Hey there, all you wonderful people!
Thank you so much for reading our palmermissions.blogspot.com these past two years. We may update it occasionally, but we have a brand new website with its own blog. We'll be using that blog from now on.
Our new website address is refugeesewingsociety.webs.com
Please take a look!
Thank you for your prayers and support.
Much love --
Cathy and Tim Palmer
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
A snood by any other name . . .
What's a snood and why do I need one? Bhagirathi and Dil (below) from Bhutan -- along with others in our yarn group --made some really pretty snoods this week.
I thought it would be fun for the ladies to model the works of art they'd made. Snoods were first popular in the Victorian age -- and now they're haute couture again.
Man Maya's lovely gray snood catches her long hair and sets off her pretty earrings.
A snood fits over your hair differently than a hat does. Harka shows us how it sits slightly back on the head.
A large snood can hold a lot of long hair.
Fancy a spot of tea with Sharon?
Why, thank you kindly. I believe I shall!
While wearing a snood, one cannot hold back a smile . . . as Saraswati demonstrates.

Godeliva, from Congo, made a snood that fits more like a cap. Pretty snood on a pretty lady!
If you think you need a snood, you're right! We sell them for $10 each. This coming Friday, we'll be having a big market at Clarkston Community Center. Come on over and snood up!
Man Maya's lovely gray snood catches her long hair and sets off her pretty earrings.
While wearing a snood, one cannot hold back a smile . . . as Saraswati demonstrates.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Devi's Day
This afternoon, I went to a puja -- or pooja -- on behalf of one of my students. Devi's birthday is today, so everyone gathered in her home to worship and celebrate. She's on the left with two of her friends.
A puja involves the worship of one or more Hindu gods. One corner of the dining room in Devi's apartment had been set aside and decorated with a string of lights and various plants and food.
A priest sat in another corner of the room. Each person present knelt before him while he sprinkled flower petals on their head and wound a red string around their right wrist. The small round glowing picture on the floor was the object of worship today. I heard several different names of who it was -- Vishnu, Durga, and Devi were all mentioned -- so I'm not sure who was being honored.
Though the puja was given in celebration of Devi, she and the other women were working very hard in the kitchen! Here, Durga and Jasoda were helping prepare food for guests.
Naina went around with more helpings of the delicious curry.
This was my plate. On the upper left is a dish made of rice, coconut, milk, sugar, and butter. Beside it on the left is "pickle." I've learned that Bhutanese people have all kinds of things they call "pickle." Some are like what we call salsa. This was more of a cilantro flavored cabbage slaw.
On the lower part of the plate we had a collection of fruit -- papaya, apple, sugar cane, and grape. Next is roti, a fried bread that is yummy. Beside it, on the right, is vegetable curry.
I sat beside my friends, Netra and Radhika.
These men welcomed me at the table. They enjoyed practicing their English with me. They're getting very good!
I'm a lefty, and it's hard to eat right-handed. In most cultures, it is very rude to eat with your left hand. I'm able to handle a spoon pretty well, and I'm learning to pick up food with my fingers, too.
Maybe the best part was bringing home bowls of delicious food to share with Tim and Andrei.
Dhanibad! "Thank you" to my wonderful Bhutanese friends for sharing this special meal with me. And happy birthday, Devi!
I sat beside my friends, Netra and Radhika.
Sunday, May 9, 2010
The usual silliness!
Tim turned 60! And how amazing that Dunkin' Donuts all over the nation celebrated his birthday, too!
Almost immediately, we got orders for 10 boxes! It took Amy, Sharon (below), and me a while to assemble all the components, but we finally mailed off our first one!
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