my obsession with a pioneer girl - rants, raves & random bits of laura ingalls wilder research, past and present
FYI
BIG WOODSPepin, Wisconsin
FARMER BOYWilder Homestead
INDIAN TERRITORYWayside, Kansas
PLUM CREEK PREEMPTIONWalnut Grove, Minnesota
THE YEAR IN BURR OAKBurr Oak, Iowa
LIW MEMORIAL SOCIETY De Smet, South Dakota
INGALLS HOMESTEADDe Smet, South Dakota
ROCKY RIDGE FARMMansfield, Missouri
KEYSTONE MUSEUMKeystone, South Dakota
METHODIST CHURCH MUSEUMSpring Valley, Minnesota
POMONA PUBLIC LIBRARYPomona, California
HERBERT HOOVER LIBRARYWest Branch, Iowa
HARPERCOLLINS PUBLISHERSNew York, New York
LHOP, THE MUSICALLittle House Productions LP
©2010 nancy cleaveland
seventhwinter[at]gmail[dot]com
It is best to be honest and truthful, to make the most of what we have, to be happy with simple pleasures and to be cheerful and have courage when things go wrong.
LIW
Making the best of things - a damn poor way of dealing with them. My whole life has been a series of escapes from that quicksand.
RWL
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December 27, 2008
nipping at your nose

In the mornings the window panes were covered with frost in beautiful pictures of trees and flowers and fairies. / Ma said that Jack Frost came in the night and made the pictures, while everyone was asleep. Laura thought that Jack Frost was a little man all snowy white, wearing a glittering white pointed cap and soft white knee-boots made of deer skin. His coat was white and his mittens were white, and he did not carry a gun on his back, but in his hands he had shining sharp tools with which he carved the pictures. -Little House in the Big Woods, Chapter 2, "Winter Days and Winter Nights"
Thomas Nast, the artist who gave us our popular vision of Santa Claus, also gave us an early image of Jack Frost. In January 1864, Harper's Weekly published a two-page drawing of Nast's titled "Central Park in Winter." Jack Frost (shown above) appeared at the top center of the piece. It's possible that Nast's Jack Frost was also Laura Ingalls Wilder's.
Jack Frost is Jokul Frosti (Icicle Frost),an elf from Scandinavian Viking legend. He traveled at night and created beautiful designs on windows, leaves, and grass.
If you don't live in a frosty climate, Jack Frost can still visit, giving you a "frosty" surface on which to make pretty patterns with your thimble. All you'll need is some beer and some Epsom salts (Magnesium sulfate). Stir Epsom salts into the beer until no more will dissolve. Then either dab the solution onto the inside of a window (or mirror, or glass from a picture frame) with a sponge, or brush it on with a wide brush. As it dries, crystals will form in lacy patterns. This "frost" is long-lasting and easily removed with water and a little scrubbing.
- posted by pioneergirl at 6:30 PM
