CHRISTMAS CARD

CHRISTMAS CARD


The first Christmas cards were commissioned by Sir Henry Cole and illustrated by John Callcott Horsley in London on the 1st of May 1843. The central picture showed three generations of a family raising a toast to the card's recipient: on either side were scenes of charity, with food and clothing being given to the poor. 
Early English cards rarely showed winter or religious themes, instead favoring flowers, fairies and other fanciful designs that reminded the recipient of the approach of spring. Humorous and sentimental images of children and animals were popular, as were increasingly elaborate shapes, decorations and materials. At Christmas 1873, the lithograph firm Prang and Mayer began creating greeting cards for the popular market in England.  The popularity of his cards led to cheap imitations that eventually drove him from the market. The advent of the postcard spelled the end for elaborate Victorian-style cards, but by the 1920s,  cards with envelopes had returned. 


We have done a invisible friend with Christmas cards, and we have a lot of fun, making them and receiving them. The English teacher's hung by a thread in the hallway, as English home.


I really liked making Christmas cards and I hope back to do something similar.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                (photo Christmas card I received)

ANNE OF GREEN GABLES

ANNE OF GREEN GABLES


The name of  this book is anne of green gables,  the author is Lucy Maud Montgomery, the public in 1908 in Canada.

Ana is orphaned at birth, when her parents, Walter and Bertha Shirley, died of typhoid fever.
 Marilla Cuthbert and Mrs. Matthew Cuthbert, 
middle-aged brothers who live together at Green Gables, a farm in a small town called Avonlea, decide to adopt an orphan boy from an orphanage in Nova Scotia to help them with the farm.
Due to a series of mishaps, ending in the roof is a girl of eleven named Anne Shirley. Ana is bright and insightful, eager to be accommodating, but dissatisfied with her name, her pale freckled skin, and especially with her long braids of red hair.
Ana is a girl with lots of imagination, filled with joy to the lives of the two brothers and the other inhabitants of Avonlea and sharing adventures with his inseparable friend Diana Barry and his love, Gilbert Blythe.
                
This book is very bautiful,  I like this book because is romantic and has some adventure