[h-cost] London's Hidden Gems

2009-06-06 Thread Onaree Berard
Anyone know of any little known or hidden gems in London?

I'm going in late Oct and I know all the big stuff but was wondering
about the lesser known stuff.

Usually I ask about museums and old buildings but in London that is
like asking someone in Los Angles if they know any highways.

Onaree

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Re: [h-cost] London's Hidden Gems

2009-06-06 Thread Alexandria Doyle
May I suggest the museum of Children in Bethel Green?  I went there to
see the dolls but they do have a bit of collection of children's
clothing.  I went several years ago, but the curator in charge of the
dolls had some wonderful stories about the clothing as well, since
they can document exactly what children wore these clothing (mostly
Victorian era) and a bot about their life.

Of course, they have some wonderful dolls, doll houses and other toys, too

alex

On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 11:02 AM, Onaree Berardmsber...@gmail.com wrote:
 Anyone know of any little known or hidden gems in London?

 I'm going in late Oct and I know all the big stuff but was wondering
 about the lesser known stuff.

 Usually I ask about museums and old buildings but in London that is
 like asking someone in Los Angles if they know any highways.

 Onaree
--
So much to do and so little attention span to get it done with…
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Re: [h-cost] London's Hidden Gems

2009-06-06 Thread julian wilson
Onaree,
 one of the oldest Pubs in London is The Prospect of Whitby, on the River, 
down in Wapping. It was Winston Churchill's favourite place to hide out and 
unwind, during the dark days of WW2; and the London Dockers were very proud 
that Winnie came to relax amongst them, accompanied only by his PPO [ whose 
name escapes me for the moment} It's well-worth a visit, and the food is good - 
the same kitchen serves both the Bar area, and the upstairs Restaurent, so 
don't bother paying the  latter's cover charge, because you'll get the same 
quality of food downstairs, - just no table service and a smaller Menu.. 
Usually there is a jazz session on Sunday evenings, too.
And on the subject of WW2 and Churchill,  - if you've never visited them 
before, then try to find the time to visit the Cabinet War Rooms, too, in 
Whitehall. 
And on a lighter note, may I suggest the Red House in Bexleyheath; and 
Kelmscott Manor out near Lechlade on the upper Thames. Both are shrines to the 
design genius of William Morris and the PreRaphaelite Movement

Still on Design, the De Morgan Centre Museum in Wandsworth is well worth a 
visit.

Cordially,
Julian Wilson..

--- On Sat, 6/6/09, Onaree Berard msber...@gmail.com wrote:

From: Onaree Berard msber...@gmail.com
Subject: [h-cost] London's Hidden Gems
To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
Date: Saturday, 6 June, 2009, 5:02 PM

Anyone know of any little known or hidden gems in London?

I'm going in late Oct and I know all the big stuff but was wondering
about the lesser known stuff.

Usually I ask about museums and old buildings but in London that is
like asking someone in Los Angles if they know any highways.

Onaree

-- 
Proud List Mom of Irish_Crochet_Lovers
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Irish_Crochet_Lovers/
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Re: [h-cost] Advice on Web Presence

2009-06-06 Thread Cin
It's not clear to me whether you're looking to advertise a business,
outline the research youve done, explain the process of construction
or just host a brag book.  I'm of the latter sort  use Google
pages, but I've heard it's closed to new members.
--cin
Cynthia Barnes
cinbar...@gmail.com

Here I come meandering along behind the times as usual, but I have
been thinking that it is time to have a costume presence on the web,
both for the purpose of organizing and storing information and
providing information to others.  Some of you on this list have the
most marvelous sites, and I wondered if you all would mind sharing
your thoughts on the best approach.  Frex, journal vs. website, vs.
blog?  What should I look at in deciding on a format?
I am leaning toward a website since I want to organize and categorize
information, not present it in a linear fashion, like on a blog
(assuming it is necessary to be linear on a blog, that is.  Maybe it's
not).  Also, I want site to be accessible to the outside world.
On the other hand, I have seen some outstanding LiveJournal pages, so
a journal site is an option.  What should I look for in choosing a
host?  How much storage capacity do I need (I intend to have lots of
pictures as well as text)?  What are my best web design options (I am
a cyber-neanderthal remember--I am most comfortable in the 18th
century).What other questions should I be asking that I do not know
enough to ask?

So many questions, I know, and honest--you don't have to write a
thesis.  But I would certainly appreciate any insight you might offer.

Thanks in advance.

Jane, techno-clueless in NO Va
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Re: [h-cost] Advice on Web Presence

2009-06-06 Thread Käthe Barrows
 It's not clear to me whether you're looking to advertise a business,
 outline the research you've done, explain the process of construction
 or just host a brag book.


If you want to have a website, there are books on how to create these in
HTML and programs like MicroSoft FrontPage so you don't have to do the HTML
yourself.  If you just want to post images, there are PhotoBucket, Flikr,
and dozens of others for that.

-- 
Carolyn Kayta Barrows
--
“The future is already here, it is just unevenly distributed.”   -William
Gibson
--
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Re: [h-cost] Advice on Web Presence

2009-06-06 Thread Sharon L. Krossa

Greetings!

At 10:14 PM + 6/5/09, Jane Pease wrote:

Here I come meandering along behind the times as usual, but I have
been thinking that it is time to have a costume presence on the
web, both for the purpose of organizing and storing information and
providing information to others.  Some of you on this list have the
most marvelous sites, and I wondered if you all would mind sharing
your thoughts on the best approach.  Frex, journal vs. website, vs.

...

I would recommend building a web site using the Content Management 
System (CMS) Drupal (http://Drupal.org/). This can be done without 
you actually having to know HTML, PHP, or MySQL, but at the same time 
you get a very powerful tool that uses all those things to create an 
attractive, essentially infinitely expandable site.


One of the advantages of Drupal is that it is not organized around 
pages so much as organized around content/information. As a result, 
you can easily place the same content in multiple places --for 
example, both organized and categorized by topic, and presented in a 
linear blog-like fashion-- without having to re-enter the content 
(and with any later edits appearing instantly everywhere the content 
appears).


Another advantage is you can start very simply, and as you learn 
more, add more powerful features. Also, the visual design is almost 
entirely independent from the content, so it is very easy to change 
the look of a site without touching the content. Apart from 
installation, site development and adding content is done through a 
web browser, and you can even have user accounts and let select 
people contribute content (with what they allowed to do determined by 
you).


Oh, and Drupal is OpenSource software, and free. You would just need 
to pay for the hosting, not Drupal software. The main requirements of 
a hosting package would be that it includes at least one MySQL 
database, and PHP (preferably PHP 5.x), and some way to 
extract/uncompress compressed archives on the server (instead of on 
your desktop and then uploading individual files to the server).


If you'd like to play around with it a little before making decisions 
about hosting providers, you can use XAMPP 
(http://www.apachefriends.org/) to set up a local test apache server 
with PHP  MySQL, and then install Drupal locally on your 
desktop/laptop computer (Windows or Mac or Linux, etc.).


Sharon
--
Sharon L. Krossa, PhD, skrossa-...@medievalscotland.org
* Drupal Training  Consulting in the Stanford Community
* Independent Academic Technology Consultant, http://SharonKrossa.com
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Re: [h-cost] London's Hidden Gems

2009-06-06 Thread Anne
Once you're in the central area, just try to walk from place to place as 
much as possible rather than taking the tube, and you will find all 
sorts of gems which will be just yours.  I cut across Green Park one 
time on my way to a meeting and came across the original Bluecoat 
School.  They are, as you correctly suggest, everywhere.


JEan

Onaree Berard wrote:

Anyone know of any little known or hidden gems in London?

I'm going in late Oct and I know all the big stuff but was wondering
about the lesser known stuff.

Usually I ask about museums and old buildings but in London that is
like asking someone in Los Angles if they know any highways.

Onaree

  

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Re: [h-cost] Mascara Advice

2009-06-06 Thread Gilbert
I had to wear mascara for a dance recital, and find that it's still 
there--not only that, it ran (cried while Mary and her little lambs danced). 
My questions are these: how do you get the stuff off, and what mascara is 
tear-proof?


I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you in advance!!

Marjorie

Marjorie Gilbert
author of THE RETURN, a historical novel set in Georgian England
Royal Ascot Finalist 2009
www.marjoriegilbert.net
www.gilbertinfrared.com 



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Re: [h-cost] Mascara Advice

2009-06-06 Thread Sylvia Rognstad
I use cold cream, but any make up remover will work.  I also wear  
waterproof mascara, which doesn't run.


Sylvia R
On Jun 6, 2009, at 5:08 PM, Gilbert wrote:

I had to wear mascara for a dance recital, and find that it's still  
there--not only that, it ran (cried while Mary and her little lambs  
danced). My questions are these: how do you get the stuff off, and  
what mascara is tear-proof?


I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you in advance!!

Marjorie

Marjorie Gilbert
author of THE RETURN, a historical novel set in Georgian England
Royal Ascot Finalist 2009
www.marjoriegilbert.net
www.gilbertinfrared.com

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