Showing posts with label coloring pages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coloring pages. Show all posts

Saturday, December 6, 2025

A Nutcracker

 


‘🎶 🎵Chestnuts roasting on an open fire 🎵 🎶’

I just read an article where the woman was saying how her kids didn’t know that nuts came in a shell.
What?


We always had a bowl of mixed nuts in the shell, with picks and nutcrackers at the ready, every holiday season. I remember my grandfather cracking open the ‘acorns’ for me to eat. Okay, they were hazelnuts, but I thought they were acorns!


Other times Dad would crack a walnut open so carefully the shell remained in 2 perfect halves.
Those were treasures you could make into something special..tiny fairy baby beds; bowls for Barbie and Ken to eat from; or decorations on a sand castle.

Fairy Gardens

It got me to thinking.
Do modern kids even know what a nutcracker is for? Is a nutcracker just an ugly soldier with a big head that dances around in tights and imaginary sword fights with giant mice on a stage?
That’s assuming any of them have been to a ballet.

Maria Doval Ballet

Is The Nutcracker Ballet where nutcrackers came from?
Hmmm…sounds like an interesting blog to me!
Let’s get cracking and find out!
(Okay, enough puns.) 

Nutcracker Ensemble, LEGO ideas

Nutcrackers are for, well, to crack nuts! Nuts have been a staple food for aeons. They are eaten raw, or ground into a nut flour to use. At some point in history someone became tired of picking out shell bits from a nut cracked open with a rock. 

Courtesy Leavenworth Nutcracker Museum

The earliest nutcracker found is made from metal and dates back to the 4th century BCE.
Yeah, BCE (before 33 AD, which is when Jesus Christ died.) You can see this nutcracker in a museum in Tarant, Italy!

Courtesy Leavenworth Nutcracker Museum

This is a Roman bronze nutcracker from somewhere between 200 BCE and 200 AD. It was discovered in 1960.
Earlier nutcrackers did not survive the elements and time. A few nutcrackers have been found made from more fragile materials such as ivory and bone, but these are very rare. Nutcrackers were meant to be functional.

Victorian nutcrackers with plain handles; kentishcobnuts.com

Then German artisans began to be creative. In the 17th century woodcarvers began to make their nutcrackers more decorative. Carved wood animal and people nutcrackers were being  produced, by hand.
German folklore taught that nutcrackers were symbols of good luck to your family and protection for your home.

Folk art Father Christmas; One Kings Lane

I’m guessing a Nutcracker artisan started that folklore! Good way to get more business.

LEGO Irish nutcracker

In 1816 E.T.A. Hoffman wrote a dark fairytale that had been passed around for some time. He was just the first to write and publish 
The Nutcracker and the Mouse King”.
 The original fairytale has some pretty dark elements to it, like so many of the folktales were. (Ever read the Brothers’ Grimm ‘Cinderella’?)  Until Alexandre Dumas.

For sale on Etsy

In 1844 Alexandre Dumas adapted the story of the Nutcracker, taking out some of the darker themes, and it was printed. It was received with mild attention. That is, until 1892 and musical composer P. Tchaikovsky enters the story. Tchaikovsky adapted the lighter version of The Nutcracker by Dumas, and turned it into a ballet.

Festival Ballet Company

The classical 2-act ballet premier was 1892 in St. Petersburg, Russia. It became popular - in Russia.


Twenty years earlier Wilhelm Fuchtner from Germany had begun mass producing nutcrackers with his lathe design. With higher production, nutcrackers became a favorite toy. The utilitarian was replaced with fanciful and decorative styles. This was much more appealing to the masses.


Decorative soldiers became all the rage. The first decorative soldier nutcrackers can actually be traced to the Ore Mountains (Erzebirge, Germany). After the ballet came out, international audiences became interested in these ‘soldier’ nutcrackers.

Mackenzie-Childs; Pinterest 

A couple things happened next. In 1944 the San Francisco Ballet Company, USA, put on a production of The Nutcracker. It became wildly popular.

San Francisco Ballet Company production of The Nutcracker

Then soldiers started returning home from World War II, bringing souvenirs with them. Nutcrackers from German Christmas markets were very popular souvenirs and not really seen in the USA.

Whitechristmaswreaths

The Nutcracker was on his way to becoming a permanent part of Christmas celebrations and decor.

Temu-Egypt

New York City, New York
1954
Famous ballet choreographer George Balanchine put on a production of Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker.
This sealed the deal, so to speak.

Pinterest

Since then The Nutcracker ballet, musical score and numerous variations of nutcrackers have remained immensely  popular at Christmas.

Neiman Marcus

You can find just about any nutcracker-themed item, in numerous sizes and styles. Here are just a few:

Merry Collectibles ornament, Etsy

Home Depot pillow

Teapot, Dunn Deals

Beaded earrings, Etsy

Butter knives, A Taste of Kentucky


Let’s play a little bit and have some fun with nutcrackers next.
Here are 2 ways to draw a nutcracker-

Art Projects for Kids


Here are a couple of graph patterns you can use for perler beads, beads, embroidery - whatever you can think of!

Pinterest

DIY Candy

Here are a couple of puppets you can print, color and cut out. You could put on your own version of The Nutcracker ballet!

Pinterest
MOMMYMADETHAT.com

Let’s close with a couple coloring pages. You should take a photo and put it in ‘comments’ so I can share with everyone!

ColoringPagesForKiddos.com


That’s it for today! 

‘Til next time,
inkspired

A few of the websites I checked out to write this blog, in no particular order:
Pinterest
whyChristmas.com
Christmasgals.com
Britannica.com
Nutcracker.com
Usghostadventures.com
Wikipedia
nutcrackermuseum.com
kentishcobnuts.com






















Monday, June 10, 2024

Where is Latvia?

 sveiti

(Hello in Latvian)

Today let’s travel to Latvia.

Why Latvia?

Because I have readers that live there and I knew nothing about the country! And because I love to learn about different people and their customs, from all over the world.

 Venta Rapid waterfall, Latvia

Latvia has a long recorded history. It is a European country that sits among Belarus, Estonia, Lithuania, the Baltic Sea and Russia.

Its land size is about the size of West Virginia (small!).

Dreamstime stock photo

Latvia has been under the rule of Germany, Poland, Sweden, Russia and U.S.S.R.  What started as a group of Eastern Baltic tribes merging in 812 AD, Latvia didn’t regain independence until 1991. Russian troops were still stationed there until 1994.

Castle of the Livonian Order, 

It is a parliamentary republic. 

Freedom Monument, Riga, Latvia

Riga is the capitol, and probably the most popular tourist attraction in the country. 

Riga, Latvia

Latvia has 3 UNESCO World Heritage Site designations, the first being Old Town or Historic Center of Riga.

Riga; Lasma Plone, Travel Blogger

Riga was founded in 1201.

From the 12th t0 15th centuries it was a key center for trading and cultural routes between the West and the East.

Orthodox Church, Riga, Latvia

In the 17th century Riga became the largest provincial town of Sweden.  Wooden buildings were built in a neo-classical style, creating suburbs surrounding the medieval city.

Ruhnu Church built in 1644

In the 19th century suburbs were laid out, surrounding the wooden buildings of the 17th century, which surround the medieval part of town. Art Nouveau was all the rage. Riga became a showcase of Art Nouveau architecture, with 50 high value architectures around the medieval part, and 300 scattered further out still standing today!

Lasma Plone Travel Blogger

The Vintage News

A second World Heritage Site is found in the western part of Latvia - Old Town Kuldiga. It started as a small medieval hamlet, and by the 16th century had grown to be a major administrative center. It still retains most of its’ original layout, including the log architecture and foreign influenced styles of the day, through the 18th century.

Papes National Park, Latvia

The 3rd World Heritage Site is part of 

The Struve Geodetic Arc.

Monument to the Struve Geodetic Arc

This is a chain of survey triangulations that run from Hammerfest, Norway to the Black Sea; through 10 countries and is 2,820 km long.

Say what?

It was the first accurate measurement of a meridian.

A mer-what?

Let’s put it this way. No one really knew how big Planet Earth was, and by doing this Arc, it was a first step in finding that out! Another amazing part - astronomer Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Struve made these calculations from 1816 - 1855! Think about it. He spent 40 years with no visible income to establish a mathematical equation that no one could see!

An amazing historical fact is there were a minimum of 10 different regents/kings/bigwigs who had to get along, agree, and approve this.

Map of Struve Geodetic Arc

And now for something completely different:

The state bird is the White Wagtail.


Here’s a coloring page for you.

ViviaiArt

The national flower is the Oxeye Daisy.


Let’s color a few!




Perhaps you’d like to draw your own bouquet -
Rockpainting101

Vector by Freepik

This is the Latvian flag:


Here are a few words you can learn in Latvian:


Latvia is known for their national dance.
These next photos were taken at Dance Festivals.

Dance Festival, Wojtek

Latvian Dance Festival

Latvia has natural resources of peat, limestone, timber and amber to name a few.
Here are some examples of Latvian amber:

VisitLatvia

Julliie Chaya Holder-Goldberger

Latvia exports things like lumber, wheat, broadcasting equipment & hard liquor.
Latvia has 99.9 % literacy rate, with 91% internet users, along with 22.5% live below the poverty level!

Weaving wreaths for Midsummer Festival

Just over 36% in Latvia say they are of the Lutheran religion. 19.5% are Catholic.
20.7% are other Christians.

Church in Cesis, Latvia

In addition to the places I have mentioned Latvia is also known for medieval castles, seaside resorts, palace museums, the widest waterfall in Europe, symbolic embroidery patterns centuries old, and gothic cathedrals.
Too much to squish into one blog, and that’s a lot for a tiny country!
Wordpress.com

Susan E, Pinterest

Pinterest 


After I research a country I always see so many things I want to go and visit!

Latvian countryside; photo credit: Peter Fenda

Rundale Palace and museum
Nickname “The Baltic Versailles”

Well, my Latvian readers, I have described your beautiful country as best I can in a short space. I hope you approve.

‘Til next time,
inkspired

A few websites I visited for info:
bmandarins.com>blog
european-union.europa.eu
Latvia.eu
Wikipedia
CIA.gov
Travelawaits.com
bittersouthern.com
LibraryofCongress.gov

Kaleidoscope by inkspired