Showing posts with label Comparison Pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comparison Pictures. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2022

Silhouettes


A silhouette is defined as "the dark shape and outline of someone or something visible against a lighter background".  I have a memory of all the kids getting a silhouette profile at one time or another. It was often a craft done in school. A bright light, tracing the outline of the head and cutting it out. Just from the silhouette profiles above, can you guess which Westra siblings these are?

There was a "shadows" song/dance with silhouettes in the musical Jen's senior year (1989) "Shadows on the Wall" ... Jen was Dorothy Brock, an older (like 50? Gasp, SO old. So many lines drawn on the face) washed up star, appalled she is supposed to audition for a part. The director makes a comment about Dorothy Brock "but she can't dance" ... and Jen knew the part was made for her (as singing and acting were no problem, but dancing was an issue!) Jen's Madrigals group (the guys) sang Silhouettes on the Shade (listen to that HERE).

Well ... have you made your guesses?

Chris on the left ... in first grade (1972-1973). On the right, little Derek ... younger, just three years old, done as a Joyschool project in 1986. You can see in the school photo, the side/profile, while not a silhouette, was the trend!

Here's an article about silhouettes

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Sitting on the Red Pig

This little piggy ... the first photo is of baby Scottie, first of the Westra siblings, sitting on the red pig. You can't even tell it's red in the black and white picture. In the second picture, the last of the Westra siblings, little Derek. I don't think the parents (or who knows, maybe this was Jen taking the picture) were trying to capture the EXACT pose ... but it is almost identical, even to the arm placement of Scott and Derek! Except for the EYES. What happened to the piggy's eyes? They were just stickers, and it had been 19+ years ...

But that wasn't the end of sitting on the red pig ...

Chris's four boys (Cayson wasn't here yet) in 2005 (top row)

Then another "piggie" photo shoot in 2011 with multiple cousins. So Camden has TWO pictures on the pig. Conner was the biggest grandkid, Ani closest to the age of Scott and Derek in the original pictures. I think Corin wins for the best pose, followed closely by Adria.

Found Photos!  A couple more grandkid sits 
... now it's a three-way tie with Camden's two-time sit with both Adria and Rella too! 


... and then as slides have been converted ... 
some color photos emerged of baby Scott.
Read a little more about the slides/negatives.


What happened to the red pig? Well in 2011, it would have been 48 years old! Beyond losing paper eyeballs, thin plastic (it was a bank if I remember correctly ... hollow) gets brittle over time. It finally broke. Hopefully NOT while being sat on, although I guess that is a very good possibility! Poor piggy. You will always be remembered. 

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

New Years Baby!

Happy New Year! I knew I had to do a post showcasing the Westra Welcome to the new year with the Westra kids their first New Year's Eve ... I searched through the folders on Dropbox and gathered up the pictures, but couldn't find one for Derek. Happily, as the "Westra Family Photos and History" project continues, Chris found and scanned Dunk in the sash and streamers.

Mom had mentioned that they actually waited a year on Scott's official picture, as he was just 15 days old for his first New Year. So instead of being the youngest ... he's the oldest in this particular pose,. Chris and Wendy are on the infamous "white couch" ... as is Shane. While Chris had to be held up, that wasn't even an option for baby Jenny, at less than two months of age. Four babies in hats, two without. Shane is the only one pictured who tried to eat the paper streamers.

It's a little ironic that the more recent pictures seem to have a lower quality than the older ones. Perhaps this is because the first four come from scanned negatives, and the final two were scanned photos? There is another cute picture of Scott, taken with the other camera, in black and white (just as there were two of Jen, color one included above, second shot in black and white below). More mysteries regarding  Old-Fashioned Film ...

When Gray and I got married, I discovered his family had a few similar traditions ... like saying "home again home again jiggidy jig" AND ... New Year's Baby photos. At least for Gray (not sure if the other kids have them). So for our family, we have a Gray/Jen and Landon!

Unfortunately, we didn't keep up the tradition with the other boys. It's hard to remember and make sure these types of photo ops happen! That makes it all the more impressive that Mom and Dad (Lamar & Margie) made it through six siblings and 18 years!



Have any of the other Westra siblings continued this tradition with the next generation?

Saturday, June 3, 2000

Graduations at a Glance ~ Six Siblings


Six Siblings - Grouped Graduations

There are several photos from Wendy's graduation, and quite a few featuring Derek (as cameras moved to digital, and his graduation was a little more recent ... and he's the baby!) but I thought it would be fun to look at all the Westra Siblings together at their respective high school graduations. A compilation post to compare and contrast.

All six siblings graduated from Cottonwood High School. For these siblings (those who have had high school graduates) I don't think any have had all their kids graduate from the same high school - of course Mom and Nelva didn't either. There was the move from Hermitage to Havenmoor, but that didn't affect the boundary school. The first five photos were taken at the Hermitage house ... the big blue spruce in the front/side was a common backdrop, as was the lava rock fireplace. Derek got the pretty backdrop of the Havemoor house for his graduation picture. 

Black, White and Gold will be victorious ... that's the start to the school song for Cottonwood High (probably the only line I actually know). This is reflected in the cap and gown over the years. While the boys seemed to stay consistent in black, Wendy's group got gold, while Jen's class looked angelic in white. All had some of the "extra" cords, sashes, etc that indicated academic prowess and other ideals.

Scott paved the way, and he and Chris overlapped their high school experience, as did Chris and Wendy. Graduations on the even years, 1982, 1984, 1986. Jen followed close enough that teachers definitely remembered the older siblings - Shane and Derek will have to comment if they felt as if they were living in a sibling shadow** during the school years. Jen's was the only "odd" graduation (year-wise). 


Check out the New Year's Babies for a similar side-by-side-six!


**We did get some comments from Derek and Shane ...

Derek: "I didn't feel like I was in anyone's shadow (6 year gap between me and Shane so we didn't share a lot of the same teachers) EXCEPT in Mr. Bill's AP Art and AP Art History classes. I think Mr. Bill always wanted more from me being Sterling Scholar Shane's little bro. In fact, I didn't get an A my senior year - I think I got a B+. But the night before the last day of school, Brian and I had already started our Summer lawn mowing business. As a last day of school prank, we drove Dad's blue truck over to Cottonwood, late one night before the last day of school the next day, unloaded our mowers and set them to the lowest setting. Then we moved "Bye Bye Bye" into the front hill of the school (REALLY short so it was a different color and unmistakable). The next day people were talking about it (it was right outside Mr. Bill's classroom windows). He gave me my grade (B+). I said with disappointment "Mr. Bill, I expected I'd do better after you saw my final art project." "What final project?" He asked. "That one." I pointed out the window. He smiled and said "That was you?" Brian and I confirmed that it was. He then changed my grade to an A-."

Shane: Speaking of living in the shadow of siblings, two experiences come to mind. One is also with Mr. Bill...on the first day of my first class with Mr. Bill, he says "Westra, huh? Any relationship to Jeni Westra?" I said, "Yes, she's my sister." Mr. Bill just stands silent for a minute and then says "How is she liking the Women's Penitentiary?" I laughed inside but kept a straight face, and said "She's dealing with it fine" (or something like that).  The other one was that I got into AP US History because the woman in charge loved having Jeni as a student. I normally wouldn't have got in because my grades weren't good enough, and I probably shouldn't have taken that class, as I didn't do well and I didn't pass the AP test.  

Jen: Ironically, I don't remember Mr. Bill that well. I know I took several art classes, but can't recall which were from him. I definitely remember Claudia Wright, the AP History teacher! I took AP American History my Junior Year, and AP European History my Senior Year. Tough classes, but she taught in such a way that it was interesting and engaging.  

Wednesday, November 23, 1994

The Hermitage House

Ah, the Hermitage House. 1677 Hermitage Circle, off of Steeplechase Lane, in the Jamestown subdivision. Dad/Lamar noted in his history, that the area had been part of the home show the year before. The Westra family moved in August of 1972 and bid the home goodbye in 1994. They were there for 22 years. Moving in, the kids were: Scott (8), Chris (6), Wendy (4), Jen (almost 2). Moving out: Scott (31), Chris (28), Wendy (26), Jen (24), Shane (18) and Derek (12).  Not only did the kids change, but the house did too!

Dad remembers "We moved into this house in the Cottonwood Area of SLC, 2 Sep 1972, after spending about three weeks with Margie's folks while we were house hunting, and while we waited for the house to be completed and closed. We bought it from a builder who was building it for himself, and had to sell -- Richard Dunn, a young man building his first house. We paid $36000 for it and paid about $13000 down, which left a mortgage of about $23000 with Prudential Federal at 7½% interest."

Originally, the house was in black and white ... *Ü*
Mom/Margie remembers (from an email exchange) The house was brand new. The builder was a "drywall" guy and it was his first house to build.  I didn't like the mustard yellow color. It was much better later when we put the rocks and siding on in later years. We stayed with my parents for a few weeks after moving here in Aug. and I had to drive Scott and Chris to school at Woodstock and pick them up each day. Scott was 9 and in 3rd grade (Mrs. Silver, I think). Chris was just turned 6 and in Mrs. Clark's 1st grade. Wendy was 4 1/2 and Jenny not quite 2.

You can see in the pictures above that it was a new build. No landscaping, no plants or trees or fences. A split level with an attached (but no door to the house) garage. In the Westra Home Movies, there are quite a few glimpses of the house and yard. Here's a small clip from right after the move in. Grandma and Grandpa Norman are out helping prep the front for grass, then there's a look at the original back deck (with the stairs on the West side) and some shots inside the house.

(https://youtu.be/OFdf1hp7hvE)
There are more peeks at the house and yard throughout the home movies.

There really aren't that many photos of the house and yard, and even fewer really capturing the inside of the home. Here are a few more photos ... in color.


There were lots of changes and improvements over the years. Trees planted that grew so big. A basketball hoop in the driveway. Replacing the yellow siding with brown slats and rock. Switching out the deck and patio in the back. The addition of a shed, with an original "cave" root cellar. Lots of rockwork - a little pool and steps.


A couple of pictures from the kitchen ... the mustard yellow appliances (they were eventually replaced ... Funny story about the stove. Shane had made gingersnaps, and went to bake the cookies, and they stayed in little hard balls. They did not bake right. Well, the oven was old and apparently broken, so it was replaced. Then, Shane went to bake the cookies ... and they stayed little hard balls and did not bake right. It was the dough that was the problem, not the stove! Jen and Gray were finishing the basement in Gray's mom's house, so they took the stove. Jen convinced Mom and Dad that they should get a new fridge to match the new stove, and then the new little apartment got the old yellow fridge too). There was a flat carpet in the kitchen and in the bathrooms, I don't think there was any tile or hard surface?

This is just a quick sketch of the layout of the house, up and down ...
(maybe someone can create a more professional rendition)


In January 2019, Chris was scanning and sharing some of the pictures showcased above and it started an email discussion of Hermitage Home memories ...

Derek wrote: I have memories of each of the rooms in our old house (that weird under the stairs portion of Wendy's basement bedroom) The high bed in Shane's basement bedroom and the space underneath, the 1980's wood paneling in the basement, and the orange shag carpet upstairs (even carpet in the kitchen right?) :) There were lots of walls since that was before open floor plans became so popular. Small closets, and small bathrooms, and I remember we had a shed in the back and it seems like Dad had a root cellar cave under it (that couldn't have been safe!)

Wendy wrote: Was our home really only 1524 square feet? Or is that not including the basement? Yes, those pictures bring back a lot of memories! Like the ones in the kitchen with the scripture reading chart in the background and the big yellow phone with its looong cord. Sometimes I would try and go in the coat closet with it for privacy. I actually wish we had more pictures of the bedrooms and the unique features of the rooms and yard. I haven’t really seen pictures of the bedrooms – there might be a couple out there – but I wish we had those. If you see a picture of the kitchen carpet let me know! I remember it as patterned with squares and the colors were orange and yellow. We had to use a butter knife to scrape underneath all of the bottom kitchen cupboards in order to vacuum the floor since it didn’t reach well under there. I would be interested in seeing other pictures of the rooms in the house like the room Jen and I shared upstairs and my yellow bedroom in the basement.

Mom had several memories to share ...
  • Dad would finish off one new bedroom every time we had a baby.
  • I remember how we had to get out of the car to open the garage, carry in the groceries through the front door and then go back and close the garage door---not fun in bad weather and with our little kids. It was Scott when he was in his 20's, that he installed an automatic garage-door opener. For awhile, in later years, our garage door would mysteriously open and close. We finally figured out that Hadleys across the street had the same code so ours was opening every they pushed their buttons!
  • Originally there was a cement patio. Shane fell once when it was icy and got a concussion and didn't know what was going on for awhile. As I remember the stairs from the deck originally went down on the West side. Then Dad did the shed. We hired a fellow in the 11th ward to build us a new redwood deck and patio and changed the stairs to the East side, so they landed on the patio.
  • I think we had your big deep sandpile where the shed was later built. Then it was under the deck. It was about 3 feet deep. You kids would put on your swimming suits and take the hose into the sandpile and play "muddy mess."
  • Yes, Dad excavated under the shed---supposedly for a food cellar. But it was too moist and full of spiders, so none of you wanted to go down the ladder through the trapdoor in the shed floor!
  • I too wish we had photos of each room----so kids, take photos now in depth in each of your homes inside and out. I wish I had more of my growing-up home on Boxelder St. in Murray. I only have one bit of the kitchen photo and not even a photo of the outside.
Derek took this advice to heart ... Documenting Your Dwelling and Jen has quite a few posts on the BlackhamBunchBlog with the Home Sweet Home label, showcasing home improvements and room rearranges. 

Jen didn't chime in on the email exchange back in 2019, but has lots of memories about the Hermitage House ...
  • Originally the basement was unfinished. Just cement floors ... which was a perfect place for roller skating in the big family room. Wendy and I would put the Xanadu record on and skate away. The Wonderful Westra sisters!
  • There were unique spaces ... the closet under the stairs (great for hide-and-seek) with shelves at the back where we stored the sleeping bags (when we weren't using the green slippery ones to slide down the stairs), the little space behind the closet in Wendy's room. The "high" bed, the space under it was actually part of the food storage room. 
  • The food storage room had so many "rolley" shelves, which was to help keep things in rotation. Put the new cans in one end, take out the oldest ones from the other end.
  • Finishing the basement rooms, the older kids got to pick out their own colors for carpet and such. Scott's room was brown, Chris's was blue I think? Wendy's was yellow (I remember her dresser and cabinet were yellow). The basement bathroom was the first to have Dad's secret toilet paper storage (or am I thinking of the Havenmoor house?)
  • Only the master bath had a bathtub. The master just had a shower, as did the basement bathroom.
  • The main upstairs living area ... living room and "dining" room. The "sheer" curtains. The lava-rock fireplace. The yellow couch and loveseat, the stereo (record player and storage), the piano, the white couch. What was technically the dining area was the "tv room" with a little television, and then Mom's recliner.
  • The kitchen had carpet. The appliances were mustard yellow (I can't recall the colors of the replacements). No built in microwave, originally there wasn't one, then we got one that would sit on the counter. There was a decent sized pantry in the corner ... we'd keep our boxes of cereal there that we'd get for Easter/Christmas. The "job chart" (there were a few different iterations) would hang on the wall, or on a big green pinboard. 
  • The main phone hung on the kitchen wall. It was a rotary phone for most of my memory. Yellow, with a loooooong cord like Wendy mentioned. There was a second phone in the master bedroom, and then eventually one downstairs. Cordless phones became common in the 80s, not sure when we got our first set. I don't remember ever having an answering machine.
  • The family room downstairs was finished at some point ... paneling on the walls, built in desk and cabinets, a countertop (for the boxes and boxes of Mom's coupons and refunds). The rock fireplace that Dad gathered rocks from the canyon to piece together ... extended to include a built in planter.
  • The furnace room, with the washer/dryer, extra freezer and storage, was never finished. Always had cement floors. A door to the back of the house, exited under the deck. Another freezer just outside.
  • Lots of pine trees in the yard ... cut down for Christmas trees later on. Lots of flowers. Chickens and Hens succulents among the rocks. Lots of rockwork. The side yard on the East had a rock pathway and the back had a little pond, planter and steps. There was a little hill/slope in the backyard.  Directly behind the deck was the vegetable garden.
  • When the deck originally had the stairs on the West side, it was quite the trek to take things down to the patio. I think it was probably Scott who rigged a rope and bucket that we'd put things in and then lower over the side, rather than going down the steps and around each time. 
  • Under the deck was the sandbox ... muddy mess (as Mom mentioned). 
  • Mom and I would dry fruit leather on tables on the back deck ... Square frames with nails, to place mesh over to keep out the birds and bugs. We sketched out plans for custom frames, but never made them happen. 
  • Dad always talked about building a racquetball court under the house ;) 

Here's a couple pieces of artwork, featuring the Hermitage House ...

This one was done by Derek ...
Complete with a Christmas tree in the front window (that's where it was always placed)... 

Mom remembers ... When it came time to move into the Havenmoor House, it had really been a seller's market for several years, so we expected to sell with ease. Many homes were being sold to the first person looking at it! We tried to sell it ourselves first, but that didn't work out. So we listed with a realtor in our ward. We started out asking $200,000, then lowered it to $180,000. We passed up one offer for $160,000. Then we ended up months later selling it for $160,000. We closed on the Havenmoor House on my birthday, Nov. 7, 1994 and moved in shortly thereafter.

Derek also commented: From a "Fixer-Upper" perspective, Zillow estimates our old home at $446K. 
https://www.zillow.com/homes/1677-Hermitage-Circle,-Salt-Lake-City,-UT_rb/12864397_zpid/

That was January 2019 ... interesting to see how that continues to change over the years! As of this posting (Nov2022) ... $631,000

Tuesday, May 29, 1990

Six Siblings at Age Eight

 

Going through paperwork set aside to be scanned and filed, there were many programs from the grandkid's baptisms. In Dropbox, there is a folder specifically for the grandkid baptisms - although not all have programs or pictures. In current (2020s) culture, there is often a plethora of pictures, especially for little girls, in their pretty white dresses (TayleeJennaAniston and more). 

In the Westra archives ... back in the days of film cameras, there are not so many photos. In fact, scanning Dropbox, the only picture to be located of the actual baptismal attire, was Shane, in 1984. In Derek's "box", there was a prepared plaque saved, and Jen had kept her wonderful wood memento varnished with shellac. None of the baptismal programs were found (yet) ... were programs printed up in the olden days? 



So, grabbing what pictures were available (school photos, snapshots) ...
Here's a side-by-side look at the six siblings at age 8.

In the small history recap for each year, it was noted that Scott's baptism was held on January 1, 1972. New Years Day (having it on the holiday surprised me! What a way to start off the new year). Chris's baptism was on September 28, 1974. While we don't have a picture of Wendy's baptism, her certificate of baptism was scanned and saved. Her baptism was June 5, 1976 with the confirmation the next day on June 6 in Sacrament meeting (as was done in the "olden" days ... at some point it was changed to where the confirmation was done directly after the baptism). Wendy's confirmation and Shane's baby blessing were done in the same meeting. Before her baptism day, Jen recalls thinking "if I'm going to do anything bad, I should do it NOW since it will be a fresh start!" (not that Jen ever did anything wrong, right?) Chris stepped in for Dad (mission prep?) for Shane, and for Derek. 


See a couple other comparison collages for the Westra six ...

New Year's Babies - Six Siblings

Graduations at a Glance - Six Siblings

Monday, October 30, 1989

"Used To You Already" ... Mission Return



Chris left on his mission in October of 1987. Derek would have five years old. So two years later, comparison pictures of Chris and  Derek. Mom remembers as they picked Chris up from the airport and were traveling home in the car, Derek commented  "You've only been home a few minutes and I'm used to you already!"


Related Posts ...

  • If you ever find a picture or event and wonder when it happened (a birth, leaving for a mission, new house, etc), remember there is a great Westra Timeline that lists all these events in order! It's also in the family dropbox. Good information!
  • For more funny sayings, check out the Cute Quotes page (Derek's cute quote above as been added there!)
  • Check out the labels (Missionary, Chris, Derek) for similar topics!

 

Thursday, October 31, 1985

Send in the Clowns

 Classic Clown Costumes!

Growing up Westra ... Halloween was known for The Great Pumpkin (Scott's creation), and some spooky tricks (setting up a coffin and hiding in it, putting a walkie-talkie in the Great Pumpkin). We'd tease Mom/Margie for giving out pencils instead of candy. Watching "It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown".  Another Halloween classic though,  were the cute clown costumes. These were handmade by Aunt Sharon (Dad/Lamar's sister) for her two boys Ricky and Randy. She passed them onto the Westra boys, and they were worn for years to come!

 



In the photo block above, if you look at the top left, and the top right (b&w), it's obvious due to the change in little Wendy, that there is a year between those two photos.  The two photos on the left are from 1969,  and the two  photos on the right are from 1970.  The boys faces haven't changed much, but Scott has grown taller (the leg ruff hits just under the knee rather than fully to his feet) and the blue clown is just a little less baggy on Chris.


Is this one (left, based on how little Chris is) 1968?

Too small for the blue outfit, and because the picture is black & white, we aren't even positive which clown costume young Scott is wearing. Red ... or blue?


The clown costumes would continue to pop up in pictures for years to come ...











In the top picture here (1972), Chris is now filling out the red clown costume, and Wendy is wearing the blue. Scott is a pirate, and little Jen just doesn't even want to be there. This picture combo (one color, one b&w) is another example of the Old Fashioned Film, two separate cameras ... Dad would often snap almost identical photos, one with each camera.  


Jump forward a few years, to 1978. Now, Wendy is the pirate, and Jen donned the blue, and Shane the red (those sizings seem to be reversed from previous years, Jen simply rocking the knickers at knee length). With neighbors Missy and Drew Yates, and the GREAT PUMPKIN makes an appearance.

Next year ... 1979, Wendy stayed the same (almost identical!) Jen turned tropical, and Shane is in the red clown costume again. Looks like it was a little chilly that October, as he needed hoodie to cover his head.



... a year later Shane appeared in the blue clown suit 
(and looks like neighbor Drew also shifted up his clown costume). 

No more found photos for five years ...
In 1985 (left photo below) Derek took his turn as the red clown with Shane as some sort of Darth skeleton (with another classic, the brown argyle sweater peeking out at the arms). The red clown costume was the choice again in 1986. Shane shifted costumes ... but still kept the same "thumbs up" pose for the picture!
Little Derek looks so cute!


Looking through the Westra Home Movies
there is some found footage featuring the classic clowns.

https://youtu.be/bwlh3CghtwI


Cute little clowns clambering for candy!
Who wore it best?

To my knowledge, we never got any of the grandkids to model the old clown costumes. One of them disappeared a few years ago, and the other was sent to DI amidst the cleaning for the move. Hopefully somewhere out there, someone's kid has on the clown costume this Halloween!