New page on the site, blast from the past, about the fairly recent past (A.S. XXV and thereabout), the medieval past (naturally), and documenting with dictionaries (again).
http://sandradodd.com/duckford/bag, and my abiding joy in connecting dots.
The image here isn't part of that other page, but is a bonus image. I was at the Victoria and Albert museum this summer with the once Lady Adelicia sans Coeur of Gloucester (now Carolyn Pihl, living in the UK and Sweden, alternately). There was a display of art salvaged from churches that were no longer standing for one reason or another. Other photos from that day can be seen here: http://s26.photobucket.com/albums/c111/SandraDodd/Europe/Sandra2011/June%2025%20LondonCarolyn/
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Wallet, Scrip, Satchel, Shoulder Bag (but not purse)
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Sandra Dodd
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Thursday, September 08, 2011
Recipe site
Recipes with photos, from various periods of history. The one I clicked right too is something my mom used to make and I didn't like when I was a kid, but if it were made with better salmon than canned (which wasn't so easily available or affordable when I was a kid), it could be good. :-) I do feel bad, in retrospect, that I said "yuck!" and then went on to really care about Saxon recipes. So it goes. And she used corn meal instead of oatmeal, and I made corn bread just yesterday, so the connections just keep rolling on.
When I was in Hampton Court last summer there was a good fire-building demo in the kitchen, starting with flint and tinder and moving on to an all-day sustainable serious-business fire the likes of which I had never seen. And they have a website with Tudor recipes:
http://www.hrp.org.uk/hamptoncourtpalace/WhatsOn/tudorcookery
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Sandra Dodd
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6:47 AM
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Monday, August 29, 2011
"Clusters of Ash Keys"
That is the registered device of someone who won't be using it. Lady Mariassa Ashgrove of the Marche of Norborough in the Middle Kingdom. I've just put an obituary up for her. I should have done it sooner, but other things kept jumping ahead of it on the list.
http://sandradodd.com/people/obituaries/sca
I feel very at peace keeping this page. Mariassa's device is beautiful. Per bend invected Or and vert, two clusters of ash keys counterchanged. When I put up a new note, I think of creating and tending a grave in a peaceful cemetery. This summer I got to stay in 'the manse' (the minister's house) in the Yarrow Valley in the Scottish Borders. The house had once had servants, and there were service bells in the kitchen, mostly disconnected. There was a wall along the back of the house, separating the garden of the manse from the church and cemetery behind. I went out and walked and took photos felt the quiet peace.
That was a home education connection ("home ed" they call it in the UK; homeschooling in the US), and I might return there. One morning very early I went to the unlocked church and played the organ.
When I add the notification of another passing, I think of my own friends who have passed from life or maybe just from my own life, as I have passed from being a physical presence in some people's lives to being a memory, and I feel rich in remembrance.
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Sandra Dodd
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6:57 AM
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Sunday, August 07, 2011
Maud's Toy Horse
Here are the photos I have of a recent project by Matilda:
Because this project was contributed to the war effort (A&S, to glorify the Outlands and all that good stuff), there is documentation, and the PDF (words and the best of the images) is here:
http://sandradodd.com/matilda/ToyHorse.pdf
Give it a few seconds to load.
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Sandra Dodd
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9:33 PM
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Thursday, May 19, 2011
Ye Headless House Handbook...
Ah, the things you stumble across when you try to procrastinate on work by surfing the web!
In this case, I came across a note in ThinkWell#6 on your website regarding Ye Headlesse House Fighters' Handbook and Training Manual. Yes, it is still available in hard copy. (Some day I may get it scanned in so electronic copies are available. Who knows, I might even put up a website and post it!) The price is unchanged. [US$8.00 each, plus $US2.00 postage (US$4.00 for Canadian addresses)]
Copies can be ordered from
William Jouris
684 Gwen Ct.
Danville, CA 94526
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Sandra Dodd
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2:33 PM
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Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Master Ark Kazad wrote something beautiful
What the SCA means to me
I was just at the An Tir Crown Tournament in Fort McLeod, Alberta and I was interviewed by a reporter from the local paper. He was curious about the Society and what had held my interest for so many years.
I love playing in the Current Middle Ages. I like the pageantry, the costumes, the comraderie, the creativity. I realized, though, that the most important things about the Society for me are things you can't see, thing not apparent to a reporter walking through an event for the first time.
The SCA is a place where people can come and be the person they really want to be. It is outside of normal time and normal concerns. No matter what you do to make a living or what your social status is, here the playing field is equal. Here you can be your ideal self.
The SCA is based on the code of honor and chivalry. We say it is not the Middle Ages as they were, but as they might have been in the best of all possible worlds. It is a historically based fantasy, a Utopian society. Everyone starts out equal and rank is earned through your own effort. It is a place where you can take risks, because it is, when all is said and done, a game.
I am something of a recluse, but in the SCA I am social. I am an ordinary craftsman, but in the SCA I am respected as a Master of the Laurel. I don't have much of a singing voice, but in the SCA I became a bard. I am a pacifist, but I took up the rapier and became a passable fencer. I shot archery and always came in last, but I had fun.
I have seen troubled young men enter the Society and be taken on as squires by knights. They found an acceptable outlet for their aggression, and in the process they were taught to be honorable and chivalrous. They learned self control and they were taught this by a man they admired and respected.
Yes, when all is said and done, the SCA is a game. But there is a lot to be learned in the playing. I know I am a better man for the years I have spent in the Current Middle Ages.
I am Master Ark of Ringholden, O.L.
That is from this page: http://masterark.com/SCA.aspx
and he's also just come to facebook, in case anyone who comes by this wants to communicate with him there. http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002410205798
The photo below is part of one at masterark.com:
The part about knighthood made me think to link this, too:
http://sandradodd.com/Knighthood, something I wrote fifteen years ago, when I was very active in the Society.
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Sandra Dodd
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9:06 AM
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Friday, April 29, 2011
Atenveldt Reunion Songbook (1983)
Mistress Kate Holford created a PDF of "The Special Edition 25¢ throwaya Atenveldt Reunion Songbook," March A.S. XVII (1983).
http://sandradodd.com/sca/AtenveldReunionSongbook83.pdf
My favorite parts are the advertisement for Honest AElflaed's Used Treasures on the back, and this part of the intro:
"The Keeper" doesn't really fit this category [drinking songs], or rather it wouldn't in a proper big book, but as it's neither a round nor a ballad, here it falls. It's a cheerful and innocuous little thing, and I dedicate it to a world which could use more cheerful and innocuous little things."
Kate also scanned the cover of an Outlandish Herald. I'll link that near its proper month in the history notes, fall of 1982.

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AElflaed of Duckford
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Friday, January 28, 2011
Nice quote about leaving the SCA
"I miss all the good parts. I tend to view the SCA like the Princess Bride or Moby Dick. With just the good parts it’s really wonderful but with the whole unabridged version it can get to you. (Chapter two --- the Whale.) Still, even though I don’t do much with it. I’m grateful for all it did for me… I would be missing such a large part of my life without it."
Clare RosMuir St. John, Ansteorra
We were chatting by e-mail, and she said she's not angry about anything, she just outgrew the need and interest and some other things, like cleaning her house, are more interesting now.
I think that's true of many people. For various reasons another interest or focus takes more of one's life until the SCA is smaller.
Comments, ideas, theories and disputations are welcome. :-)javascript:void(0)
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Sandra Dodd
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2:35 PM
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Thursday, September 16, 2010
Art, contrast and anachronism for sure!
Gather Ye Olde Suburban Knights
September 15, 2010
by CLAIRE O'NEILL
That is from an NPR blog article by Claire o'Neill, interviewing E. F. Kitchen, the photographer and author of Suburban Knights.
The web page and the project are fascinating. Click on the other shields at those links for other details, images and information. the book isn't ordered directly from the author, but sources are listed in North America, Germany and the UK.
My favorite detail is the 19th century technology for photographing 21st century medieval knights. It reminds me of the images of the Eglinton Tournament of 1839. Photography was starting to happen, but not of such things as that yet.
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1:53 PM
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