Thursday, 29 July 2010

Textile time in Thailand

Want to share some inspiring textiles I saw in Chinag Mai today
by local artist Pairat Sawasdisara.
She is multi talented and her small showroom in Northern Village at Central Airport Plaza shows both her beautiful large paintings, silk screen printed silks and these beautiful patchwork embroideries.
I loved the way she has created a tablecloth by embroidering 
small fabric pictures onto the beautiful soft, natural hemp fabric. 
The result is a work of art on the table - a still life.


Her images of northern hill tribe women are just stunning.

Friday, 23 July 2010

Ten ways I love to use tea towels

When did my love of tea towels begin?
Well it wasn't at the kitchen sink!

Inspiration came when I saw these wonderful tea towels at StudioPatro
They describe it so beautifully:

"what is a tea towel?


essential kitchen accomplice

natural and absorbent

thoughtful, responsible giving

washable and reusable

classic cook's tool

better than a paper towel

motivator to dry the dishes

dish towel or art?"


Reading the constantly inspiring Treefall today, I was introduced to Skinny Laminx 
and her amazing T-towel designs in her Etsy shop. 
Had to buy this one for the IKEA man in my life!


The thought popped into my head that I really needed to know how
 to use these tea towels for wrapping gifts japanese style, Furoshiki to be precise.

Furoshiki in a nutshell = the origami of cloth


Do you believe in synchronicity?
 I do ... 
no sooner had the wrapping idea come to me 
than I was led to click on this link with a twist!


Further investigation led me here and now I am madly practising wrapping anything to get my skill level up.

Go further and watch this clip to make a kangaroo wrap

I had to end with my own effort

No animal suffered in the taking these photographs



Ps Sorry, this  blog has link overload - but I just kept finding more and more that I wanted to share with you.

Sunday, 18 July 2010

Anthro, Austin and art

Shopping in Anthropologie in Austin just over a week ago. Heaven. My eye was drawn to this book-so inspiring I bought it. 










Love how author Sibilla Court describes herself as being less of a hoarder and more as a collector and curator of things. In fact she goes further and likens herself to a bowerbird. Perfect.

Bowerbirds (well the male to be precise) love to create an elaborate structure, a bower, which they decorate with colourful objects they find.... from snail shells and berries to bottle caps and flowers. Attracting another mate is not my intention! but this has to be the best description for a lover of things unusual and beautiful. Doesn't Sally Elfords screen print act as a beautiful image to focus on?




Bower bird


Satin Bowerbird screen print card by Sally Elford

The book has so many great ideas, I recommend you hot foot it to Anthro or Amazon and secure your own copy of ETCETERA



Monday, 5 July 2010

Tables love fabric


Tables love fabric


A little table rehab for sister Jen's kitchen 
 ~ a linen runner on top of a linen cloth
simple and effective at tieing the old and the new furniture together ...
as Jen decides on what look she is going for.
(3 years on and she is still working on it!)

If your table looks lost then try taking a piece of nice linen but don't make it cover the entire table. Leaving some of the wood showing creates a nicer feel. 
If you don't have time to sew then just iron the edges under.
The runner on top creates the focal point and links it all together. 
Again you don't need to sew it ~ just fold it over so the raw edges are hidden.
Have some fun and bring summer into the kitchen.


I'm in Texas at the moment and hoping to be back in blogging mode soon - but plenty of distractions. 
See here for one reason!

Wednesday, 16 June 2010

Collections


Understatement: I love collecting

Example: stones ~ preferably rounded and smooth
My sister Jenni watching me find yet another special stone to bring home! photo by Alice



Inspiration: Kettle's yard, Cambridge

photo by Ingrid


"On Castle Street in Cambridge, is a beautiful and unique house containing a distinctive collection of modern art. Kettle's Yard was founded by H.S. 'Jim' Ede as a place where visitors would 'find a home and a welcome, a refuge of peace and order, of the visual arts and of music.' " 
If you are near Cambridge this summer I hope you can visit this unique home and art gallery too.


Inspiration: 'My Bombay Kitchen' by Niloufer Ichaporia King

My Bombay Kitchen: Traditional and Modern Parsi Home Cooking
In this treasure of a cookbook the author describes how her mother would choose a stone that fitted her hand and use that as the simplest of garlic crushers.

It was on the beach at Dunwich in Suffolk, Uk 
that I found my garlic crusher and now use it here in Beijing.





Wish for you today: to find a round stone on a beach or river bed near you.
(No beach? Find images that bring the idea closer to you)





Footnote: Flying back to Uk tomorrow -
so hope to collecting stones by Sunday as I walk on the Suffolk coast 
and breathe deeply the clean air.

Friday, 11 June 2010

The way we live with the things we love

Do you love books too?




 I love finding the unexpected when I open the pages and trusting 
that I will randomly come to a page 
that has something relevant for me to read today.



Some books I turn to more often than others and so today I plan 
to put my feet up for half an hour 
and randomly turn to some pages of delight in these books.


"Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. 
Inside of a dog it's too dark to read" Groucho Marx




Would love to hear what books you will be turning to this weekend....
(thanks Rufus for feigning interest)

Thursday, 10 June 2010

Possibilities



Statement: Dining tables need to be multifunctional

Fact: The dining room is probably one of the most underused rooms in the house




Here's mine in use this morning
~ breakfast
 ~ journalling
~ notes on this blog
~ making it my space 
~ listening to music 





Note to self: Use it more

coffee brewing - Gevalia
thermo mug - gift from Jo (Menu)
music playing - 1 Giant Leap




Footnote: I decided to make my writing space my own wherever I am 
by creating a simple quilted mat which uses some of my favourite colours and fabrics.
That way I am connecting with all that I have written before 
and helping me with the process.

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

A Fable about a Table

A little of what you fancy.......




does you good.

I hope you will find this blog has a little of what you fancy.
Maybe you'll even eat a fondant fancy while reading it!






Hi and welcome to the story as it unfolds.

A fable that was started in China by a piece of calligraphy art
and is developing into a book and a business......
The Fable of the Table


Let me start by explaining the story of how this beautiful piece of calligraphy came to be hanging on our entrance wall in Beijing.

In April 2002 I went to see an exhibition of the Art of Calligraphy in Modern China at the British Museum in London. 
(I was living in Copenhagen at the time and moving to China in the summer of 2002)

The exhibition just captivated me 
and I wrote down the names of some of my favourite artists.
Probably 6 months after I moved to Beijing I had reason to go to Liulichang, the artists street in Beijing, and was able to meet Sa Benjie, one of the calligraphers who had exhibited in the UK.
 From this initial meeting we were invited to Sa Benjie's studio, 
fell in love with his work and the stories behind them, 
culminating in the purchase of the piece entitled 'A Fable about a Table.'

In 1994, Sa Benjie had become fascinated by the idea 
that individual items of furniture 
could develop a personality of their own, 
'and that this could be used as a metaphor 
for the thoughts and actions of human beings.'

Our painting tells the story of how a beautiful Ming scroll table 
was rescued in the 1950's by Wang Shixiang, 
a great authority and collector of Chinese furniture. 
During this era, the communist idealists sort to destroy all vestiges of the wealthy classes.
The calligraphy tells this story and how the table came to be donated to the Shanghai Museum in the 1990's.

 detail from 'A Fable about a Table'





Makes me take a second look at some of the furniture in our home... 


If you would like to read more about modern calligraphy 
I recommend "The Art of Calligraphy in Modern China" by Gordon Barrass




























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