Holiday Colours

I would have posted this earlier but I was watching the wedding on TV – congrats William and Kate, it was lovely :)

My effort for this week’s Creative Writing Ink exercise is below, along with the pic that prompted it. The connection between the words and the image is quite a subtle one this time – rather than the subject of the image itself, it was the colouring that really grabbed me, along with the overall contintental theme. Quite a short and simple one this week:

Italian Street Sign

Italian Street Sign (supplied by Creative Writing Ink)

Holiday Colours

Red wine sipped at sunset by lovers holding hands.
Yellow sun shining down over wanderers on the sands.
Blue skies meet green hills meet white shores and sapphire seas.
Can we go on holiday now? Can we? Please?

© Catherine Smith

Comments welcome as usual :)

 

Easter

Slightly belated Happy Easter everyone! And a slightly belated Creative Writing Ink exercise to go with it! I actually had this pretty much  finished and ready to post last week but I kept getting distracted and ended up sort of, well, not posting anything… However, here’s my effort, a (very!) short story for a change :)

Steps (supplied by Creative Writing Ink)

Easter

Steph couldn’t wait. It was Easter and that meant one thing – the annual family get together at her grandparents’ place down in Cornwall. It had become something of a tradition over the years, ever since her grandparents had decided to retire and move back to where they’d grown up, met and lived until her grandfather’s job had taken them away to London. Every year the whole family would make their way from wherever they happened to be and stay from Good Friday to Easter Monday – even Uncle Dave would come over from Connecticut, so important was this weekend in Steph’s family calendar.

She wasn’t sure what it was she looked forward to most about these weekends. Certainly, getting away from the bustling pace of city life for a few days of Cornish sea air was part of it – walks along the beach, BBQs on the terrace, camping in the back garden; what Ivy Pine Cottage lacked in bedrooms, it more than made up for in outside space. Her grandmother’s cooking was another; she couldn’t remember ever coming through the front door and not being greeted by the smell of freshly baked bread, cakes or hot cross buns. She loved catching up with her various relations, finding out what they’d all been up to, and fussing over Bonnie, her grandparents’ playful and much-loved labrador.

Perhaps what she looked forward to more than anything else though was Ivy Pine Cottage itself. It was a quaint, old place, that looked as if it had grown from the land on which it stood, so naturally did it blend in with its surroundings. Steep stone steps led up, past the ivy and beneath the old pine tree that gave the cottage it’s name, to a wooden front door with a wrought iron knocker. Going inside was like stepping back in time; a crackling fire and ticking grandfather clock stood either side of a small black-and-white TV, the furthest modern technology had been allowed to intrude into the living room. Watercolours and oil paintings lined the walls; faded sepia photographs stood in frames on the mantelpiece. Tiny doorways that her dad always had to duck through connected the various rooms and nooks and crannies, each filled with more photos and memories. At night, the place echoed with the sound of Bonnie’s gentle snoring as she lay asleep on her rug in front of the fire. If a house could be a hug, or a favourite pair of slippers, this was it.

The conductor announced her stop then, forcing Steph to abandon her daydreaming and get her things together. She smiled and waved at her parents, who’d come down the night before and had offered to meet her at the station to take her the last few miles. She turned to look at Paul and smiled; this was to be his first Easter at Ivy Pine Cottage, and she very much hoped it wouldn’t be his last.

© Catherine Smith

Comments welcome – somewhat new territory for me, this!

Sunset

Yesterday was Monday, which means a new Creative Writing Ink prompt to tackle. It also means it’s not Monday anymore, which is good as I’m not a fan of Mondays. Unless they’re Bank Holiday Mondays, or coincide with when I’m on holiday – those kind of Mondays are allowed :D

Anyway, here’s this week’s effort, an ABC poem. I used to think that poetry had to be several stanzas long in order to be effective, and I did spend quite a while trying to come up with lines for a few more letters, but playing around with these different formats each week has taught me that less can be more. A lesson, I have no doubt, my old English and History teachers at school wished I had learned some time ago!

Countryside in sunset

Countryside (supplied by Creative Writing Ink)

Sunset

A summer’s day ending,
bidding farewell until dawn.
Cool night air descending;
dusk, to darkness til morn’.

© Catherine Smith

 

Feedback welcome, as usual :)

Raining Again

Time for another Creative Writing Ink exercise! This week, a tanka, which as far as I can make out is a bit like a haiku in that it’s Japanese and involves lines of 5 and 7 syllables, but is less mean as it gives you two more lines to play with – that’s fourteen whole syllables! I must admit, my first thought when I saw this week’s image was of the Doctor Who episode where the shop mannequins all come alive and start attacking everyone (the blonde one has an evil glint in its eyes if you ask me!) but I’m not sure that was the intended effect so I came up with this instead:

Wet high street

Two for One (supplied by Creative Writing Ink)

Raining Again

Rain’s pitter patter;
high street bereft of chatter
and frantic spending
as it pours down, unending,
and evening gives way to night.

© Catherine Smith

As usual, comments are welcome – I must say, those I’ve received so far for other posts (apart from the spam, anyway) have been brilliant :D