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having a dress up moment RED

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the only fashion advice you'll get this december~
 


Audrey Hepburn by Richard Avedon

" When in doubt wear RED."
Bill Blass


along with a little look at the Bill Blass Spring Collection from 1995-surprisingly fresh & ladylike


Designer Garage - Cyber Monday Gift Ideas for the Car Guy/Gal

We designed this garage for the person who likes to tinker with toys with motors. This garage also happens to be designed with special outlets for catering companies who will basically install a kitchen in the Garage for large catered parties, thus the restaurant sink. I found the flooring and Cabinets at an web order based company in Chicago called Car Guy Garage. This company has fantastic gift ideas for people into cars. The sink and sprayer are from a commercial restaurant kitchen supplier.  This is a great resource and a very cool site. 




















Also Check out this link to Great Books on Ultimate Garages




I know it sounds dorky, but it is really hip.

POW: Sesame Street



"As I plop my too-young-to-watch-TV 18-month-old son in front of YouTube to enjoy a couple of minutes of Sesame Street clips, I feel comforted that what he’s going to see represents the world I want him to live in. He’s transfixed, bopping and swaying to Ray Charles singing the ABCs. He claps when the song is over. He's too young to tell me what he's thinking or feeling, but it's nice to know that his companions on his journey of childhood include a big yellow bird, a counting vampire, a garbage-can-dwelling misanthrope and a multiracial cast of human beings who value his worth as a child of color in this world. What a village." -Lome A. Aseron

Celebrating its 40th anniversary this season, multiple Emmy Award winning Sesame Street - OBG's POW (Place of the Week) - is the preeminent educational television program for preschoolers, a pioneer of the contemporary standard which combines education and entertainment in children's television shows, and a fictional place in the slightly idealized New York City.  The central characters - Susan, Gordon, and later, Miles; Maria, Luis, and later, Gabi; and in the basement apartment, Ernie and Bert - live at 123 Sesame Street and to the right of 123 Sesame Street are the somewhat more unusual abodes of Muppets Oscar the Grouch (and his pet worm Slimey) and Big Bird.  Other beloved Muppet characters include Mr. Snuffleupagus (aka Snuffy), Grundgetta, Ernie, Bert, the Twiddlebugs, Papa Bear, Mama Bear, Curly Bear, Baby Bear, monsters Telly, Zoe, Mexican-born Rosita, Elmo, Cookie Monster, Prairie Dawn, Count von Count, Humphrey, Ingrid, baby Natasha, bellhop Benny Rabbit, Kermit the Frog, The Two-Headed Monster and more (whew)!  Currently, Grover's regular segment, "Global Grover," follows the self-described "lovable, furry pal" around the world exploring local cultures and traditions.

Tying in with its multiculturalist perspective, the show pioneered the idea of occasionally inserting very basic Spanish words and phrases to acquaint young children to the concept of knowing more than one language with Sesame Street's reach ultimately becoming global.   [Source: Muppet.wikia.com]





Wine To Water: CNN HEROS: Put A Bow On Your Donation


When watching the special CNN HEROS and Bar Tender Doc Hendley received  an award for his work in creating Wine To Water where 100% of donations from wine tastings go directly for water projects in developing countries. It occurred to me what a great gift it would be to donate to this great organization in the name of a friend or  loved one instead of that foil wrapped bottle of wine. Put a Bow on your receipt from the DONATE link on WinetoWater.org website.








Our mission is to provide clean drinking water, sanitation and hygiene education to those in need around the world.


As donations for water projects are received, Wine for Wells partners with carefully selected in-country agencies to implement water projects. Only agencies with an exceptional track record of successful project implementation are utilized. 100% of public donations are given directly to water projects.


As part of its fundraising efforts, Wine for Wells works with partners in the wine industry to garner support for water projects. If your wine-related business would like more information on becoming a Wine for Wells partner, please contact us.




It was great to see Julia Louis-Dreyfus introduce Doc Hendley at the CNN HEROS Awards as she is such a good supporter of Heal The Ocean here in Santa Barbara. 

See previous Post...."Heal the Ocean Benefit in Montecito, CA."


a Tree inheritance

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Mrs. Tree's Sitting Room at Ditchley

Nancy Lancaster stated " I was always searching for beauty wherever I've lived, wherever I've gone. I wasn't interested in the houses as I was in their ambiance. In the furniture, in the history, in the garden. You never really could put your finger specifically on whatever created beauty-it was too elusive-but house were where I found it the most." In all of her homes she found it-Haseley Court, Kelmarsh Hall and likely her most triumphant Ditchley. In 1933-Ditchley became Nancy's- her husband-long fascinated with Ditchley purchased the property. It is fascinating to note- the house was filled with furniture collected for over 350 years. After some of the important and stellar pieces were tagged to go along with the sellers-leaving the rest to the Trees, Nancy shrewdly drew the line, telling her husband "we buy the house with everything or completely empty: one or the other, it was their choice. In the end they decided to sell it lock ,stock and barrel."

Nancy during her Ditchley Reign photographed by Cecil Beaton

Serebriakoff painting

During Nancy's tenure at Ditchley- the room once referred to as the Tapestry Room became Mrs. Tree's Sitting Room. Here she attended to the daily business of running the house. The most important design element in the room was the exotic Chinoiserie Rococo carvings.  Assisted by Stephane Boudin of Jansen in Paris, Mrs. Tree used him more as "contractor" and not decorator. She had no intention of creating a decorator's room- but a room of her own. The results were decidedly feminine, pale yellows, golds, whites and pinks for color and an 18th century Axminster carpet with birds, bouquets of flowers and wheat sheaths. Her design for the curtains-an elaborate Chippendale to do with pelmets- was loathed by Boudin-but Mrs. Tree insisted. The walls were covered in bleached out red Victorian damask, giving it a "sort of hardly pink color." A grand bureau plat with Austrian fauteuil, various pieces of black lacquer rounded out the room's design and lastly Nancy's witty addition of a oyster coloured felt embroidered table skirt with animals dressed in 18th & 19th century costumes- including Madame de Pompadour dressed with a goat's head.


The work was embroidered from the artist J J Grandville's drawings LES SCENES DE LA VIE PRIVEE ET PUBLIQUE DES ANIMAUX published in 1842. The satirical caricatures drawn by Grandville provide an insightful commentary on society using animals- The inclusion of the table in Nancy's room at Ditchley and subsequently reappearing in her Saloon at Haseley Court in 1954 says a great deal about Lancaster's ideas about the bon ton. The Grandville embroiderys also tell us Nancy Lancaster got it right the first time-continually using her favourites, recycling pieces she loved and reinventing them in new settings. The Saloon-considered the most formal of the house again became an eclectic mix: girandoles from Ditchley (appearing in the first photograph above), aquamarine silk walls and a pair of aquamarine curtains that hung in the blue drawing room at Ditchley-being remade for Haseley. Nancy acquired the large Elizabethan paintings of the sisters Fitton for the Saloon at Haseley. Once again these reappear in Nancy's future homes and are now owned by Annette and Oscar de la Renta.

scenes from the Saloon at Haseley Court

Grandville's Scenes


 

 

 

Imagine my surprise when recently perusing forgotten books- I found in The Englishwoman's House, photographs of Anne and Michael Tree's Shute House-the same embroidered table skirt. Anne Tree "inherited" the whimsical piece from her mother in law Nancy Lancaster and placed it in her drawing room- referring to it as a "winner." Not too shabby- those hand me downs. "My husband was lucky to inherit a lot of furniture and carpets from his parents and over the years his mother has given us endless presents of beautiful things." Along with all the beautiful things inherited-also a pair of Ditchley bedroom curtains mentioned by Madame de la Tour du Pin in her diary written while residing with her relations at Ditchley after she fled the French Revolution.

the embroidered skirt in Anne Tree's drawing room

detail of Anne Tree's tablescape

Anne Tree had no plans to redo the house in future-obviously believing like her famous mother in law the only three essential ingredients for a successful interior-" a wood fire, candlelight and cut flowers." - and a table skirt.

suggested reading- the wonderful biography Nancy Lancaster Her life, her World, Her Art by Robert Becker, read about her life with many accounts of her world in her own words.
Nancy Lancaster English Country House Style by Martin Wood.
The Englishwoman's House edited by Alvilde Lees Milne
all photographs from one of the above books.
Nancy Lancaster here
Madame de la Tour du Pin here
Ditchley here
Kelmarsh Hall here
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Use Apple iPhoto or Blurb.com to Make a Great Gift!


Making a photo journalistic book of an experience that you shared with your family and friends can make a wonderful surprise gift, especially, if you can create something beautiful that will become a "coffee table" book, at least for a while. A photographer friend of ours turned us on a the idea of personal publishing a couple of years ago. Mostly we have used Apple's iphoto, to create and order the books we make. Currently though, we are using a platform created by Blurb.com, BookSmart. I'm loving the flexibility of this platform  as it allows me to customize any template or create my own. The book we are creating now is unique in that we have taken the photographs taken by our two good friends, their teenage and adult children as well as another couple, nine in all, and are creating a photographic journal of an Alaskan Adventure we all went on together. We are using a selection of EVERYONE'S photographs that were uploaded to the same website. This way everyone on the trip will feel like they participated in the creation of the book. 





We're trying to decide between these to photos for the Cover of the Book. Both evoke the spirit  of the unique adventure we experienced with our good friends. A quiet awesomeness.





Gregg and I have published a number of books via "on demand publishing" (for the general public) platforms.  We have done this mostly for marketing purposes for our real estate projects. On demand publishing allows us to select photographs that best describe our projects and provides us with a well designed  format to describe the projects and present them in a compelling and beautiful manner. If you haven't tried this type of presentation for your creative endeavors, give it go. It's a terrific outlet especially if you have an aptitude for creating visually beautiful compositions. 






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march of the English Penguins

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Why one can not find these darling little PENGUINS in the States-I can not say? Never fear- head right off to ENGLAND for this most delightful series- PENGUIN'S ENGLISH JOURNEY. Twenty classic English romps through the countryside.





 









 

All available at AMAZON uk here
or PENGUIN here
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Slutty Pilgrim is a Monarchist!

Black patent Pilgrim shoe by Roger Vivier, with a platform and 4 ½” heel. Buckle is embroidered with “God Save the Queen” and R.V., $1125.

The Pilgrim shoe was first recontextualized when Catherine Deneuve wore the original Roger Vivier design in her role as a prostitute in Belle du Jour. Today's version has a platform and an almost 5" heel, so the sinfulness is built right into the shoe. Leave it to RV, to once again play with the Pilgrims by invoking allegiance to the very monarchy whose rule they fled.

Perfectly ironic footwear for Thanksgiving, yet practical enough for pole-dancing.

Thanksgiving: Reality or Myth?





"For an Indian, who is also a school teacher, Thanksgiving was never an easy holiday for me to deal with in class. I sometimes have felt like I learned too much about 'the Pilgrims and the Indians.' Every year I have been faced with the professional and moral dilemma of just how to be honest and informative with my children at Thanksgiving without passing on historical distortions, and racial and cultural stereotypes. The problem is that part of what you and I learned in our own childhood about the 'Pilgrims' and 'Squanto' and  the 'First Thanksgiving' is a mixture of both history and myth."  Read more here.

Of eBay and Empires

Awesome animated graphic of the rise and fall of world empires from 1800 by Pedro M. Cruz. I did a double take when I saw this because it looked so much like the "found palettes" I'd been collecting from eBay. It's a category I think of as "graphic cousins" or "visual homonymns"--they have visual similarities, but little in common beyond that. If there is a word for this phenomenon, I'm not aware of it.


Visualizing empires decline from Pedro M Cruz on Vimeo.


Fisher Price records


Enamel skillets

I tried to come up with possibilities for what the word might be, and started googling. "Homograph" is already taken and refers to words that have the same spelling, but whose meaning can only be known from the context in which it is used. "Homoglyph" is also taken. It refers to two characters or sets of characters that appear very similar and can often appear identical. Examples are the numeral zero and the letter "O", or the letters rn and m. "HOMO pict" has somethig to do with chemical bonding. "Homopict" has to do with another kind of bonding.



When I tried working with “icon”, Greek for "image", I found out that "Homicon", is an annual convention for fans of Homicide: Life on the Street, while "Homocon" is short for “homosexual conservative” an oxymoronic political identity. Google assumed there was a space missing in "homoicon", so I was taken to an art essay in the Independent, Arrows of desire: How did St Sebastian become an enduring, homo-erotic icon? “Sebastian's appeal to gay men seems obvious. He was young, male, apparently unmarried and martyred by the establishment." "Homoiconic", however, is a word used in computer coding. According to Wikipedia, "Homoiconicity is a property of some programming languages, in which the primary representation of programs is also a data structure in a primitive type of the language itself, from homo meaning the same and icon meaning representation."

Alas, being at a loss for one word, has caused me to use many.

Rubber Stamp Catalog

One of my vintage ephemera finds from Buenos Aires.










Israel Fashion, The Street Walker vs. ILook (Tel Aviv)

In between threats of terrorist attacks the people of Tel Aviv style it up like there's no tomorrow. I came across two blogs based in the hip Hebrew city. Lets have a face off and let you decide who's the better of the two. Presenting:

ILook - http://israblog.nana10.co.il/tblogread.asp?blog=387973


&

The Street Walker - http://www.thestreetswalker.com/






Ct 2009