Pages

Showing posts with label patio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patio. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

White Therapy


Once a week I get to drop everything I'm doing and focus on white therapy. I get to think really hard about putting some things together that make me really, really, happy. It's a regular appointment I've set for myself that I really hate to miss. 




One of the nice things about a blog is the regular exercise of something you love that makes you feel good.  And then you get to share it all with somebody who is actually interested!




So today I'm feeling all white and wonderful. Like I'm eating a big piece of my favorite layer cake. Which happens to be. . . . white cake with white frosting. Go figure!  




The rusty wire tray and white flower pot are recent flea market finds. Pillows, Pottery Barn. 











 January 2011 Britsh Edition of Country Living.









I like this type of chippy vintage plant stand for candles, displays, or seasonal decorations. Never plants. (At least so far.)










My prized vintage Heywood-Wakefield wicker.



 

A large vintage damask towel makes a nice tea cloth. But I can never figure out the monograms. Seriously which letter is this?






































Ahhh! That feels better!
Now I'm off to find more white therapy at Faded Charm.
Maybe I'll bump into you there!

Jacqueline



Join me at

Monday, April 9, 2012

A Few Signs of Patio Life


We live far from the sea here in the desert southwest of the country. That's why we must bring the ocean home to us. Who knows where this fountain relic began its journey to a dusty town in New Mexico, but I'm glad it found its way to me. The fantastical dolphin reminds me of those you find drawn on maps warning the ancient sailor that he had come to the ends of the earth, and that beyond here be dragons: the edge of the known world. 




I have a notorious French ancestor who settled here after many long journeys. A fantastical character like the monster on a map, he navigated the desert by the stars in the way he had done at sea. So my sea references come with a tale as well!



Many traditional homes here have niches built in. 



What you include, and where, has a big impact on the look of the patio. This photo, and the following one is from two summers ago. Things can change a lot all through the season. These were easy plants to keep going whatever they are!

     




As you can see, we are living patio life once more after our own journey through seasons. Spring and fall can be lovely in Albuquerque. And even in the heat of summer, early mornings and late evenings are patio time! 



We are in process of the annual ritual of bringing out plants from indoors, and replacing the potted herbs. Lots of weekend visits to the nursery to dress up the skeletal garden artifacts.









It seems like we replace at least one broken market umbrella every spring. (Wind is a hazard.) This time of year we even need them to keep the elm seeds off the plates at meal time. Sweep. sweep, sweep!




It's time to coax a few spindly and pale plants back to life, if it can be done. . . .





























A little lovely dusty miller in a zinc tray.




Transfer ware and McCoy pot details.




Bent up vintage racks give character to a patio garden. This one is an old vinyl record stand.




A French cast iron fence piece offers a little excitement too.




Still lots of clearing, sweeping, and dressing up to do!





I'm so glad to be dusting off the patios again!
It's a great place to settle in with a magazine and listen to the birds.
I hope you're enjoying some of your own seasonal rituals too.
Have a super week!

Jacqueline




Join me at
Metamorphosis Monday
Tabletop Tuesday


Thursday, May 20, 2010

Queen's Ware Afternoon

Mary E. made herself famous by reminding us that it's good to be queen. Nice thought, but I'm not holding my breath waiting for someone to plant a crown on my head! But a good way to play the part is with Wedgwood's Queensware china.


Seems like I've slobbered over every magazine ad with this gorgeous pattern on it's page for decades, but I only recently ever saw it in person last winter.


Did I NEED another set of dishes? CLARO QUE SI! Mais, oui! BUT OF COURSE! I have NEEDED this china since maybe 1977! So I snapped up a gorgeous incomplete set that completed me. And I just brought it out for it's first spring airing.


I love small parties. The occasion doesn't have to be grand to get out the grand stuff. A centerpiece may be the only thing you have to go out of your way to add to make an ordinary event a special occasion. And as per Carolyne Roehm's recent suggestion, a flamboyant fern or houseplant can stand in for that. Especially if it's a garden party.


I've never had much time for extras like favors and place cards, though I've found them charming at other people's events. Simple spreads reduce stress and increase spontaneity.


You don't have to dust for a patio soiree.


Simple garden decor sets a nice AND easy stage.


White pom pom mums have replaced roses as my must have flowers.They are long lasting and dramatic and low cost.


A table set like this for two could be your answer to Evelyn Couch's saran wrap outfit! You'd want candles of course.


This china pattern is table decoration enough.


Yummy enough to eat!


In fact, these plates stacked on a cake stand even look like an iced confection fit for Marie Antoinette.


With dinner ware like this you could serve pizza and no one would care.


But probably the best thing about taking care with a table is its very mindfulness. Taking time to see everything close up. In slow motion. Especially with loved ones you see often. You are sending the message that "YOU MATTER."


These bistro glasses are a favorite at the CLUB (the family reference to our house). I'm always casting about for fill in replacements because when you use things a lot casualties occur.


This cloth with its white embroidery is one of my favorites. So subtle.













Perhaps on occasion we can enjoy rising to the celebration of each day's gifts with a little extra gesture.



". . .The Badger summoned them to the table, where he had been busy laying a repast. They had felt pretty hungry before, but when they actually saw at last the supper that was spread for them, really it seemed only a question of what they should attack first where all was so attractive. . . .
Conversation was impossible for along time; and when it was slowly resumed, it was that regrettable sort of conversation that results from talking with your mouth full. The Badger did not mind that sort of thing at all, nor did he take any notice of elbows on the table, or everybody speaking at once. As he did not go into Society himself he had got an idea that these things belonged to the things that didn't really matter."

Kenneth Graham, Mr. Badger chapter, The Wind in the Willows

Ciao! Thanks for stopping by!

Jacqueline

Today I'm joining Tablescape Thursday at
Between Naps on the Porch
My Romantic Home
Show and Tell Friday
Please check out both fun blogs!