Entries in Tweed (9)

Thursday
Jul292010

show and tell and more

'Memba the other day when I was telling you how much I'm loving orange? Well, here's a recent orange purchase I wanted to bring here for Show and Tell. So, get a load of the cuteness/coolness of this set. It's Japanese and I guess I would call it a coffee set. But man, those cups are petite -- back in the day when this was made (I'm guessing the '70s) they sure didn't swill coffee by the vente cup -- a vente likely wouldn't even fit in the pot. The 4 cups, pot and cream and sugar set me back all of $4. Can you believe? I found it at one of my fave thrift haunts: Hidden Treasures in the lovely village of Tweed, ON, where I spend as many weekends as I can. The place lives up to its name time and time again. 

And speaking of Hidden Treasures, I gave it a recco recently in the pages of STYLE AT HOME, along with the Bridgewater Trading Co antique co-op in Tweed and Funk N Grüven, an antiques shop in Belleville. This week I received a kind of a snippy handwritten letter from a reader from a town near Tweed. She felt compelled to remind me (on the piece of lined yellow scratch pad paper she chose as stationery) that Hidden Treasures is a thrift store that supports a charity and I really should have suggested that people make donations in addition to buying items there. Oy vey, a gal can't win! Mea culpa baby.

And 2 more topics for today:

1. The nature of blog content.

I don't want to get into the details, but between a very demanding work sched and some very important days spent at the hospital with my parents, I've experienced some blog ennui. So much of the goings on hereabouts seem just so very unimportant in the big picture. Who cares what 10 furniture items I hate? Who cares how cool it is to paint your floor white? Who cares what designers and bloggers are in the in-crowd? Who cares about seeing yet another shot from the Domino archive? Right now I don't care about many of these things. I also recently read Jane's post about keeping up with the bloggers here and overheard Jane and Chelsea on Twitter about the endless re-hashing of content and I kinda agreed. I'm certainly guilty (as recently as yesterday!) of this and would like to change things up a bit. I'm going to work on that. Ennui begone!

2. My photo above. 

Here's just a tiny step in the direction of offering something new here. The photo of my beloved coffee set is a shot I took while messing around with my iPhone. It's the Hipstamatic app with the Jimmy lens and Kodot film. 

 

Tuesday
Jun292010

linen love

Libeco Clément collectionI hereby declare my full and complete 24/7/365 love of linen. The affair deepens afresh every year around this time. Summer is made for linen. Soft and cool to wear. Sophisticated but relaxed. Luxurious. Durable. Earthy and earth-friendly. Pressed or rumbled -- I just adore it. My fave sources for linen products are Libeco Home Stores and The Linen Way. Libeco is a a Belgian company and they have the MOST beautiful linens for the table, the kitchen, the bed -- and to wear (and the duffle bags are so Great Gatsby chic!). The Linen Way is a wholesale source, but you can find their products at many retailers across North America. The lady who runs the company with her son -- well, they are just lovely lovely people. I like to give lovely people my business and I try to promote them as much as possible!

Also on my linen source list are Fog, Matteo and Rawganique. John and Juli at Mjölk sell Fog in Toronto. I don't need to tell you how great their store is -- I'm sure you already know. But here's a fun link to the story of their recent trip to Japan when the met the founder of Fog, Yumiko Sekine. Charming! Now, back to Rawganique. I have a major beef with them -- their site is HIDEOUS! Check it out here. Someone needs to save them from their preachy selves. Couldn't they store all their text-heavy eco-messaging behind a hot link? And is it against the tree-hugger code to celebrate beauty? I assure you, the products they sell -- the linen and hemp bedding specifically -- are devastatingly gorgeous but you'd be hard-pressed to know that looking at the site. So sad and such a missed opportunity.

I love to collect new and antique table and kitchen linens. On my current want list is linen bedding. I'd like to mix linen and hemp bedding for my place in Tweed -- if I can find some that I can afford! Last time I was at Muji in NYC they had some and I didn't buy it - drat! Hope they still have it when I'm back in Sept. Or maybe I'll call...Meanwhile, enjoy my little love letter to linen.

And one final heartbreak -- so sad that IKEA has discontinued the Aina drapery panels in pure linen. Truly one of my most favourite IKEA products of all time. A pox on them for doing so -- I mean, just look at the lovely way they flow and puddle hanging from my DIY four-poster!

sources: 1-5: Libeco. 6, 7, 13: Linen Way. 8: Matteo. 9. Bemz. 10, 11: Fog. 12: Pi'lo. 14: styling: me. photo: donna griffith.

 

Monday
Jun212010

painting the trim

 

I'm painting the trim at my place in Tweed , Ont. And when I say "I'm painting." I really mean that I am doing the painting. No professional painter, no help from hubs (I think he would if I'd let him, but I'm not letting...trust me, it wouldn't be good for our marriage.) The house is not huge, just a 3 bedroom red brick number with all the normal rooms. But oh my, there is  A LOT of trim. I did a calculation on the weekend. I will be painting 58, yes 58 pieces of corner block moulding -- each block takes 2 coats of primer and 2 coats of paint -- as does all the linear footage of trim that runs between all 58 blocks, plus I am painting some of the walls, too. I'm quite thrilled with the results so far, so thought I'd share some befores and durings. For the After shots, you'll have to check out a future issue of STYLE AT HOME. This is a BIG project. I'll keep you posted.

I took this before shot just post-Christmas (hence the evergreen swag on the newel post). It creeps me out to think how long I lived with this looking this way...

As you can tell from the chaos of this shot, I took it just after finishing painting -- guess I should've moved the lamp and ladder. oops. There is much to do still in the stairway area: paint risers to match spindles, paint treads, handrail and newel post in Farrow & Ball Railings in full gloss (yum), new stair runner, new lighting, hang art along far stairway wall, whitewash floor...

YIKES, I disliked the stained trim around the front window so much I tried to hide it behind these feeble curtains. And I chose a nasty golden wall colour just 'cause it blended with the trim stain -- proof positive that you should NEVER decorate around something you don't like in hopes of making it look better. Won't work. You will still dislike. Lesson learned.

Oh, hello pretty stained glass window with yellow. I did not even notice you before because of the ugliness surrounding and obscuring your beauty. I'm inspired by your colour and I promise your next dressing will be much more flattering. I'm working on that now...(ps sorry again for not moving the lamp + don't have photoshop).

Here's the magic potion I am using on the trim: Farrow & Ball Eco Finishes Estate Eggshell in the colour Pointing. The stuff is like thick cream and has just the right look of age to it -- perfect for my 100-year-old home. And yet, as you can see, the effect is light and bright. Oh, actually, just realized, I used the same colour in full gloss on the panelled stair wall and balusters -- that finish is perfect because the gloss really picks up the light coming in the front door. I decided to use Farrow & Ball because my kitchen already had trim painted in this colour. I know people in design go on and on about maintaining flow -- and this is a prime example. Before, when you walked from the kitchen into the living and dining rooms, you felt like you were entering a different home. Now there is flow. Flow is nice and peaceful. I quite like it. I painted the walls in the living room (see above) in the same colour, Pointing, in a flat finish: Estate Emulsion. The hallway walls are Farrow & Ball's Lime White -- they've been the same for years and I still like it. Love the mixing of whites.

And in case you are wondering, yes, I will be using some of the new STYLE AT HOME paint colours that I worked on for Beauti-Tone. I'm in the process now of choosing one for the mudroom walls -- that will be the most incredible makeover...can't wait to tell you more about it....and there's plenty more.