Off Shore Muse
Followers
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Fanny Farmer was started in Rochester, New York by a Canadian politician and businessman, Frank Patrick O'Connor in 1919 and grew to over 400 stores.
Frank Patrick O-Connor
(1885-1939)
O'Connor had previously started the Laura Secord Candy Shops in Toronto, Ontario in 1913 located at 354 Yonge Street. The company was named "Fanny Farmer" to exploit the exemplary reputation of one of America's foremost culinary experts, Fannie Farmer. The spelling of the first name was altered simply to "avoid confusion".
Fanny Farmer stores shared a look that was similar to that of Chicago candy maker, Fannie May.
In 1992, the Archibald Candy Company acquired Fanny Farmer and its 200 retail stores in the Northeastern United States as a sister brand to its own Fannie May candies. In 2004, Alpine Confections purchased Archibald out of receivership, merged Fanny Farmer into Fannie May and moved production to its Ohio-based Harry London Candies which had been acquired a year earlier. Fannie May was reopened in October 2004 with 45 retail stores.
In April 2006, Fannie May was sold for $85 million. The chocolates and candy contnued to be manufactured in Ohio under the name Fannie May Confections Brands Inc. while the Fannie May corporate headquarters remained in Chicago. This ended the brand's stand alone presence remembered by many.
In 2006, the million-dollar flower and gift company, 1-800-FLOWERS bought the merged company and phased out the Fanny Farmer brand.
The last long-standing stores were in the Rochester, New York area.
Fannie Merritt Farmer
(1857-1915)
Sidenote: The "Fanny Farmer" candy shops were a separate entity named in honor of her which were eventually merged with Fannie May. In 1896, she published The Boston Cooking School Cook Book which became a widely used culinary text, later known as The Fannie Farmer Cookbook. Fannie was often called the "mother of level measurements".
Friday, April 24, 2026
Thursday, April 23, 2026
The Andy Warhol Museum
117 Sandusky Street
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Andy Warhol, born Andrew Warhola on August 6, 1928 was the youngest of three sons born to Andrej Warhola and Julia Zavacky Warhola. His parents immigrated to the United States from the European region that is now Slovakia, settling into the working-class neighborhood of Uptown in Pittsburgh. Warhol graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Pictorial Design in 1949 and soon after moved to New York City to pursue a career as a commercial artist.
Throughout the 1950s, he became one of the most successful illustrators of his time and won numberous awards for his work. His clients included Tiffany & Co., The New York Times, Bonwit Teller and others. Much of his commercial work was based on photographs and other source images, a process he would use for the rest of his life. While he continued to work as a commercial artist throughout his career, in the early '60s Warhol transitioned into the fine art world gaining notoriety in the Pop Art movement.
Early Pop paintings were based on comics and ads, with his series of Campbells' Soup Cans in 1962 creating a buzz in the art world that launched Warhol as a celebrity. Other early subjects drew upon Warhol's life-long fascination with Hollywood. In 1962, he began a large series of celebrity portraits which included Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley and Elizabeth Taylor.
The Andy Warhol Museum Mission and Values
.. to engage and inspire through Warhol's life, art and legacy ..
The life story of Andy Warhol, in all its complexity, is inspirational and guides our work. Our collection is the heart of our institution and we will succeed through sharing, preserving and interpreting the collection in the most accessible way possible. The museum is a place to express and explore multiple perspectives, push boundaries and challenge conventions. The Warhol believes in learning by doing and being a place of experimentation. The Warhol is committed to advancing diversity, equity and inclusion in every aspect of our work.
"If you want to know all about Andy Warhol, just look at the surface of my paintings and me, and there I am. There's nothing behind it."
Andy Warhol
Circa 1966
Self-Portrait

















































