Thursday, May 31, 2007

closing up for the evening



Hammocks and watermelon. Faded picnic blankets. Deep, damp grass and barefeet. A quiet gin and tonic on the porch. Fireflies. I *heart* summer.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007


Party orders shipping out today. I love the idea of all these colourful little gatherings. Please, send me your pictures!

Square dinner plates are sold out and I can't get my hands on any more. I should have more of the larger round plates + seagrass totes by the end of the week. No takers for the leis though. Surely I'm not the only one who loves them? And the finger rockets? People, these are seriously good fun. First of all, they fly like a hundred feet. Second, one, that's right one rocket, kept a gang of kids amused for over an hour. That's a lot of entertainment for $1.95.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

yeah, it's a(nother) party



It seems when we moved into this house we not only inherited a share in a community snowblower but also the expectation that we would continue to host the Canada Day street party - a duty we've shirked for the last four years. This year we're on it. Invites went out today. Planning is in full swing.

On another note, the cute party picture contest is just about to close. There's a real horse race between two contestants - you decide who gets the $150 gift certificate so vote now!

honeybunch: rock the vote#links

Monday, May 28, 2007

Fine weather for sale-ing



Saturday was the annual street sale in Markland Woods, a pretty little warren of streets just west of us, and with dozens of families participating you could spend your entire morning browsing, if you were so inclined. We were all pretty excited to check things out but no one more than Stella who was armed with a fistful of loonies. Within minutes she was sporting a paper crown, a remnant of someone's party at Medieval Times. She usually passes over tatty stuffed animals but today was different. Loonies long gone on Tonka trucks, a puzzle and a hammering thing for Henry she pleaded and begged for a $5 loan to buy a talking pig she insisted was Wilbur from Charlotte's Web but was actually a cast-off Babe. It was about to turn ugly when I spotted this fellow in the free box. He raps. And hops.



Mollifed, we were allowed to continue. I picked up the pink petal ware jug for $2 and the great cake moulds for $1 a piece. Lemon bundt cake and a jell-o ring with shredded carrot and pineapple (my mother's recipe) for our July 1 party! I'm not a golfer but if I were, I'd really have to have this baby blue club bag. A successful day, but the real find turns out to be Hip Hop bunny: his twin brother was later spotted at the Cookstown Antique Market - for $15. Good taste might trump money, but a score beats all.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

picture day


I'm a bit of a rudderless blogger it seems. I like to write. I like to take pictures. A blog seemed like good pairing of the two so I dipped a toe in the water last year. But I never set out with a purpose, other than free personal expression and a place to share hopefully interesting/cute/pretty photos. I'm a tad envious of blogs that are actually about something. Food. Design. Plot holes in Lost. I guess I just can't be that focused. Oh well.

Which brings us to this morning. Picture day at nursery school. Love this outfit, which arrived with much fanfare and billows of tissue paper from Italy - a gift from family friends we've never actually met but who send scrumptious outfits that always fit just so. In return we send cute jeans, BabyLegs and winter boots (hard to find in southern Italy). My father-in-law, who returns to his tiny town in Calabria, Fossato Serralta, each summer, is a friend of these generous folks, and is the official thank-you note translator, sizing expert and clothing mule in this international fashion swap. Fun. Happy Friday!

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

a dime a dozen



I have a thing for homespun parties. Kids and grown-ups happily mingling. Lots of sweet treats, good music and a few crowd-pleasing games make for an afternoon we all enjoy. Sure a home party is more work than, say, taking the troops to the movies or an indoor playground for a few hours but those parties, and I'm not judging here it's simply my preference, just don't satisfy the hostess in me. Or my need to coordinate.

So I'm pretty excited about the great new party stuff I added to the shop today. It's all classic dime store stuff: melamine dishes, crepe paper streamers, seagrass totes, and some very kitschy leis, so you can pull the entire thing together for less than $40 but doesn't it look like a million bucks?

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

all buttoned up



My plans to hit five or six yard sales Saturday were waylaid when I spent my weekly garage sale allowance of $40 bucks in the first 30 seconds on a lovely Drexel cocktail table from the 1960s and this big jar of buttons. Buttons you say? Yes, the humble button is an adored object among certain crafty, vintage-loving folk. One of the things I truly love about the Internet is finding and connecting with people who share sensibilities and interests some might find esoteric. Like swooning over a 2 kilogram jar of buttons. Look at all of this loveliness:


Vintage Buttons, originally uploaded by Picnic by Ellie.



vintage button wreath, originally uploaded by pixiegenne.



close up flower notes, originally uploaded by .tomate d'epingles..



Novelty food is another thing I can't pass up. Like this "Texas-sized" donut. It was the size of a bicycle tire. It drew a small crowd of neighbourhood kids. And it was gone in 60 seconds.

Friday, May 18, 2007

changing lanes


One of the first job interviews I had was with a book publisher. This was many years ago and I no longer recall the company or the position, other to say that I wasn't remotely qualified, but I do remember the meeting well. I wore a tan Ally McBeal-ish suit, tottering heels and some sort of leather briefcase that was quite likely empty but for my metropass, gum and a creatively padded resume. But despite the great outfit and my desperate enthusiasm, the meeting did not go well. The interviewer's puzzling line of questions became more and more abstract, and ended with the stumper: "You're driving on the 401. Which lane are you in - left, right or middle." Well and truly flummoxed, I eventually replied "I don't have a snowball's chance at this job, do I?" That was the only honest exchange during those 20 awkward minutes. Probably because I still don't know how to answer it, the question has stayed with me over the years.

I don't think I've ever been a left lane kind of person. I don't know if I'm ambitious or if I just have things , a wooly list of things, that I'd like to do. I'm not very good at separating work and family and personal dreams. Like the rest of the world I just want to be happy. So I let that guide my decisions. Not returning to my former job this year was pretty easy. I did go back to work full time at the end of my maternity leave with Stella and, though I was happy once I was actually at work, I spent a lot of time feeling rushed and overwhelmed getting there and back home again. I realized with two kids the pressure would be amplified and I just didn't think going through life like that would be good for me or anyone else.

There's an interesting article in this week's Maclean's that says disparity in the workplace is no longer a male/female issue, it's between those who have kids and those who don't. According to the author, Lianne George, kids are the new glass ceiling. I'm inclined to agree. Meetings booked at 4:30 p.m., a daycare that charges $5 a minute beyond the 6:00 pick-up time and always, always the feeling that I'm not doing home or work particularly well made it pretty clear that I should find a way to make a living on my own terms.

So life is a bit slower these days, a bit of a drive in the right lane. There's more time to appreciate the simple beauty in life and I'm grateful for that. I've always been a fan of the slow food, and slow travel movements, both of which are in keeping with my newly found slow life. Happy long weekend everyone.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

She Pulls Her Man Around By Her Apron Strings


Aprons, originally uploaded by Red Colander.



St. Louis woman, with her diamond rings,
She pulls her man around, by her apron strings;
She wants for powder, and for store-bought hair,
The man she loves he wouldn't go nowhere

(St. Louis Blues, William Christopher Handy)

The part about store-bought hair gets me. Everywhere I look lately I see aprons. June's issue of Canadian House & Home. And this darling book, given to me for Mother's Day by my lovely sister-in-law.



I love the stories - especially Harold Sasaki's tale of his grandmother whose apron pockets always held tobacco and cigarette paper - and the photographs are wonderful but it's the patterns I'm positively giddy over. I've collected aprons here and there over the years; I like to give them as hostess gifts with a bottle of olive oil or a set of vintage serving spoons. I like wearing them too. But they've become such a hot collectible recently and good ones are hard to find anyway, so I'll try my hand at making one or two. It'll give me a reason to dip into my overgrown fabric stash, and I like the idea of connecting in some way with apron makers - and wearers - of the past.




Tuesday, May 15, 2007

rock the vote

Our four cutie pie contestants! Vote for your favourite photo - poll now open. Winner will be announced in the June newsletter.


Monday, May 14, 2007

Daily Sweetness

Doll's clothing stitched from vintage fabric scraps. I have a wedding coming up in August and really must find someone to make an adult version of this dress. It's altogether perfect.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

homecoming



After returning to the same island, the same street and, usually, the same beach house for a few years now, it feels a bit like coming home on both ends of our trip. It wasn't always so. Vacations used to be about exploring. Months spent researching dusty corners of the Internet looking for secret hideaways and unspoiled gems. But after driving from Munich to Umbria in a heatwave, with a nursing 4-month old and catastrophically wrong Mapquest directions to this place, we needed to find an easier way to vacation as a family.

Florida. Such a simple and obvious choice that I'm a little embarrased. I'm unapologetically anti-Disney World (non-stop manufactured kid-tertainment is not for me. That's a trip reserved for indulgent Aunties and Grandparents.) so the other Florida was something of a revelation. And now I'm positively evangelical about the sunshine state. Or rather parts of it. Here's why you should go:

There are lovely homes like this

And this


But most look something like this rather adorable cottage, where we stayed.


With embroidered curtains covering a sunny kitchen window

And a weathered door with seashell carvings


You can have pancakes here for $1.50 and watch dolphins in the bay.


And see a sunset wedding any night of the week.


And end every day pretty much the same way.


Oh, and the flip flops-only decree? Absolutely spot on.