Showing posts with label guest bloggers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest bloggers. Show all posts

Fall Favorites



Summer may not be quite over yet but I've got my eye on these favorites for fall. Whether it be for the home or fashion, I'm all about grays, teals, purples and subtle little details this season. I particularly love the blue linen flower by Emerson Made that can be dressed up or down.



Emerson Made Blue Wild Rose
Scallop Garland by This Neck of the Woods
Metal Cross Brace Desk from the canvas Home Store
J. Crew Colletta Coat in Plum
Teabag Mug by Bailey Doesn't Bark
Chalkboard Heart
Sweet Stripe Masking Tape

Guest Post by Kathleen from Twig & Thistle

Photo Crush




I developing a pretty big crush on the work of food stylist/photographer Aran Goyoaga. Her photos are so beautiful and I love how the lighting in them makes everything so bright and vivid!



Guest Post by Kathleen from
Twig & Thistle

Tying the Knot



I'm a total sucker for a good wedding invitation so it shouldn't come as a surprise that I was completely floored by this invite by urbanINFLUENCE (a local fave of mine). Designed for art director Mike Mate's wedding, they are utterly charming. I love the summer camp feel and the gmund paper was the perfect choice. (If you'd like to see more uses of faux bois paper, I printed my husband's 30th Birthday invites on it). Congratulations to the newlyweds!




Guest Post by Kathleen from
Twig & Thistle

Crazy for Confetti




It's amazing how something so simple as paper dots can truly liven up a party! Below are some sweet little confetti inspirations for your next soiree. Cheers!

Scout Books

Scout Books
I love these pocket notebooks by Scout Books, but what I especially love is their custom option . I just love customizing! Have you seen these ? They're amazing. Anyway, I'm also love the sketches inside of this one by Mia Nolting.






Guest Post by Lisa Rupp from That's Happy.

Poketo for Target




While walking through Target the other day, I spotted a collection by Poketo that I thought was pretty fun.

Guest Post by Lisa Rupp from That's Happy.

Camera Love




I have a little obsession with cameras right now. My collection is very small, but it's slowly starting to grow. I just can't get enough of the dreamy look you get with instant and toy cameras, as you can see here, here and here. And I'm always on the lookout for the perfect camera bag. Impossible? Maybe, but I love what their doing at Fungus Workshop in Hong Kong. It's a handmade leather bags and accessories workshop and just look at this lovely creation by Patrick Ng. I especially like the "love camera" flag detail. You can see more creations here.



Guest Post by Lisa Rupp from
That's Happy.

2011 Calendars



These are my most recent project. They are created from my illustrations, printed on fabric and ready to hang! You can get them here.



Guest Post by Lisa Rupp from That's Happy.

Guest Blogger : Lisa Rupp

Thanks for having me! I'm Lisa,and I live near Phoenix with my husband and baby girl. I'm a mom and a graphic designer and absolutely love what I do.

Lisa Rupp

I have a little blog called That's Happy where I share inspiration, art, fun finds and about everyday life things. I like to draw, dabble in photography and make things. I'm excited to be sharing some things with you and I hope you enjoy!

Sarah McNeil




I’m endlessly inspired by images that seem to convey certain emotions, concepts or meanings in ways that a million of my words cannot. Sarah McNeil’s artwork does precisely that. The innocent pastel shades of her illustrations are perfectly harmonious with their philosophical titles and whimsical figures. They are like storybook characters for adults.




The pieces here include: “White Wolf”, “Blue Ribbon Love”, “Lambspirit & Your Mother When She Went to College” and “Tattoo Sweater and Everything Inside”. Quite possibly the wittiest titles ever. To see more of her work, visit this website.

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

Lover the Label



In my imaginary wardrobe, which includes things I adore but cannot afford, the Australian label Lover features quite heavily. Along with A.P.C. and Toast, Lover is one of my favourite clothing labels and it should come as no surprise that I am totally in love with their 2010-2011 collections, aptly titled, “Untitled”. Apart from the effortless simplicity of these pieces, I’m drawn to their colour schemes. While I’ve always loved the combination of grey and white, I’m also really liking the mixture of yellows, greys and blacks together. There’s also something about the orangey red shade of the above dress that reminds me of sinking my teeth into deliciously ripe fruit. Does anyone feel like donating money to my imaginary Lover fund?

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

Jenny Holzer






Jenny Holzer is an American Neo-Conceptualist artist who is famous for her use of truisms and sayings within public spaces. I’m particularly drawn to her light projections that utilise well-known public buildings as the canvas for the exploration of private commentary that I imagine best belongs within the personal domain of the lovers’ bed. These particular projections seem to highlight how even our most intimate moments are mediated by public experience and how our notions of love, desire and privacy are determined by the wider environments of culture and society. There is something so incredibly touching about seeing the large letters of a statement such as “you are my own” splashed across a building. It is both intimate and political, just like her artwork.

To see more of her projections, click here.

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

The Thirteenth Tale



I first bought a copy of Diane Setterfield’s novel, The Thirteenth Tale (Orion, 2006), about an hour before I was supposed to get on a train from Oxford to the North of England. I was feeling rather homesick and wanted a good Victorian-style mystery novel to lose myself in. The book has regrettably remained in my rented room in England as I tried, rather unsuccessfully, to fit it into my full suitcase a few months later. But the narrative has remained in my memory.

This is not the most well-written or accomplished novel I have ever read, but whenever one of my friends ask me to recommend them a book to read, I suggest they give it a try. It is one of those books that is easy to enter into and absorb in moments when you want to drown out the world. It’s perfect for a day at the beach, snuggling in bed, or lying in the garden under the sun.

The novel explores a family mystery that centres on the fictional figure of the author Vida Winter, and the Gothic house, Angelfield, which she inhabits. It begins with the protagonist of the story, Margaret Lea, being invited to leave the seclusion of her father’s book store to live in the equally isolated Angelfield House and write the biography of Vida Winter. I won’t reveal anymore plot details as I don’t want to spoil the mystery for anyone.

This is a novel that quite lovingly wears its influences on its sleeves: it deliberately draws from previous authors such as the Brontës, Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Henry James, Arthur Conan Doyle and Daphne du Maurier. It creates an evocative sense of place and time and seems to relish in the literary traditions of detective and Gothic fiction.

But more interestingly for me, it is also an exploration of history as fiction. With its overt fixation with the process of storytelling and the impossibility of correctly narrating another person’s life, it also suggests the limitations of the narration of historical experience. I ultimately came away from this novel pondering the relationship between literary fiction and historical facts. For example, can we approach novels as forms of historical artefacts?

Despite this exploration, it is by no means a difficult book and can be appreciated purely as a fun read for those of us who like old-fashioned, thick novels.

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

Literary Cafés

I’m one of those people who can spend ages in cafés and I’ve spent countless hours writing in them, oblivious to the world. In the spirit of my never-ending cataloguing of cafés I love, let me introduce you to two of my favourite European literary cafés:





Café Einstein, Berlin : Café Einstein Stammhaus
Kurfürstenstraße 58
10785 Berlin

Café Einstein is a cult literary café in Berlin, designed in the style of traditional Viennese coffee houses. It started out as an illegal casino venue and has since endured a turbulent existence during the Two World Wars. It is now a well-known hub for authors and philosophers. I’m planning a trip to Berlin, and this café is at the top of my list.




Café Procope, Paris
13 rue de l' Ancienne Comédie
75006 Paris

Café Procope was founded in 1686 and is the oldest coffee house in Paris. It has seen the likes of Voltaire, Robespierre, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and George Sand through its doors and happens to house a rather endearing portrait of Frédéric Chopin, my favourite composer. It is of course filled with the most delicious food and coffee, and has the kind of decadent French interiors that make you feel entirely spoilt when you enter.

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

Godiva in Japan







Godiva Chocolatier is a well- known chocolate institution around the world, but what is not so well-known to me, is this beautiful Godiva store in Japan. Located in the Harajuku district in Tokyo, the amazing interiors to the store were designed by the Tokyo interior design team Wonderwall.

This is conceptual and playful design at its best, with the interiors created from a child’s perspective. Who has not watched Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and wondered what it would be like to enter a wonderland devoted to all things sweet, where you could literally eat the walls? Although I don’t recommend trying to eat these specific walls, I do think that sitting down to eat something sweet within metaphorically melting walls and ceilings is a good second option. The lighting in these interiors is also spectacularly clever. It’s almost as if the non-melting surfaces have been turned into the crisp wrapping of a chocolate bar through the positioning of light. I propose we take a small trip to Japan and have some chocolate.

All images from this website.

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

The Elements of In-Between



Meaning is not in things but in between them.
-Norman Brown


When Rachel asked me to talk about my book project, The Elements of In-Between, I struggled to think about how I would go about describing it. It is, admittedly, an unusual little book. Essentially, The Elements of In-Between is a collaborative book project between myself and the exceptionally talented Melbourne illustrator and designer, Amy Borrell. The book is a collection of my wholly subjective film reviews and fictional responses to certain films. It is a testimony to my increasing fascination with the small details of everyday experience and the imprints that certain films and images leave in our consciousness. But also, this book is developing as a dialogue between a writer and an artist responding to the same films.

The idea for the title of the book came from the notion that we often create things in those “in-between” moments in life when we are supposed to be working on something else. Any writer also knows there are words that do not make it in the final cut of certain works when they are sent off to be published, and this is a collection of those words that I could not bring myself to let go of and which have inspired new fictional worlds.

But the primary pleasure of this book for me would have to be discovering the way that Amy has responded to each film I have written about through her art. The uniqueness of Amy’s work does not simply lie in the various techniques through which she creates her images, but in their inherent philosophy of enchantment. I often think that seeing the world through Amy’s eyes is an exercise in intelligent innocence and wonderment.



Our little book will be revealed to the world in a few months. In the meantime, these images are a small peek. But I sincerely urge you to visit Amy’s website and explore her other beautiful creations.

Post by guest blogger: Hila Shachar

Guest Blogger: Hila Shachar



Hello, my name is Hila Shachar and I’m an author from Perth, Western Australia. I’ve recently completed my PhD in English and Cultural Studies and I’m now an Honorary Research Fellow at The University of Western Australia. I’m also one of the writers for The Australian Ballet’s blog, Behind Ballet.

I spend most of my days absorbed in words and images as part of my current research project, to which my little blog, le projet d’amour, is devoted. Both my fictional and academic writing has been published in various books and journals, and I’m working on a few of my own books at the moment, one of which I will share with you here.

I like all manner of things and I’m generally fascinated by the world. I will share what inspires, amuses and enthrals me. Many thanks to the lovely Rachel for letting me guest blog for the week, and I hope you enjoy my posts.

Craft Lake City

Craft Lake City

Over the weekend I went to Craft Lake City with Stephanie and was very impressed by the variety of vendors and high-quality designer crafts.

printprintpress

A few of my favorites included ... Allison Cornu from print print press, I couldn't resist the letterpress "Joie de Vivre" print. I really loved her minimal and feminine style. Check out her etsy and blog.

easykeeper

Loved these books and coasters by Easy Keeper Lettepress.

weewaldorf

There was adorable stuff at Wee Waldorf, I was especially charmed by the Wooden Skittle Play set.

Lets Be Friends
Lets Be Friends2

I was impressed by these awesome Polaroid toy friends which you can also get letterpress cards to draw on -- a super cute children's toy idea. (*2nd image from their etsy shop)

Colt Bowden
Colt Bowden2

There was lots of creativity brewing at Colt City with Colt Bowden and his wife Abi sharing their artist letterpress print and handmade collages. I really liked this monster print and these other creations.

Nobletownvintage

Noble Town Vintage had sweet revived and vintage jewelry.

Overall it was a really great event and unfortunately my tired and pregnant frame after lots of walking around, didn't get to see everything or even photograph a few of my other favorite craft/design vendors. Here are a few more I also loved ...

Urban Patchwork : stunning quilts and other beautiful handmade crafts.
Smart & Wiley: gorgeous typographic prints & sketchbooks.
Sycamore Street Press : an all-time favorite letterpress duo.
Freshly Picked : pretty bow bags and other goodies.

Did any of you locals attend -- what did you think?