Arranging without Flowers

WOMGood Morning Lacquered Lifers! Putting together those final touches on that Thanksgiving flower arrangement? I love this arrangement from Waiting on Martha. Sometimes what your arrangement needs are those small accent pieces that are not in fact floral at all! One of my favorite sources for branches, dried berries, and all sorts of fun floral curiosities is Terrain. Below are some of my favorites – with two day shipping they could be on your table and in your arrangement just in time! 
Terrain 2Fresh Red Winterberry BunchTerrain 3Preserved Oak BunchTerrain 4Preserved Echinops Bunch
Terrain 7Dried Cotton Stem

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Beautiful Bowood

VerandaGood Morning Lacquered Lifers. Happy Friday. If you’re anything like me you have been swooning over the cover of Veranda Magazine and have been completely inspired by those velvet walls. There are definitely velvet walls in my future. However, in typical fashion, the piece that jumped out at my was the chintz. bowood chintz 2You have heard about my love of Schumacher’s Hollyhock Chintz, and I’m pretty sure I have mentioned my appreciation for Colefax & Fowler’s Bowood Chintz, but today I want to share a little more about the origin of this ever-so-chic chintz, which as you can tell from the photos above can look good in both casual and formal settings. 
bowood chintzBowood Chintz, named for the house, is a reinterpretation of a 19th century fabric that John Fowler saw at the house during the middle of the 20th century. This fabric has been in production ever since, and is considered one of Colefax & Fowler’s classic prints. Bowood_House_3Bowood Chintz was “discovered” by John Fowler inside Bowood House. Located in Wiltshire, Bowood House has been the home of the Landsdowne family since the 18th century, and is currently occupied by the 9th Marquis and Marchioness of Landsdowne. The original house was built on the site in 1725, and underwent consistent alterations throughout the remaining part of the 18th century. This is Bowood House as it looked in 1905. During World War I, the Marquess operated a Red Cross auxiliary hospital in the orangery, and during World War II the house served as a school and as a headquarters for the Royal Air Force. After the War, the “big house” (seen here on the far right) was in severe disrepair. It was demolished in 1955, and the “little house” (seen here to the left) was renovated to accommodate the Marquess.Screen Shot 2014-11-21 at 10.38.39 AMThis is Bowood House as it looks today. Parts of the house and the gardens are open to the public during certain times of year. For more information on visiting Bowood’s House and gardens visit their website

More Historic Preservation

Why Preservation? … Why Not?

Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 9.16.29 AMGood morning Lacquered Lifers. If some of you ever had any questions as to why I am a passionate preservationist, or what the point of historic preservation is, these photos of the Brooklyn Navy Yard’s main hospital building and surgeons quarters should answer your questions. The Brooklyn Navy Yard has occupied this site since 1801, the hospital was completed in 1838, and the surgeons quarters in 1863. The Brooklyn Navy Yard was decommissioned in the mid-1960s, whereupon the land was sold to the city of New York and these buildings have stood empty. Over the years different plans have been floated to redevelop the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and while those plans are coming closer and closer to fruition these beautiful pieces of architecture sit empty, abandoned, and neglected … despite their status as New York City Landmark properties. So why preservation? Honestly, why not? 
Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 9.16.31 AM Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 9.16.48 AMScreen Shot 2014-11-19 at 9.17.21 AM Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 9.16.54 AM Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 9.17.07 AMPhotos via Curbed

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