamond Nature Center