So This Is Christmas

Merry Christmas is such an infectious feeling I like to feel that way all year around.

So if you are visiting just before Christmas, just after Christmas or even here on Christmas day I am sure you will find something of interest for you and in the spirit of Christmas.

It may be said that Christmas is no longer a celebration but this must be spoken by people that have never had trouble closing their eyes on Christmas Eve in an expectation of what maybe left for them on the carpet under the tree.

I continue to look forward to the surprise on my Grandchild's faces to this day at Christmas events.

Merry Christmas - Merry Christmas - Merry Christmas

Friday, November 13, 2009

Celtic Wedding Rings Are Timeless

By Bart Forcey

The knot, as stylized and used in Celtic wedding rings design is a perfect symbol for the bonds of matrimony and the joining of two lives. If you and your partner are considering using wedding bands that incorporate traditional Celtic patterns, you may be curious as to the Celtic heritage. The Celts encompass a large number of different ethnic groups connected by a common Indo-European language.

The Celtic nations are essentially the British Isles with the exception of Ireland. In England the Celtic tradition was subsumed by Anglo-Saxon culture. The long held belief that all Celtic culture trace back to a common tribe has been disproved by genetic investigators and it is now believed Celtic culture was spread by conquering other unrelated tribes or through simple cultural influence of neighboring peoples.

Celtic art in modern usage refers to the designs and motifs that came to prominence during the Celtic art revival of the eighteenth century. This revival was born out of the desire by the Welsh and Scottish to assert their cultural identities in the face of the dominance of English culture in political and religious areas.

Celtic art is primarily ornamental, making it well suited to jewelry. In this it has more in common with Arabic art than with the representational art of the classical tradition. Unlike Arabic art, however, Celtic art avoids straight lines and employs symmetry only sparingly.

A recurrent theme in Celtic art is the knot, and it is around this symbol that most Celtic wedding rings are designed. There are a variety of Celtic knots.The symbolism of the knot includes bonding or joining and this makes it ideal for use in wedding band design.

Modern Celtic wedding rings utilize any of about a dozen traditional Celtic knot patterns. Two or three patterns are sometimes combined. Added to this are edging styles or even edgeless models, which is made possible by fashioning the metal as rope strands that serve as their own edges.

Ring edging is also an area in which Celtic knot motifs allow the designer exceptional freedom. Because the underlying theme is that of a rope, it is not necessary for there to be any edge to the band at all, other than that provided by the knot pattern itself. In many ways, Celtic wedding rings are one of last artistic expressions of intricate metal work. The filigree of the Victorian era has a dated look compared to the graceful, long curves of modern Celtic design. The filigree of Celtic knot designs surpasses the temporal limitations of fashion.

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