Category Archives: Words and Photos

The Rose

Whenever I travel to Los Angeles, my trip is not complete without spending a glorious afternoon at The Huntington. This remarkable research library established by businessman and financier, Henry E. Huntington, is surrounded by 12 singular botanical gardens. A scenic stroll through the sublime Chinese, Japanese, and Australian landscapes, as well as the Rose, Camellia and Shakespeare gardens must be followed by a visit to at least one of the extraordinary art galleries on the property.  Huntington was a discerning collector of British, French and American art. Of course, the gift shop and the Rose Garden Tea Room are also not to be missed. I took this photo in the Huntington’s Rose Garden and later wrote the accompanying essay.

rose

The Huntington Botanical Gardens, 1990. (Photo by L. LeVasseur)

The roses nod and whisper among themselves of candlelit dinners, weddings and moonlit strolls, as the mellow breeze meanders through the sun-drenched garden.  The soft June air is filled with a hypnotic floral perfume.  In a riot of reds, yellows and pinks, the delicate blossoms cling to the stone wall surrounding a thatched bungalow. A tiny, red bud stretches its furled petals to the cerulean sky.

A buxom, vigorous woman dressed in a faded, cotton sundress and carrying a pair of secateurs, moves briskly through the garden.  She hums a bit of Mozart as she  gathers the sweetest blossoms, placing them carefully in her wicker basket.   With a gentle hand she snips the new rosebud from the vine.

The gardner carries the roses to the end of her winding, dusty lane where she has set up a roadside stand.  Arranging the flowers in bright, hand-painted vases, she places the baby rosebud within a bouquet of elegant pink blooms.  Sitting in the shade of the ancient oaks lining the country road, she waits patiently for  someone to stop and purchase the roses she has tended so lovingly.  She hopes to share their beauty with someone special.

Words and Photos: A Dream Come True

 

Many years ago, I traveled by train from Los Angeles to San Diego to visit my aunt and uncle.  When I arrived, I wanted to see Balboa Park and spent a delightful afternoon wandering around its Spanish Village Arts Center .    One of the picturesque galleries caught my eye, and the photograph I snapped has inspired this photo essay:

balboapark

Balboa Park, San Diego, CA (photo by L. LeVasseur, 1990)

The small stucco building is draped in flowers and sunshine. Its white walls glow pink in the morning air.  The rooster weathervane glints golden in the delicate light and spins lazily with a faintly musical creak.

Marisa and Joe carry sacks of fresh vegetables across the empty courtyard.  Soon the colorful slate tiles will be covered with umbrellaed tables for guests who prefer to dine beneath the brilliant blue sky.

As Marisa deposits her bags in front of the eclectic lilac door, the inspiration for the name of their new restaurant, Joe fishes the key from his coat pocket.  The door swings open and they stand back to admire the results of all of their planning.

Entering the brightly decorated dining room, she immediately heads for  the kitchen, while he hauls in the bags of produce and then begins to take down the chairs from the sturdy oak tables.  In just a few hours, the hushed tranquility will be replaced with the rush and clamor of their very first lunch hour.  The clatter of silverware, the hum of conversation and the sizzle of the kitchen grills will fill the space, along with the warm and comforting aromas of chilies, cumin and cilantro.

Marisa emerges from the kitchen, her face already smudged with flour.  She has put a batch of churros in the oven.  She and Joe exchange a smile. After years of studying in culinary school and working in other chefs’ kitchens, their dream has finally come true.

Remembering Lily

The sweetest kitten ever.

The sweetest kitten ever.

Lily is curled up in a warm pool of sunshine on the brightly cushioned couch. She purrs in her sleep, filling the cozy living room with a steady rumble of happiness. A soft breeze scented with freshly mown grass wafts through the living room window, ruffling the kitten’s uniquely marked white and black fur.

Waking from a dream in which she was running around her new home with her brothers and sisters, exploring under furniture, peering around corners and meowing with curiosity, Lily opens her clear, green eyes and yawns. She sits up and stretches luxuriously, sniffing the air and detecting the lingering aromas of lilac candles and freshly popped corn.

The living room is very quiet. The kitten tilts her head, listening to the gentle ticking of the crystal clock that sits on top of the mahogany desk around the corner in the dining room.  She begins to lick her delicate, white paws, her pink tongue rasping against her soft fur. Finishing her quick bath, she bounds from the couch to the coffee table, which is stacked with photo albums. Carefully stepping between the piles of albums, she pauses a moment to glance down at an open page filled with images of her own elegantly marked face.  She blinks, meows and leaps down onto the wooly, braided rug that covers the hardwood floor.

Peek-a-boo!

Peek-a-boo!

Lily scampers across the room, but pauses at the sound of a familiar step in the hallway. A key rattles in the lock and the front door swings open with a whoosh of warm air. The girl named Linda steps into the living room.  In her warm and loving voice, she cheerily calls out, “Hi Lily. I’m home.”

Linda drops her school bag by the door.  She collapses onto the cushioned oak rocker that matches the couch by the windows, and Lily bounces up onto the chair to sit beside her. Nestling close to her new friend and placing a possessive, white paw on Linda’s leg, Lily begins to purr, once again filling the room with the steady rumble of happiness.

Words and Photos: Portraits

Whenever I visit an art museum, invariably my favorite paintings are the portraits.  I enjoy studying the faces and clothing of the subjects and wondering about their personalities and lives.  Edinburgh has a wonderful National Portrait Gallery  on Queen Street in New Town.  The collection includes pictures of many literary and royal luminaries.  Upon entering the museum’s Great Hall, I always marvel at the gilded murals adorning entrance hall’s balcony.  The procession of Scottish dignitaries includes Stuart kings and queens, poets, scientists and philosophers.  In the short story I am currently writing, my character, Elizabeth Ann, visits the portrait gallery with her friend, Maude and experiences a moment of clarity.

National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh Scotland.  Photo by L. Walkins, 2006

Photo by L. Walkins, 2006

Outside, wispy clouds stretched across the blue summer sky.  Shoppers and tourists crowded the sidewalks of Castle Street.  Maude and I headed up the block and turned right, walking past the Queen Street gardens.  Behind the wrought iron railings enclosing the park, I glimpsed rolling green lawns and the roof of a Grecian temple.

Maude walked quickly, leading me along the shaded sidewalk.  “It’s a shame Will couldn’t come along on your vacation,” she said, as we approached the National Portrait Gallery.

“He wanted to, but he has a big case going to trial soon.”  My boyfriend, Will was doing  well at his law firm and hoped to make partner soon. Following Maude into the museum, I wondered what Will was doing back in San Diego.  I  looked at  my watch.  With the time difference, he was probably sound asleep.

“Wait here,” Maude said.  “I’ll get us a map.”

I nodded, pausing in the middle of the sumptuous room to look around.  My eyes were drawn to the gilded frieze that decorated the balcony above me. A procession of Scottish dignitaries filled the upper reaches of the hall.  In one corner, I spotted Queen Mary and her consort, Lord Darnley dressed in splendid finery.  The couple stood proudly among the crowd of leaders.  Mary, in particular, looked like she was born to rule.

Maude returned and unfolded the visitor’s map of the different galleries.  “Where shall we begin?” she asked.  “Literary figures or the royals?”

Glancing up at the figure of Queen Mary once more and thinking back to the day Maude and I became friends, I said, “Why don’t we find a portrait of your favorite queen?”

Maude and I had met during my semester abroad at Regent’s College  in London.  Spotting me at Westminster Abbey one Saturday, she reminded me that we shared a public speaking class and insisted we spend the afternoon together.  Taken in by her candor and exuberance, I had followed her into the abbey and right over to the tomb of Mary Queen of Scots.

“Excellent idea,” she said now, consulting the map.  “She’s on the second floor.  Follow me.”

We  climbed the  stairs and found  the Scottish queen’s portrait.  She wore a white hood and veil and looked out at us with sad eyes.

Leaning forward, I read the placard beside the painting.  “It says she’s dressed in traditional French mourning.  It seems weird that white was the color for mourning back then.”

“Poor Mary was absolutely devastated when her French husband died.” Maude fiddled with the end of her long, blonde braid.  “The royal  family had no use for her anymore and they cast her aside.”

“Being a sixteenth century woman was pretty horrible,” I said.  “Can you imagine having no control over your own fate?  Like all those poor women who married Henry VIII.”

“Dreadful.”  Maude folded her arms as she studied the portrait.  “Mary was just 19 when she came home to Scotland to rule.  When I was 19, I had enough trouble managing my classes at university, let alone ruling an actual country.”

Thinking about Mary’s life moving from castle to castle in medieval Scotland, I wandered across the small gallery.  “At least she didn’t have to worry about where she was going to live,”  I said with a laugh.  “In Edinburgh alone, she had the castle and Holyrood Palace.”

“I know,” Maude agreed.  “It must have been some comfort to depend on centuries of family tradition.”

We drifted slowly through the glass doorway to the next gallery.  As I studied the portraits, I considered my family and our traditions.  Even though, I’d been living in my own apartment for a few years, I called my parents’ yellow bungalow in Mission Hills home. All of our family celebrations still took place around my mother’s dining room table.

Tonight, Maude and her husband were throwing a housewarming in their amazing new flat.  For sure, the first of many parties.  Maybe it was high time I too began some new traditions in a real home of my own.

Words and Photos: The Chapel

At Edinburgh Castle, I always set aside a few minutes to visit the oldest building in the city.  Saint Margaret’s Chapel dates from the twelfth century.  Margaret was the wife of King Malcolm III.  With her gentle influence, she helped to civilize and educate the Scottish court.  She and her royal husband were revered for their good deeds and charitable works.  To honor his mother, David I built the tiny chapel in her memory in 1130.  Today, Saint Margaret’s Chapel offers a small corner in the bustling castle where tourists can pause and enjoy a quiet moment of reflection.

stmargaret

Photo by L. Walkins, 2010

Delicate sunshine filters through the colored glass illuminating the gentle features of the saintly queen.  Standing before the window, Elizabeth Ann looks around the small stone chamber,  letting her gaze follow the swirl of reflected blues and greens splashed across the stone floor.  Slowly, she retreats to one of the benches lined up against the wall across from Saint Margaret’s stained glass portrait.

She sits and closes her eyes.  An unbidden image of a man with shaggy straw-colored hair, a narrow face, and twinkling light brown eyes fills her mind.  Sebastian.  She wonders what he is doing.  The last time they saw each other was in Paris.  They had visited Sainte-Chapelle to admire its famous stained glass.  Sebastian knew everything about the history of that chapel.  He had linked arms with her as they gazed up at the towering windows, entertaining her with a plethora of random facts until, laughing, she had retreated to the gift shop.  If he were here now, what would he tell her about Saint Margaret and Edinburgh Castle?

Opening her eyes, Elizabeth Ann looks through her  guide book.  She studies the map of the castle and rises to her feet.  With one last glance at the saintly queen’s wise face, she pushes her memories to the back of her mind.  Sebastian is married to someone else.  He is part of her past.  That’s all.

Elizabeth Ann turns her back on what might have been and steps out into the afternoon sunshine.

 

Words and Photos: Welcome Home

Best known as a breath-taking winter destination for skiers, Vermont is also beautiful during the summer.  While enjoying a relaxing June weekend in the Green Mountain state, the scenic view of this  gracious and comfortable farmhouse caught my eye.

Welcome Home

Photo by L. LeVasseur, 1991.gfgt

Photo by L. LeVasseur, 1991

The white, clapboard house stands patiently waiting.  From its stone foundation, the hills and meadows of the New England countryside unfold like a verdant patchwork quilt.  Golden sunlight streams through its sparkling windows, filling the rooms with a mellow glow.  The farmhouse is empty now, but earlier in the day the parlor, kitchen and stairway had echoed with the kind-hearted industry of several aunts and cousins as they made preparations for the newlyweds, who are due to arrive at any moment.

As the sun dips below the horizon and the stars slowly appear above in the deepening lavender twilight, the house is silhouetted against the stark beauty of the mountains, a beacon to the young couple.  A shining black “Tin Lizzie” rattles down the lane and stops in the yard.  An elegantly dressed man extracts himself from the driver’s seat. He runs around to the passenger side of the open motor car.  Doffing his top hat, he extends a hand to his bride.  She places her hand in his and alights from the vehicle. The diaphanous folds of her white gown flutter in the evening breeze.  Arm-in-arm they climb the steps of the wide front porch.  The groom slips a key from his vest pocket and opens the front door.  As they step inside, the house welcomes them content in the knowledge that now it has become a home.

Words and Photos: The Bake Shop

When I finished my master’s degree in Library Science, I took myself on a congratulatory trip to Quebec City, where I spent a long weekend exploring the historic walled city and snapping photos.  While wandering down a cobbled street, this wooden rabbit caught my eye and inspired a romantic and winsome photo essay.

Photo by L.A. LeVasseur, 1998

Photo by L.A. LeVasseur, 1998

At exactly 5:00, the bells in the church tower rang and the young man rounded the corner onto the Rue Saint-Paul.  He had left his office earlier than usual despite his secretary’s questions about that evening’s conference call.  Above him on the cliff overlooking the Saint Lawrence River, the roof of the Chateau Frontenac shone in the late afternoon sun.  Momentarily distracted by the iconic view of the famous hotel, he halted, but then set out again, quickening his pace.  He had to reach the bake shop before she closed for the day.

Moments later, he reached his destination and stood beneath  her open window.  Dainty lace curtains fluttered in the summer breeze.  He stooped, hands on his knees, trying to compose himself as he breathed in the warm scent of cinnamon.  The wooden rabbit she kept on the sill stood guard over a wicker basket that was probably filled with hot, fresh doughnuts or perhaps chocolate cookies.  He took off his aviator sunglasses and smiled at the toy sentry, which seemed to beckon him inside.

As he straightened and adjusted his suit coat and tie, she appeared in the mauve-framed window.  Her honey-colored curls were pulled back from her freckled face and her nose was smudged with flour.  She wore a cheerful yellow apron over a sleeveless floral dress.  Her arms were tanned and toned.  Reaching for the basket, she glanced down into the street and her bright blue eyes met his.

Mesmerized, she gazed into his hopeful grey eyes and slowly smiled.  There he was again!  Carefully, she stepped back and closed the window, still watching him.  She placed the basket on one of the round, cafe tables scattered across the hardwood floor and turned to the door.  Today, he would finally step inside and into her life.

Words and Photos: The Tearoom

On my first visit to St. Andrews in Scotland, my friend, Susan, and I stumbled upon a charming tearoom located on the edge of the sea.  The name of the establishment made me laugh: Crumbs Pavilion Tearoom.  When I returned home, I wrote this photo essay sparked by the photo I took that afternoon in St. Andrews.

Photo by L. LeVasseur, 1995

Photo by L. LeVasseur, 1995

As soon as she spies the tearoom from the crest of the hill, Sage can’t help smiling.  The compact building sits squarely on the edge of the cliff above the calm, clear ocean.  The summer sun shines down from the azure sky bathing its coral-colored walls in curtains of golden light.  The murmur of voices and the clatter of china and silverware blend with the steady hum of the surf on the beach below.

For her, Crumbs Pavilion Tearoom is a favorite old haunt from her childhood.  She and her pen pal, Linda, who lived on the Isle of Skye, met face-to-face for the very first time at the tearoom.  Shy with each other after their initial greeting, the girls exchanged curious glances as they stood silently at the counter waiting to order Wall’s ice cream bars. Sage asked for a Magnum White and Linda chose almond.  Finally, as they sat side by side on the sea wall, swinging their legs and biting into the thick chocolate that coated the rich vanilla ice cream, they began to talk.  For years, Sage continued to meet Linda at Crumbs each summer.  As they moved from college to first careers and then to marriage, they somehow had let the tradition go.  Until now.  

Linda waits for her at the doorway of the tearoom.  She holds the hand of a young girl, who has straw-colored braids and sports a pair of glamorous white sunglasses.  Catching her breath, Sage feels like she has stepped back in time.  The child is the spitting image of Linda at the same age.  Swept away on a wave of fond memories, Sage laughs like a carefree girl and runs down the hill.