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piratelassie

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About piratelassie

  • Birthday 07/19/1986

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  • AIM
    Oceanotter349
  • Website URL
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Profile Information

  • Location
    Conanicut Island, Narragansett Bay, Atlantic Ocean, USA
  • Interests
    plunderin' the great ships o' Narragansett Bay in my good piratical kayak<br><br>Really, reading, writing, kayaking, singing, dressing like a pirate, knitting, playing ice hockey
  1. Nope, it was actually my first real project. As long as you have basic knowledge of a sewing machine and access to someone who can walk you through the more complicated piecing, it's pretty simple...just time consuming
  2. Your preferred mode of transportation is a boat...even over land. You are not fazed by music/movie piracy. After all, you're just carrying on a proud tradition. You have had nautical/pirate expressions on the whiteboard on the door to your dorm room for over a week...and your roomate is afraid to erase them. Your main question while clothes shopping is Can this look piratical?
  3. me likes!!! 'ow much did those beauties set ye back?
  4. thank you for fixing it. I can't get me mind around technology
  5. One of my friends sent me this site and thought I'd share it with you www. tellnotales.com enjoy!!!
  6. I agree! The ship in yer wig reminds me of a book wot I had when I were a wee thing. twas called "The Lady With A Ship On Her Head". Twas about a lady dressed like you in the picture, and she goes down to the beach to get sea shells fer a headdress fer a fancy dress ball and a ship sails onta her 'ead and she doesn't know it. Tis quite amusin' really, but I don't remember who tis by. Anyway, great work anyway. I gots ta put up a pic of me coat that I sewed from the pattern, but I must warn ye, the work pales in comparison ta yers.
  7. Adam Nicolson's first book is really good too. Not on the same lines as God's Secretaries though. It's called Sea Room, and it's about him inheriting and living on the Shiant Islands in the outer Hebrides. Really interesting, and evocative of the place and the myths and stuff surrounding it. And, it's now in print in the US!
  8. Jenny, I definitely see your point, and agree that it is a good thing to imagine and fantasize about history. That, in some form or other is why we're all here. However, I think that it is important to realize that there is a fundamental difference between the history that there actually was and the history that many people wish there was. That said, as long as you don't mistake the romanticised for the real, which was often drudgery and completely unromantic, I say fantasize all you want. I know I do. I don't think anyone here was meaning to knock anyone, I know I wasn't, so calm down. put up yer cutlass and have a glass to friendly debate
  9. I know what you're saying, and you're absolutely right -- it's just my taste in imagining myself in the piratical days of old never involved a fantasy wherein my dashing pirate captain husband sets off once more to sea while I remain at home with our eighteen kiddies to clean the house, milk the cow, churn the butter, weave the wool, tend the gardens, beat the servants, give birth to the nineteenth kid, etc etc etc. It's not the wishing-for-days-of-old that bugged me, it was what parts of the days of old were being wished for. I have a passionate loathing of romantic novels, historical or otherwise: This (besides the bit about wanting to stay at home with the kids while the husband has a life) is what really bothered me. I read in a psych textbook once that the majority of rape scenes (and that's what this is, because "sex by force" is the definition of rape, okay) in romantic stories are portrayed as forced and violent -- but the woman enjoys it anyway. Oddly enough, ACTUAL rape incidents are enjoyed by 0% of the victims. (Actual statistic. Believe me.) I'm not trying to be negative ... I suppose there's nothing wrong with liking a story like this. But it really bothers the heck outta me. I don't dream of the days when a husband could go off and see the world while the woman stayed at home and raised the children, and I don't like glorified rape scenes. The very idea offends me. *climbs off of soapbox* Okay. Sorry. I'm done now. This is just one of my biggest pet peeves of all time (I take my literature seriously), so I couldn't help it. Sorry to all you romantic literature readers out there if I offended you. I didn't mean to offend anyone; I'm just venting about the genre itself, not its readers. Feel free to take a pot-shot at the formulaic approach of every heroic fantasy novel since Tolkien's "Ring" series if it'll make you feel better. (You wouldn't get any arguments from me on that subject anyway.) I completely agree! I worked at the Gilbert Stuart Birthplace (the guy who painted GW on the dollar bill) and had to dress up in colonial costume and guide people around demonstrating the stuff in the house. I don't care how much hard work builds character, those irons were heavy. And women really didn't have much of a life back then, as you said. Oh, for a book that is serious and literary as well as romantic, involving, not pirates sadly but whaling and a woman at sea, I would definitely recommend Ahab's Wife. And if you're still looking for historical fiction with a bit of romance, Pirates! by Celia Rees is good. Lots of adventure, enough romance to satisfy those who are looking for romance, and a pretty quick read, despite its 300 some odd pages. Pretty well written for YA stuff too. well that's me tuppence worth on the topic
  10. good score, good battle scenes. I liked the beginning a lot, but I don't remember much else besides liking it, and laughing hysterically at the corny dialog (bad dog, anyone?) I saw it a while ago. maybe I'm due for watching again
  11. Never seen the movie, but the book were one of me favorites. Yer opinion o' it makes me want ta watch it. In me boatloads o' spare time (really I gots none whatever). Do you know if they made a movie o' the sequel, Catriona?
  12. Probably one of my favorite books!!!!! It's completely hysterical! Especially the whole bit about page 115. Y'know, I think it would make a good movie, sort of along the lines of Robin Hood: Men in Tights
  13. Like Maria, I found mine at a thrift store. They're actually womens size 7 rainboots, but they're made out of something that looks and feels like distressed leather, and they're waterproof! And they were only $4! The only problem is that they don't have buckets. Oh well, can't have everything I guess.
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