Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Last year our kitchen was green and the eggs spotty. This year, gone the green and I doubt even the most observant among you would be able to spot any polka-dotted pleasure in the Swenglish Home.
No, this year we have a different plan.
Hm.
Not entirely sure what that plan is yet, but it will come to me.
Soon.
Help?!
Monday, March 29, 2010
Mmm...
Five acres of green fabulousness, lovingly brought to life by the owners, Barbara and Ian Pollard, a k a The Naked Gardeners. 100 000 tulips (a few of them greeting us yesterday), UK's largest collection of roses (soon, soon in bloom), water features, wildlife and a garden so beautiful, so interesting, with so many rooms, stunning focal points and small still lifes I found myself nearly hyperventilating whilst photographing like a mad woman worried it - or I - would all disappear if I were not quick enough... Wow. Lots of wow.
Fancy a bit of horticultural wow, but live too far away? Try http://www.abbeyhousegardens.co.uk/ or see the book The Naked Gardeners. And yes, on certain days, expect to see Ian and Barbara in the most natural of costumes.
Wow.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Wow. More wow. Or as BBC's Alan Titchmarsh (gardener and host of numerous gardening programmes) once put it: "The WOW! factor is here in abundance".
I made a new aquaintance today, a twenty-five-minute drive from here: Abbey House Gardens in Malmesbury, also known as the Home of The Naked Gardeners. Today was not a "clothes optional day", and most bulbs still seem to suffer from a spot of stage fright, so this spectacular privately owned 5 acre garden will definitely be on the must-see list for a later date this spring or summer. To see the flowers in bloom, I mean.
What did you think?
Tomorrow, more images from this stunning former monastery garden and orchard. Fear not, most images will be perfectly decent. Except perhaps one...
Saturday, March 27, 2010
This weekend, the Swenglish Home has got some V I P guests brightening an otherwise rather rainy UK. My parents are here from Sweden and as if that was not enough to make us all do cartwheels of joy, they came bearing gifts... The latest issue of Vakre Hjem, the beautiful magazine so full of breathtaking images that reading it all in one go leaves me slightly intoxicated -in a good way, Lantliv (another lovely magazine) and a recently published book by the woman who makes me believe brussel sprouts actually have a purpose in this world: Minna Mercke Schmidt's "Blomstrande Idéer" ("Flourishing Ideas").
And then there was the little carrier bag from HM Home... I will show you soon what treasure it sheltered in its plastic embrace. Let's just say for now that this is one happy, excited and -purely from inspiration - inebriated Swede.
Wishing you all an equally healthy dose of intoxication this weekend. And if not, then at least a moment of tipsy giggling.
Friday, March 26, 2010
An inspired moment...
The world of interior blogs is a deep and bubbling ocean of inspiration and ideas. As much as I like soaking up page after page in my favourite magazines, peering into some of the tasteful and creatively composed bloggers' homes can be equally stimulating. Or perhaps even more inspiring, as it is more personal, feels real and very often something I feel I can relate to more than some of the incredibly flash and fancy homes that appear in the magazines.
So what can one do with a piece of wood, a band-saw, some white paint and a bit of blogged inspiration? Well, after having for a long time admired a wooden box with a handle in the kitchen of the gorgeous http://www.lillablanka.blogspot.com/, I decided to have a go at making one. Not entirely straight perhaps, but a few flaws can be covered up with a sprawling basil, maybe? Kitchen roll holder, heart and small stars on string were soon conceived in the same saw dust frenzy, inspired by products by Elisabeth Berg, ebcountrydesign in Västerås, Sweden.
The ivy rests in a tall glass vase covered in twigs from the garden, an idea actually born without my having sought enlightenment elsewhere. Yes, I think I may simply have had an uninspired inspired moment...
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
A little scruffy, sadly devoid of chocolate, but with a vintage factor so high it almost makes up for the lack of chocolate.
Almost.
I never really wore pink and purple growing up. Or maybe I did, but I cannot remember being a particularly pink-type-kind-of-girl. Now, grown-up and mother of two lovely, but very blokey boys, my need for pink and purple has sent most of my wardrobe into lilac overdrive. As I found myself with a surprising lack of matching jewellery and with a creative curiosity about the popular trend to make your own, well, you can guess the rest. It was a lot more fiddly than I had expected, and as my creative patience does not match up to its curious counterpart, I do confess to a hint of frustration being baked into this basic bling bling.
Perhaps I could grow fond of the fiddling, or perhaps I shall just resolve to stay in my purple phase with accomplished neck decoration until the fiddled frustration has fallen into oblivion and I am ready to throw myself into my next home-fiddled beaded bling-type-thing...
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Just outside the glazed doors in the dining area, some of the newly planted pensees and violets form a nice little circle of potted friends, and we spend the days playing peek-a-boo with each other through the different panes of the door.
Some cousins, rather untamed and with a penchant for living a little on the wild side, peer at us from underneath a garden bench, and there are moments where I am quite convinced they arch their backs just a little bit extra to show off their natural beauty and rub their freedom in the noses of the manicured but restricted potted lot.
Monday, March 22, 2010
And so it was that there was a rushed Swede on a fly-by visit to Stockholm in September 2007. The Casa Cor exhibition had just started and I had about 15 minutes to spare. With ca 40 architects and interior designers having created a wild and wacky home for an imaginary family, those 15 minutes were going to be jam-packed with impressions and inspiration, and I did not intend to miss a thing.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
When I was given this letter, together with a few others my grandmother had kept, I instinctively felt that I did not want them to just float around in a box somewhere, soon to be forgotten and possibly even lost. Just like the photo of my grandparents transfered onto a linen cushion, my great grandparents are invited to peer into the life of their descendants, anno 2010, from a framed version of the letter, from a candle, and since a few days ago also from an Easter egg.
Some people may find it strange or even inappropriate to use old photos and letters from family members like this. To me, it feels like an OK thing to do. In fact, more than OK. It is a lovely family reunion, where no one has to leave.