Monday, August 22, 2011

sneak peak...




a little peak at a few of the vintage lovelies that will be popping up in the shop this week...

we have several new handmade pieces as well, which we'll share later




a pretty german floral platter.  so lovely to set down a nice big vintage platter in the middle of your table, as the family gathers for the meal; sitting so prettily on display between meals...





three lovely hand painted royal york bread and butter plates... love to use these around the house as candle holders, or as under-plates for pitchers of flowers, or simply as sweet little catch-all plates on end tables (and, of course, mixed with other vintage dishes on the dinner table)...








the loveliest shade of blue.  a pretty divided dish, and matching sauce pitcher, in the taylor smith taylor boutonniere pattern...








just love pretty bowls of various size, stacked up on the kitchen shelf, and adding a little bit of special to the dinner table...








another sweet set, from the taylor smith taylor 'ever yours' line.  this time in the 'autumn harvest' pattern.  a pretty platter and bowl, ready for the changing season and cooling weather...








a wee little blue pottery bud vase. the simplicity and size of this one is just so wonderful...





prairie seed

Sunday, August 21, 2011

a creole manor...




loving the simplistic beauty of this creole manor 


here is a bit, from garden and gun magazine, about the home's current owner, southern designer and antiques dealer, patrick dunne (proprietor of lucullus, an antiques store, with locations in new orleans and  beaux bridge, louisiana):

The first change Patrick Dunne made to his Creole country house was to remove the dishwasher, a bold statement given how much the New Orleans epicure entertains. He grinds coffee by hand, and though his home has central air-conditioning, he prefers to throw open the sashes and fill the rooms with fresh air. He sleeps under a mosquito net, not for decoration but to keep the bat-sized bayou moths out of his bed. Antique roses, bearing names such as ‘Souvenir de la Malmaison’, ‘Rev d’Or’, and ‘Old Blush’, dominate his parterre garden, and spiky vetiver and citronella sprouting alongside his front gallery drive away mosquitoes the same way they might have done when the home was built two centuries ago.













prairie seed

Saturday, August 20, 2011

tine k home...




the timeless and cozy stylings of tine k home 

a little about the company's origins from the founder and creative director, danish designer tine kjeldsen:


While the interior decorators in those days decided mainly on pink, baby blue and an abundance of flowers (quite shabby chic), I opted for a different, more minimalistic approach: clean colors in grey, blue, white, dark brown and black which eventually lead to the creation of a collection of cushions and quilts, and consequently the foundation of the company Tine K Home.

The collection has grown ever since, and today it includes also furniture and clothes. The unique Tine K Home style is an adventurous mix of Asian, French, Scandinavian and Moroccan colors, shapes and surfaces which, despite the big cultural differences, are lifted to the higher level of a remarkably clean and simple style.
Design is my life, and the smallest every day actions at home, as well as food, shapes, colors, flowers and trips abroad are a source of inspiration to me. 



(all images via the tine k home webshop and blog)



































prairie seed

Monday, August 15, 2011

mark eden schooley...



an american photographer living in paris, mark eden schooley's work has been featured in many publications. love the world his images inspire. he also is the designer of the koushi lamps, handmade from steel wire and cotton, featured below. 












via remodilista