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Showing posts with label Best of 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best of 2010. Show all posts

the best book I read last year?



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'This was the Wellwoods’ third Midsummer Party. Their guests were socialists, anarchists, Quakers, Fabians, artists, editors, freethinkers and writers, who lived, either all the time, or at weekends and on holidays, in converted cottages and old farmhouses, Arts and Crafts homes and working-men’s terraces, in the villages, woods and meadows around the Kentish Weald and South Downs. These were people who had evaded the Smoke, and looked forward to a Utopian world in which smoke would be no more.'









I read ravenously in 2010-still nothing caught my attention quite like A. S. Byatt's The Children's Book





"It will probably never be said of Byatt's writing that she wears her learning lightly, and her lengthy disquisitions on the building blocks of her narrative both support and bloat the novel; her briskly delivered but expansive accounts of, among other things, the development of London's museums, of late Victorian banking crises, of pottery and puppetry and of the Arts and Crafts, Fabian and suffrage movements are never less than informative but sometimes a little less than compelling. (...) But Byatt is brilliant on the gathering forces of England and Germany at the beginning of the 20th century, their contrasting attitudes towards the part that the land plays in the collective unconscious, their differing forms of nostalgia." - Alex Clark, The Guardian


Here, illustrated from the imaginings of the Pre-Raphaelites.



























Lalique















"You know, it's a truism that writers for children must still be children themselves,
deep down, must still feel childish feelings, and a child's surprise at the world. "










"She didn't like to be talked about. Equally, she didn't like not to be talked about, when the high-minded chatter rushed on as though she was not there. There was no pleasing her, in fact. She had the grace, even at eleven, to know there was no pleasing her. She thought a lot, analytically, about other people's feelings, and had only just begun to realize that this was not usual, and not reciprocated."









The story books were kept in a glass-faced cabinet in Olive’s study. Each child had a book, and each child had his or her own story. It had begun, of course, with Tom, whose story was the longest. Each story was written in its own book, hand-decorated with struck-on scraps and coloured patterns. Tom’s was inky-blue-black, covered with ferns and brackens, some real, dried and pressed, some cut out of gold and silver paper. Dorothy’s was forest-green, covered with the nursery scraps of small creatures, hedgehogs, rabbits, mice, bluetits and frogs. 
Phyllis’s was rose-pink and lacy, with scraps of gauzy-winged fairies in florid dresses, sweet-peas and bluebells, daises and pansies. Hedda’s was striped in purple, green and white, with silhouettes of witches and dragons. Florian’s book was only little, a nice warm red, with Gather Christmas and a yule log.
















‘It is a terrible thing to be a woman. You are told people like to look at you – as though you have a duty to be the object of…the object of… And then, afterwards, if you are rejected, if what you…thought you were worth…is after all not wanted…you are nothing.’
She gave a little shrug, and pulled herself together, and said, ‘Poor Elsie,’ in an artificial, polite, tea-party voice, though she had not offered, and did not offer, to make tea.








Christopher Dresser Linthorpe Vase









These children, Julian thought, had been charmed and bamboozled as though some Pied Piper played his tune and they all followed him, docile, under the earth. The Germans had sunk the liner, Lusitania, and Charles Frohman, the impresario who had staged Peter Pan, had drowned with gallant dignity, apparently reciting the immortal line which had been judiciously cut from wartime performances: To die will be an awfully big adventure.



there were many wonderful books I read, what was your favorite? read The Children's Book?

explore the Pre-Raphaelites this year.
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Favorite Posts of 2010 v: the Style Saloniste

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"Carmen (Homage to Munkacsi)"
Coat by Cardin
Place Francois-Premier, Paris

August 1957





Diane Dorrans Saeks of the Style Saloniste says:
"This iconic sixties image  by Richard Avedon captures my own mood when I'm in Paris—off the ground, leaping with happiness, and yet calm and focused."



while I might be more this-


AVEDON'S
Dovima with Sacha


Cloche by Balenciaga
Cafe des Deux Magots, Paris,August 1955




 
I am following as much to the letter as possible Diane's Paris Journal. though "My Trip" is not slated for the New Year, I return to this post time and again to take this wonderful trip with Diane to Paris, stopping at all of her favorite spots and drinking in the sites as only Diane can do. For the moment a ongoing pick me up is Diane's book Paris Style-






another of Diane's posts that I favored is her visit to Chateau de Haroue to see the chateau and the meticulously curated collection of Givenchy, Balenciaga, and Venet.




 there is a truly delectable book accompanying this exhibit available that just happened to be one of my Christmas gifts!

 






Diane will be traveling the world again in 2011- no doubt- and whether I go behind her is suspect- So, happily with anticipation will I await her adventures and oh the stories she will tell.

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Favorite Posts of 2010 iv : Christina of Fashion's Most Wanted

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 Glamorous Christina Lindsay in a smashing dress made by Mrs. Jones. from a Harley Davidson flag  
photographs from FMW. 



Christina Lindsay of Fashion's Most Wanted is one of the busiest and most gracious of blog writers this one has met. I discovered Christina's blog this year from the House of Beauty and Culture- (affectionately known as HOBAC). Since HOBAC is one of those blogs I hold sacred and dear-whatever is recommended from that quarter I leap to.


 a glimpse from Mrs Jones lookbook


I was not disappointed. Christina is a wonderful interviewer-being one of my favorite things to do as well-I am always studying the work of others. Two of my very favorite posts of hers are an interview with the fashion designer Mrs. Jones and a post Christina calls Me and Mrs Jones. These two damsels are friends- longstanding & great friends and it shows in these two stories.

I was taken with the friendship and the warmth of the interplay between the two. The interview introduces us to a woman doing things- not always smoothly- but Her Way and succeeding gloriously. I was captivated. Not to mention all the photographs Christina put together for the post- it is a fashion smash hit from the 80's and 90's!



Photography by Lee Jenkins
 Mrs Jones (aka Fee Doran) with Christina of Fashion's Most Wanted
  from the Evening Standard in 2001


Do not miss this story.


another wonderful interview from Christina is one with Julie Newmar.  The interview came about when CL pronounced Ms. Newmar the best Catwoman ever ( I concur) & JN contacted her with thanks.


the rest is here.

MEOW.
 
 


I really can't wait to see what Christina has for Fashion's Most Wanted in 2011.
I will be reading.



& so should You.

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Favorite Posts 2010 Part iii : Reggie Darling

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Reggie Darling. (end of sentence)

If you haven't already- & why? & where have you been?
RD is a must read for me-

Sometimes I love Him, sometimes He drives Me crazy.
Sometimes I love Him, sometimes He drives Me crazy.
Sometimes I love Him, sometimes He drives Me crazy,
& that is why I can not stay away.

& by the way Reggie Darling is a dear.

some of his best 

his infamous:
 



                & III




Parts I- IV


Self Portrait: The Painter and His Pug
painted by William Hogarth, 1745
National Portrait Gallery, London




the Infamous
Here's what RD said: "This was a post that elicited a firestorm of comments, and more than any other post I have written.  In it I explain why it is that I have come over time to require our housekeepers to wear uniforms as a condition of their employment.  Some people took Reggie to task for this, in some cases quite vehemently, but the majority agreed with him." The post received 59 comments and I of course added my 2 cents and remarked to Reggie this summer-I had to stop receiving updates on this one as it concerned comments- "oh Lord-here comes another MAID comment." Everyone had an opinion about this one- Dare I ask yours?
&  my counter to RD here 
& I dine with RD here. 
Honestly every post from Reggie is a Treasure. He recommends these, this should catch you up and start following along for his second year of telling it like it is- or should be.

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Favorite Posts 2010 ii : ULLA of model's own

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Ulla van Zeller writes the blog model's own.

(her posts on Katz are great too)


Ulla's summer excursion to Cuba provided a wealth of magical photographs and a glimpse at the color, climate and culture of Cuba.
See all her Cuba posts Here.

just a few of my favorite photographs from the many of her trip :











& for another favorite post from model's own:










all photographs are property of model's own.
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Favorite posts of 2010 Part i What is James Wearing?

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I follow this blog. What is James Wearing? Since I am always discussing interior design and fashion and all that links them- it should be no surprise.

This is a photograph of JA in the David Hicks boutique- France & It has to be the best photograph of the year on all the blogs I peruse.
Great- No?








oh! & he has paper dolls too, and you know how I love paper dolls!  here & here

WIJW? here  &  this post linked throughout, & here
David Hicks here

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