Friday, September 28, 2007

corners of my home


It's taken some doing, but at last, a tidy corner.

I'd given up on striking gold at Value Village and coming home with a mid-century teak credenza for $50, so chancing upon this sofa table in Ikea's As-Is department felt like fate. Of course getting it home assembled was no easy task, but thanks to a trio of good samaritans in the parking lot who helped me untangle car seat straps and stuff the thing in, we're home and now a lot of odds and ends have a place to be.

On another note, a family around the corner who, with four kids, always has the best yard sales, told me about this mondo garage sale. It's tomorrow. It's really big and I assume crowded. But by all accounts, worth it. See you there. Happy weekend everyone.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

a bargain at twice the price





I was very happy to make the acquaintance of Flora, a crafty gal down the road who is a whiz with the crochet hook. While lots of folks can knit and crochet with competence - those scratchy acrylic but beautifully turned-out hats and dolls at church bazaars make me weep - it's the crafters who also have an eye for colour and an attention to detail that stop me in my tracks. These are Flora's hair clips. She asked if I would be interested in selling them in my shop. Normally I don't do hair accessories; they're not really the sort of thing people buy online and it's hard to convey in a photograph how lovely and thoughtfully made these are. But I couldn't say no because these are just too good to not share. Flora has sent over a smattering of samples. She crochets each little flower then attaches it to a ribbon-covered alligator clip, that also has a magnetic strip inside so it'll hold the finest baby hair. They are $6.75 a set, which, considering the level of detail, means Flora is not paying herself nearly enough. So get in on a good thing while you can!

If you're interested in a set of clips for your gal, drop me a line: nicole(at)honey-bunch.com

Monday, September 24, 2007

get me alice, stat


A bit of a mixed nuts kind of weekend around here. A bit of this, a bit of that. All perfectly unscheduled, which was fine by me. A peaceful, grown-ups only morning of scavenging turned up this sweet MelMac set, which is just what I wanted for an upcoming tea and crafting afternoon. Porcelain cups seemed too fussy for what I have in mind.



In between the furniture painting, garage reorg and mowing half the lawn, we also managed to squeeze in some much needed home maintenance. A door that was threatening to fall off its hinge for years finally did just that, and we could no longer ignore the problem. Bolstered by success we tackled a burned out lightbulb at the top of the landing. Months of navigating a twisty staircase in the dark has given us all some kind of weird spidey sense; I can manage it while carrying a tub of laundry and cradling the phone. But when a five-year old visitor asks "how come you haven't fixed the lightbulb yet?" willful blindness starts to feel like sloth.

In between the this and the that we had drop-in guests. Normally the idea of people arriving on my doorstep without at least an hour or two's notice would freak me out. I need time to stuff things into closets (or in a pinch the oven), whip the shower curtain closed and slap on some make-up. Like most, our house is never really in drop-in condition. But this weekend the house was particularly, well, I'll just say it, dirty. As in dishes in the sink, a bathroom that were it public I would not use, folded laundry covering the coffee table, a hoosier in the hallway blocking the closet door so everything that should be hidden away is now strewn about the floor, and, good god, a poopy diaper fermenting on the porch. It was not good. I was paint-splattered, pony-tailed and quite possibly not even showered when our visitors dropped in at 5:00, stayed for dinner (take-out), coffee and frozen apple crumble.

Sure it was a little embarrassing. But I was enjoying the conversation and counting on four kids tearing up the house to provide some camoflage. I thought I was getting away with it when my mother-in-law, who also happened to come by, cast an eye across the chaos and said "If you make some money this year maybe you can hire a housekeeper." A comment trumped by own mother who observed "You're always getting organized but you never get organized." They are both right. I need a housekeeper. I need an Alice to my Mrs. Brady. Do you know who Sisyphus is? I'd never heard of him until we let go the cleaning lady last year. Getting this house in order has been simultaneously uphill and downhill ever since.

Despite how it sounds, it was a splendid weekend. It was kind of freeing to have people see us at our worst and still want to stay, frozen apple crumble and all.

Friday, September 21, 2007

relax



I've fielded a couple of emails from folks a bit panicked about the painted portrait deadline. Do not fret, please. Take your time and find a photo you truly love. I am happy to extend the offer for another week.

i've got to be me


It is Friday and it is oh so warm and sunny, so I know I am not the only one who wants to yell doodlydoodlydoo at the top of her lungs, swing round a lamp post, kick off her shoes and sit on the porch with a frosty glass of something or other. I am extra enthusiastic today because it has been a long week filled with meetings of one kind or another. A week of too many spreadsheets and a dusty calculator. A week that was far too dull and yet incredibly exciting at the same time. But more on that another time. Today I am happy to just get my hands dirty again. The plague of wasps that kept me from painting any furniture for the past six weeks seems to be over, and so today the driveway is filled with 3 dressers, 1 cabinet, and several chairs all getting a lick of paint and a new lease on life. Cleaning, scraping, sanding, priming and painting a tatty old bureau might not be everyone's idea of a good time, but I love a makeover. I've decided to not take on any more custom orders for furniture. Painting all of my stuff white started to feel more like production - especially when I had to cover an amazing turquoise or candy pink I'd already done - and I really missed the fun of picking a shade that seemed to really suit the piece. It may sound silly but I take a lot of time deciding on colours. I like to get it right. So today I've decided on rain slicker yellow for the chairs, robin's egg blue for one dresser, lavender for another and a watermelon pink night table. I may be alone in my opinion, but I think the world needs less white and a little more oompah-pah.

Happy weekend friends

Monday, September 17, 2007

Letter of the Day: H

"The value of an idea has nothing whatever to do with the sincerity of the man who expresses it." - Oscar Wilde

Oh that Mr. Wilde. He always has my number. Barely two days after my plasticky junk rant, look what moved into the house:



A rare Sunday morning garage sale. In my defense, I had nothing to do with this purchase. It was made while I was happily forking over three bucks for this:



And in that short interlude with my back turned, Mr. Honeybunch bought a talking purple vaccuum cleaner. Oh yes, the saucy so-and-so does have quite a bit to say about the state of the house. I might not object if thing actually had a bit of suction, but, no, all it does is judge: "we must clean up this dust!" "let's clean up this mess!" and my favourite, "This place is a pig sty!"

Some battles are uphill all the way. A bit of fortification, however, in the form of this article in the weekend Globe. A *slow* clothes movement. Yes! Yes to quality. Yes to integrity. Yes to buying less but enjoying it more. The purple vacuum? I may be an idealist but I'm no fool: It'll probably outlive us all. I may very well hand it down to Stella's kids as a prized family heirloom. I'm not saying no to plastic. I'm saying no to this:

Friday, September 14, 2007

weekend-ing



The divided plate was gone when I returned to GoodWill, but finding this fellow for $5 made my day. The shade could use some pompoms, don't you think? Mr. Dumpty will live in Henry's room, I think. I haven't lavished nearly as much attention on the little Mister's room, so it's due for some thrifty goodness.

You can't see me, of course, but here I am, on the porch, barefoot as has been the case since mid-April, soaking up the last of summer. I am getting misty. And contemplating a run to the McGregor sock outlet down the road. It seems I may need a pair this weekend. 15-degrees tomorrow? Oh the cruel, cruel jet stream.

On the family sked this weekend:
1. Marineland. I promised.
2. Queen West Art Crawl. Where we bought this last year, and kind of hoped to buy another Steven Nederveen painting, but discovered we can no longer afford his work. Which I suppose is good, investment-wise, but a bummer for our still barren bedroom.

Happy weekend!

Thursday, September 13, 2007

good timing


At the nursery school's annual picnic last week Stella won, handily I might add, the sack race, foot race and tied for first in a photo finish in the wheelbarrow race. What can I say? The kid is speedy. But I think it was the mountain of prizes waiting to be won that was really behind her Olympic-worthy performance. She cleaned up, and we came home with a large bag full of stuff. The dreaded plasticky stuff that fills under-the-bed bins, lurks behind the couch, litters the car floor and makes the thwacking sound in the dryer as it falls out of one pocket or another. Of course all of it ultimately ends up in the garbage. The leg that falls off the *walking* dinosaur seconds after its unwrapping. The disappointing ball that doesn't really bounce. The thingy that falls off the thingy, rendering it useless. And on and on. I have a personal ban on plasticky junk: I do not buy it for my kids or for anyone else, but it invades my life just the same.

My sister-in-law sent me this snip from a CNN blog yesterday:
Have you had enough of the china-made recall stories? I'm considering going retro for my toddler nephews... and getting the old-fashioned wooden toys. The kind where you go to a small crafting/antiques/knickknacks tourist town and a guy is standing there actually making them for you at his shop. Today I'll interview a “fortune” magazine guest about whether this is going to be a very different christmas."

Amen to that. If there is any good to come from this toy recall mess, let it be a return to toys that A) actually work B) won't hurt you C) use a little imagination. Now we all know there is a vast difference between the stuff a 4-year old thinks is cool and great and the stuff a 38-year old gets giddy over. But as a keen observer of how my kids play, the thing they return to over and over again is a big box of building blocks Stella's had since she was a baby. They've been turned into the tower of Pisa, castles, boats and, lately, a jail for misbehaving farm animals. They don't break, make noise, get boring after 5 minutes, annoy adults or end up in the garbage. They are perfect, and on that the 4 year old and 38 year old agree.

We are also in agreement over these very sweet new toys. They're handknit by a fair trade cooperative. The veggies and tool belt toys are rattles for little hands, and the donuts and cupcakes are a welcome addition to the play food menu.

PS
Thank you Sue for passing on this recall link. The photos that accompany each product are really helpful when trying to figure out if you have any of this stuff in your house.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Warning: Plot Spoiler

Dear Nan,
before you go any further I must warn you that I have posted a couple of photos of the CD that will be on its way to you and your little loveys in just a day or two. Of course, if you're like me and enjoy peeling back a corner of the wrapping paper - just behind the ribbon where no one will ever know what you've done - then by all means come on in and have a little look.






A snip of thrifted pillowcase, a bit of ticking cotton, a pair of vintage buttons, stitch, stitch, stich, some wobbly embroidery, et voila: a CD envelope. Now I am not a pattern follower. I am a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants crafter. But I am also a bit of a perfectionist and if you're thinking that those two qualities do not mix, well you'd be right. At some point in every project I am ready to chuck it all in the trash can recycle bin. So a confession: I botched the first CD envelope, the one pictured here, and I remade it last night a bit tidier: I embroidered before I sewed in the lining so the knot of stitches is hidden. I am not a neat embroiderer. Correction, I am not an embroiderer at all and goodness knows my grandmother would be appalled by my handiwork here, but what I lack in skill I make up in speed, and I quite like the way it looks all the same.

In case you're wondering what all this swapping business is about, I am making a CD for Nan's kids and she is making one for mine. Nan lives in Sydney. We've never met. But I know from our mutual disdain for The Wiggles and her funny and very pretty blog that if we were neighbours we'd be baking lemon squares for the school bake sale together. And probably arm-wrestling over vintage children's books and Japanese tableware at the thrift store.

The swap was organized by Tracy, an ex-pat now living in California, the lucky devil. I do so love the Internet.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

doodleedoodleedoo

Standing around the soggy schoolyard this morning waiting for the bell to ring watching this kid, a fellow JK-er, gleefully running through mud puddles, as five year olds do. His smart navy trousers splattered up to his shins; shoes, and surely socks too, sodden. I know what you're wondering: did I stop him? Nosiree, I did not. He was having a good time. But more truthfully, we all slept in this morning and rushed out the door before the coffee finished brewing, and my judgement is simply not to be trusted before the Folgers sinks in. Yes, I felt a bit bad mother-ish about it, albeit in slow motion. But then, my Ebay of the Day arrived and whaddya know - vindication:




It is from this book by Ruth Krauss and illustrated by Maurice Sendak, one of my favourites.



What would you say about eyebrows? Or a hole in the ground? Well, Miss Krauss, way back in 1952, posed these questions to a group of children at the Harriet Johnson Nursery School and this book of kid-defined words is the result.







And the best one:

Monday, September 10, 2007

I am so saddened by the news about Anita Roddick. I worked for The Body Shop during its hey day in the '80s, and was lucky to meet Anita a few times. She was incredibly inspiring. Electrifying, really. But also kind and funny and generous and so very human. Though I kind of outgrew Body Shop products over the years - Christmas still smells like Raspberry Bathing Bubbles and Milk Bath to me - the company's earth-friendly and fair-trade practices resonated deeply, and continue to inform my work/life philosophy. She was years ahead of everyone on everything: the Amazon, sustainable ingredients, reduce/reuse/recycle, human rights. In our little Body Shop smocks, we were enraptured, evangelical. I'm sure customers wandering in for their kiwi lip balm wondered what the hell a bath shop was doing with t-shirts emblazoned with "Get Your Lawn Off Drugs" or coffee table books about the Kayapo indians in Brazil. But Anita had the gift of story telling and making you really, really care. It was, without a doubt, a life very well lived.

Friday, September 07, 2007

meet my hoosier




I fell in love with the hoosier last Sunday. Isn't it a beauty? Despite what you may think, my house isn't especially vintage-y. Stella's room is the exception. The rest is mid-century garage sale with a dash of Ikea. So I really had no idea where the hoosier was going to go but I knew I had to have it and that I would not regret its purchase. While I would love to use it to bake pies and clip recipes and plan girl scout jamborees I needed to find for it a more practical purpose. Happily it turned out to be a lovely new home for my laptop and office-y stuff. Everything fits just so, and aesthetically it's a vast improvement over the sawhorse table I've been using as a desk for 15 years.

The books, by the way, are originals from the Honeybunch series by Helen Louise Thorndyke. In case you've ever wondered, that's where the name of my shop came from. At the time I was mulling over a bunch of different names but nothing stuck until I stumbled across Honeybunch visits the City at a flea market and something about the combination of silly and sweet (who names their kid Honeybunch?) got to me. Turns out her real name was Gertrude Marion Morton, but Mr. Morton declared it unfitting for a girl so possessed of sunshine and renamed her Bunch of Sweetness, later shortened to Honeybunch. I like it.

Looks like another super-wonderful weekend is upon us. I am checking out early to enjoy it and get ready for the inaugural meeting of the park rejuvenation committee, chez moi. Much to talk about next week. Enjoy your weekend friends.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

the long good-bye


First day. Stella, a quiet nervousness. But man I could really use a Kleenex - I even lost a contact lens. The teacher, Miss H., is young and bright and sparkly and shooed us out the door before I was ready to say good-bye. My girl, who I can barely lift anymore, looked small again to me, sitting on the classroom floor waiting for whatever was going to happen to happen.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Party, Party, Party




A sunny day, a big shady tree and tie-dying t-shirts in the backyard. I so love this party. There was also an obstacle course involving water balloons and hockey equipment - all big hits with the under-10 crowd. My trend-y senses are tingling: It seems like simpler, more humble celebrations are coming into vogue. There's Katrina Onstad's "party monsters" article in September's Chatelaine, this article sent to me by my sister (Who is also a fan of the home-baked party. It's the only kind we ever knew.), and this article on HGTV's site .

I love good decorations, yummy food and a fairly organized operation: wine for the grown-ups, no blaring kid music, a well-planned activity and a treat for the ride home. No insanely expensive loot bags, but no plasticky junk either. That the wine will be, as Katrina Onstad describes, "half drunk, clouded with wadded clown napkins and a regurgitated cake chunk sunk to the bottom...", is a given. Indeed, that describes most of my beverages, party or not. Call me a sentimental fool, but I love it all.

Thanks for sending in the party pictures Lisa - looks like a good time.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

ethics 101 (or how not to get ahead in business)




Funny, I don't remember donating my old logo to Goodwill, but wow, there it is. On someone's store front not 5 kilometres from my house. Now I'm all for recycling and reusing but it seems to me someone has done more than rifle through my trash can here.

This photo isn't the greatest, I did, after all, take it while driving past with my jaw hanging open, so what you can't see is that the sign is a rich, chocolately brown. The same rich, chocolately brown that I drove my printer and designer up the wall to get right. That I spent a entire week searching Pantone colour cards to find. I might sound glib about all of this but seriously I am flabbergasted. Discouraged. And angry. Honeybunch has been a labour of love for sure, but a labour none the less. I've invested four years and countless late nights, long weekends, savings into creating a little business that I'm pretty darned proud of. Sometimes I make money. Sometimes I don't. But it's always fun and rewarding and I do it because it brings me joy. I'm a little deflated today. It'll pass. I believe in karma not lawsuits, which is a rich irony considering my husband is an IP lawyer. I probably should have listened to his urgings to trademark my art. Lesson #987,654 learned people. Lesson learned.

Monday, September 03, 2007

squeezing every last drop



My oh my, what a fantastico weekend. In no particular order, here is how we spent summer's final days:

...admired a sea of red peppers at the market...



...listened to this fella singing Johnny Cash...



...watched the afternoon sun cast shadows...



...skipped all the way home...



...lunch at Grandma's...



...a stroll at sunset...



...a pair of wonderful finds at the flea market...



...that were perfect for a tea party...even if one of the guests forgot to wear pants...



...a quiet ride home...



...hmmmm--do I or don't I?
(I don't)


...(I do)...



THE END.