Poppy Prints to Brighten Up Space
Etsy is home to so many inventive, pretty and yes, inexpensive prints to brighten up you space. And don’t stop there, Amazon and more have way to express yourself your walls with just a click of your mouse and a hammer and a nail.
Let a triptych of poppies populate your walls. Kristin Boydstun runs a prints & posters shop on Etsy - these start at 68.00 for the 8 x 10. Click here to go right to them.
Happy Birthday Beethoven
It’s the 250th year since Beethoven was born and if you don’t know much about Beethoven, you surely know know his music from “Fur Elise” and “Ode to Joy” to “the “Moonlight Sonata” and thunderous “Fifth Symphony.” The Financial Times making the case not just for him as the “archetypal Romantic composer” who was “unkempt, unruly, born to struggle against fate and the injustices of the world.” but also as a composer and artist whose work still resounds fiercely today.
A cascade of new articles and books out about the famous composer are indexed here - both to walk you through the basics and provide a guide for further exploration for you or the Beethoven aficionado in your life.
25 SEPTEMBER 2020 Chris Wright writes in Dissent Magazine about “The Revolutionary Beethoven” pushing back on what you think you know - “ Familiarity, it seems, has bred not contempt but ignorance. We hear the famous melodies for the thousandth time, whether in movies, commercials, or concerts, from the third, fifth, sixth, or ninth symphonies or from piano concertos and sonatas or pieces of chamber music. But the cutting edge of this music has been dulled through overuse. That is, we have forgotten, and no longer seem to hear, the intensely political nature of Beethoven’s music—its subversive, revolutionary, passionately democratic, and freedom-exalting nature. In the year of the great composer’s 250th birthday, it would be fitting to recapture this essence, to retune our ears to pick up the music’s political and philosophical message…” The entire piece, which takes you through the greatest hits of the composer’s life as well as surveys his patrons and his politics is worth reading. Plus Wright introduces you to a piece the casual Beethoven listener might not have heard - “Cantata on the Death of Joseph II” - and the background behind it.
Wright also delves into Beethoven’s fascination with and later contempt for Napoleon and the composer’s disdain for aristocrats. In an insult for the ages, Wright shares “His contempt for aristocrats was such that, years later, he was able to write an insulting note to one of his most generous benefactors, Prince Lichnowsky: ‘Prince, what you are, you are by circumstance and birth; what I am, I am through myself. There are, and always will be, thousands of princes; but there is only one Beethoven.’”
Click through to read the entire piece here at Dissent.
25 SEPTEMBER 2020 Richard Fairman in the FT surveys Beethoven “the real-life artist and the Romantic myth” lamenting the lack of celebration of the composer’s work in this 250th anniversary year due to the pandemic. The casual listener is pointed to Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra’s performance of the rarely-performed “Christus am Olberge” (see more below for February’s interview with Rattle on this).
Fairman also looks at the two newest books out on the composer - “Beethoven, A Life” - written in Dutch in 2009 and just translated into English - calling this part of “the journey towards a more complex and nuanced picture of the great composer.” He also surveys Laura Tunbridge’s “Beethoven: A Life in Nine Pieces” - a shorter book that uses nine Beethoven works to explore is life. Fairman saying “Her choices are not always the most obvious, but a lot of information is packed into her musical portraits.” “Fidelio,” Beethoven’s sole opera getting special mention for it’s contemporary relevance to patriotism and tyranny.
2 FEBRUARY 2020 Simon Rattle on “Christus am Olberge” - mentioned earlier in the FT piece. Rattle lays out his thoughts on Beethoven, his motivation behind this "and the “matter of the dark night of the soul.” He characterizes it as an “unearthly, underground sensation of some of it.” Watch here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jX5BfCBiHos
Headed Into The Cocoon...
What we’re loving as the end of summer feels like it might be a little more…isolating…than we thought if the covid variant is on the rise and we are back to staying a little further apart.
It’s still the heat of summer but autumn looms. And the seasons transition from iced tea to hot tea - which means you might need an extra sidetable for the teapot and mug. Love this West Elm side table for all seasons…
Terrain has a brand new merino wool herringbone throw the color of a rainy sky.
Pottery Barn out with these throws with a big chunky cable knit to help transition between the seasons.
Back to Basics - Six Sofas from $200 to $2000
A sofa is the centerpiece of your living room or - if you live in a New York studio apartment - the place where you’re trying to put the focus so no one notices the bed in the corner. The right sofa can set the tone for the whole room - plus you want to be able to stretch out on it; use it to WFH and even sleep the occasional guest.
Our latest list - curated from our favorite sites and brands - and as always, some things you buy through the links may earn us a commission.
1. BURROW
$1990 with free shipping
One of the pioneers in fallback delivery plus made in North Carolina - Burrow now sells through Amazon. The Nomad is a streamlined beauty that would be at home in any living room - stain-resistant and easy to set up. The sofa itself arrives in a number of boxes that can easily be carried into your home and set up inside. Plus a bonus you don’t usually see - a USB charging port in the sofa. And honestly, we like the ottoman as another way to put your feet up.
2. THE LEWIS
Usually $2136, currently $1495
Credit: Joybird.com
Everything on Joybird is 30% off including this streamlined sofa - “The Lewis.” Shown in gray - there’s a range of fabrics including a very appealing “Tussah Blizzard” in cream and, for a little extra, a golden chenille, the “Bentley Daisy.” As always with Joybird, the 90-day return is priceless. Reviews range from “Bailey” who says “Our (Lewis) couch just a few days ago and we are in LOVE” to Chloe who said her husband wanted something “super comfortable” that he could “lounge on” and she wanted something “stylish and had a mid-century modern feel”…the Lewis turned out to be “the perfect compromise!”
3. THE CELESTE
$899.99 right now
This Wayfair classic is a good deal - the modern and sleek sofa is made from wood from New Zealand with tapered legs and cushions piled on top. Add some cushions to integrate it into your overall color scheme.
4. THE BENJARA
$1322.35
Call this a sofa - or is it more of a “chesterfield.” No sections here - just one sleek sofa that’s 90 inches long with stylish nail head accents. Want a little more style built in the moment it arrives - we’ll find you a humidor or chess set to go with it.
5. US PRIDE
$289.00
Not an error - this punchy little number is a good deal. A little bit Miami; a little bit Mid-Century - all style. And for under $300. It’s faux leather with tapered legs and lovely from top to toe.
6. STONE & BEAM
$530.48
This is like the little black dress of sofas - all depends how you dress it up or just let it speak for itself. Comes as a flatpack that you assemble from Amazon’s in-house brand - change your mind about it and you can return for free for 30 days.
Six Rugs on Sale This Presidents' Day Weekend...
A three-day weekend - especially one this cold in NYC - is a great time to shop. We’ve been looking for just the right rug for the foyer…and the living room…and could upgrade the one in the dining room. So here’s the best of what we’re seeing this weekend that could work for you too.
Overstock.com is having what they call a “blowout” sale this weekend - check out their selection of jute rugs from this 5’ x 5’ in natural to these runners from the 2’ x 12’ to the 2’6” x 14’ depending on your space - all running you under $100 with fast delivery.
From Overstock.com to Wayfair which has loads on sale including this gray area rug which is both practical and a little fanciful from Laurel Foundry Modern Farmhouse - and a great complement to lots of layouts.
Also from Wayfair - this Bungalow Rose take on silvery abstraction in a rug is good for little moodier take on tying a room together. And it looks like you’re walking on clouds.
Pottery Barn is also running a big sale on rugs this weekend - this Persian-style rug in a golden taupe with brick and sage accents could work well in so many rooms. PB touts it as being pure wool with a synthetic latex backing that will help extend the rug’s life.
At West Elm - which is also awash in rug sales this 3-day weekend - this distressed Printed Canopy Rug rocks the frost grey and golden pattern and ties in well with a room already using gold as an accent.
Shag rugs feel superb underfoot in all seasons. West Elm has just put a platinum “glam” shag rug on sale that will warm up the look of any room. Also - doesn’t shed. Try it in the bedroom or the living room.
Oh bother, it’s A.A. Milne’s birthday!
"Life is a journey to be experienced, not a problem to be solved.” - Winnie-the-Pooh
Pooh in one in one of the original illustrations by E.H. Shepard.
Alan Alexander Milne is the author behind some of the most beloved characters of all time - Winnie-the-Pooh, Eeyore, Piglet, Tigger, Kanga and Roo.
Born in London in January 1882 - Milne intersected with some of the great writers and writers-to-be of the age - one of this elementary school teachers was H.G. Wells. Later, he played cricket on a school team alongside P.G. Wodehouse, Arthur Conan Doyle, and J.M. Barrie.
After a stint serving in the British Army in World War I, he and his wife Daphne had a son in 1920. They named him Christopher Robin.
Milne, his son Christopher Robin, and the stuffed bear who inspired so many adventures.
Milne did not start his writing career with children’s books or Winnie-the-Pooh. He initially wrote plays and novels and even screenplays for the growing British film industry. The Pooh books about a boy named Christopher Robin were inspired by his son and his stuffed animals (the originals are now at the New York Public Library). Two characters from the mind of A.A. Milne were added to Piglet, Eeyore, Kanga, Roo and Tigger - Rabbit and Owl.
The Hundred Acre Wood was a fictionalized version of a forest in East Sussex where Milne and his family had a farm.
The first publication of Winnie-the-Pooh in The Evening News.
The Pooh stories became a smash hit - becoming Disney cartoons; a collection of the Pooh illustrations sold for more than a million at a London Sotheby’s auction in 2008; and UK polls have voted Winnie-the-Pooh onto lists of “icons of England.”
Penguin - a new character introduced in 2016 - in “The Best Bear in All the World” was inspired by a photo of the author with his son and a toy penguin. (https://www.bbc.com/news/av/entertainment-arts-37401359/listen-to-the-moment-winnie-the-pooh-meets-penguin-friend-in-new-book )
In 2018, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London staged a blockbuster Winnie-the-Pooh exhibition - here’s a look at it through the eyes of the children visiting - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGOpwDOdHp0 And a slightly more grown-up look from the BBC - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tv_-a8pfGHw
A great write-up here about the 90-plus year journey of this bear from pencil sketch to beloved Disney character. https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-winnie-the-poohs-90-year-journey-pencil-sketch-disney-icon
You can read a the complete volume of tales and poems here in The Complete Winnie-the-Pooh.
Thatcher, Unleashed - is this the definitive look at Britain's PM?
Much has been written about British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Now Charles Moore brings us his third and final biography in his trilogy assessing her life, based on scores of sources and notes. Benjamin Moore reviewing it in the New York Times calling it “comprehensive” with a perspective that “shifts continually from Thatcher herself (he adeptly captures the force of personality that radiates from her annotations and even from the underlinings in policy papers and memorandums) to her advisers, her colleagues and rivals in the cabinet, her adversaries across the floor in the House of Commons and in Brussels, even her hairdresser. Only this cumulative approach can convey the interplay of Thatcher’s personality and outlook on history and the peculiar way she conducted politics.”
No Drama, Just Llama in Your Kitchen...and Everywhere Else...
We can’t help it, we love a llama motif. And even though you might not be able to fit the llama that originally caught our eye here at ABC Carpet & Home…. or this beauty found on Etsy …
Here are 11 ways to “llama up the drama” all over your space…
These American-made dishcloths are a big paper towel saver (written as we’re eyeing the 18 rolls of paper towels we bought and thinking over my new resolution to ONLY use re-usable clothes like these) - in fact, the SWEDEdishcloths description claims what one cloth is equal to 17 rolls of paper towels plus they are 100 percent biodegradable. Rinse after using and air dry. And, plus they’re cute. (Our assessment.)
Como te llama? on the inside - just a good overall feeling on the outside. Perfect for hot chocolate, mint tea, your morning coffee - and a guaranteed smile. Contemplating sets of two as a holiday gift…
Yes, we aLLso LLove this LLots. Seriously, this is adorable. It’s flannel fleece on one side, “super warm polyester sherpa on the other.” It’s freezing in New York right now - we’re ordering this and also delighted it’s machine washable.
Monocle, check. Bowtie and bowler hat, check. We never knew we needed these accoutrements on a llama but now that we’ve seen them… perfect for your the child you know who has a sense of humour and already knows the word “monocle” by age 5.
Honestly, how did we not make this the first item in the post. Everyone needs this sweater for Christmas. Everyone.
Don’t we all…but if we can’t actually be a unicorn, we’ll take being a llama. This is 60 x 39 inches…and if that’s too much llama drama for you, there’s a smaller version at 31 x 20 inches. We think this is perfect pinch of humour on your mudroom floor. Soft and plush on your feet right after the shoes come off.
Speaking of “llama drama” - it’s just right on these house slippers. #1 bestseller right now in the “women’s slipper socks” category and we can see why!
Could not love these adorable measuring cups more. Plus you stack them in the cupboard or on the counter for a fun decorative element that’s also super functional.
Accio llama patronus t-shirt! No matter what house the Sorting Hat has put you in, your patronus still could be a llama. (Ours is an elephant which is a different matter altogether and won’t stop me from wearing this.) One of the many adorable Harry Potter-adjacent purchases that we’ve rounded for superfans. (More here.)
Uhhhh, this is 40"W x 72"H of amazing... Ordering for the office, stat! Could also play well at parties, selfie backgrounds, gag gift delivery to friends…where wouldn’t this work?
A timeless tale of a tyrannical toddler who will not, cannot, go to sleep. Also great fun to read to anyone of any age. Great for a baby shower…or a toddler’s birthday or to give as just an “empathy gift” to any parent struggling with the under-5 bedtimes.
Life is just a bowl of (husk) cherries!
Husk cherries.
They look like small cherry tomatoes wrapped in a tomatillo husk - the seller from Alewife Farm at Tucker Square Greenmarket this morning told me they're related to tomatillos. Physalis pruinosa is the plant name - and they can also be called "strawberry tomatoes," "ground tomatoes," "ground cherries," or "winter cherries." We found once we squeezed the little orange sphere out of it's paper lantern husk - it's delicious. Not sure they what we'll do with them aside from peel the husks off and eat them straight - they're a unique and not-too-sweet late summer snack. @thekitchn has some great suggestions for how to use them - might pop them into salsa...or pie!
More here - The Kitchn - https://www.thekitchn.com/5-reasons-youll-want-to-buy-husk-cherries-at-the-farmers-market-tips-from-the-kitchn-205798
Smithsonian - https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/five-ways-to-eat-ground-cherries-98470003/#BpG2WVoj78LCro7b.99
Plate It...
The Laboratorio Paravicini - a Milanese workshop dedicated to tableware - handcrafts beautiful plates, dining set, tea and coffee servers, etc etc
A dream purchase is entire set of the constellation series - which we finally hunted down. It's now going on the wall and picks up the "red thread" of blue and white that runs through one of our apartments.
How to hang it? Simple platehanger here -
“Diet” Hot Chocolate
We love hot chocolate… we especially love hot chocolate made at home on the stove from David Lebovitz’s recipe using whole milk and chopped bittersweet chocolate … but day to day, when we want just a hit of chocolate, we make a version of “diet” hot chocolate which is really hot cocoa. All you need is a mug, milk, pure cocoa (not hot chocolate mix) and just a little white or brown sugar to taste.
“Diet” Hot Chocolate for one (just make mug by mug)
1 mug
Pour milk, whole milk is best, almost half an inch to top
Put in microwave on high, heat for two minutes.
Using a teaspoon, take a heaping spoonful and add to the warm milk and stir vigorously. Add a little white sugar and stir again. If not quite sweet enough for you, add a little more sugar.
Finding 100 percent cocoa can be a bit difficult in some grocery stores. Here are some brands we like:
Valrhona - makes an almost velvety hot cocoa. Yum.
Guittard
Ghiradelli
The Hot Chocolate That Will Change Your Life
Winter...summer...all times are the right times for hot chocolate. The best time is probably a Christmas tree-trimming party where I've found it's wildly popular with kids and their parents alike.
Parisian-dwelling David Leibovitz calls this version "deeply flavorful, but not over-the-top rich…so there’s no need to feel guilty indulging in a warm cup whenever, and wherever, you feel the need." He's right.
Find the recipe here.