Atlanta Designer, Dan Carithers

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It all started with this kitchen…I spotted it in a magazine so many years ago.  I clipped the page (maybe even some of the other rooms associated with the kitchen) and saved it.  The Atlanta based designer responsible for this beauty is Dan Carithers.

Dan CarithersImage via Southern Accents

Image via Southern Accents

His interviews and design philosophy was so appealing to me—I always felt he was creating rooms I could live in.  They never appeared stuffy or overly formal.  In fact they were usually just slightly unpredictable and a little unorthodox.

Southern Accents May-June 2005

The above 3 images are from Southern Accents, May-June 2005.  A young Atlanta couple had Dan Carithers design their home with French influences.

I’ve seen homes that he’s designed that are quite contemporary, and they are lovely, but it’s his classic and traditional looks that hold the most appeal for me.

Nancy & Dan CarithersHere is Dan and his lovely wife, Nancy.  The images below are from Southern Accents (I believe) and they are of the Carither’s home.

I could feel very comfortable in this house!

In 2008 he worked on the Southern Accents Showhouse at Regents Park, Atlanta.  For a video tour of the house visit HERE.

Below are some additional kitchens I’ve saved that Dan Carithers designed:

I love the beams and the open feel to this kitchen.

This kitchen has a cottage feel to it but with that touch of elegance in the upholstered chairs and beautiful dining table.

More beams and I love the glass front cabinets above the kitchen sink.

I love the simplicity of this bedroom, the neutral palate is calming to me.

More beams and I like the interesting decorative items that create a history of where and what the homeowners interests are.

Are any of you Dan Carithers fans?  (Note:  Just one more Atlanta designer to love!)


Irish Stew, a simple recipe

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I realize St. Patrick’s Day is behind us but I thought I would share the recipe I prepare for the holiday.  It’s a modification of my mom’s beef soup recipe; with a bit of tweaking and some thickening of the broth you have a hearty and tasty stew good for any cool winter (or spring) evening meal.  As with so many stews, it’s better the second time you heat it so I usually make mine a day before I’m going to serve it.  Enjoy!

Image via Pioneer Woman ~ link on my GHP Home page

KB’s Irish Stew

Beef  (serves 6)

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INGREDIENTS:

2 pounds London broil, cubed, patted dry

2 tablespoons canola oil

2 tablespoons butter

4 large carrots, scrubbed and sliced

8 large mushrooms, sliced

3 medium potatoes, diced

1 large onion, diced (or you can use frozen pearl onions)

4 cups beef broth+

1/4 cup flour

1/2 cup whipping cream

1 teaspoon thyme

Salt and pepper to taste

INSTRUCTIONS:

Cube beef, trim off excess fat.  Heat oil and butter in Dutch oven over medium-high heat.  Dry beef with paper towels; season with salt and pepper; brown beef in small batches.  Once brown on all sides; continue until all beef is browned; set aside.

Next add onion and carrots, (it may be necessary to add a little more oil); add mushrooms after onion has cooked for about 2 minutes; cook until mushrooms have released their juices.  Return beef to pan and add broth and cubed potatoes.  Reduce heat to keep (medium-low heat) stew simmering; cook for 2 hours, with lid on pan.  Check periodically in case more broth is needed.

30 minutes before stew is finished, make slurry of flour and whipping cream, add to stew and stir.  Check and adjust seasonings.

Serve with crusty bread and salad.

Spring fever…a little daydream

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I’ve been diagnosed with “spring fever” (self-diagnosis) and as a result I find myself sitting around, staring out the window and day dreaming…

…of taking a little trip to Scotland.  I’ll use the Orient Express for an overview of the country and then stay in a few castles to round out the vacation.

Image via Atmosphere by Ingrid

Image via The Royal Scotsman, Orient Express

The Royal Scotsman (one of the Orient Express trains) offers a 2 night Highland Journey for only $3,720.  This price is per person but does include all meals and alcohol, HUGE savings there!  I’d definitely want to go with Hubby so make that $7,440.  We’d depart from Edinburgh and during our 540 miles on the train we would see Dundee, Montrose, Aberdeen, Keith, Inverness, Dalwhinnie and Perth.

Once the train portion of this dream is complete,  I’ll head north by car to Loch Ness, near Inverness for a stay at Aldourie Castle.  The region is called the “capital of the Scottish Highlands”.  We’ll look for the Loch Ness monster, visit the James Pringle Weavers operation and tour the Abrinchan Gardens.  Oh, and the price for 2 nights in this castle?  £10,500 plus VAT.  {Did I mention this little vacation will take place once I hit the lottery?  Guess I better start buying a lottery ticket!}

Next stop, Comlongon Castle, Dumfries & Galloway.  The restored Medieval Scottish Castle and Baronial Hotel specializes in a menu that is prepared with the current season’s bounty.   Lots of abbey ruins and museums to see here along with the home of Robert Burns, (Auld Lang Syne).  Cost:  £120 – £240 per night, seems a bargain!


And finally, we’ll stay our last few nights at Skibo Castle.  Andrew Carnegie, a wealthy industrialist, bought this castle in 1898 for £85,000.  Carnegie, his wife and only child spent many summers here.  Its changed hands a few times since the Carnegie family sold it in 1982.  We won’t be joining The Carnegie Club but we’ll take advantage of their policy of letting new guests stay there once while being considered for the exclusive membership!

Isn’t dreaming fun?  Any thoughts of spring floating through your head during this change of seasons?

For Japan with Love

Thanks to paper{whites} for her post sharing information about  For Japan With Love

I’ll be observing Bloggers Day of Silence, (today, Friday, March 18th) and I’ve made my donation that goes towards providing Japan earthquake victims with much-needed shelter boxes.   If you’d like to donate  you can make it right HERE.

I’ll be back on Monday with a new post.  Be thankful for the simple abundance most of us enjoy daily.  Say a little prayer for Japan.

A bit of the Irish and a spot of green

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Top o’ the mornin’ to you.  Here’s a bit o’ green for your upcoming St. Patrick’s Day…

Okay, technically this cottage is in the Cotswold's...I couldn't find one nearly as charming on Google for Ireland.

You may want to dress up and paint the town red, I mean green!

I'd add the Burberry scarf just in case it's cool outside.

You'll want to take your bag, green beer isn't free.

I've never had this drink, but it's so much prettier than green beer, right?

I’ve always wanted to visit Ireland…I’ve been to England several times and just never managed to get to Ireland (bucket list #5).

Maybe you just want to keep it casual...

Hey, not that I own green UGG’s but these would be comfortable for an evening at home.

Maybe you'd rather stay home with your best friend, Reilly, the Irish Wolfhound (not to be confused with the Deerhound that just won Best of Breed at Westminster Dog Show.

Curl up by the fire with a little Irish tea...

...have a few friends over for Irish Stew

Whatever you do have a Bonnie St. Paddy’s Day!

Dan Marty…praise from a fan

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Inspired by a post on the adventures of tartanscot earlier this month (during his visit to Los Angeles for the 2011 Design Bloggers Conference), Scot gave us a peek at Dan Marty’s Los Angeles home as featured in House Beautiful May 2010.

I don’t know if his dogie is still with him, he must be pretty old if he is, but he was such a cute dog and was always with Dan when he was in his shop.

I immediately wanted to revisit the “beach cottage” I had the privilege of touring when Dan allowed the Corona Del Mar High School Home Tour to include his home. (I can’t remember what year it was, but I was still working in my garden business so it had to be at least 7 or 8 years ago, maybe longer).  At the time he had a store in Costa Mesa; Les Interiors which was a wonderful venue for inspiration and a great place to pick up the occasional home accessory, always new and original.  The store also offered design services, which I’m sure did some beautiful work for local folk’s homes.  He parted ways with Les Interiors and opened Dan Marty Designs in Corona Del Mar but alas, we ultimately lost him to the Los Angeles Design Mart (affectionately known as The Blue Whale, due to the color of the main building).

The above images are of his beach cottage.  I loved the use of space and somehow the small spaces felt ample and oh so comfortable!

Griege did a pretty extensive piece on his designs last year.  Clearly Dan Marty has a following…and for good reason.

The above images are mostly from the House Beautiful story last year.  I love seeing some of his obvious ‘favorite accessories’ used in his newer house.

I’m partial to the charm his beach cottage offered but I admire the French flair of his home in Los Angeles.

Above images are from his commercial sites.

Do you have a favorite designer…or 2 or 10?

Its so Ozzie and Harriet!

*WARNING* I’m about to age myself, but who care’s right…it’s your outlook and attitude that matter, right.  But I digress…when I was growing up I used to love to watch the Ozzie & Harriet show.  For those of you who are now asking yourself, what television show is that again? …The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet ran on ABC for 14 years between 1952 and 1966.  Early this year David Nelson passed away, the last of the family that starred in the series.

I was only 2 years old when the show premiered so I didn’t see it until much later, but then I watched all of the old episodes the network would rerun.  I was in ♥ love with Ricky, the younger sibling of David, and was a huge fan of the lifestyle they acted out on their show.  I’ve read that the genial life they performed was pretty accurate to their real lives, at least for the most part.  If you want to read more about the show and the family members visit HERE.

When I read about David’s recent passing I thought about the show and remembered why I enjoyed it.  The show created the “ideal” lifestyle using a real family.  In fact one of the frequently used colloquialisms I heard as a young adult was “it’s so Ozzie and Harriet”, which I’m sure was a stab at the perfect lifestyle that was projected.   For me I had conjured up an image that to this day seems doable and at the very least something to strive for.  (A married couple raising 2 sons in a neighborhood where most everyone gets along).

I find I still use the “…so Ozzie & Harriet” phrase when I see a really traditional neighborhood or a very traditional home with a well manicured lawn and maybe a basketball hoop on the garage.  I imagine (perhaps wrongly) that there is a perfect little family living there!  There are still a few of those neighborhoods in Orange County and its fun to drive by to admire the architectural style and see what they’ve done to the landscape.

This is the real Ozzie and Harriet house

So, am I wrong to dream the dream…delusional?  I hope not, I’m working hard to live that dream!

A hint of spring

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I’m pretty sure the entire nation has been hit with more than their share of cold, winter weather.

Image by Cameron Purdy

This is a little glimpse at what we can look forward to, hopefully sooner than later.

Sweet peas, berries and ranunculus, these are the flowers I associate with spring.

Yellow flowers, what other color screams warm sunshine?

Daisies are another flower that says ‘spring’ to me.  I know they are sometimes out of favor, but these little Santa Barbara daisies are so sweet.

Tulips, pink jasmine, ranunculus and asters {sigh}

All of the above images are from a wonderful site  Small Studio + Studio Choo

So bundle up, but know that very soon we’ll be able to throw open the back door and sit in our gardens and soak up the sunshine!  Happy Wednesday!

Easy strawberry treat

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I was one of 4 hostesses for a bridal shower a couple of weeks ago and I made these to go on the dessert tray.  They were easy and delicious.

I like to share…

6 ounces of mascarpone cheese, room temperature

½ teaspoon vanilla

½ teaspoon almond extract

3 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar

¼ cup sliced almonds

12-20 fresh strawberries

Rinse strawberries and cut both ends.  Use small melon baler to remove inside stem.  Allow to air dry for about 1 hour, or pat dry with paper towel.

Meanwhile toast almonds in 350° for 5-6 minutes.

Mix mascarpone cheese (cream cheese can be substituted) with hand mixer until fluffy.  Add extracts and sugar and mix until blended.

Place cheese mixture into a pastry bag with ¼” star tip.  Stuff each almond with cheese mixture.  Chill strawberries.

Add cooled, toasted almonds.  Can be made earlier in the day.

Framed…art and other treasures

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From my first apartment forward I have always enjoyed finding just the right “art” for my walls.  I confess I’m not strictly a purist about what art I’m willing to frame and hang in the interest of room enhancement.  For example there was a time when I framed calendar pages from an American artist by the name of Charles Wysoki (during my American Country décor days).  I’ve also framed a menu card (it was a menu card from a wine bar in London sporting our last name as the name of the bar— we still have it on the wall in our family room).

Designer Barclay Butera had sea fern (or is that coral?) framed for his beach house—it looks amazing with the other shell items in his entry.

As I branched into a more English Cottage look, I framed hunt scenes, expensive ones and inexpensive ones, and paintings by unknown artists and antique prints or papers when the subject attracted my attention.  For me personally “art” doesn’t have to be signed, numbered or even original for me to frame it and hang it if I love it.

This is Barclay Butera’s living room and I fell in love with his sail boat painting (did I mention he has a showroom near where I live?)

I’ve noticed that over the past 5-8 years I haven’t been inclined to change my art very much, which is a money saver.  When I’ve custom framed prints it has usually cost more than the cost of the art itself.  I will say that a great framing job can make some art look better than it actually is, monetarily speaking.  Kind of the “turning a pig’s ear into silk purse” theory.

Image via Elle Decor

I use fun tack to hold my pictures in place but in this case, with California earthquakes, I think I’d be inclined to tack all of these (above) pictures—don’t want a concussion after the earth moves!

Image source unknown

I think this (above) grouping adds interest to an otherwise plain corner of the room.

Image via Rooms that Inspire

When your room is white, what better contrast than black?  I love the look of black frames against the white walls and the subway sign is so fun.

Image via Cote de Texas

The framed intaglios are appealing the way they have been framed and made more prominent by being hung on the face of the book case.  {My friend Carla has a set of framed intaglios and I love the sense of history they give her rooms}

Image via Jackye Lanham (new website HERE)

Another great use of framed intaglios, this time on a blue background with the touches of blue in the bedroom tying it all together. {sigh}

Image via Jackye Lanham

Another great Jackye Lanham room…I love the similar themed paintings she grouped in the living room of this home.

The other important facet of hanging art, in addition to a complimentary frame, is the arrangement itself.  In fact, I’ve found arrangements that were so intriguing but in fact not expensive art at all.

Lauren Liess of Pure Style Home (her entry).

Lauren hung lots of frames the exact same size and framing materials and had mats cut to accommodate different pictures.  The effect is impressive.

I love the interest this adds to the bath but I wonder if the steam from the shower might cause the pictures some damage?

Okay, I’m about to age myself…does anyone remember the “M” on the wall of the apartment of the charming Mary Tyler Moore show?  Some things just never go out of style!

So what do you like to use as art in your home?  Do you have a Renoir hanging in the parlor?