Photography
Related: About this forumI met this young lady while I was grocery shopping today, and I loved her hat!
I asked if I could photograph her with it, and she said "Yes!" I also explained that I'd like to post it here with all of you, and she had no problem with that.
Enjoy, dear friends!

FalloutShelter
(13,631 posts)
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)
Diamond_Dog
(37,830 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)
niyad
(125,723 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)George McGovern
(8,459 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)When she pulled her hat down, I felt surprised, but I quickly realized that this was a great move!
Hekate
(98,733 posts)
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)But you never know!
AllaN01Bear
(26,741 posts)
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)
1WorldHope
(1,486 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)
TomSlick
(12,626 posts)

CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)TomSlick
(12,626 posts)I am concerned about the fire hazard from all the hair on fire.
LittleGirl
(8,799 posts)and he made my life great!
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)May it ever be so.
SleeplessinSoCal
(10,221 posts)👍
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)Siwsan
(27,634 posts)My grandfather walked across Europe, a 14 year old orphan. He was headed to Pennsylvania where his half sister lived.
When he arrived he was so sick, underweight and lice ridden, they almost didn't let him in. An older Italian gentleman said he'd take charge and get him healthy. Which he did.
My grandfather lived to 97, raised 8 children, worked as a rail road worker, a coal miner and, finally, relocated to Flint MI and got a job at Buick, where he worked until he retired.
I'm willing to bet that a version of his life was lived by MANY other immigrants.
George McGovern
(8,459 posts)Literally working on the railroad all the live long day. Coal miner and lived to tell about it. Back then Buick was a quality car and he had a hand in its advance.
Men like him, women too, built this country with the sweat on their backs.
We owe them for what they've given us.
Siwsan
(27,634 posts)My paternal grandfather, the son of a Welsh immigrant, was a coal mine worker in Frostburg, MD just like his father and brothers. He came from a family of 13 kids. Most of the brothers and uncles worked in the mines, too, just like their the family did in Wales.
Grandpa was caught in a mine collapse but was able to escape. That made him decide that he did NOT want his son, my uncle, to be a coal miner. He'd lost his father and several brothers and cousins to 'coal miners asthma' which is what they called Black Lung Disease.
Anyway, just like my maternal grandfather, he moved his family to Flint and got a job at Buick. Both grandfathers were passing acquaintances at Buick and had no idea there would be a family connection through marriage.
I never met my maternal grandfather. He died about 6 months before I was born. However, from what I've been told about him, we are very much alike.
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)Thanks for sharing his life with us, my dear Siwsan!
MIButterfly
(921 posts)Thank you, CaliforniaPeggy!
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)Staph
(6,421 posts)Hamilton and LaFayette: "Immigrants, we get the job done!"
CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)Very thoughtful of you.
LoisB
(11,236 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)
LetMyPeopleVote
(167,136 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,661 posts)
ShazzieB
(21,235 posts)My husband's grandparents were all immigrants from Poland, and my paternal grandparents were immigrants from the UK. If it wasn't for immigrants, neither of us would be here, and (needless to say) neither would our daughter! 🇬🇧🇵🇱🇺🇸
MIButterfly
(921 posts)She had a brother and sister in Toledo but there was no work there, so she went up to Detroit by herself. She answered an ad in the Lonely Hearts column and married my grandfather, who was from Russia.
My paternal grandfather was of Swedish decent and my grandmother was full-blooded Chippewa. They were from Minnesota.
So that's me - 1/4 Polish; 1/4 Russian; 1/4 Swedish; 1/4 native American; and 100% lifelong Democrat.