Friday, May 25, 2007

Inspiration Friday


I'm trying to keep up but the days are fleeting fast. For inspiration this week I'm sharing some pics of containers around the cottage - starting with this beautiful painting of a French pot. I love how this shot turned out with the writing from the background transferring to the reflection of my kitchen window blinds! Funny how a fluke can really inspire one - I now know I must work more diligently on becoming more creative in my photography efforts.



One of a pair of cast iron urns atop my pine armoire - love the rusty coloring and the shape.
A decorated wood shelf holding one of my decoupaged pots - with writing again, of course! One day I plan to get back to decorating my waiting stack of terra cotta pots.
Bought this pretty rusted iron basket and have never known what to put in it so leave it empty and just enjoy the design and color.
Found this charming beaded bowl last year on a Homegoods clearance shelf - holds different items at different times - decorative balls at Christmas, Easter eggs, fruit, mail, my car keys!! This bowl evokes that Bohemian look I like to mix with cottage items - what my decorating friends call "Elegant Shabby Cottage" - that's an oxymoron.
Hope your holiday weekend is wonderful - stay safe, especially if traveling, don't get burned at the beach and, like it or not, hot Summer weather is here - well in the South it is and we desperately need some rain.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Heavenly Hydrangeas

Some of you say you have not heard about the Endless Summer Hydrangeas so am sharing a little information on these wonderful plants. I've usually had good luck with all my Hydrangeas, my long time favorite being the Nikko Blue mophead. Then last year I read about these new plants and was able to find them locally and planted five around the garden. These two in the front bed by my porch are really prolific - blooming, as advertised, all Summer long and well into the Fall. I cut these back to about 18" in early Spring, only to have the lovely new growth zapped by the big Easter freeze. I was worried they would not do well this Summer however as you can see from these pics taken today, they are healthy and loaded with pale green blooms which are starting to turn blue in my acidic soil.
The new Blushing Bride is also available now - saw dozens in assorted size pots at my local Home Depot last week. I must find a spot for one of these which are very pretty and cottagey looking !


I really love Hydrangeas - they make a statement in the garden, are long lived and don't seem to suffer from any pest problems. They do of course love plenty of water during the hot Summertime. The flowers are beautiful in the house in that lovely china vase we all found at the thrift shop! The muted colors of the dried blooms are decorative throughout the Winter months.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Corners in my Cottage

I have been so busy this week and will continue to be until after Memorial Day. More friends arriving this weekend so am changing linens, cleaning around the house, and baking again! Took a little de-stressing time to wander around the cottage with my camera ~ and a cup of Earl Grey ~ and snap shots of things I thought special - such as corners!

Life is full of corners and we all hope we turn the right ones...................who knows what's around the next corner?

This "faux Gucci" watch was one of the many gifts my friend brought me from her recent trip to China - just hope it keeps ticking as it's really nice!Garden also keeping me hopping as we've had no rain and it's getting hotter by the day - will be in the 90's for the weekend. Spending too much time dragging the hoses to water. The veggies are starting to put on some growth - fertilized today and tomorrow morning hope to be out there early spreading mulch around the beds to help conserve some moisture.


Told you - a garden is a joy and a job for ever!

Monday, May 21, 2007

Knew you were coming so I baked a cake!

We had so much fun over the weekend and the fabulous weather made being outdoors just perfect. Seeing my long time best friend who's also from England and lives in California, is always wonderful - we catch up somewhere across this vast country at least once a year - and have a ball. We even let our dear hubbies join in the merriment.
Homemade carrot cake was demolished at teatime in the gazebo - birdwatching and taking photos included.
Some new containers for the deck were hastily planted ready for outdoor dining - I love Hydrangeas and have several in the garden - thought I'd try a new Endless Summer (flowers will be blue eventually) as they bloom continuously on old and new wood. The pot was large enough to mix in some Wave Petunias and variegated Ivy.
This iron basket contains a Coleus, purple Wave Petunias and a green something or other - forget name but it's pretty and will trail!
For our our table I found these gorgeous Sunflowers on sale at a local grocery store last Thursday - they are beautiful, still fresh and perky today. Later I set the table with my Italian hand painted ceramic dishes so it was very colorful and attractive for lunch.
On Sunday afternoon we spent time downtown at the annual Artsplosure festival. Booths displayed a myriad of handmade items from jewelery to these beautiful vintage looking birdfeeders..........and I couldn't resist one for my garden. The dish is an upturned old silverplated lid from a serving bowl. This local artist threads vintage silver lids, bowls, gravy boats (even tea and coffee pots to hold flowers) with heavy copper wire which she curls and attaches copper leaves to. There are small drainage holes drilled in the bottom. This morning on looking out the window I was greeted by a tiny Chipmunk sitting in the lid munching birdseed, followed by a Carolina Wren and a Nuthatch who scattered when the first of many squirrels appeared. This is going to be a popular hangout I can see!

Have to feed our feathered....and furry....friends!
~~~~~~~~~~

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Bringing the Garden Inside

I probably won't have time to do the usual Inspiration Friday this week as I'll be gallivanting with my friends from San Francisco. So here are a few pretty "outside in" shots for Thursday. I love doing this kind of decorating, bringing garden items into the house - mine include old iron urns, stone balls, bits of old porch posts with peeling paint, bird houses, and of course my blue shutters and lots of fresh flowers. I've recently seen some of these old vintage green glass jars - with the tin lids - think I may get a few in different sizes.

Urn with woven balls on my dining room tableA favorite bird house - too tall for a shelf so sits on the floor.These iron urns are a perfect fit on the pine armoire - dried hydrangeas from last year's garden. I wallpapered the interior of the armoire some years ago. Postcards on door are watercolors of coastal scenes in Devon, England, my home - I enjoy glancing at them several times a day!
By next Monday I will be looking for a comfy chair like this to take a little break perhaps. Not for long though as we have more friends coming to stay for Memorial Day weekend!


Hope everyone has a great weekend.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Cooking for Company

My long time best friend and her wonderful husband are coming to visit from California this Thursday thru Monday - can't wait to see them. She and I are both from England but met in Washington, D.C. in 1962. We discovered we grew up in the same seaside town and lived just a couple of miles from one another. We shared an apartment, bought a tiny British car, traveled to Canada for a weekend, danced all night in D.C. clubs, and did many crazy things I don't dare repeat! Oh to be twenty again!!
I'm so busy.........Spring cleaning, gardening, and now starting the cooking. Love to cook and try to get as much done ahead of time so I can spend more time with my friends. This Italian parsley is beautiful - it will be used a lot.
These gorgeous red peppers will become the Piedmont Roasted Peppers - to go with the penne with Gorgonzola and salad.

Here's the recipe - hope it enlarges when you click! It's from Delia Smith, a great British cook.
Will try to keep up with you all during this busy week. Hope everyone is having a great one.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Our Mothers are many.........


.........................and on Mother's Day we celebrate them all.

Always With You
Your Mother is always with you.
She's the whisper of the leaves
as you walk down the street,
She's the smell of bleach
in your freshly laundered socks.
She's the cool hand on your brow
when you're not well.
Your Mother lives inside your laughter.
She's crystallized in every teardrop.
She's the place you came from,
your first home.
She's the map you follow
with every step that you take.
She's your first love
and your first heartbreak......
and nothing on earth can separate you.
~~~~~~~~~~Author Unknown

A Mother laughs our laughter
Sheds our tears,
Returns our love,
Fears our fears,
She lives our joys,
Cares our cares,
And hopes our hopes.
~~~~~~~~Julia Summers


My Mother died in 2003, she was 91 and had lived an interesting life. Born "within the sound of Bow Bells" in London, she was a true Cockney, but she grew up in the beautiful town of Windsor where my grandfather was assigned to Windsor Castle as an officer in the Coldstream Guards. Her playground was the castle grounds, she and her twin brother would run up and down the castle steps - sounded like great fun in those days when children were sent out to play after breakfast and told to be home at dusk! She was sent to boarding school with her older sister and then learned her craft, dressmaking, and was apprenticed to a Royal dressmaker in London where she made gowns for Queen Elizabeth (the late, much adored "Queen Mum"). After moving to Devonshire where my grandfather had purchased a pub/B&B, she enjoyed life on the coast. At the start of WWII she joined the Royal Air Force and worked underground plotting positions of enemy planes crossing the English Channel. There she met my Father and they were married in 1942 - when the war ended they set up home in bucolic Devon where they remained, raising my brother and I. Times were tough following the War. Mother was a hard worker and a strict parent, I am who I am because of her.

Fast forward....................Mother said she would never have let me leave England to work in Washington, D.C., supposedly for just one year, if she thought I would never return to live. For forty years we traveled back and forth, "across the pond", never going more than a year without a hug and then another teary goodbye until the next time. I dragged my kids there loaded down with baggage including a suitcase full of cloth diapers - no Pampers in the sixties! She literally had to drag my Dad here, just once, because he was terrified of flying, but he had a ball whilst in the USA and spent the remainder of his life talking about the trip to anyone who would listen, including strangers on the street. Mother kept visiting here until she was about eighty. She loved everything about her visits, the long flight, the weather, the stores, the scenery, and of course seeing her family and all the many friends she had made here over the years.

My trip across the pond in March 2003 was expected to be one where I'd be spending a couple of weeks visiting Mother in the rehab hospital. She'd been a patient there since January after suffering a small stroke, and a subsequent bad fall, at home. On arrival at the hospital I feared I had made it just in time, and although she was unable to speak to me, she smiled and knew me, and I did all the talking for an hour or so before kissing her goodbye and promising to be back in the morning. The phone call came just as I was leaving the house.........I still rushed to the hospital. They said she had been waiting for me to come home and I know that all she needed was to see me one more time. I will always be grateful that I got to see my dear Mother that one last time..............................on her side of the pond.

I read the above poem "Always With You" at her funeral. I will be thinking of her especially on Mother's Day.