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Garden, Home & Party

~ My love of gardening, making home comfortable and entertaining friends and family.

Garden, Home & Party

Category Archives: Decorating

{Home} Wall gallery ideas

20 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Collections & Accessories, Decorating, House and Home

≈ 28 Comments

Tags

wall gallery

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12

I’ve written about wall galleries before, but as with all decorating (in my humble view) it bears a revisit…which is code for :: my wall gallery image file is bulging and I want to share with you, in case you’ve missed some of these beauties in your daily rounds of wonderful blog sites you enjoy visiting.

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12

Here are some really wonderful wall galleries.  The thing that’s always made this form of wall art a favorite of mine is the ability to create something that, as a whole, not only fills a space but adds interest and beauty to a room.  The separate components of the gallery can be personal bits of art that you’ve collected or a great display of vintage botanics torn from an old book and framed in identical frames.

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12

{Charlotte Moss, Lonny, October 2012}

I’d love the opportunity to have a look at the wonderful gallery of items in the Charlotte Moss office (above).

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Cote de Texas}

I love the symmetry above.  It would appear the art may be botanical images but I’m not sure, either way, it creates such a serene setting for slumber, don’t you think?

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Haus Design}

The wall gallery above gives this black and white dining space such a punch…I really like the tailored look for the chairs and the fabric, very sophisticated.

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Haus Design}

The subject of the gallery above is ideal for the card file piece it accents.

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{House Beautiful}

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{heirloom philosophy}

This family gallery is wonderful, all black and white photographs and identical frames.  I like how they used every inch of space, right down to the base at the foot of the stairs.

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Veranda, House of Windsor}

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{source unknown}

The above is a wonderful example of how interesting a wall gallery can be, it can be anything you collect or have interest in.

Haus Design{Haus Design}

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Ralph Lauren}

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Splendid Sass}

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Suzanne Kassler via Cote de Texas}

Garden, Home and Party 11.13.12{Things that Inspire}

I hope you were able to glean some inspiration from these wall galleries, I sure have. 

On a separate topic, I plan to drop posting to once a week through the end of the year. As some of you know, we have a wedding December 1st and then my favorite time of year, Christmas, will be looming.  This will serve more than just time constraints for me as I’ve been struggling with creative topics.  If you write a blog, I’m sure you understand.  It’s been a bit of a dry patch for me lately.  I do enjoy my blog and know I’ll recharge my batteries and come up with some fun ideas after a rest.  I thoroughly enjoy you, my blog friends!


Note:  Mr. B. will walk by when I’m reading a comment on the computer and he has noted that I have a grin on my face…it’s always a reflection of the pleasure meeting and chatting with so many of you in blog land provides me.  It’s funny how you may have never met someone in person but you can feel a kindred spirit with blog friends and feel certain that you would be close friends if you lived in the same city. ♥

Have a delicious and relaxing Thanksgiving filled with family, friends and gratitude!

{Home} What style are you?

25 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Decorating, Designer, House and Home, Misc, Personal Information

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

decorating styles

Are your tastes and preferences, where design is concerned, clearly defined?  If asked, how would you describe your style?  Do you look at a shelter magazine or book and know right off the bat that the room/home featured  mirror  your style; the room is how you would furnish and accessorize ~OR~ do you sometimes get drawn to a style that is completely different from what you currently have?

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Barclay Butera}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Beaufort House}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{House Beautiful}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Carol Glasser via Cote de Texas}

There are so many blended styles that appeal to me, so I believe I would have a hard time telling anyone that my style is strictly traditional, classic or country.   I believe there’s a little bit of several styles in most homes, especially if you’ve been adding and layering over the years.

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Haus Design}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Heather Bullard}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Kathleen Rivers, Southern Accents}

I confess, I have to put the brakes on sometimes, I can become so enthralled with a certain new-to-me ‘style’ that I lose site of what I believe to be my design focus or style.  Does this ever happen to you or am I the only fence-rider of style?

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Linda Floyd Interiors}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{nest egg 1.27.11}

Garden, Home and Party 10.25.12{Robert A.M. Stern Architects}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12{Rose Uniacke}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.25.12

That doesn’t mean I decorate a room and it never changes, far from that.  I find I get tired of colors and maybe even some furnishings every 10-15 years.  Fortunately, it usually means I need to paint and maybe rearrange the furniture or trade out a lamp with another, in a different part of the house, change the wall adornments, move pictures, change pillows and throws, you know what I mean.  But I do have to remind myself sometimes what ‘it’ is I love, what I always come back to, what makes my house my HOME.

Does this ever happen to you?  If it doesn’t, you are the person I admire and would love to have the confidence to say, this is IT, this is my style and I’m never swayed to the fickle tastes of design world changes and trends.

{GHP} If you had to edit, what would make the cut?

23 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Antiques, Collections & Accessories, Decorating, Designer, House and Home

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Editing

Joni of Cote de Texas fame had a wonderful post last month on the talented Jane Moore and her recent feature in Veranda.  This is a designer I have admired for years.  For her story in a recent Veranda issue visit CDT.

Jane Moore, Veranda 2012 via Cote de Texas{2008 Veranda cover ~ Jane Moore}

As part of the feature, Joni showed us Jane Moore’s new, edited townhouse… 

Veranda 2012, Jame Moore dining room{Jane Moore, dining room ~ townhouse}

Veranda 2012, Jane Moore townhouse{Jane Moore ~ Townhouse, kitchen}

Jane says she was ready to completely edit her look when she moved.  The new townhouse is filled with only what she wants in it – no one else.  And she loves it – she looks forward to coming home each day to a place that is filled with pieces she carefully selected from a lifetime of collecting.  Joni, Cote de Texas

This got me thinking, if we made a move to scale back, what would make the cut?  I started with a list of what I felt MUST be included and quickly realized this was much more difficult  than I first thought.  I know it’s just stuff, but it’s stuff I’ve lovingly collected over the years.  Would it be easy for you?  This is hypothetical so it really wasn’t that hard, but it did give me an opportunity to look at my home and possessions with an analytical view.

There are a few pieces of furniture that I believe I’d make work no matter what.  For one our antique china cupboard.  My mom gave it to us when they retired and moved to a smaller house.  She had purchased it in the early eighties at a Los Angeles antique store called Antique Guild (formerly the Helm’s Bakeries building).  The hardware is original and the glass in the doors is beveled.  The only thing damaged on this piece is the lock on the cupboard doors below…they stay closed when not in use so I don’t mind…

Antique Guild China Cupboard{Antique Guild China Cupboard}

…and since we’re in the dining room, I’d want to find a spot for the side board.  The thing is, if we actually moved I could see using some of the furniture in unexpected rooms.  I’ve seen some amazing uses for pieces in unexpected spaces that I wouldn’t have thought about…isn’t blog land wonderful?!

Antique Side Board

I’m attached to our bed and dresser, mainly because I like the style and it fits in our current bedroom, which is quite small, so I imagine it would fit in any smaller home we might buy.

Master Bedroom{It’s hard to see the detail but it’s a bed with headboard, foot board and side boards.  Very substantial but I really like it.}

Our sofa was custom made for the space we have in this house, I’d recover it if it fit perfectly in a new home, but otherwise, I’d consider a slightly larger sofa.  The club chair in our family room is made by Century, it’s been a great chair, found at a consignment store and recovered twice, so I’d make room for it.

Century Club Chair{This is a very comfy chair and it has been recovered twice since I first bought it; this is a Ralph Lauren print that works for the room}

Close up of Century Club Chair

Most of the art I’ve used in this house would make the cut.  There are a few paintings (not by anyone famous) that I really enjoy.  There are framed print in almost every room and I might do some serious editing if I had to, but most would find a home somewhere in a new abode.

Glass Painting, hot air balloon{I like this print for it’s Union Jack, I’d make room for this}

Steady Jonny, Steady lithographThis lithograph (above) of a print called, “Steady Johnny, Steady” is special because my grandmother bought it for me.  She always thought the elderly Scotsman looked like her father, my great grandfather.

I wish I could take my Viking range, were we actually moving, but in California the range is nearly always expected to be part of the kitchen.

36" Viking Stove{My Viking is the best range I’ve ever cooked on}

I have 2 Smith and Hawken teak benches that I’d like to keep.  They are impossibly expensive today.  I would figure out a spot in the yard or on a patio.

Smith & Hawken teak bench9 sets of dishes, no, they would all have to come with me! (They are not complete sets, mostly dinner and salad plates for over half of the patterns, but I do enjoy using them all.

Anyway, this was just for fun, an exercise in what if…  Do you ever fantasize about a move and what a new abode might be like?  

{Home} Kitchens, continued interest

18 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Decorating, Designer, House and Home

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

kitchens

We remodeled our kitchen in 2003.  I’m talking taking it to the studs, same footprint.  It’s hard for me to believe that it’s already been 9 years.  The kitchen has fulfilled all of my hopes and expectations I had when we embarked on the project, so many years ago, and it’s held up well for the most part.

Viking stove, side counters 9.9.12Kitchen horse lamp, toasterThat doesn’t keep me from being stopped in my tracks when I see a beautiful kitchen.  In fact, my “favorite kitchens” file is the largest of my saved images files.  While my kitchen is pretty tiny I find I have saved kitchen images that feature huge kitchens as well small ones, and I’m pretty sure many of you enjoy kitchens as much as I do because the blog sites I visit regularly often provide some of the prettiest examples.

black and white kitchenMy apologizes, I not only have lost the source of this image, but I love it so and can’t remember if I’ve used it before.

So, I think that as fall is coming and I tend to cook a lot more in the cooler months, here are some ideas if you’re in the midst of planning your dream kitchen or just need some “pretty” to brighten up your morning.

Vignette Design{vignette design}

The one thing our kitchen lacks is a breakfast area.  I love the kitchen/breakfast area below.

Black and white kitchenBarbara Pervier designer{Barbara Pervier design}

This kitchen [above] is the kitchen of a 640 sq. ft. home.  I always marvel at how much style can be found in a small space.

Fine art in the kitchen is an unexpected treat.  I do worry that it would be my luck the marinara sauce would splash!

Color Outside the Lines{Color Outside the Lines}

The kitchen below is a favorite for the map of Paris over the stove and for the pretty dutch door.

Things that Inspire, 7.11.12{Things that Inspire}

accomodating pets in the kitchenHow clever is this?  [above] If you are a dog owner the sense of this built in doggie bar has appeal.  Notice the drawers with the dog bone cut-out for various canine necessities, so cute.

The kitchen below has a fire back that serves as the stove’s back splash.  I wanted to do that when we remodeled but couldn’t find a fire back within our budget.  Instead I installed a pewter looking tile with a rooster on it.

Home Bunch{Home Bunch}

This little jewel of a kitchen features several favorites:  The chandelier over the sink, the art on the side of the cupboard on the right, and the Carrara marble, among other details.

{Country Living}

What I love about the kitchen below is the glass front cabinet…for a dish-aholic this would be the best thing ever.  Storage for a variety of dish patterns, all fully justified, can be a challenge.

Great storage for dishesHome Bunch 9.28.12[Home Bunch}

Phobe Howard via Design Chic{Phoebe Howard via Design Chic)

…and last but not least, blue and white is always welcome in a white kitchen or one with stained cabinets.

Home Bunch, kitchen with blue and white cache pots

Do you have a preference, stained cabinets or white?  What is your favorite counter top material?

{Home} Fall around the house

02 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Collections & Accessories, Decorating, Fall Entertaining and Decorations, House and Home

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

Autumn decorating

So its onward and upward…we’re on a march to cooler temperatures, warm cider, glow from a fireplace, and a general theme of cozy around our house.  Comfort foods and a recipe or two will come in a later post.

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12I wanted to share some ideas for the little touches you can add to your home to embrace the season…if you’re more of a flip flops, warm weather loving person, that’s okay.  I understand, sort of.

It doesn’t take much to create a feel of the season with just a bit of bounty from Mother Nature.  Pumpkins come in so many colors these days, even my orange hating friends can find a pumpkin that works for them.  But a throw draped over a chair, careful placement of a few candlesticks and/or votive candles and a few branches of turning leaves can create an inviting vignette for the season.

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12The pewter sugar bowl holds faux Pottery Barn acorns because there aren’t many oak trees in our neck of the woods and even if there were, the squirrels would beat me to the stash. {they look pretty real don’t they?}

During this time of year my nesting instincts take over.  I want to add a few accessories to the mix.  When spring/summer comes I’m always ready to shed the extra items that feel good from October to late February.

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12I placed a nest I found abandoned in our backyard in a pewter porridge bowl, the feathers were also found on a walk nearby, the quail eggs are real, but purchased from a store called Urban Gardener.

I love that so many creative people have taken the pumpkin way out of the box…this white pumpkin has been stamped with insects and other critters, appropriately creepy for Halloween.

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12{via}

Ralph Lauren (above) does fall better than most, love that man!

I don’t have a library like this and my dining room table wouldn’t fit in this space, but don’t you love the idea of dining in the library…especially for the cooler months.

Garden, Home and Party, 10.2.12Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12Martha Stewart (above) always has some fantastic ideas for the season, no matter which season we’re talking about.  {I wouldn’t want to eat each meal at a picnic table, would you, but the centerpiece and the picnic benches are attractive.}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12{Pottery Barn}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12RL with his bold bed linens, calico print and plaid.  I’m probably too cautious to veer out of our solid sheet selection, but I admit, it looks inviting for a bed to crawl into after a blustery day.

Garden, Home and Party

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12{tumblr:That Inspirational Girl)

Fall and winter are nature’s way of urging us to relax, smell the cocoa and read a book.  For me that equates to some serious time in a chair, feet up, throw over legs (if it’s cool enough).

~or~

You could pack a picnic and brave the cold…

{via} Don’t you love the inviting look of this outdoor table setting?

If you’re lucky enough to have an outdoor fireplace, what better time to use it?

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12{via}

Garden, Home and Party, 10.4.12So, are  you with me {except my good friend in PA 🙂} ready to pick up a few pumpkins, throw on a turtleneck and enjoy the season at home?

I’m headed over to No Minimalist Here, she’s hosting another one of her Open House Parties.

{Home} It’s the little things

27 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Collections & Accessories, Decorating, House and Home

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

accessories

If you have followed my blog for any amount of time you may have noticed that I do like accessories.  I find that when I view rooms, whether in a magazine or online, I zero in on the accessories.

I’ve been known to get tired of them (accessories) when they start to feel more like clutter than enhancement, but for me it’s the little things that can make a room, add interest, invite me to sit and stay awhile.  It’s an ever-changing interior landscape that I have fun wit.

I prefer accessories with a story, like, “oh, I picked this up when we visited __________”[fill in the blank], or, “my kind, old neighbor gave them to me”.  These stories make a room feel like a home (as opposed to just a ‘house’), don’t you agree?

The “little things” can also be adding something small, but new, to a room.  New throw pillows, a new-found horse statue, complete with acquisition story, an used coffee table book from Friends of the Library.

My friend recently had new pillows made for her living room, the yellow Pierre Deux-like fabric livens up and enhances everything in the room, great job, Linda.

We used to call Linda the “vignette queen” because of her talents with arranging items.  Another example of her skill is this little vignette that she has in her master bath in their home on Bainbridge Island.   More of Linda’s house and this magical island next month!

Garden, Home and Party, 9.27.12The lavender, painting,  jars for soaps and such, all together make such a pretty spot in her bathroom.

The smallest item can be something that draws you to a particular area in a room.

I discovered this little horse statue at a flea market I attended with my future daughter-in-law, I will always remember that fun day when I see this…stories such as this I like to weave into my own home accessorizing and enjoy hearing about from other homeowners.

We are fortunate to have a used book store inside our library.  I’ve found a lot of old books there for usually less than $5.00.  The little bronze Scottie dog was a gift from my friend Carla.

There are few table tops in my home that don’t have some kind of vignette.

This flower man statue was a birthday present years ago from my friends of the birthday group, the little pewter sugar cellar with greens came from my friend, Gretchen.  These accents have spent time in nearly every living space in our home.  For me that is the fun of mixing things up.

I bought this antique side board some years ago before one of my favorite sources for antiques went away, Bill (Kottler’s Antiques) retired, darn!  The Napoleon Staffordshire statue, which had been repaired before I purchased it, was made into a lamp by Custom House Lighting.  Napolean was recently relocated from our family room to the dining room for the fall/winter months—he needed a vacation.

Even the French coat rack in the entry can’t escape, The binoculars in the old leather case were my father-in-law’s, the small pair next to the case were given to my mother by a dear friend, I ultimately inherited them.  The antique riding cap was acquired on one of the many antiquing trips Carla and I used to make before I rejoined the corporate world of full time work.  The Pendleton wool blanket, while new, is a favorite since, with it’s carrying strap, it seems vintage (a Christmas gift from our oldest son and family).

Garden, Home and Party, 9.27.12Garden, HOme and Party, 9.27.12

Garden, Home and Party, 9.27.12The kitchen is a room that often goes UN-accessorized, yet I’ve seen designers hang paintings in kitchens with great success.  Our kitchen doesn’t have the wall space for more than one painting, but I did manage to put a small, silver antique horse (that I had made into a accent lamp) next to the stove.

There are design stores that use accessories within the vignettes they stage.  I know that I am always drawn to each detail of this kind of marketing and I would guess it helps them sell the furniture.

Mary Ann of Classic Casual Home posted about a design studio, Elizabeth Benefield, that did a beautiful job of staging. (Below).

~and~

I always delight in the stories many bloggers share.  It’s fun to hear how they acquired some of the pieces featured in their homes.

This sweet statue has a great story behind it finding its way into my blog-friend, Victoria’s home.  {If you’ve never visited Victoria Elizabeth Barnes blog you are in for a treat, she and her husband are renovating a 1890 Victorian home outside Philadelphia. Her posts are witty and entertaining}

I am forever seeking inspiration and ideas for accessories.  I enjoy changing them up by season and when the creative mood hits me.  I revisit certain blogs for a seemingly unending supply of decorative inspiration and one of my all-time favorites is for the love of a house.  Joan and Dan renovated a historic home in New Hampshire, this after moving from Texas!  If you enjoy a good before and after you will thoroughly enjoy the ongoing tale of their work on this home.

Joan used to own an antique store and each item in their home has a story, the memories of acquisition are wonderful treasures for those of us with an interest in home decor.

One of my other favorites for accessory placement inspiration is Charles Faudree.  In his book “Details” he provides ideas by the area you are specifically in need of help with…mantels, walls, table top, etc.

Charles Faudree is the king of French and English rooms of this style.  I especially love his Cavalier Spaniels that appear in so many of his rooms.  Pets, for some, are the ultimate accessory {guilty as charged}.  Side note:  I met him once at a book signing and he is such a nice, Southern gentleman.

Do  you enjoy accessories or do you prefer the clean lines of “less is more”?  It’s the little things in life, never the giant issues, that provide contentment, right?

{Home} Time for a “pretty rooms” fix

25 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Collections & Accessories, Decorating, Designer, House and Home, Misc

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

pretty rooms

I was sorry to miss “Favorites on the First” over at The Polohouse.  I was on vacation and otherwise occupied with a 21-month old granddaughter…no complaints here!  Alison always hosts such fun monthly “favorites”.

I’ve been delivering posts that are more subject-specific since returning from vacation and even I’m bored with that!  {I guess it could be argued that all posts are subject-specific, but I just miss looking at pretty rooms, no specific topic or even particular focus}.

It’s time to feast our eyes on beauty, plain and simple (in my humble opinion) and these are some of my newer found “favorites”, and a couple of returning great rooms that I could look at daily and still find reason to be inspired somehow.

I hope you enjoy this frivolous interlude of well designed/decorated spaces and the accessories that inspire me…

This room/space had me at wood paneled walls and ceiling. The chandelier and eclectic accessories create interest.

Atlanta Home Foyer, Garden Home & Party{Atlanta Homes Magazine}

Old world rooms always draw my interest, don’t you wish they still made arched doorways with this kind of detailing?

Old world charm, Garden, Home and Party{source}

Any room with books says “comfortable and inviting” to me.  In fact I enjoy finding a library of sorts in unexpected places.

{source}

I’m looking for an entry rug similar to this, any shopping tips?

Foyer, Garden, Home and Party{source}

Vintage painting and beautiful furnishings, wow.

Tailored room, the Steward,Garden, Home and Party{source}

This sun room is so pretty, love the windows and doors.

Garden, Home and Party{source}

My apologies to those who are put off by antlers.  I understand, but I do like the lodge-look, even old European style they impart.

Garden, Home and Party {source}

This Jane Moore kitchen has been on a couple of my “favorite” blog sites lately, but I absolutely love the room and it’s non-structured, non-typical kitchen design.

Jane Moore, Veranda, Garden, Home and Party{source and Cote de Texas}

When Southern Accents magazine was still published I became an avid fan of Dan Carithers style…I used to be able to pick his rooms out of any magazine.  He’s now retired but his style is timeless and will remain close to my heart.

Garden, Home and Party{Dan Carithers}

There are so many features in this smallish space that draw my attention.  The little lamp, the comfy chairs and the table are all inviting and great use of a small dining area off the kitchen.

Better Homes and Gardens, Garden, Home and Party{Better Homes and Gardens}

I would love stone walls in a kitchen!

Garden, Home and Party{Elle Decor}

This tub is a favorite and I like the closet doors, I’d have to work on keeping order to my closet with these doors, but it would be worth it.

Garden, Home and Party{source}

The headboards and the chest are appealing, not to mention the botanics above each bed.

Garden, Home and Party{Design Chic}

Another small space but I really like the transferware grouping on the wall and a wingback in the kitchen is such a great idea…why not really be comfortable when you dine?

Garden, Home and Party{source}

I realize I couldn’t really allow the vines on our house to grow indoors, but I like the rustic look for this, don’t you?

Garden, Home and Party{Garden & Gun Magazine}

This is the best ever kitchen chandelier!

Garden, Home and Party{New England Home}

Joan and Dan’s house (for the love of a house) is one I can revisit weekly, they have such a great house and the way Joan pulls her incredible collections together makes it my favorite example of how to accessorize any room.

Garden, Home and Party{for the love of a house}

I’ve always liked this kitchen and the marble counter and back splash.

{Traditional Home Magazine}

If we EVER add a kitchen eating area, this is the image I’ll show the contractor.  Love it!

{Velvet & Linen}

I hope you enjoyed seeing some new and returning favorite rooms.  Do you revisit certain images for inspiration from magazines, design books or Pinterest?

{GHP} 10 Things I love about fall, I mean, Autumn

20 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Collections & Accessories, Decorating, Entertaining, Fall Entertaining and Decorations, Holiday/Seasonal cooking, House and Home, Traditions

≈ 24 Comments

Tags

greeting fall

Before I provide you with 10 things I love about the fall autumn season, I want you to know I’m a bit of a crazy when it comes fall. The season has always made me giddy with anticipation, maybe it stems from the whole back-to-school thrill I felt when returning the first day of school, seeing classmates I hadn’t seen over summer and sporting a new frock, not to mention the newly sharpened pencils and the fresh PeeChee folders and crisp, college-lined three-hole punch notebook paper.

Why am I telling you 10 reasons I like this time of year, whether you want to hear them or not?  I was inspired by Melissa over at The Inspired Room.  She hosts an Annual Fall Nesting party every year and I jump on the bandwagon because I know I’ll be surrounded by like-minded fall-season-fanatics enthusiasts just like me and I’ll pick up a lot of great ideas for seasonal entertaining and décor.

So here goes, in no particular order because the way I see it each thing I love about autumn receives an equal share of my admiration…

1.  Cooler days.  A relative term since I live in Southern California however, it’s the little things, like a 10 degree difference that make my day.

{tumblr, the Steward}

{tumblr, the Steward}

Sometimes we even manage a little rain, nothing huge but still, it always makes me happy to know the plants are being gently cleaned of their summer dust.

{source}

2.  Fire in the fireplace.  We have a wood burning fireplace and it’s one of my favorite things in life.  If I lived in the U.K. I would probably need a fire every day.

(above) a match holder I found years ago, love the acorn pattern to it.

{source}

{Carla’s coal burning fireplace ~ gas operated} * I apologize for the darkness of this photo.

3.  The holidays.  This time of year I begin to plan for Thanksgiving and Christmas.  I’m not as big a fan of Halloween, other than it’s the time of year the goblins arrive, bag in hand, that marks the beginning of cooler weather for us. {Don’t get me wrong, I love seeing small children dressed for the holiday, I just have never gotten totally wrapped up in “Halloween” decorations or costumes — curmudgeon, no, why do you ask?

{Martha Stewart}

{Martha Stewart}

{griege blog}

{Southern Accents}

4.  Turtlenecks.  I know, how can that  be a favorite?  Easy, I hate my neck and am always happy I can wear scarves and turtlenecks this time of year.

{I don’t think I’ve ever pulled off “attitude” like the turtleneck-clad model below, but I do like her Donna Karan outfit}

5.  Extra blankets.  I’ve been known to sleep with windows open year round and it always feels good to have the extra weight of a blanket on me.  Fortunately Hubby feels the same.

#5 and #6 should have been combined, but I do believe they are not mutually exclusive.

6.  Flannel sheets.  TMI?  We love flannel sheets in the winter months.
Shorter days.  This is the one item I reluctantly list because there is a part of me that truly appreciates the longer days of summer.  That said, I enjoy getting home from work, having something comforting to eat and enjoying the darkness of the evening while sitting in front of the fire watching TV, catching up on email.  We bought our flannel sheets from Lands End and they are so cozy.

7.  Entertaining.  I’ve had many conversations with friends who enjoy entertaining, about how much easier it is to entertain in the cooler months.  When I entertain in the summer, yes the menu can be easier (BBQ, salads, etc.) but not necessarily.  The “things to do” list is always longer in the summer i.e. windows should be clean, garden tended, patio furniture clean and so on.  Once the time changes the outdoor factor goes away.

{my friend, Cayley always sets a beautiful fall table}

8.  Apples.  I enjoy fresh apples year round but there are so many delicious recipes using apples and there’s nothing like a piece of apple pie to help reinforce the season.

Have any of you ever tried these individual pie in a jar recipes?

9.  Long, hot baths.  No further explanation needed, right?

10.  Fall foliage.  You know, the leaves the plants the berries that crop up on so many deciduous plants.  It draws thousands to the East coast annually…there must be something to it.

Talk to me, do you find yourself dreading fall, holding on to that last warm summer day, or do you get a burst of energy from the cooler season?  It’s okay, I can take it, let me know.

I’m joining Kate at Centsational Girl for her fall link party.  She is featuring mantles but said any fall post could join!

…and Alison at The Polohouse, for her Favorites on the First.

{Home and Garden} Home away from home

13 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Cottages, Decorating, House and Home

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Cottage in the Cotswolds

Home away from home, life in EnglandFor as long as I’ve been married to Hubby (which is a very long time), we’ve joked talked about living in England, at least for a few years.  We’ve vacationed in England several times, always feeling like we’re visiting home away from home.
Inspired by a recent series of posts by Mona of Providence  Ltd. Deisgn on her virtual cottage plans [here, here and here], I decided to create a virtual cottage in the Cotswolds for my files.  You never know what opportunity waits around the bend.

Home in the Cotswolds

{Providence Ltd. Interior Design}

I had the good fortune to visit the Cotswold area in 1995 with two of my closest friends.  For me it is one of the most beautiful areas of England.

The area is served by the market towns of Moreton-in-Marsh, Chipping Campden (a personal favorite), Stow-on-the-Wold and Winchcombe, and the larger villages of Broadway, Blockley and Burton-on-the-Water, all of which provide good shopping and other amenities for everyday needs.

I fell in love with Chipping Campden and that is where I’ll find my “virtual” cottage.  It will be exactly as I imagine…

Home in the CotswoldsMaybe it will be on one of the waterways through town,

or have a fabulous vista.

I imagine the entry to be slightly smaller than the one below, but with a Dutch door, lantern and room enough for a table to throw mail and keys on.

Cottage in the Cotswolds

I will probably go with a neutral palate in the country but I’ll have plenty of warm, colorful throws and seasonal pillows to brighten the space.

{House Beautiful}

My Cotswolds cottage will have a stone fireplace (above) or something like this (below)…

{Griege}

As you walk out of the living room you’ll pass through a hallway to the kitchen, along the way you’ll undoubtedly encounter the occasional antique table with a few old pieces on display…

Cottage in the Cotswolds{source: Tone on Tone} If you love Swedish antiques and accessories, a visit to Tone on Tone is essential. 

Loi writes a very entertaining blog as well.

Cottage in the CotswoldsThe kitchen will serve double duty as a place to cook as well as dine.  The chandelier will give it some casual formality.

Cottage in the Cotswolds…and off the kitchen there will be a little sun room, with a banquet where you can enjoy a quiet corner to read the paper and sip some tea…oh yes, there’s tea, plenty of tea.

{Heather Bullard}

There will be trays doing double duty to keep the smallish kitchen orderly.

Cottage in the Cotswolds{tumblr}

The master bedroom will have a reading corner (above), I know I’ll enjoy the sun streaming in the French doors with a good book and cup of tea and a throw, it will be very cozy.

…and since this IS my home away from home, I’ll need lots of bookcases to house the books I’ll get to read so the wall of our bed will provide the headboard and bookcase storage.

Cottage in the CotswoldsThis is the guest bedroom, please join us for regular visits!

I know the grandchild(ren) will be visiting us so I will make sure we have plenty of sleeping space for her (and more?).

With spare time a great soaking tub will be a necessity.

Cottage in the CotswoldsHubby and I will have to share a single sink, but that’s okay, we’ll be on vacation.

Cottage in the CotswoldsThe guest bathroom will be on the smaller size as well.

Cottage in the CotswoldsI’ll have to have a garden bench…English cottage gardens are my favorite.

There will be a mudroom where I can store the great French mirror I picked up at a sale…

Cottage in the Cotswolds{Atelier de Campagne}

…as well as some storage for vases and cache pots ready for flower arrangements.

Cottage in the Cotswolds{Providence Ltd. Interior Design}

Do you think it’s premature to pack my bags?

If you were to buy/build a home away from home, where would it be? 

Speaking of luggage and such…I’m visiting my long time friend, Linda on Bainbridge Island, Washington.  This post is being published without me (I placed it in the queue) but I will not have access to a computer until my return on Tuesday.  If you comment, thank you so much, I’ll reply Tuesday.  Have a wonderful weekend.  I hope to have some great pictures and stories to share about this pretty spot on the Pacific Northwest.

{Home} What is it about men and wood?

14 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by Karen B. in Decorating, House and Home, Paint Color, Renovating

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

painting

Sometime earlier this month I unveiled our newly painted family room.  We I decided I was tired of the rich, red walls and ready for a change to a slightly more neutral setting.

I asked my loyal readers, all 6 of them, 🙂 what their thoughts were on painting the ceiling white, like the fireplace, French doors and entertainment center, and each person was wholeheartedly in favor of the idea.

I casually mentioned this fact to Hubby and he acted as though I had asked him to run naked down the freeway.  This got me to thinking of the various blog sites that had shared similar stories where they were longing to paint their paneled, orangey pine walls white, and husbands far and wide responded anywhere from mild protestation to downright forbidding such appalling violation of the natural beauty and appeal of wood sans paint.

{source}

What is it about men and wood?!

{source}

I can appreciate natural wood as much as the next guy, or girl, but there are times when a room needs the lift of a little paint.  Besides, the ceiling in our family room is very inexpensive wood, tongue and grove so it’s not as if I’m asking Hubby to paint over burl wood or mahogany.

{source}

I do love natural wood in a cabin setting in the woods, like the beauty above.  In a horse stable (below), sign me up.  There is nothing like it.

Great, old wood floors are amazing.  I’ve seen some attractive painted wood floors but I don’t believe I would ever paint my hardwood floors.  See, I can be reasonable about wood.

If our ceiling was made from wood such as the two rooms below, I’d want it to be left natural, honest.

{Belgian Pearls}

{haus design}

This is more like it…see how clean and nice this ceiling looks, that’s the look I’m going for.

{Design Chic}

{Design Chic)

And finally…this room probably gives men everywhere the best of both worlds.  The ceiling is white but also has wonderful natural wood beams to off set the paint.  The fireplace over mantle appears to be recycled wood.

{Things That Inspire}

What do you think, there’s no right or wrong answer.  It’s what you love and feel comfortable with, right?

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