Last week, we had some of my very best friends and their sig others made their final visit to NYC before we Bryants move on. Here are a few of my favorite memories with them.
Best friends for close to a decade, Times Square
Spring attempting to spring, Rockefeller Center
So meta: Lego Rockefeller Center, in Rockefeller Center (Dave, especially, seems enthralled)
Three girls, two boats, one picture + one photobomber, Central Park
The best $12/hour you will ever spend in NYC, Central Park
What my husband will do when I suggest taking a picture with the pretty tree, Central Park
The Bull statue + the only Americans waiting in line to take a picture with it (us!), Wall Street
Manhattan's first park, Financial District
New York Stock Exchange, quiet on a Sunday, Financial District
Gazing over to Brooklyn, South Street Seaport
My masterpiece of a photograph: a few months ago, I got this special edition Metro Card, issued for the 100th anniversary of Grand Central Station. Here, I line it up with the modern day Grand Central. Cool, right?!
All last week I felt sneezy and snotty and miserable, and then we had friends come to visit (more on that later!), and I'm just now recovering from my cold (which was awful) and my houseguests (who were awesome). I'm finally climbing back out of my cave with some finished garments!
I ventured into a part of the sewing world I had never been before: lingerie! All in one Saturday afternoon, I busted out the following pieces, just for lounging around the house. First up, some delicate lace shorties:
These guys are the bloomers option from Nutmeg by Colette Patterns. The embroidered eyelet (from Fabric.com) had holes in the design, so I lined them in white cotton muslin. The border scallops are just perfection. Even though I shortened them a little from the pattern, they still have about a 3-inch inseam (which is longer than some of my old shorts from Old Navy!), so they are still appropriate if one needed to, say, run out in the hallway of one's apartment to change out the laundry.
Next up, a pattern I had been wanting to try ever since she released it for free on her blog a few months ago: the Amerson Undies by Madalynne!
The basic shape of my pair of undies is the same as her original pattern, but I did make some minor changes. I made casings for the elastic at the waistband and leg openings instead of sewing the elastic on the outside. I also added a little ruffle along the leg openings in a contrasting fabric because the undies were turning out a little cheeky for my personal liking, and I didn't want to make them even more so by taking up fabric for the casing! Instead, I cut 2" strips of the contrast fabric and added them to the legs and turned them under like bias binding. I actually really, really like how the contrast turned out. (From Fabric.com: roses fabric, yellow floral fabric is sold out)
Last but not least, my lingerie sewing "masterpiece" (which I sadly do not like ON my body at all, but think it looks great on the hanger!). This is the bralette and tap shorts from Nutmeg by Colette Patterns. I had a grand vision of a classic black-and-white ensemble that I figured out about halfway through looked suspiciously like a French maid's costume. Not what I was going for.
So, I decided to break it up by using the roses fabric from my Amerson Undies for the back straps, which I think ended up as a nicely quirky combination. However, I seriously did not understand the directions for how to sew the back parts to the front part, and improvised that to a not-so-perfect solution.
I used black silk charmeuse for the tap pants, and used the "wrong" side of the fabric from the yoke and the "right" side for the legs, and I love the contrast of the textures. I took about 3 inches off the length of the inseam from the original pattern. As I said, I love the way this looks on the hanger, but something about it on just doesn't work! Some garments are best left to be admired from afar.
I would still call my lingerie sewing foray 2/3 successful - that's a win!
Basically, the memorial is a big mausoleum that holds both General Grant and his wife. And it has all the typical American-hero-memorial type things in it, like flags and maps and informational plaques.
And domed ceilings,
ceiling murals,
and a set of coffins in a mildly eerie marble basement area.
Last night, we had the enormous pleasure and perhaps only-chance-left-in-this-lifetime opportunity to see Fleetwood Mac at Madison Square Garden. (This was our Christmas present to ourselves!) We were somewhat wary of our seats, since they were in a section to the side-back of the stage, but were ecstatically surprised to find that they were probably some of the best seats in the house. Stevie entranced us all, Lindsey tore it up, Mick drummed the heck out of everything, and ol' McVie just kind of stood over to the side jammin' in his own world, but all together, they were simply magical.
Now let's talk about Stevie Nick's mystical shawl-dancing, which was the best.
Exhibit "Gold Dust Woman":
Exhibit "Sara":
Exhibit "Stand Back":
Amazing. So much twirling.
(And as we walked out, we had to make a stop at the Hulk Hogan display.)
This post is very long, and most enjoyable if you ever watched and loved Dawson's Creek and/or One Tree Hill. Full-on fangirl mode starts now.
Once upon a time in 2004, I signed up to help serve beverages at a College of Education event at OSU. My fellow iced tea server was a girl named Rachel, who I vaguely knew as a member of my Theta pledge class, but hadn't really gotten a chance to speak to. While we poured that tea, we somehow discovered our mutual love/obsession for the fictional character of Pacey Witter. 9 years of best-friendship and one Backstreet Boys cruise later, we made a journey to Wilmington, North Carolina, to bear personal witness to the sights and scenery of the greatest television show of our generation: Dawson's Creek, y'all! Also coinciding but actually not planned: this spring is the 10-year anniversary of the show's series finale!
Secondarily important to our mission were any places we could find also related to One Tree Hill, a somewhat inferior but still epic show that I did faithfully watch 7.5 out of 9 seasons of (and even dedicated a blog post to how perfect I thought the final episode was).
Please read on for our journey that was most certainly one of the best three days of my life.
To start, a little mood music.
(I have just realized that every single location shown in this intro is a place that we visited. WOWZA! We done good!)
First stop: the beautiful Airlie Gardens. Several things were filmed here, but perhaps the most important location of all is the "ruins" - some columns and a fountain and a bunch of idential busts meant to look like they were built long ago but since abandoned.
OTH reference: where Haley and her sisters spread their mother's ashes at her funeral in season 7.
Dawson's Creek reference: THIS MAGIC. Dawson using the pretense of filming a scene for his stupid sea creature movie to seduce Jen into a kiss, and Pacey and the scandalous Ms. Jacobs.
Creepin'
Unrelated to any television show, but still an amazing sight were these turtles all gathered up on a log in the middle of the pond. There was a tiny turtle ON TOP OF a bigger turtle! Double turtles!
Our trusty blue rental car
Next up: the Bend on Airlie Road.
OTH reference: where Peyton's car breaks down in Season 1 (and seen in the intro clip above!)
Dawson's Creek reference:
Ice cream cone of death for Dawson's Hot Dad Mitch Leery.
Where Deputy Doug pulls Jack over in the beginning of the series finale.
Joey and Pacey's first kiss (technically second kiss, but the first one that mattered).
Oh, what the heck, I'll just give you the video.
Next let's move on to Wrightsville Beach.
DC reference: anytime they are ever on a beach. The pier below (which is in disrepair from the hurricane - boo, hurricane!) is where the cast is frolicking in the intro above! OTH reference: anytime they are ever on a beach.
The waterfront of Downtown Wilmington. We got the greatest little loft condo just a few blocks away from the wooden mile-long Riverwalk. Are you seeing these views?! Perfect for a couple morning runs. But I digress: more importantly, an endless number of scenes from both shows take place along this waterfront. Pretty much every time anyone needs to have a conversation in a picturesque place, it's somewhere along here. Look familiar? The steps of this federal buildling masquerade as an art museum in season 2 of DC, where Dawson and Joey have a great fight about how Dawson doesn't see enough emotion in modern art. Hilarious. Also, Andie and Pacey meet here to go to the Homecoming dance in season 2 and later come back for their first kiss here. (I'm starting to get slightly self-conscious that I'm rattling off all these things from pure memory...)
Regardless of what TV shows were filmed here, I want to live in a place that looks like this:
Here is where our locations diverge, so let's head over to Tree Hill first (because Capeside is so much more epic).
Detouring over to Tree Hill for awhile, here, Brooke Davis lived out her tortured girl-behind-the-red-door existence through most of high school.
And Lucas and Karen's house! This house is surrounded by one-way streets, not providing an easy escape route, so watch out.
Here is proof that it is Lucas' house on the show. Notice that this is the most synergistic picture I could have possible chosen, as it is from an episode where James Van Der Beek (DAWSON LEERY) guest stars as an insane director.
So iconic: Karen's Cafe/Clothes Over Bros. (literally a block and a half from our condo).
In the season finale, Quinn and Clay go to adopt (re-adopt? reclaim?) Clay's son at the courthouse, and then decide to get married. This staircase is involved. We found it by walking into the Wilmington Courthouse and there they were. They're really almost making this too easy.
Lucas' bridge from the opening credits is on 6th St. As you cross, it sort of feels like you're crossing over to the bad part of town, so be forewarned.
Second best location: Tree Hill High! Actual location: Wilmington Community College. Class was in session while we were there, and I just felt like screaming at all the kids walking around, "DO YOU UNDERSTAND WHERE YOU GO TO SCHOOL?!?!"
So in the screenshot from the show above, on the very right you can see that one of the corridors is labeled "Whitey Durham Fieldhouse." This corridor, in fact: And would you believe it...when I opened a door, it really did lead into a basketball gym!!!!
Now, it looks basically nothing like the gym on OTH, but it's still a gym, it still counts, and we still took a picture posing as Ravens just because.
And last, but not least (we all know what I saved for last): RIVERCOURT.
Except, it no longer exists. Apparently they tore it down right after they finished filming. So, here's where the Rivercourt used to be.
While we were there, a guy and a girl showed up, and the girl ran around in the grass dribbling and shooting a pretend basketball while the guy took pictures. So we're not the only ones on a TV show location scout! I respect her dedication but we did not do that.
The view across the river from the court is seen in almost every show as well. Who wouldn't want to play basketball here? Skillz, I see why you love this place.
So long, Tree Hill, off to Capeside we go!
In the series finale, Pacey owns a restaurant back in Capeside. In real life, it is called Elijah's, our waiter was named Keith, and we ordered so much food we had to take the whole appetizer of wings home because we were stuffed. BOOM:
In season 1, and then kind of sporadically throughout the rest of the show, Dawson and Pacey work at a video store (remember when those were successful businesses?) called Screen Play Video. I present its storefront: In another of my top 10 episodes from the series, "The Longest Day," the teens gather at the library on a Saturday to do a report on Watergate. Said library:
Again, TOO EASY.
In seasons 5 and 6, Joey goes to college and inexplicably gets a job as a bartender at a place called Hell's Kitchen, even though she is presumably only 18 and 19 years old, and I'm pretty sure there are laws about those things. Nonetheless, here it is:
We didn't take any pictures of the interior (which they did use on the show!) because we were too embarrassed that we had just gotten second-to-last place in trivia that night (other people were cheating, we know it!), but there is a big rowboat hanging on one of the walls that is, we're assuming, a boat used on the show.
Speaking of Joey's college, it's a made up university called Worthington, but was actually filmed on Duke's campus.
Um, this place. This place is so beautiful. If you had the good fortune to attend college here, congratulations to you, and I don't know how you got any studying done surrounded by this much magnificance.
Please notice Joey's cell phone clipped to her jeans waistband in the below picture. She was lucky she is so pretty.
If you've read this far, first of all, I'm impressed either with the amount of free time you have or the love of DC and OTH you apparently share with me. Also, you're in for a treat, because it is now time for the top three best locations. DRUM ROLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL.
#3: ASK ME TO STAY.
Which now looks like:
This hurts my heart a little bit, but at least whoever did this had the sense to leave a little of that brick exposed. Future generations need to know what happened here.
#2
Capside High School! Home of the Minutemen. Actual location: UNC-Wilmington. A million things happen at school since the main characters of DC are, you know, in high school for the first four seasons. Specifically, in the credits above (you know, waaaaay back at the top of this post), you might have noticed Dawson and Joey walking under a jacket in the rain in front of the school. Allow me to recreate that.
Also, let's recreate the time that Dawson, Joey, Jack, and Andie plan the "Anti-Prom" whilst sitting on these very steps in one of the top 10 greatest episodes of the entire show, because it spawns Pacey's most romantic whisper of all time: "I remember everything."
(A loyal fan may recall that this Anti-Prom took place at Dawson's parents' restaurant, Leery's Fresh Fish, on the waterfront. We actually went there for lunch [though it is actually a Latin restaurant called Mixto], but we didn't take a picture of it, so just believe me, okay?)
#1
WE WENT TO DAWSON LEERY'S HOUSE.
AND NEXT DOOR IS JEN LINDLEY'S AND GRAMS' HOUSE.
Quick story (who am I kidding, none of this has been quick): We didn't know how often people still come since the show has ended 10 years ago at this point, so Rachel and I decided to be really overly nice about it and bought some tulips and some scones to take with us as peace offerings. The house is down a private drive that is very clearly labeled with the address number and the people's names on it, so you can't really even pretend you're meaning to go somewhere else. As we were driving up the one-lane drive, we were met with an oncoming car. Immediately, panic set in, and we tried to decide if we were going to act like we were lost or not, but the woman driving rolled down her window and said, "Are you guys Dawson's Creek fans?" ...Guilty. She said we were free to walk around the yard and down the dock and take pictures! So sweet! We didn't even need our bribe, though we still left it on the front porch with a note (the screened in porch where so much drama goes down!!!).
Also at the house: this dock...
where this now infamous face happened:
Have you ever seen such unbridled giddiness on two grown women's faces?!
Thus ends the longest post I've ever written or will likely ever write. Rach, I'm glad we found one another, and we took this trip we've been talking about for ten years. You are the P. Sawyer to my B. Davis.