Monday, May 31, 2010

GIVEAWAY REMINDER!!!



DON'T FORGET!  

Wonderful handmade giveaway items:


                        hand made in Bolivia

      these are from Anabel Fournier of ...and so I whisper, one                                                              of my favorite blogs!

                                              jewelry and crochet scarf 

                click here to enter!

Again, here are the items. 

To enter, you must go here, leave a comment, tell me which one you would want, make sure you leave your email. The drawing is Sunday, June 6.

                    #1.           #2.


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     #3. #4.


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#5.


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Friday, May 28, 2010

YARD SALE AT EDDIE ROSS




Yard Sale....at Eddie Ross

Yes, it was Yard Sale Weekend chez Eddie and Jaithan! They live in upstate New York, in the Hudson Valley. And this was their much anticipated yard sale...I was there within an hour of its opening. Lots of goodies! Of all kinds. Silver, fabric, furniture, dinnerware, bone-handled knives, lampshades, books and the list goes on. True to form, they were gracious hosts! Not only was it a sale: it was an "event", drawing people from near and far. What a perfect way to start the long weekend... and I went on to Millerton for lunch with a friend and discovered lots of great shops and restaurants.







this is the house:

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this is the view:




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these are the people:




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here are their neighbors:


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and here are the goods:


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I'm still kicking myself for not buying that great DIY table....but I did buy the sel et poivre grinders... here they are all cleaned up:


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and here's the sweet little green pitcher, now filled with daisies:


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and of course, being me, I couldn't resist some pictures of their flowers:


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thanks Eddie, thanks Jaithan, thanks Shaari for making it a great day

and Kay: I'm sorry you missed it; and we missed you.....

Hope you all have a good weekend: I'll be back on Tuesday.




Wednesday, May 26, 2010

HANDMADE IN BOLIVIA: UNIQUE GIVEAWAY








Let me introduce Anabel Fournier...



    ...and so I whisper is Anabel's blog.  Not only are her products out of this world; her pictures are just as wonderful. Add to that her unusual and unique life story and the result is a blend of sophistication, curiosity, love of color and materials and an attention to details that won me over! 



I've wanted to do a giveaway with some of her products for some time now. But I also wanted to interview her for a feature post... so here I am ... combining the two. I asked her some questions, just last week, to which she responded.



Q:  Would you tell us something about you and your unusual history?



A.:  I am a native Costa Rican of French descent and mother of two wonderful kids, living in Bolivia. I am a person of the arts who cannot keep still, and my mind and my hands are always busy creating new things and playing with every material that gets into my hands. I have traveled extensively since I was very young and enjoy the challenge of moving to new places and discovering new cultures.



Q:  Can you tell us how that has influenced not only your present style, but how you think that has made your style unique? I mean, how is your world view different from, say, someone who has always lived in one place?



A.:   After living in Europe, South America, Central America, Africa and the Middle East, I have found that my perceptions are much more sensitive and open to discovery. I have learned to use color and mix textures in everything in my life. Traveling and moving around has made me a much more tolerant and adaptable person to different environments and settings. I have met many people who have inspired me, who have taught me new ways doing things.



Q:  And your sense of color: is it color that guides you? Or materials? Or both? Does one come first and sort of lead you to the other?



A:  I first look into the materials I would like to use and then I look for the colors that work for each collection. 



Q:  When you lived in Africa, did you also look to the local women for their craft "ability" and use them? You are still importing items from Africa, right? As you move around the world, do you think you will continue to work with people from these different countries, or would you prefer to concentrate your efforts in one country? 

A:  Yes, I lived in Africa for two years. I learned there the wonderful art of beading and now use it in my accessories collections. I am still importing fabric from different parts of Africa because I love the colors and designs.



I concentrate my efforts in creating styles and collections that can be manufactured wholly in Bolivia where my permanent workshop is located, but I love the materials and colors from different parts of the world, and as they become available to me I would like to keep experimenting and creating with them.

Since 2003 I started a poverty alleviation project in Bolivia to provide work and improve incomes to women knitters in the city of Cochabamba. We started with a baby and children's clothing line, and since November 2009 started a line of women's clothing and accessories.



     Now, let's get on to the Giveaway!

#1.           African "Khanga" necklace.

         These fabrics are from Kenya, and the beads from Tanzania 

                           African Khanga necklace1rev 


  #2.



                          African Necklace medallion1rev 

#3.   Pendant Necklace

   Made from Pima cotton from Peru and pewter from Bolivia. Hand made in Bolivia.





                  Pendant-Pewter Necklace1rev 

#4.   

      Faux pearl handmade in Bolivia.

                             Faux Pearl-Crochet necklace1rev 

 #5.

       Summer weight Pima cotton scarf made in Bolivia

                             Crochet Scarf Light Blue1rev
  

    To enter the giveaway:

    1. Choose the item you would like!

    2. Leave a comment on the post, and be sure to leave your email so I can contact                 you if you win!  Then, for additional entries you can:

       **** Become a follower and leave a separate comment

      **** Post, or Tweet, about the giveaway and leave a comment linking back to                              your blog or Tweet

      **** Yes, we can ship to Canada and Europe

That's up to three entries!  Giveaway will close at 9 PM on Sunday, June 6, 2010.

The winner will be announced the following day, Monday June 7, 2010.

 
 





Tuesday, May 25, 2010

CHROMA LAB REVISITED


Do you remember my visit to ChromaLab?

Here are the two pieces I took to them for makeovers:


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And here is the result:


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more views:


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Here they used BM Savannah Green underneath (with the original wood showing through also), and BM Pale Celery. Two coats of clear glaze, and wax on the top. Distressed, shabby chic for sure!

And for the tilt-top table:


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 Here we used BM Blue Hydrangea for the bottom and Blue Daisy for the top. Then, of course, the wonderful trompe l'oeil sprig of lavender: nice touch Tony!
  

 Am I happy? Yes. Did we absolutely rescue these two tired, ordinary pieces from the Goodwill pile (or worse)? Yes indeed. 

And, what's more, the blue table goes perfectly with the new duvet cover I just bought last week (Pottery Barn).  I had my eye on this cover for maybe six months, waiting for it to go on sale. No such luck. So I just DID it, and bought it with two shams. Again, am I happy with this? Yes indeed.

The walls had been a pale, sort of dirty yellow. Now they are BM Palladian Blue. I recommend it highly: a medium, grayed blue that is very peaceful and serene.

The question I ask myself is: where in the world did the BLUE thing come from? I have never, ever used blue in my house! My first loves are still yellow and red, but blue in the bedroom? Not too bad!


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Bed
 
 
 



Sunday, May 23, 2010

TRENDY MONDAY: NAUTICAL


By the sea, by the sea...


Nautical is a trend. It's been around for years, of course, but you see it now being used in almost every product category. Nautical can be the traditional colors of flags i.e. red, navy, white, yellow; but more often these days we see it in all shades of blue, mixed with creams, naturals, and ochres. One of my favorite fashion items is the iconic French blue and white stripe "sailor" shirt. Oh so classic!

Here's a trend board showing you a small, very small, selection of "nautical for the home".

Nautical 1

Love this one! From the chalk board map to the Greek key rug, the blues aren't too heavy yet the colors are varied.


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{House Beautiful}

Are we in a house, or a boat? The seating and storage are nicely done. The dark stained beam ceiling is great.


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{House Beautiful}

In Nova Scotia:


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Just a little nautical!:

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{House Beautiful}

And from the overtly, blaring nautical:


Screenshot {Houzz}


to the subtler, sweet, old-fashioned "by the sea" look (yes, this is what I grew up with, whether at the Jersey shore, Martha's Vineyard or Maine..):



Screenshot
{Houzz}

And, for some on-site pictures, these from Brimfield last week:


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Which kind of nautical are you? Do you like the traditional colors; do you like nautical flags to be evident; or are you more of a "seaside" person?

Thursday, May 20, 2010

ARTIST BOBBIE BURGERS


How in the world did I come across Bobbie Burgers? 

    I honestly do not remember: the link has been here on my computer for some time, under the gallery, Bau-Xi, which represents her both in Canada and the U.S. She is Canadian, and as you might guess when you scroll below, has studied and painted in Provence, France.

    Where to even begin? Her paintings are FABULOUS. The color, the sheer explosion of color, is out of the world wonderful. 

    Of her subject matter (flowers) she has said, "Flowers became my focus only because I wanted a medium to express colour. It's not that I have an obsession with flowers - there just seems to be an endless variety of shape and form and colour."

    And to her process she says: "A still life can look very traditional. A floral can look like nothing more than a rendering. But I want them to be larger than life, undeniably there, sucking you in."


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Wonderfully exuberant and colorful! 

The next show at Bau-Xi  will be this coming July in Vancouver and  October in Toronto.


 



Monday, May 17, 2010

THREE SHOWS AT JAVITS


Three shows in one building!

    Surtex: "Selling and Licensing Original Art & Design" is the tag line for this show. For those of you who do not know me well, or who have just met me in this last year of blogging, I will tell you that Surtex holds a very special place for me. I showed here, almost continually, for twenty years. The show was still fairly new when, in 1990, I decided to do it. I had been designing for a number of years and even had a few licensing contracts at the time. But I had also been very sick that winter, was fully recovered, and wanted to reach out to the design world. It was a first attempt! The booth was not great... but what did come of it was a job with a manufacturer and importer of wovens. That was a genuinely remarkable experience: from designing, to marketing, to managing the showroom during market weeks, to Heimtex, to the factories in India. I will never forget it!

    After showing for so many years, both as designer and then licensing agent, it was time for a break this year. But, of course, going back as an observer is bittersweet. I passed customers in the aisles, saw them working with other artists in their booths, visited both old and new friends. Those of you associated with the show are familiar with Kay Degenhardt who is the media/marketing guru.  Kay and I go way back: she represented me many years ago and now we have become colleagues in the design business. She is a role model for me (!) and I was hoping I would run into her and sure enough, we had a reunion in the 200 aisle...and were soon joined by Lisa Newman, then Barbara Richardson and Krim Danzinger of AkzoNobel Paints . Barbara is presenting "Color Futures: an Informative Look at Color" as part of the Surtex conference program.

"I think of my presentation as an informative look at color," Richardson says. "I'll delve into the details behind the color vision we're anticipating in upcoming years and touch on the principles that inspire designers in their selection of color, with an emphasis on the psychological reasoning associated with particular colors and their appropriate applications.

"Color is a remarkable instrument,"

    What did I see at Surtex? Honestly, a little bit of everything because, as you can imagine, all artists have their own "interpretation" and way of presenting what is timely. Everyone has a different style. That said, there were flowers galore. All kinds of flowers to be sure, but many were almost letter-pressed/botanical looking. I would say the scale was large for the most part: one gorgeous flower on a white ground. One interpretation had that flower with lots of texture; another had it almost pastel (perhaps done with water based colored pencil?) as part of a bouquet. One thing that seemed evident to me was a return to showing artwork as is: not always presenting an entire collection of formatted products but rather just presenting the artwork, thus allowing the manufacture/buyer to reformat and experiment.  Is there a consensus on this? What do you all think? All of you designers who read this: are you doing less "product formatting" and concentrating on design/artwork alone?

    But I also saw so much one and two color patterning; this is almost always computer generated. Negative/positive, silhouettes, border treatment, geometrics: all of these and more. Which then segues into the Stationery Show where this was very much in evidence.

    The very first, and to me most obvious, design element I noticed at the NSS were ALL the cards with clever sayings, a "bon mot", contemporary illustrations, or photography with an appropriate cute phrase. All over; everywhere. Now, I am just not a big fan of this type of card...so I can't get excited about this...But, of course, they sell. And that IS the bottom line here, right? There is truly something for everyone: whether as card purchaser or card recipient. 

    But back to the geometrics as seen as Surtex: here there are wonderful interpretations of one and two color graphics, in note cards, journal covers, diaries, note pads, giftwrap, calenders and so much more.  I do think the product offerings are remarkable: from the traditional paper products to "giftie" items such as key chains, business card holders, cubes, candles, wall stickers,  and on and on.

    Colors? A lot of green, but then that works well with the botanicals and the "flora and fauna" themes also seen. Jonathan Adler showed turquoise. Vera Bradley has wonderful florals for both their fabric products and paper line. Many were on dark grounds: black or indigo.  Marsupial had a wonderful chocolate brown booth backdrop with magentas, purples and pinks in evidence. Anna Griffin had, front on, neutral colorways on new bags; a key line geometric and then an almost jacobean floral companion. Birds: large, small, botanical, silhouetted; they are definitely an item. 

The Furniture Show (ICFF): 

    I think I have only been to this show once as I was never able to leave my booth up at Surtex in order to make the trip downstairs. Oh, what I have missed! It is wonderful and if you ever have a chance to go: do it! One of the best things about it is just the space available.... wide open aisles, no real booth setup, and then all the fabulous furniture and finishes from all over the world. This year there was lots of glitz and bling in the finishes available: one small table even had real Swarovski crystals in the faux glass as the center inlay. Or a square table with caning in the center finished with a gold spray. Or a traditional 18th Century chair spray painted with metallic silver. Lots of chrome and stainless steel; metallic surfaces for counters and walls. And then, the oversize florals from Graham & Brown Wallcoverings: beautiful flowers on long, 12 ft. high hangings.. Jonathan Adler, again, showing turquoise but also in evidence the new pear green and chocolate brown combination, with rust accents. 

    At the very end of the show, just as I was  ready to leave, I thought I recognized her.... another blogging friend in person! Yes, I met Jackie Von Tobel and her daughter Anastasia...Now, I would never have known who she was were it not for her picture on her blog. And, of course, on my blog here I show my feet! Maybe it's time for a real head shot!



LAST LOOK AT BRIMFIELD (UNTIL JULY!)


Promise: this is the last of the show!


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And from a new (to me) source for vintage clothing and accessories: FunkyFinder


Purse 3 Purse 2


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Shoes

Next: on to the shows at Javits!


Sunday, May 16, 2010

TO BRIMFIELD, THEN JAVITS


What a whirlwind weekend!


The weekend started out Friday afternoon as we drove up to the Berkshires to spend the night in an ordinary motel. Not so! We opened our bottle of wine and sat looking at the setting sun out over the water.  Then, the restaurant attached to said ordinary motel was Indian. We were in for a treat: authentic, delicious Tandoori and curry served while we sat by the water's edge!

Saturday morning off to Brimfield. The weather was perfect. The "show" seems to get better each time I go, in part because it no longer feels SO overwhelming and enormous. I had definite fields, and names of booths, where I was headed...but of course was side-tracked many, many times. At the beginning of the day I was taking pictures every few feet: most vendors are fine with pictures, but I do always ask first, and yes, there are a few who won't allow it. By the end of the day...well, it was all I could do to put one foot in front of the other.

I'll do at least two posts on Brimfield..so stay tuned...but for now I have a few highlights to show you. 

First stop is Nifty Thrifty Dry Goods. Do you know it? It has been one of my very favorite booths at Brimfield every time I go! 

Oh my goodness. What to say? Are you looking for trim? Ribbon? Buttons? Ideas? Colors ? They have it. Sue's story is of a tradition carried down through the generations, and her displays mimic those of her grandmother's dry goods store.


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The displays, much less the products, are so rich in details. I did ask Sue if there was a best selling colorway. Green and cream was her answer. Hmmm: food for thought!
Visits to Sue's studio in Barrington, R.I. are available by appointment.  Check the website above.      

Next is going back to last Monday's post on Grain Sacks. I was on the lookout! 


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                            Yes! These from La Casita in Tampa, Florida.
 

And finally, at the end of the day, we made our way to The Textile Trunk, home of Wendy Lewis, the famous purveyour of all things grain sack and French textile.

It's the first time I have actually met someone from the blog world! We were so surprised to "see" each other...Wendy is great: she's friendly, great sense of humor, very down to earth, loves to talk about what she does and how she does it, and is just so full of information. She is, in her own words, "just a little obsessed with fabrics!" Here we are:


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  ok, ok, not a great picture: it had been a long day!

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 Note that gorgeous antique window fabric in the background.


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I listened to Wendy's story, and she listened to mine, and I am sure we will get together again.

I was going to continue with the next day, today Sunday and my trip into the Javits Center. Three shows to see, walk and review: Surtex, Stationery and Furniture.

I'm going to let them go until tomorrow! Time to call it a day.
 



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