On the Archipeligo with Gudrun Sjõdén

www.129twigandvine.com—Gudrun Sjoden

Gudrun Sjõdén opened a shop in Soho the week after we were in New York. I was sorry to miss the grand opening. Her spring and summer collection is full of color and pattern—as I’ve come to expect—but she continues to create settings that are visually poetic and inviting.

In this collection we are welcomed to “the outer edge of the archipelago.” I can barely think of another word that I like more at this very moment. ‘Archipelago’ is the very definition of edges and nuance, isn’t it? And the photos of some obscure Swedish landscape further suggest water and thin curving spits of land reaching out, allowing a view in either direction to the other islands in the chain.

As I write I am humming The Albatross (lyrics here) by Rickie Lee Jones, a song I’ve known and loved for over 20 years, with its repeated use of the word archipelago and its maritime suggestions of a boat’s mast over the garden wall, a family living by the sea, sailor’s calls and echoes.

Another post about Gudrun Sjõdén.

Mod Peacock Pillows

129twigandvine_peacock_pillow2

Inspired as I am by Danish modern art and design, I tried my hand at it last spring and made several peacock illustrations for Wild Apple. The art was picked up by several home furnishing companies, among them Manual Weavers and Woodworkers. These production samples arrived at the office this week and I’m tickled by my quirky birds, all puffed up and cheery.

These are indoor outdoor pillows, and will appear in their spring offerings to their clients. Fingers crossed that they’ll end up in retail down the line.

www.129twigandvine.com — Mod Peacock PIllow, art by Sue Schlabach

www.129twigandvine.com — Mod Peacock by Sue Schlabach

Forcing Forsythia, the Love of Orange

cappella_kicheloe_image

Photo by Capella Kincheloe Interior Design

As I typed the words ‘forcing forsythia’ I heard them spoken in the voice of Sylvester, the cartoon cat who always chased Tweety Bird.

These metal industrial stools cheered me when I came across them this morning via Nest Design Studio. I do love orange, and a jolly little 1940s milk pitcher, a small le Creuset butter pan and a few Staub shallow dishes are practically glowing on my shelves this morning in all their orangeness.

Then the forsythia filled me with longing for Spring—which is a long way away in these northern parts. Just yesterday I found my secateurs under a dusting of snow in the alcove off the porch. (The wind blew snow into every nook and cranny in this last storm.)

I’ll cut forsythia branches to force today. If you’ve never done this, it’s so simple to do: clip branches close to the main trunk of your bush until you have a bundle to fill a vase (or put single branches into a group of glass bottles).

Put the branches in warm water, then fill your sink with very hot water.

Submerge each branch in the sink and (under the water) recut the end at an angle, then cut a one inch slice through the end of the stem (to help the branch absorb the water).

Make your arrangement and put it out to display. The branches will respond to the water and indoor warmth and blossom in due time. They will last longer if you change the water regularly and don’t have them in direct sun or near direct heat. That can be hard in our house, so I just enjoy whatever blooming comes my way. The yellow flowers are dazzling when lit up by sunlight.

Happy winter gardening.

Image from Capella Kincheloe Interior Design, found via Nest Design Studio.

More great information about forcing branches: Fine Gardening.

Living with Blue and White

129twigandvine_blueandwhite

This fall I was pleased to see classic blues return to the pages of shelter magazines and in the collections I saw in Paris at Maison et Objet. As a child I collected blue willow china, and I still have a soft spot for any blue and white plates.

These new blue and white references show that artists and designers are finding new ways to show off a palette that has been tried and true for centuries. I’m excited to see graphic, painterly, and watercolor versions of blue flowers showing up in textiles, and bold blue and white geometric patterns for wallpapers, fabrics, flooring and ceramics. Little touches of purple or turquoise make it appear current.

Blue and white is easy to decorate and live with. I’m glad it’s surfaced again in trends.

Photo credits, from top left clockwise: Christopher Baker for Country Living; Studio Ditte; Nick Pope for Easy Living; Bluebell Gray; Home & Garden UK, November 2012 issue.

Columbia Road, London, First Stop Cake Hole

Several weeks ago I arrived in London after the red eye from Boston. It was a Sunday morning, but noontime by the time I’d settled in my hotel. The bed was calling me, but not as strongly as the Sunday-only markets of London. I set out for Columbia Road and its famous Sunday flower market and quirky vintage, art, and design shops—many with limited open hours on any other day of the week.

I have a lilt in my step. I am in London, and I love the place. My parents brought me here as a child and I keep returning—like a moth to flame. {Only not singed by the light, but illuminated.} London has sights to break ones’ heart, but also beauty and ingenuity to fuel hours, weeks, months, years of creative endeavors. For me, at least.

So onto the Tube train—smelling familiar like shoe leather, hint of tobacco, mesh of cooking spice, body odors and damp newspaper. On the familiar Northern Line—the one I lived closest to when I spent a college term in London—I head north to Old Street Station. From here a short walk brings me to one end of Columbia Road, chock full of wonders.

First, I need sustenance. It occurs to me that I last ate something on the airplane hours—seeming lifetimes—ago.

Vintage Heaven and Cake Hole {the cafe through and behind} lure me in. Vintage Heaven is true to its name—a beautifully curated shop of color-grouped cups, plates and teapots. Books, textiles, and various ephemera linger among the kitchen goods, paired for color and theme very cleverly. I would take most of the shop’s contents home with me, but this is day one of an eleven day trip, and I can’t coddle breakables from here to Paris and home.

A small apple green book called Wild Life of Britain, with a jaunty illustrated squirrel on the cover, is the backdrop for a tableaux of jade cups and saucers. Its binding is slightly damaged, and as I buy it the shop’s owner and I discuss the beauty of the book. She says how some would pass over it for the marks on the top of the spine. It does look like a mouse has snacked on it. But I prefer to imagine a squirrel is the one who took a bite, and say so aloud. She and I laugh at this idea and page through admiring the illustrations and sampling bits of the writing by author F. Fraser Darling (whose name is yet another reason why I choose to buy this book).

If you are ever in East London on a Sunday go to Vintage Heaven and chat with the owner. She is marvelous and so is her shop.

Cake Hole is just the place to sit with my new book and eat my first meal in London (and drink my first cup of quality English tea). The cafe is intimate and charming, with some of the qualities of Vintage Heaven spilling over into its decor. Throughout the shop and cafe mismatched Scrabble letters are used to label things—tea, scones, Victoria sponge cake.

I share my table with two different couples—both friendly and carting their flower purchases and other goodies from their amble on Columbia Road. My smoked salmon sandwich and scone with jam and clotted cream are served upon 70s era china. The tea takes a swing at my mild jetlag headache and the food is a good start to establishing me in Greenwich Mean Time, plus one.

More Columbia Road discoveries coming soon. Stay tuned.

91Magazine, and a DIY Desk Fan

There are few things more lacking in beauty than a fan purchased at your local hardware (which is where most of us buy of a fan—and usually during a heatwave when we can’t be too picky). Thanks to Holly Becker’s blog Decor8, I found out about the new issue of 91magazine. The fan images were styled by Charlotte Love and photographed by Jonathan Gooch.

There is much to please the eyes, but this diy really stood out. It’s still hot enough here to run the fan in the evening, so I am eyeing my various plastic and metal eyesores for their new potential.

Danish Textiles by way of Barcelona

I came upon the Indian print textiles of Bungalow in the marvelous home décor shop ivo & co in Barcelona, and brought a tea towel home with me. It hasn’t touched a dish yet, since most tea towels suffer a messy fate in this house—too quickly stained with tea or tomato sauce.

This one is moving about on table tops far from the kitchen, and spent a little time draped over the back of a chair in the living room. Mine is the center design shown in the group of blue teatowels above (only mine is green). Here are more of the textile collections designed by Minna Hildebrandt for her company Bungalow, based in Denmark.

Lundagård

I wish Lundagård‘s shop was in my town. Their blog features their Finnish home and things they find—old and new—for their shop.

These lampshades are so unusual. And with my recent lampshade obsession I am wondering how they are made. The fabric looks sheer on the gray one—and you can see its reverse through the hole in the top, so it is only one layer of fabric, unlined. Hmmm. I vow to experiment more with lampshades.

I like the attitude and life approach of the couple who are behind Lundagård. This is excerpted from their website, (ending with the James Michener quote):

We are a family with four children living in the country in Ostrobothnia, Finland, in an old log house from the 1800s that we have moved and rebuilt.

Creative processes and creative solutions are part of our everyday lives. We are working enthusiastically with handicraft, colors, shapes, frames and decor both in our home and in our company Lundagård.

We are fascinated by old buildings and working with natural materials, and any form of recycling!

“The master in the art of living makes little distinction between his work and his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his information and his recreation, his love and his religion. He Hardly knows Which is Which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence at whatever he does, leaving others to Decides whether he is working or playing. To him, he’s always doing both. “

- James Michener -

The Michener quote is the clincher, no?

Lundagård recently had a stall in the Old Square of Pietarsaari, Finland. I wish I could’ve strolled by and handled the wares.

Jelly Jars and Watercolors

When life gives you jelly jars, some would make jelly.

I found a box of dusty old jars at the thrift store yesterday. And jelly making couldn’t have been farther from my mind (seeing as it was 90 degrees). I’d never seen such groovy jars and immediately pictured them filled with all those little sundries that I lose in the studio all the time—safety pins, tacks, beads, jewelry making pieces.

It didn’t occur to me that these jars would also be the Muse I needed to get started on a watercolor project that I’ve been mulling over all week. I needed to do folkloric inspired flowers, and these 60s flowers aren’t exact to the assignment, but they were just the color kick I needed to get started. And, as we all know, sometimes getting started is the hardest part.

 

No Sew DIY from Covet Garden Magazine

Did your great aunts make you hangers like this? Mine did. I still have a few that I can credit to Aunt Helen. They hang among all the nondescript hangers that deserve 5 minutes of my time to look this good.

This was in the latest issue of Covet Garden. Go browse about.

Cut some scraps and get to work!

Happy weekend (almost).

 

Previous Older Entries

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 2,587 other followers

%d bloggers like this: