Tuesday, January 29, 2019

A tribute to Earl Martin





Earl Martin retired from Goddard Space Flight Center as a lead aircraft engineer and mechanic in 1991. He was a veteran having served in the Navy during WWII. He turned his woodworking hobby into a small business. Most of his creations were toys but he also made nativities. We first saw his work at the Christmas bazaar at Ss. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church Holiday Arts and Crafts Festival. We returned for several years buying one of his nativities at each one. We discovered another connection-he was the father of Sandy Hemphill. At that time Sandy's husband, David, was not our Pastor (he became our Pastor in 1997).



Stable by Earl Martin. Ceramic figures by Carole




I purchased the patterns for the two white nativities and asked Earl to make them for me.

The first nativity we bought from Earl Martin


It is
This nativity music box was Earl's prototype for future ones. He made it from a pew he purchased from his church and he gave it to us one Christmas. 

This is designed as a toy. Each piece has a magnet and there is a corresponding magnet glued to the base. Earl's wife, Peggy, did the painting.

A puzzle. All of the pieces fit into the stable which can also be used as a base for putting the pieces.




Monday, January 28, 2019

2018-19 Nativity Display

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We displayed 870 sets this year, down from 925 from last year because we took some out of the display to make it less crowded. 














There are more than 200 nativity sets/ornaments on the tree. We also put angels, stars, and crosses on the tree. 



















Saturday, January 26, 2019

It's been a long time since I worked on this blog

      It has been a long time since I worked on this blog. I reviewed it today to see what I have to do to bring it up to date. For the most part I add pictures in existing categories. In reviewing this blog I see that there are new categories to be added as well as lots of pictures to be added to existing one. I hope you will enjoy looking at my blog. It is by no means complete.
      I began the blog when we were living in Costa Rica for three months working as Mission Nannys. In the past few years we have been taking some of our nativities off of display and putting out some new ones. In 2017 we displayed 924 and this year's display (2018) we have 870 (more than 200 are on the tree).
     We begin putting up our display the beginning of November and have had it completed by Thanksgiving. We leave it up until the end of January hoping that many people will come to see it.
     I enter the Anne Arundel County Fair each year with at least three ceramic nativities (two in "Ceramics" and one in "Christmas") and one plastic canvas needlepoint nativity. Jack once entered a silk flower floral arrangement in "Christmas"). I have not paid too much attention to the "Christmas" categories and have always had to enter in "Table decoration below 12"). My entry this year got disqualified because the judge thought the imprinted  mold marking of 1999 meant it was not made in the 2018 entry year. This was actually a blessing because the lady in charge of Christmas is adding Nativity as a category. (The past two years haven't had any other nativities in the entire fair.). My goal in entering the fair is to remind people of the real meaning of Christmas.