you can connect your computer and tablet using a usb-micro -USB cable and drag and drop photos or go to the forum using your tablet and upload directly hereMy little tablet will take photos, but I don't know how to get them off the tablet onto the pc.
I'm fond of coloured and/ or textured glass, maybe because my mum encouraged me to collect sea glass as a child, who knows. Most of it went in the loft when we redecorated downstairs and is still up there. The only thing of any monetary value is a pair of "snowball" tealight holders that I bought very cheaply in a charity shop.I am a sucker for glass and china, as was my mother. I have inherited all of hers, added some of mine and inherited other bits and pieces from grandparents and great grandparents. Nothing of financial value; just nostalgic value.
It's like they're made of ice! very beautiful!The only thing of any monetary value is a pair of "snowball" tealight holders that I bought very cheaply in a charity shop.
Yes I loved them as soon as I saw them. It was only many years later someone recognised them and said they were collectable. Never had them valued as it's less than £100 and I still like them. Need to make sure my daughter knows so she can sell them once I'm gone though.It's like they're made of ice! very beautiful!
I still have my mother's Hedgerow dishes - medium plates, cream jug, sugar bowl, milk jug and gravy boat. Still have slightly better quality Woolies bone china with an odd brown modernist pattern (Royal Vale) - also my mother's - just cups, saucers, cream jug and sugar bowl. They must be 60+ years old now. Woolies used to make some pretty good china and other household goods. Most of the china I use comes from charity shops though.I was offered my sisters China, that may have been my Mum's before that. But there's so much of it, including tureens, it takes up 3 kitchen cupboards, and I don't like the pattern, so I declined.
However I still get nostalgic at the old Woolies pattern that was my childhood every day one .Who remembers Hedgerow?
We bought a set of those some years ago. Sadly they didn't last until we got a dishwasher. Very clumsy family.We had Alfred Meakin's Sunflower for everyday as I was growing up. Unfortunately as soon as my parents got a dishwasher the pattern disappeared.
When I moved to Southampton there was a very old-fashioned hardware shop nearby which had a stack of the side plates, which we snapped up. Only one left now, rather chipped, onto which we empty out the teapot.
Oh my, I'm so sorry!@Antje77 come on it's the Monday after! Need a report on the weekend now please
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