
It's hard to imagine in this day of blogging, texting, I-phones, high-speed everything a time when a milk truck driving down the street would stop at each doorstep to drop off the day's fresh milk or a delivery of ice to the ice-box on the back porch. If you had been alive in the mid-1800s and lived in a city, the lamplighter would have been a familiar figure, making his rounds through the city streets lighting your lamp and casting the street in a warm glow. In nostalgic memory, the 'Gaslight Era' is a period of unhurried, gracious living, as is the beautiful city of Charleston, which we've decided to feature this week after a recent visit for a good friend's "low country" wedding. (Here's us with Nancy, Kirk and Sarah and one outstanding rick-shaw driver!)

And then it was onto the wrought iron...


After watching a PBS special on one of Charleston' s most famous blacksmith's, Philip Simmons, we were anxious to admire the delicate scrolls, leaf and flower patterns, spears and wiggletails. Special thanks to http://www.thingsthatinspire.net/ for finding this lovely example:

Equally beautiful and wondrous to admire are the myriad gas lamps that still are aglow in the historic district.



This lamp combines decorative iron scroll work and natural gas:

Another beauty:


Another link that I am including this week is to a blacksmith/artist, whose work I discovered this week while trying to find my husband a set of fireplace tools. I cannot tell you how much I adore the Chevalier collection:http://www.winterdrewdesign.com/index.cfm/portfolio.htm
Happy weekend and a very happy Mother's Day to all of the mothers out there!
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