Wednesday, 31 December 2014
ABC Wednesday: "Y" is for Purl City Yarns @Purlcityyarns
Purl City Yarns at 62 Port Street are more than a knitwear shop. They run workshops and classes, such as knit and natter groups and movie nights. Hey, they even write a blog too.
I'm linking up on this New Year's Eve with other "Y"s and wherefores.. to ABC Wednesday. Have a good New Year's Eve, whatever you choose to do!
Tuesday, 30 December 2014
End of year at Allotment @AllotmentBar
Allotment in the NQ opened last summer and is a spacious bar and restaurant with a rustic but cool edge. From their themed website to the shabby chic benches and tables, it looks the part. I ate here on Saturday and the food quality was high, portion sizes were just right to generous, the presentation stylish and the crockery nicely vintage. I was disappointed, of course, to see few vegetarian options though and no vegan meals at all. I;'d like to see that fixed on the menus, at the expense of some of the meat-heavy cruelty options, and then I would happily eat drink and be merry here throughout 2015.
Sunday, 28 December 2014
Weekend Reflections: Snow play and a good read...
Taking part in Weekend Reflections. Yesterday, on the third day of Christmas, we were sent 3 cm (maybe more) of
snow. Time for a morning walk at Dunham Forest golf and country club. It turned into a
magical stroll as the sun rose between the bare trees.
It was a lovely day all round as after this I headed into town
to meet a friend for lunch at Northern Quarter’s rustic and enjoyable Allotment
restaurant and bar. Then home for family cocktails.
Saturday, 27 December 2014
Snow at dusk yesterday...
Snow fell here yesterday early evening, the first proper snow fall for two years in Altrincham I think. Not much snow gets here as it, like much of Manchester is low lying. This area is 30 to 60 metres above sea level, unlike the hillier outermost regions of Greater Manchester and beyond, such as Oldham at 213 metres, Alderley Edge at 215metres or Snake Pass at 510 metres. It looked lovely, and hopefully as you read this I am out walking in it on Saturday daytime...
Friday, 26 December 2014
Skywatch Friday: St Stephen's stroll in the country
A bracing walk in the countryside is the order of the day... Saint Stephen, fresh from all that feasting, would surely have approved. By the Bridgewater Canal near Dunham Town. My Boxing Day contribution to Skywatch Friday.
Thursday, 25 December 2014
Merry Christmas from Mancunian Wave
Thanks to Holly Sutton-Brand for this great image of Manchester Town Hall, taken at the Albert Square Christmas lights switch-on back on 7 November, but which seems appropriate for today.
Merry Christmas - may yours be peaceful, happy and cruelty-free!
Wednesday, 24 December 2014
Old School festive in Dunham Town
The Old School in Dunham Town, looking subtly festive with wreath and matching plants. The sign above the door reads: "This school was erected in 1759 for the benefit of the township of Dunham Massey according to the will of Thomas Walton Gent."
Tuesday, 23 December 2014
The last Cornerhouse Christmas #SaveCHBuildings
This is the last Christmas that the Cornerhouse will be in in its present buildings before the Spring move to Albion Street. We had a nice works meal and drink in the first floor cafe bar last week. I love their wooden tree- trust an arthouse cinema and gallery to be stylish. In the main screen building It's A Wonderful Life and Northern Soul are being advertised. It's the last day today before they close for the festive break.
Taking part in Our World Tuesday.
Meanwhile the capitalist vultures are circling to demolish this 1900 building and throw up another soulless glass and steel office/hotel block. Please get involved with Save the Cornerhouse building campaign.
Our first campaign meet-up, come along! https://www.facebook.com/events/1530100190609728/?ref=22 … #saveCHbuildings #cornerhouse
Monday, 22 December 2014
Monday Mural: Print and Paste mountains
Here’s a wonderful winter poster on the Print and Paste space.
It reminds me of those 1930s / 1950s winter tourism and ski adverts, only
without the text. I think it is the work of @Heystudio in
Barcelona thanks to @m_onestudios.
It was put up in early November but I have been saving it for this last Monday Mural before Christmas. The current poster is of The A Team's Mr T as Santa, which is not an image that does anything for me.
Sunday, 21 December 2014
The Manchester Carols
"These carols were written in Manchester in 2007 and first performed by children from several Manchester schools at The Royal Northern College of Music (and again in 2008). All of us who worked on them – librettist, composer, artist, conductor, teachers, musicians and singers – live and work in that great city. And so these are, and will forever be, The Manchester Carols."
Saturday, 20 December 2014
Weekend Reflections: Greengate Square fountain
Greengate Square's dancing fountains in winter colours look pretty but not inviting on these cold days. Taking part in Weekend Reflections.
Friday, 19 December 2014
Skywatch Friday: Misty Manchester morn
Last Saturday morning I awoke and saw what I thought was low cloud on my 8th floor balcony; it was actually fog all the way down to ground level. I wandered through a muffled sounding and quiet city centre in the early morning to see the sun rise over frosty fields in Cheshire by the time I was on a London-bound train. It turned out to be one of those blue sky, crisp days that we had so few of in autumn but which I hope to see plenty of now that we are about to head into winter. My contribution to Skywatch Friday.
P.S Don't be fooled by the Royal Exchange clock, which hasn't worked for several years. It is poetically stuck at midnight (or noon) ...
Thursday, 18 December 2014
Ice rink repeats... @Spinningfields
Wednesday, 17 December 2014
ABC Wednesday: "W" is for the Wheel
Today's photo is taken by Tim Sutton-Brand from the summit of the Manchester Wheel, with "W" being this week's ABC Wednesday letter of choice.
Tuesday, 16 December 2014
Familiar faces
Some Christmas markets return year after year to the same spot- this lampshade and wood carvings seller on Albert Square always provides an attractive display. The markets end their 5 week run on Sunday, so the countdown has begun for the 300+stalls before they pack their wagons and head homewards, to locations from Lancashire to Lapponia.
Taking part in Our World Tuesday - take a coffee break glimpse at places all over the world today.
Monday, 15 December 2014
Monday Mural: Penguin Parade
You've got to smile at this mural on Tib Street by Pete McKee. I showed the other side on 24 November. Composition-wise I liked the way they seem to be about to surround the unsuspecting man on his phone. Taking part in the wonderful Monday Mural meme, sharing innovative street art around the world.
Sunday, 14 December 2014
Castlefield 'Off the High Street' Christmas Market
A weekend Christmas market worth visiting is the Off The High Street one in Campfield Arcade at Castlefield. Some great photography for sake along with, craftwork, vintage items from around the world - and a big refreshments bar. It'll be less crowded than the Christmas Markets elsewhere in the city centre- where masses flock at weekends.
Saturday, 13 December 2014
Weekend Reflections: Bridgewater Hall this autumn
The Midland Hotel reflects in the entrance of The Bridgewater Hall from a few weeks ago. (although it is still autumn for another week!) Taking part in Weekend Reflections.
Friday, 12 December 2014
Skywatch Friday: Chapel Steet dusk
Looking down Chapel Street at this time of year can be gloomy- as can be everywhere in the northern hemisphere with days that rarely, barely rise above a dusk grey light. There are blue skies as I post this though, which lifts the spirits. What else is at Skywatch Friday?
Thursday, 11 December 2014
Cheese and whine at Monroe's this Christmas
While much of the city centre and suburbs go for tasteful and stylish decorations, there's something reassuringly old school, if a little cheesy, about Monroe's pub and hotel on London Road.
The pub has had a tough couple of years, with the demolition of the iconic Twisted Wheel club (home to Northern Soul) next door and then being dwarfed by the inconsiderate construction of yet another hideous, out of character, unwanted by most of us mega hotel all around it. Time to boycott the 330 room German budget hotel... There's a depressing video here.
Wednesday, 10 December 2014
ABC Wednesday: "V" is for vintage Photomaton booth
ABC Wednesday veers towards the letter "V". In a corner of Fred Aldous' arts, craft and creativity mega shop, stands this late 1960s (?) vintage "photo-me" booth. It cost 2/- (two shillings = 10p) for the classic strip of black and white passport type photos. These were a hi-tech novelty for those of us who remember the 1970s...
There is actually a modern booth elsewhere in the shop although nothing beats a bit of vintage! Oh, and the cows?- well, who knows (moo knows?) - it's all part of the three floors of the quirky Fred Aldous wonderland on Stevenson Square.
Tuesday, 9 December 2014
M&B Braithwaite Bicycles saddles up for the last time
Maurice Braithwaite has retired and sold the family firm of M&B Braithwaite Bicycles on Stamford Road. Families have happily shopped here and had bike repairs carried out since 1947 - it's a lovely, friendly little corner shop.
Hopefully the new owners will keep it going. It's the kind of place everyone should be buying their Christmas presents from, not high street chains and multinationals that bleed the little shop keepers dry. Read the full story here.
Monday, 8 December 2014
Monday Mural: Seven Miles Out
The mural includes the Bard of Timperley Frank Sidebottom with Little Frank, plus part of the famous Stockport viaduct. I'm unsure as to what the other images represent. Would any Stopfordians care to enlighten me?
"The name Seven Miles Out itself has a direct link to Manchester, in that we are just seven miles out of one of the greatest cities in the world. Seven Miles Out was also the name of one of Stockport’s lost cultural landmarks, a boutique emporium in the 1960s situated on Wellington Road South, near where the Hatworks currently is now. "
Sunday, 7 December 2014
Power to the people! #TuitionFees
“What do we want? Free education. When do we want it? Now!”
Apologies for quality of the phone snap but no apologies for the banner's content. A strong message was shouted out by university students in Manchester on Wednesday protesting at having to suffer for four years, since the outrageous charge of £9,000 per year tuition fees was introduced. Since the Tory and so-called “Liberal Democrat” government entered power in 2010, they have ripped the heart out of society, preying on anyone who is vulnerable or disadvantaged.
Free university education used to be a basic right in the UK, funded by the taxpayers. Taxes remain the same and yet students are charged. Students used to receive grants, then they were abolished. They have to take out loans to get them through their education. So with say £6K a year loans and £9K a year tuition fees a tree year degree can lead to a student being £45K in debt when they start their first job. Don't tell me that this (Dis)United Kingdom is at all civilised or fair...
Nick Clegg MP famously reneged on his promise to oppose tuition fees once he became Deputy PM; as a result he could well be voted out of his Sheffield constituency by the large student population next May.
The Green Party seem to be the only mainstream party to oppose these tuition fees. Labour would merely reduce then to £6000. Oh that we lived in a true democratic system (not a first past the post voting system) like Finland and Sweden where the Green Party is part of their coalition governments.
Saturday, 6 December 2014
Ducking the issue, #MeatIsStillMurder
One of the many beautiful ducks on the mereside at Marbury Country Park on a walk last Friday. I fear that the sound of slaughterhouses up and down the country are echoing to the cries of millions of turkeys, geese and ducks being massacred as I type. I was pleased to see pavement slogan street art earlier this year neat the Palace theater with the hashtag #MeatIsStillMurder , from PETA .
It's so easy to be vegan or veggie at any time of year but festive recipes can be found at their society websites here (vegan) and here (veggie/vegan).
Friday, 5 December 2014
Skywatch Friday: Leicester Road sundown
Walking around suburbia at dusk at this time of year gives plenty of photo opportunities: the setting sun and silhouetted bare trees give a glow to even the most ordinary of streets, although Leicester Road is far from ordinary, with its huge 19th Century family homes. My contribution to Skywatch Friday.
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Window on Dutton Locks
A walk by the River Weaver where the waterside cottages always have a certain something photogenic about them. The lock keepers used to live in these when Dutton Locks were built in 1874. The locks were built at a time when Cheshire's thriving salt industry was at its peak and boats transported salt from Northwich to Liverpool, from where they went on to the world.
Taking part in this week's Thursday Challenge topic of "minimal", at the Spun WIth Tears website.
Wednesday, 3 December 2014
ABC Wednesday: "U" is for upcycling (ii)
26 weeks ok I gave you a "U" for upcycling for an ABC Wednesday post. Six months later here's a recent little project of mine. I wanted some 1950s atomic style fabric and found a small amount of this reproduction 1950s fabric online. With the style of the noughties chrome lamp base already fitting my idea of a take on mid Twentieth Century design, it was a simple job, although the details need a little tidying up.
Tuesday, 2 December 2014
More people at work...
Another option for yesterday's theme day photo was this shot of workers in Kendal's taken last Wednesday evening- a department store which emphasises taste in its window displays unlike some.
Monday, 1 December 2014
Theme Day: People in their workplace @MCRSanta
The City Daily Photo theme day for December was orignally People in their workplace and then it got amended to Worker.
A once a year job started weeks back, on Halloween, as Manchester council workmen and workwomen (aka Santa's little helpers?) assembled Father Christmas in Albert Square (above).
A few weeks later (below) on 10 November they were putting up the stalls for the Christmas Markets (actually more like late-autumn markets) which dominate the city centre in several locations, from the Cathedral Gardens to Spinningfields, Brazennose St to Campfield Arcade. Even the soulless and clinically commericalised Market Street has some Xmas market stalls this year.
Five mulled wine drinking, twinkling light filled festive weeks from Friday 14 November to Sunday 21 December.
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