Today Christians around the world will be celebrating Palm Sunday. The ladies of my church, Independent Presbyterian Church, spent Friday morning making these lovely crosses for all of us to wear today in rememberance. It's a technique that I admire but have not learned. I guess I'm just pleased to just watch them and be able to photograph the beautiful results.
18 comments:
I never tire of the dear palm trees here!
Aloha & Joyous Palm Sunday,
from Hawaii my Friend
Comfort Spiral
Lovely photos, Virginia. Love that you've shown the hands working.
Thanks for showing us...
The palm cross looks great...and I think it`s hard work to make them...
The pictures and mood are lovely.
Here is a companion to them:
http://jerusalemhillsdailyphoto.blogspot.com/2008/03/palm-sunday-preparations.html
Wishing you a joyous Palm Sunday.
Dina has already written what «Louis» was thinking!
Blessings to you as we enter Holy Week.
I remember you introduced me to this wonderful custom last year. What I don't remember is whether the crosses are actually made from pieces of palm frond.
I've never seen them so tiny. what a great idea. I love the photo of the woman's hands making one.
Happy Palm Sunday!
May the joy of The Season be with you and yours!
Wonderful hands portrait.
Yes, these are palm fronds that are stripped into these tiiny slivers and wound to make these wonderful crosses. I have mine on right now!
V
love the shade of green you captured V
I had no idea it was Palm Sunday until I went downtown and saw all the people selling their very intricate palms.
But I certainly wasn't able to get "big hands, tiny cross" shot like you.
That is just so very good. Elderly handy still full of dexterity and obviously lovingly at work.
Nicely portrayed, V. I envy people with the manual dexterity to be able to do that kind of fine hand work!
Wonderful hands shot...very expressive...
seriously good image, V
To me this is a very nice shot of "working hands".
Beautiful composition and light too.
I remember making these when I went St-Mary's-on-the-Highlands in Birmingham. We sat at tables in Randolph Hall with palm strips, scissors, straight pins ad huge buckets of water. We folded then pinned a pin on the back then pit them in wayer to stay fresh for Palm Sunday. They were blessed by the priest then given out. When Palm Sunday was over we were either to bury the cross in the earth or return it to be burned for ashes for the next year's Ash Wednesday.
No throwing anything blessed in the trash!!!
Post a Comment