Homefreude

Happy Christmas one and all. Now take me somewhere hot before I dissolve

Posted on by D in Fashionfreude, Festivefreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment

Just before Christmas I said I’d post about my homemade holly wreath. There was a whole painful saga behind it: from discovering you had to pay £20 for a wilting wreath at homebase and B&Q through multiple holly-gathering missions and torturous sessions with gardening twine and secateurs as I wrestled the holly into some sort of circular form. Anyway, it’s a little too late for it to be of any use, but I have to post it given the blood (literally), sweat and tears that went into it. So here is the homemade holly wreath in all its glory:

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The shopping list:
Two bags of holly, pilfered from local church yard
One wire coat hanger (a genuine wire wreath circle would be better, but as this was an effort at a thrifty Christmas decoration, I used the hanger. Not ideal as there is not much for the wire to grip onto and the holly slides around).
One pack glitter pine cones, £3.99, B&Q. Half to three quarters of a pack used.
Plant wire, £2.99, hardware stores

Festive Kirsty moment: Making a mini Christmas tree scene

Posted on by D in Fashionfreude, Festivefreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment

Earlier this week, in a completely as yet unheard of move, I got all festive on a few baby Christmas trees from Tesco and did THIS:

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I’d seen the idea on a design blog and loved it – and making decorations at Christmas always makes me feel so much more festive than buying it (don’t get me wrong, I love to buy shit too of course).
My theory is that precious time + effort = maximum enjoyment of result (and a bit of that festive smugness that old Allsopp feeds off all year round).

When I started out on this mini project I didn’t anticipate it would cost over 50 quid, take eight journey to almost 20 different shops looking for mini trees (shocked to find the last place I looked – Tesco – was the place); price comparison on baby baubles; hunting for LED lights that were golden not blue-ish… but the way I see it, next year I’ll only have to buy the green stuff.

Whaddya think? Next post: Homemade holly wreath.

Merry Christmas!

THE BREAKDOWN
Trees: £3 each, Tesco
Planter: £18 (bit pricey, but it’s surprisingly difficult to find an indoor window box), local florist
Moss, £2, florist
Mud, £3.29, Homebase
Lights: £4.99 from Robert Dyas (make sure to get ‘soft white’ otherwise they will look blueish and dreary.
Baubles: £3, 50% off @ Urban Outfitters. Paperchase do similar @ £4.

Write your Christmas cards in style: Louis Vuitton launches luxury stationery range

Posted on by M in Fashion News, Fashionfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment

What do you buy for the woman who has everything? A €1,750 Louis Vuitton alligator fountain pen with a piston-filling system, obviously.

The pen forms part of the new writing collection, to be launched at pop-up store ‘Le Cabinet d’Ecriture Louis Vuitton’, in Saint Germain (that’s French for Paris), on December 13th.

The range includes crystal ink pots, luxury pencils, bespoke stationery and leather notebook holders.

If your cash doesn’t stretch that far, you can always just invest in some ink for €35 – pen & pot not included.

It all sounds rather grand, old-world and way out of our budget so naturally, we love it.

(images:WWD)

Definitely not on the High Street: LV crystal ink pot

LV leather pouch: For your papers and things…

Who lives in a house like this? World of Interiors sneaks a peek into the homes of top fashion designers

Posted on by M in Fashion News, Fashionfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment

Donatella Versace’s phat pad

Their runway work is perfection but we secretly thought maybe some of the world’s top designers were living under a messy sea of safety pins and sketches, suffering for their art, with no time to pay attention to painting and decorating.

World of Interiors have quickly put a stop to that sad mental picture, peering through the keyhole of the fashion elite.

Think opulence, understated elegance and dream homes – so if you’re stuck for ideas on your new place, have an unlimited budget or just love a bit of interiors porn, go get the December Fashion issue now.

Christopher Bailey, Giorgio Armani, Nicolas Ghesquière, Vivienne Westwood, Donatella Versace (above), Marc Jacobs, Sarah Burton, Jean Paul Gaultier, Azzedine Alaïa and Hubert de Givenchy all opened up their doors to WOI, taking the images themselves and even wrote accompaniment texts.

Ikea, anyone? Sigh…

 

Man likes to read: Giorgio Armani’s Milan apartment

Not a check in sight: Burberry’s Christopher Bailey’s Yorkshire farmhouse

Very establishment: Vivienne Westwood’s traditional home

 

Get the December edition of World of Interiors, out now

Ff loves… rustic chandelier lights by San Francisco artist Tracey Kessler

Posted on by D in Artfreude, Fashionfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment
Lighting up our world: Tracey Kessler lights inspired by vintage builders lamps

Lighting up our world: Tracey Kessler lights inspired by vintage builders lamps

Spare £3,000? This is what we would spend it on this month. San Francisco designer Tracey Kessler has created some rustic-looking cage lights inspired by a some tangled old metal wire and old construction workers’ lamps she spotted at a salvage yard.

Love the way they’re clustered together, and the warm ember-like glow.

Via morewaystowastetime.blogspot.co.uk. Image copyright Eric Luse for the San Francisco Chronicle.

 

Ff wishes you all a very Happy Easter!

Posted on by D in Fashion News, Fashionfreude, Festivefreude, Foodfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment
Happy Easter! Celebrate with a feast of Faberge

Happy Easter! And a feast of Faberge

Mulberry's Bayswater bunny

Cuteness: Mulberry's Bayswater bunny

Gwyneth Paltrow Skypes in to Rachael Ray show to defend accusations over cook book… You go girl!

Posted on by D in Fashionfreude, Foodfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment

We’ve all been there, a few glasses of wine down and we get all self-righteous about something that’s been bothering us. Most of us wouldn’t be afforded access to video chat on  a national TV show to get things off our chest… But Gwyneth can! And you know what, she did too.

Gwyneth Skyping in to Rachael Roy (image via ABC news)

Gwyneth Skyping in to Rachael Roy (image via ABC news)

Froom her London kitchen, dressed in her pyjamas and waving a half-drink glass of wine around, she Skyped into Rachael Ray’s cookery show to defend herself against recent accusations that celebrity chefs (her included) have little or nothing to do with their cook books.

Ghosted, but still pure Gwynnie, she says

Ghosted, but still pure Gwynnie, she says

Gwyneth wasn’t one of those  directly accused in the New York Timesof relying entirely on an other food writer to conceive, develop, write and test her recipes (though that was one of the accusations levelled at the celeb cook book market in general). But she was mentioned as someone who had a lot of help writing hers, and her picture was used on the story – and on all the subsequent coverage when other media organisations picked up the story. Guilty by association then.

So naturally Gwyneth, who swears blind she came up with all the recipes herself from her very London kitchen, was outraged – and called Rachael to tell her so. Here’s the vid – it makes us want to be Gwynnie’s pal… We’re with you, Gwyneth!

The ultimate upcycle: Rusty bike to arthouse light

Posted on by D in Artfreude, Fashionfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment
Inspired: The Upcycled Bicycle lamp by Andre Wagner and Jen Turner (photograph via New York Times)

Inspired: The Upcycled Bicycle lamp by Andre Wagner and Jen Turner (photograph via New York Times)

It’s always a little bit sad to see a once-fine bicycle rusting away, abandoned, locked to a fence somewhere to end its days rusting slowly while scavengers pick over the best parts, leaving the mangled, corroding remains (well, as a cyclist with a soft heart, I find it sad anyway…). But in New York, two artists have found a way to reinstate the majesty of the two-wheeler, by salvaging its parts and turning them into art.

INSPIRATION#1: The ‘skeletons’ of abandoned bicycles left to rust around NYC

INSPIRATION#1: The 'skeletons' of abandoned bicycles left to rust around NYC

Inspired by Japanese sculptor Isamo Noguchi’s Akari pendant light and those of George Nelson, Andrew Wagner and Jen Turner saw a resemblance between the rusting wheels of abandoned bikes, and the former’s arthouse lighting designs.

INSPIRATION#2: Noguchi’s Akari lights

Inspiration: Noguchi's Akari lamps

They set about creating their own tribute, using pieces they salvaged from unwanted bike wreckages from neighbourhoods they found were fertile hunting ground for these abandoned treasures – Williamsburg, East Village, SoHo.

INSPIRATION#3: George Nelson’s pendant bubble light

Inspiration#2: An original George Nelson pendant light

The result? A resounding success, that as the artists put it, are a sweet reminder of cycling as children through the neighbourhoods where they found the bikes.

Here’s how they did it (via the New York Times):

“Materials collected, we set about devising a simple fixture with an air of 1960s cool. The design was straightforward: We took two de-spoked rims, one slightly larger than the other, and inserted the smaller into the larger, securing them at one junction with a screw, nut and washer.

Once the structure was in place, it was time to install the light. An old lamp socket and cord would work beautifully, though you can find something similar at any lighting store (we got ours at Canal Lighting for $20). With at least 20 feet of cord, the lamp can be adapted to virtually any setup.

We ran the cord through one junction of the structure, leaving the plug on the outside, then we attached the light socket to the end of the cord inside the lamp, using a plastic cable grip to hold the wire and bulb at the right level.

We then wove ribbon through the spoke holes (though you could also use sliced, discarded bike tubes), to provide structural support for the final phase of construction — the application of ripstop nylon, often used as parachute fabric.

The entire project — from collecting the material to building the lamp — could easily be done in a day. (Ours took a little over two weeks, but only because we kept tweaking the design.)

And once complete, it’s a surprisingly beautiful and mildly cheeky reminder of the leafy suburbs where many of us first learned to pedal.”

From Trash to Treasure: A Workshop Exploring Transformation, with Andrew Wagner and Jen Turner, will be held in conjunction with the “Found” show, at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, in Ridgefield, Conn., on March 31. Information: (203) 438-4519 or aldrichart.org/events.

 

via New York Times

Adele is creeped out by her massive Sussex mansion, moves in her bodyguard, hits Tesco

Posted on by D in Fashionfreude, Homefreude | Leave a comment

Ff could have predicted this weeks ago. When lovely Adele, who was brought up in a small apartment above a shop and, even once famous, chose to make her home a modest London flat, said she was moving into an enormous £7m 10-bedroom Sussex mansion, we weren’t sure how long it would last.

It's creepy and it's kooky, mysterious and spooky: Adele's 'haunted' mansion

It's creepy and it's kooky, mysterious and spooky: Adele's 'haunted' mansion

Two swimming pools, 25 acres of land, and more wings than Adele has Grammys. We worried she’d be rattling around in the place. And now, the 23-year-old star has confessed the echoey old building – a former convent - gives her ‘the creeps’.

Friends have said she keeps hearing things that ‘make her jump’, and she’s now so convinced it’s haunted that she is reportedly paying her (female) bodyguard £100,000 a year to live there with her.

Adele showed U.S. TV host Anderson Cooper around her house before she moved in - but now confesses she finds the building spooky

Adele showed U.S. TV host Anderson Cooper around her house before she moved in – but now confesses she finds the building spooky

That’s one expensive flatmate. And just as anyone would when they move into a new place together, Adele and her new roomie headed straight out to the nearest supermarket to stock up on supplies.
Hope you got your Clubcard points, girls!
Ooh, the glamour! Even superstars need to cook din dins sometimes

Ooh, the glamour! Even superstars need to cook din dins sometimes

Bored of your old wooden headboard? Get papering!

Posted on by D in Homefreude | 1 Comment

This is a great way to jazz up an old wooden headboard – and to indulge your passion for a dramatic wallpaper.

Especially good to find a use for statement wallpaper if you’re renting and don’t want to waste your lovely paper on your mean old landlord’s crumbling walls, or if you don’t want to commit to an entire feature wall.

And if you get fed up of chartreuse birds, tear it off and start again!

via decor8