The best holiday gift is personal
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Young Chang
Local artists and shoppers agree that a personal touch is what makes
the best holiday gift.
That touch is exactly what Corona del Mar artist Marilyn Ellis, who
recently displayed her paintings at the Newport Beach Central Library, is
looking for in gift-giving.
She has made cards from some of her visual mono prints, an art form in
which the painter works on a sheet of plexiglass on an engraving press
that is then used to create one print.
The abstract designs, pasted onto more than 100 cards to be sent
overseas to family members and friends, are colorful and intimate.
When it comes to the best holiday gift she could receive, Ellis, 68,
has a simple answer: good health.
She suffered a slight stroke last month and was in the hospital for
six days.
“The fact that I am not paralyzed and that I can walk three miles,
that’s my greatest gift,” Ellis said. “It’s really life and death; that’s
what you think about.”
When asked about her all-time best holiday gift, Salwa Rizkalla,
director of “The Nutcracker” ballet being performed by the Festival
Ballet Theatre at Orange Coast College this weekend, recalls two that
touched her emotionally.
A few years ago, dancers at her studio pitched in and bought her a
small statue of a dancer. They carved “thank you” on it and then her
name. Rizkalla said she values it to this day and appreciates the thought
behind it.
The other gift was a 4-foot-by-3-foot piece of needlework with
countless “Nutcracker” figures embroidered onto it with different fabrics
and sequins by her dancers.
“A lot of people got involved in it,” Rizkalla said. “They all made it
together and it took teamwork.”
Arthur Taussig, the creator of a Web site focusing on films and family
values and the moderator of a film noir series at the Orange County
Museum of Art, once received a wind-up Samurai toy from his
brother-in-law.
Taussig collects them--he has about 2,000 to 3,000 wind-up toys at
home--and he remembers this gift because it showed that a family member
really knew him.
“That’s just quirky me,” he said. “It’s [my brother-in-law’s] secret.
He has a secret source of these very strange wind-up toys, and he won’t
tell me where he gets them.”
Local shoppers also are buying at unexpected locales.
At Temple Bat Yahm’s annual bazaar this week in Newport Beach, amid a
sea of beaded jewelry, decorative candles, pillows, hand-crafted
trinkets, custom-quilted photo albums and other few-of-a-kind finds,
temple visitors avoided the bustle of the holiday mall crowd.
But Julia Kayton, a congregation member, had a more religious reason
for being there.
“I found some Hanukkah stuff for my house and for my family in
Florida,” she said. “The items in the malls are more geared toward
Christmas.”
Michelle Lieberman, a visitor to the bazaar with a basket slung on one
arm and a baby cuddled in the other, scoured the booths for creative
crafts that kids would enjoy.
“I’m just looking for something small to appreciate the holidays,” she
said.
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