Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Goodbye Fall, Hello Winter


In just about three weeks, my favorite season of the year will officially give way to winter - whether I'm ready for it or not.

Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns.
-George Eliot
The coats, hats, and gloves have been out for a few weeks now, frosty windshields have already been scraped a time or two, and it's a rare tree around here that still has any straggling leaves.  {Near the end of fall, I always search for and begin observing a tree in my yard that has just a few leaves remaining, then fewer, then fewer still, then three...two...one singular leaf. I like to see how long the last one can hang on. A little leaf one winter hung on the entire season!}  Though I'm not overly fond of cold weather, I appreciate the fact that winter has it's own unique way of slowing us down and turning us inward, both literally and introspectively.  I welcome both after a busy summer and fall.

One fun project that I enjoyed near the end up of September was a little fall piece I did for the October/November issue of Sage Magazine.  The theme of the issue was 'cozy' so I decided to take advantage of the fair weather and do a couple of outdoor scenes in the spirit of romantic glamping, or, as I've learned in the last year or so, "glamorous camping".  I don't know much about glamour, but I certainly do believe in whimsy and magical places and pretty little things that just make a girl smile.

So we built a tent out of a simple frame and sheets, blankets, and even curtains....


Inside, we filled it with a cozy feather mattress, quilts, throws, and pillows.  Perfect for outdoor reading {or a nap!}


Call me old-fashioned, but I love crocheted shams and bedcovers.  There's just something romantic about them.  {I made the brown paisley pillows...can you believe I didn't sew my fingers together not even once?}


I also thought it would be sweet to make a pennant banner from various fabrics to string along the top of the tent ceiling. I'm so glad you can't see the, ahem...interesting...stitching lines I sewed across top of it!


I wanted this little tent to have a hanging lamp, so I took an old shade and stripped it down to it's metal frame.  Then I just knotted strips of linen and burlap all the way around, adding accents of tulle along the bottom. The light is a battery operated candle in a little mason jar.  


For the dinner tablescape, I went with a collection of items that I felt would work well for both fall and winter, indoors or out.  Of course, I had to throw on a crocheted tablecloth to set the stage...


along with a green garland and plenty of pops of red with apples, a rose and hydrangea arrangement {from Hobby Lobby.  I tucked in real sprigs of baby's breath to help fool the eye}, and some homemade tomato soup.


I can never seem to pass up those tiny little glasses that I'm always seeing at thrift stores.  I put them to use by wrapping them with various things such as cinnamon sticks and adding tea lights.   {hint: secure the cinnamon sticks with a rubber band first, then cover the rubber band with fabric a fabric strip.}


Here's another little glass that I covered in linen and converted into a candle holder.  Just sweet and simple.


                           

I really loved the shape of this lamp shade but not the original fabric.  So I stripped it down to the metal frame and recovered it in a piece of crochet work that I found years ago at Goodwill.  I'm pretty happy with how it turned out but it was a bit tricky getting the scallops to sit just right.  It kind of killed me to cut into the crochet because I wasn't sure if I was going about it correctly, and like I said, I've had this piece for years.  Ever had one of those "this could be fabulous or it could be a total failure" kind of projects?  This was definitely one of mine and I was a more than a little skeered, let me tell ya.  


But sometimes you just gotta take those risks because you never know. I ended up using any extra crochet work that was cut off as trim on the brown paisley pillows, so it all worked out.:)  I used another little mason jar with a battery operated candle to light it up and hung it from a tree branch  with cotton string above the table.


Are we all still singing the praises of wooden pallets?  I know I am.  I had taken a before shot of what this pallet looked like originally, but I took it with my cell phone and then recently dropped my phone in the toilet, ugh!  But just imagine an old beat up wooden pallet.  I stained it a nice rich brown and it became the perfect low lying picnic/dessert table set atop my adored chenille quilt that I affectionately call 'grandma blanket'.  Don't judge.  She was a very inexpensive find at Old Time Pottery many, many years ago and she seems to just get tougher  with age.  Isn't that exactly what a grandma should do anyway? Also, there is a grandpa blanket, but we'll feature him another time.


More little homemade candle holders using various items such as burlap, twigs, tulle, and lace doilies... {hint: Turn a small container upside down, drape a doily over it, and spray several coats of spray starch - letting each coat dry before applying the next.  Then carefully remove the doily from the glass and insert a battery operated wax candle.}  



A table runner was created by tearing {not cutting} a long strip of  linen that came from an old curtain panel.  More natural elements such as blooming branches, berries, pine cones, apples, acorns, and cinnamon sticks were layered on to cozy the table up.  


I usually use this large glass cloche for decorative purposes, but apparently flies love chocolate brownies as much as I do.  They were being quite the pests during this shoot, so I finally got to use my cloche for a practical purpose.  


More pillows, pillows, pillows and crisp white tableware to contrast nicely against the richer browns, greens, and reds...





  I keep recommending battery operated candles because a couple of weeks or so ago I caught the living room on fire with a regular candle.  It was a silly mistake in which I draped some fabric over the top of it, forgetting that it was even there.  We were able to put the fire out with a garden hose before the six or seven {*sigh*} firetrucks arrived.  The birds and bunnies just happened to be flying and hopping around the living room when the fire broke out, but none were harmed, thank goodness.  I have a couple of pieces of furniture pieces to refinish or replace, including one of my favorite reading chairs that I got at Goodwill a couple of years ago,  some drywall and beadboard to repair, and a few scorch marks on the floor to live with, but it could have been much worse, and for that I am extremely thankful.  I still use regular candles, but for candles anywhere near fabric, like the candle holders I made above, I highly recommend battery operated, just to be on the safe side.

We'll talk again soon, dear friends! Until then, cozy up and brace yourself {like the last little tree leaf} as we say goodbye to delicious autumn and welcome winter...I hope you all are doing well! 

87 comments





Faux Cupcakes and a Word on 'Being Creative'



Hello, friends! I hope you have been well and are enjoying this delicious fall weather! I'm itching to get a nice, warm fire going in the fireplace and settle in for the season. This is most definitely my favorite time of year!

I have been busy making little things for the shop and have turned out a sweet batch of faux cupcakes. I will be photographing and listing them when they are fully cured, but I thought I'd share with you one of my favorites.

Why is it that I am so fascinated with little mushrooms? ...And little polka dotted mushrooms at that?! Let's not forget tiny pennant flags and unexpected teensy tiny things, like a miniature cupcake, under aforementioned polka dotted mushrooms...




*le sigh* Oh little baby cupcake. How I love you.


This cupcake is sprinkled with German glass glitter for a little sparkle...and I do believe I am addicted to German glass glitter as much as I am cupcakes and mushrooms.


{The mini bakery is slowly coming along. You can see in the background the wallpaper choices I'm considering. Chocolate stripes and tiny French print! The little table that the cupcake sits upon will be painted robin's egg blue.}

Of course, I'm still working on signs as well...


I can't tell you how happy it makes me to get up each day and decide what to make. For me, {and maybe for you, too} there was a long period of time that I felt like so many other things needed to be accomplished first before using my time to create. "When the house is finished", "When the closets are organized", "When the landscaping beds aren't full of weeds"... But the truth is, for me, {and maybe for you, too} I need the energy that only comes from creating to be motivated to work on the more mundane parts of life. Admittedly, there were also a lot of doubts about my abilities and fears of not doing things as well as others. I still have those doubts and fears, but I'm realizing that being truly creative means striving to let go of them, just 'going with it', and being open to imaginative adventure. Whether our interests lie in home projects, crafts, music, writing, painting, culinary arts, sewing, gardening {and so on}, making time to c r e a t e is so important to our health and mental / emotional well-being, and sadly, busy lives can easily snuff out the precious time needed to dedicate to personal creative interests. But if you have a long list of goals and projects right now, whatever they may be, you'll be amazed at how much more enjoyable they will be if "Make Something Daily / Weekly OR Do Something New Daily / Weekly" is near the top of the list. If you don't think you have a creative or adventurous bone in your body, do it anyway because the very fact that you're thinking about the possibility shows that you have it in you. If you don't think you're that 'good', do it anyway because you have to start somewhere and really, who cares! I recently read that 'comparison is the thief of joy' and I truly believe that. So avoid the temptation to compare... If all the artists and musicians and designers, etc., worked to be just like the others, we'd have a world full of the same old stuff, and where's the fun in that?

Before I sign off for now, I found a few interesting creativity quotes to inspire you as they have inspired me. Enjoy - and Happy Creating!

True happiness comes from the joy of deeds well done, the zest of creating things new. -Antoine de Saint-Exupery

I'm always thinking about creating. My future starts when I wake up every morning... Every day I find something creative to do with my life. -Miles Davis

You can't use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have. -Maya Angelou
While we have the gift of life, it seems to me that only tragedy is to allow part of us to die - whether it is our spirit, our creativity, or our glorious uniqueness. -Gilda Radner

The first and most important thing an individual can do is to become an individual again, decontrol himself, train himself as to what is going on and win back as much independent ground for himself as possible. -William S. Burroughs

There is a fountain of youth: it is your mind, your talents, the creativity you bring to your life and the lives of people you love. When you learn to tap this source, you will truly have defeated age. - Sophia Loren

A creative mess is better than idle tidiness. -Michael J. Fox

The mind is sharper and keener in seclusion and uninterrupted solitude. No big laboratory is needed in which to think. Originality thrives in seclusion free of outside influences beating upon us to cripple the creative mind. Be alone, that is the secret of invention; be alone, that is when ideas are born. That is why many of the earthly miracles have had their genesis in humble surroundings. -Tesla

The creative adult is the child who has survived. -Ursula K. Le Guin

When in doubt, make a fool of yourself. There is a microscopically thin line between being brilliantly creative and acting like the most gigantic idiot on earth. So what the heck, leap. -Cynthia Heimel

Everyone is born creative; everyone is given a box of crayons in kindergarten. Then when you hit puberty they take the crayons away and replace them with dry, uninspiring books on algebra, history, etc. Being suddenly hit years later with the 'creative bug' is just a wee voice telling you, 'I'd like my crayons back, please. -Hugh MacLeod

So you see, imagination needs moodling -long, inefficient, happy idling, dawdling and puttering. -Brenda Ueland

If you hear a voice within you say, ‘You cannot paint,’ then by all means paint, and that voice will be silenced. -Vincent van Gogh

Creativity is contagious. Pass it on. -Albert Einstein

We will discover the nature of our particular genius when we stop trying to conform to our own and other’s people’s models, learn to be ourselves and allow our natural channel to open. -Shakti Gawain

Creativity can solve almost any problem. The creative act, the defeat of habit by originality, overcomes everything. -George Lois

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Cottage Delights



Friends... they cherish one another's hopes. They are kind to one another's dreams. ― Henry David Thoreau

Isn't that so true? So many of you over the years have cherished my hopes regarding this little fixer upper - and have definitely been very kind to all my cottage dreams, big and small...encouraging me every step of the way, providing helpful advice and ideas, and coming back here to 'visit' and catch up as we make progress on the place. I will always be so thankful to all of my bloggy friends - you inspire me to keep on keeping on no matter how little the time or tiny the budget. Thank you!

While we're on the subject of friends, one of my dearest - Deborah of the charming Fairfield House - recently surprised me in the loveliest of ways. She sent me the most cheerful and amazing gift package I have ever seen! Now, if you know Deborah, you know that she weaves words like magic... her writing and blog posts are always such a joy to read. While I can sit in front of my blank Blogger screen as my eyes glaze over and my brain goes numb trying to think of something remotely interesting to say, Deborah's beautiful, thought-provoking posts just seem to flow from her fingertips {though I know she puts a lot of thought into everything she writes}. Well, after receiving this package {and others from her in the past}, I have had the joy of discovering that she puts a lot of thought and beauty into her gifts as well. I certainly hope she doesn't mind that I share some photos with you... Her packaging details and the gifts themselves were just too pretty to keep to myself. So in the interest of spreading creativity, cheer, and happiness, let me show you the cottage delights that Deborah sent to The Twice Remembered Cottage!

My heart skipped a beat when I opened the box and saw the red with white polka dots. Do you realize just how much I love red and white polka dots? I mean really - it's almost an addiction. I just can't help it... Polka dots are my favorite color! But I digress.


Ah, what a dreamy card...


Kraft paper packaging tied up with twine...This is my favorite way to wrap {and receive} gifts! There's just something so old-fashioned and timeless about it.


Sweet little details like hand stamped tags, a page from an old book, a feather, and a seashell just make my heart smile...








Even though these packages were too pretty to open...


...I eventually did. :)


And what precious cottage goodies were inside! There was a lavender sachet {the whole box smelled of heavenly lavender!}, ribbons - including polka dotted ones, a sweet felt brooch, an embroidered tea towel, and a beautiful white doily...


...and just look at the old red rimmed enamel bowl! Cottage perfect!


Deborah knows that a cottage isn't a cottage without a lot of good books, so she sent me this novel titled 'The Tea Rose'. It is set in the 1880s and is the first of a trilogy - I can't wait to read all three.


As more cottage treasures were unwrapped, I oohed and ahhed over each one, including this little old jam jar. Adorable!


Then there was an address book, gorgeous antique style earrings, stationery items {Love the 'Fly' theme!} and cute magnets...


Ok - I am not even kidding when I say that I gasped when I saw these measuring spoons! Are they not the most exquisite set you've ever seen? I had seen them somewhere before and put them on my mental 'wishlist'. So to actually have these in my kitchen right now thrills me to no end. I will never put them away in a drawer! And how about the red polka dot ceramic trivet? It has inspired me to be on the lookout for me red polka dot ceramics. They just make me happy!



Last year, Deborah sent me these fun pot holders and oven mitt. I must admit, I can only bring myself to use one of the pot holders because I don't want to get them dirty! And speaking of not wanting to get anything dirty, those classic monogrammed linen napkins are a special treasure...


So crisp and clean and beautiful!


I found the perfect spot for this little love token - the neck of a glass bottle that sits on my dining room mantel. :)


I can't express enough how blown away I am with Deborah's generosity and how well she knows the kinds of things I love. Thank you, Deborah, for your kindness and for inspiring us all by your creativity and thoughtfulness!


And thank you for all your kind comments on my last post regarding our beach vacation. We had a wonderful time! I did take photos but I'm afraid editing them for a blog post has taken a back seat to painting, painting... oh, and painting!

Until next time!

~Kim

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