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The idea of one photo a week was quite popular in 2024, and it encouraged participants to take photos and showcase them without having to create a whole layout for them.

In 2025, I will offer you a little twist on this. Again, the idea is only to showcase a single photo at a time. You can showcase them as a flashcard, emphasizing the letter (you can use these free cards as a basis to create your own). Of course, if you want a different format, you can use a polaroid frame, a slide, or a playing card (like Susan was doing in 2024). Choose the format you want, and keep it throughout the year. But just make sure to emphasize the first letter!

Every 2 weeks, you will be asked to take a picture of something, at home (or around your home) that starts with a specific letter of the alphabet. The goal is just to be on the lookout for ANYTHING that can be photographed. You can stage the object however you want, or just take a picture of it in its natural environment. For example, you can showcase your favorite Mug, or your Pillow, or your Fireplace.

You can practice your photography skills if you want, but you can just capture things as they are.

Let's just encourage each other.

This is a no-pressure thread.

And if you skip a letter or two, you can always come back. You know your alphabet so you can easily catch up, whenever you need to.

Let's continue with the letter G. It could be your sturdy Glasses, a well-used Grater, your cozy Gas fireplace, or the trusty Garbage can in the kitchen!

What will you showcase?

Posted

G is for "Glasses (Eclipse)". My cousin, her husband and 2 granddaughters came to my house to see the eclipse a year ago. Since she was a former elementary teacher, she did some research about watching the eclipse with kids. Her granddaughters were 5th grade and 7th grade at the time. One thing she found was using paper plates to hold the glasses. She brought the items needed with her and that morning we all made our own holders. I was very glad she thought of this as I couldn't keep the eclipse glasses in place over my regular glasses. I had no problems with this. It was a fun day and I still have them displayed on my bulletin board in my office. That bulletin board has been hanging in that spot since the late 60's and still has stuff my high school years on it! (Never thought of using it for the letter "B")

ABC_G.jpg

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Posted

Rene, I tried that script for my G entry. Here's G = Grater. I use it all the time. I prefer it to the fancier rotary versions. I guess it could also qualify as Gold Grater! 😉

ALPHABET G FOR GRATER_600.jpg

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Posted (edited)

The letter G had me puzzled for a while and the word "grater" didn't came to mind. But then my eye fell on this copper guild mastermark that is in a small holder in our "office" - just a room but we call it our office ðŸ˜‰ It has a diameter of only 4.4 cm and was issued in 1780 to a relative of mine on my mom's side of the family. In those days there were guilds for the trades, like fishmongers, butchers, bakers, masons etc. You started as an apprentice for a master of the guild and after a couple of years when you were ready, you had to deliver a piece of work, your masterpiece that showed the guild that you had learned all there was to learn. If the guild approved you got the master title and a guild mastermark to prove it, which allowed you to start - in this case - your own bakery.  On one side of the guild mastermark is the name of my ancestor and the word "Mr Bakker" (Bakker meaning baker) and on the other side is a windmill and stalks of wheat.

AlphabetPhoto-G-600.jpg

Edited by Corrie Kinkel
forgot something
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Posted
  On 3/29/2025 at 6:53 PM, Corrie Kinkel said:

The letter G had me puzzled for a while and the word "grater" didn't came to mind. But then my eye fell on this copper guild mastermark that is in a small holder in our "office" - just a room but we call it our office ðŸ˜‰ It has a diameter of only 4.4 cm and was issued in 1780 to a relative of mine on my mom's side of the family. In those days there were guilds for the trades, like fishmongers, butchers, bakers, masons etc. You started as an apprentice for a master of the guild and after a couple of years when you were ready, you had to deliver a piece of work, your masterpiece that showed the guild that you had learned all there was to learn. If the guild approved you got the master title and a guild mastermark to prove it, which allowed you to start - in this case - your own bakery.  On one side of the guild mastermark is the name of my ancestor and the word "Mr Bakker" (Bakker meaning baker) and on the other side is a windmill and stalks of wheat.

AlphabetPhoto-G-600.jpg

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Great story of the history of this special piece.

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Posted
  On 3/29/2025 at 4:35 PM, Ann Seeber said:

Rene, I tried that script for my G entry. Here's G = Grater. I use it all the time. I prefer it to the fancier rotary versions. I guess it could also qualify as Gold Grater! 😉

ALPHABET G FOR GRATER_600.jpg

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I've never seen a gold one, I love it. the cutout looks great (grate-r?).  

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Posted
  On 3/29/2025 at 6:53 PM, Corrie Kinkel said:

The letter G had me puzzled for a while and the word "grater" didn't came to mind. But then my eye fell on this copper guild mastermark that is in a small holder in our "office" - just a room but we call it our office ðŸ˜‰ It has a diameter of only 4.4 cm and was issued in 1780 to a relative of mine on my mom's side of the family. In those days there were guilds for the trades, like fishmongers, butchers, bakers, masons etc. You started as an apprentice for a master of the guild and after a couple of years when you were ready, you had to deliver a piece of work, your masterpiece that showed the guild that you had learned all there was to learn. If the guild approved you got the master title and a guild mastermark to prove it, which allowed you to start - in this case - your own bakery.  On one side of the guild mastermark is the name of my ancestor and the word "Mr Bakker" (Bakker meaning baker) and on the other side is a windmill and stalks of wheat.

AlphabetPhoto-G-600.jpg

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oh my gosh, this is really interesting.  Again, your letter G fits perfectly with the story.  Well photographed, I can see all the details and it is really detailed.  The craftmanship of this Mastermark is unbelievable. 

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Posted

I know what you're going to say: this doesn't look like a giraffe! And when I see it up close like this, I'm not sure either. But it's a much-loved (and slobbered on) dog toy that we call the giraffe. None of my dogs over the years have destroyed their toys. Licked 'em, carried 'em, worried 'em, but not chewed to pieces. (The toy does have a long neck!)

2025 P26 alphabet G.jpg

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Posted
  On 3/31/2025 at 11:07 PM, Julie Magerka said:

I know what you're going to say: this doesn't look like a giraffe! And when I see it up close like this, I'm not sure either. But it's a much-loved (and slobbered on) dog toy that we call the giraffe. None of my dogs over the years have destroyed their toys. Licked 'em, carried 'em, worried 'em, but not chewed to pieces. (The toy does have a long neck!)

2025 P26 alphabet G.jpg

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That's so awesome.  Your dogs treat their toys better than I treated mine.  

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Posted
  On 3/31/2025 at 11:07 PM, Julie Magerka said:

I know what you're going to say: this doesn't look like a giraffe! And when I see it up close like this, I'm not sure either. But it's a much-loved (and slobbered on) dog toy that we call the giraffe. None of my dogs over the years have destroyed their toys. Licked 'em, carried 'em, worried 'em, but not chewed to pieces. (The toy does have a long neck!)

2025 P26 alphabet G.jpg

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So cute and a lovely story about your dog. I was never one for having or playing with stuffed animals, not even a teddy!

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Posted
  9 hours ago, Corrie Kinkel said:

So cute and a lovely story about your dog. I was never one for having or playing with stuffed animals, not even a teddy!

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I wasn't big on girlie things like dolls, but I loved my teddys and other stuffed animals. I still have a few of them.

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