Nature Trip: Audubon Society in Wellfleet

No time to blog about indoor beauty today.  Too busy trekking through the woods and marsh on a “Seashore Ramble” at the Mass Audubon Society in Wellfleet Bay.  It was a gray and misty day, but the water was warm and the creatures were out and about.  Just call me Nature Girl. Ha.
MassAudubonThe Nature Center and the lovely flower gardens.

treesAlong the trail.

frogFrog on a lily pad.

grassMarsh grasses.

horseshoeHorseshoe crab molt and snails. Would have made a nice addition to the mantle, but not allowed to remove anything from the sanctuary.

boysGone nettin’.

Get the Look: Wicker Furnishings & Accessories

These pieces are so much more refined than the wicker chest I had in high school in my Laura Ashley bedroom. (Believe me, it was an improvement over the whole rainbow and unicorn thing I had going on in junior high.) If you’ve been thinking of adding a little texture, these are cute and inexpensive wicker furnishings made from all sorts of often renewable, natural (and a few synthetic) fibers. A word of caution however. If you have a puppy, skip the wicker. Years ago I borrowed a white wicker table from a boyfriend’s mom to use in my sparsely furnished studio apartment. My ten-week-old cocker spaniel ate the entire thing, literally. (He was really cute though.)

GetLook-Wicker

Shopping Guide

Rattan pouf, $88 at Urban Outfitters.

NÄSUM banana fiber chest, $60 at IKEA.

Lighted rattan spheres, $20-$45 at Pottery Barn.

Red synthetic wicker outdoor stacking chair, $70 at Pier 1 Imports.

Woven palm leaves pendant, $199 at West Elm.

Woven seagrass mirror, $149 at West Elm.

HULTÖ peeled rattan chair, $70 at IKEA.

LINUS rattan and steel chair, $40 at IKEA.

Woven jute and metal studded tassel pull, $9 at West Elm

Fat handcrafted rattan stool, $100 at Pier 1 Imports.

Casa rattan table lamp, $70 at CB2.

Whitney Design banana leaves storage bench, $120 at Target.

Wicker cafe conversation collection, $1,160/set of 3 at Target.

Beale rattan and steel lounge chair, $249 at CB2.

Seagrass chair, $159 at Pottery Barn.

Water hyacinth and rattan open weave storage baskets, $7-$15 at CB2.

Design Diary: Josh Childs of Silvertone

This spring I visited Josh Child‘s South End duplex for Stuff Magazine‘s “Drinks” issue. The article “Josh Childs shows how cocktail culture reaches beyond the bar” explores Josh’s fascination with the cocktail culture, especially from the 1920s through 1940s. Fittingly, Josh is co-owner of Silvertone Bar & Grill in Downtown Crossing as well as Trina’s Starlite Lounge, which will open later this summer in Inman Square.

lrThis is the focal point of the main living space, which is two stories high. (The entry is, interestingly, on the second floor mezzanine, which overlooks this space. The two bedrooms are also up there.) The bookshelves were custom built by self-taught millworker Mark Meritt, who also built the glass front kitchen cabinetry that holds the bar glasses.

In addition to books and old photos, the shelves hold pieces from Josh’s collection of cocktail shakers and such. “I really like the 1930s cocktail shakers they started pumping out after Prohibition,” he said, as he showed me a chrome Art Deco cocktail shaker and champagne bucket from Chase, a well-known company based in Pittsburgh. He also has a soft spot for vintage Silvertone radios (a brand sold by Sears beginnign in the early 1920s). He’s simply unable to resist the round-edged design. The large original 1940s print for Gincana, an Italian aperitif, that sits on top is Josh’s favorite piece of artwork.

CIMG6883Here’s the fireplace next to the shelving, and the stairs going up to the second floor. There used to be a “Greg Brady firplace made from rocks.” This mantle is from the 20s. He pretty much gutted the condo when he purchased it in ’98 and reworked everything to look old. The London train station sign came from a Topsfield flea market.

In the foreground is the simple West Elm modular sofa that makes up the living room seating area. Josh’s dad is an architect who worked at Skidmore, Owing and Merrill when Josh was growing up. They lived in a townhouse in Georgetown in D.C. Josh says, “Everything was streamlined and chrome. The joke was that the architects all had outdoor furniture inside. It was pretty spare; not a lot of carpets. I guess it influenced me more than I realized

boothJosh had this booth made for the space by the guy who built the stairs and railing.

chair and oilThe chair is an authentic, signed George Nakashima handed down from his great aunt. The portriat is a great, great grandmother. Josh has a few ancestral oils because nobody else in his family ever wants them. He says, “I am where the family’s castoffs go.” On mixing such a variety of styles he says, “What happens in small living spaces you put up everything. If I had house, I’d have it all in one room, like a library with leather couches. But I think it’s OK to mix eras; it’s all just stuff that I like.”

CIMG6891You can tell this kitchen is really used, by the abundance of pots and utensils. It’s a little cluttered and definitely homey, but has a good sense of masculine design.

kitchen view2

childs-barstuffClose-ups of some pieces in Josh’s collection. He found the Ricard bottle on Etsy. Have you seen “Julie and Julia” yet? There’s one in a Parisian restaurant scene. Josh doesn’t do the Ebay thing much. Most of these things came antique stores, including the Cambridge Antique Market.

CIMG6884Don’t you love that there’s art hanging in the tub? Josh had the image blown up at Kinko’s on waterproof vinyl, then had it framed.

brEven the bedroom has vintage bottles sitting among the old black & white family photos. He added the shutters to the windows. The smaller quilt is handmade.

br dresserHere are the dressers opposite the bed. The tall one was part of a set of a double bed and vanity dresser but two friends took the other pieces. It has Bakelite pulls. The other dresser is more ’60s early ’70s, from a flea market to which he added new pulls.

postersJosh collects vintage posters and magazines, which are scattered throughout the condo. His bar, Silvertone, is similarly adorned. Josh says, “The imagery on the walls are ’20s and ’40s cocktail advertisements, often torn from LIFE magazine. People would bring in photos from that period too. They’d say, ‘I have a great old picture of my father in the ’40s’ so I have them made a copy and we’d put it on the wall. It took about 5 or 6 years before it was finished.”

ARTmonday: Cynthia Packard

P1010064

Cynthia Packard is a Provincetown artist whose mother, Anne Packard, is an established landscape painter and whose grandfather, Max Bohm, was a well-known painter. She graduated from Mass College of Art with a degree in sculpture, and subsequently studied painting in Provincetown with Fritz Bultman.

I really love Cynthia’s work, with which I became acquainted when I first visited my husband’s family on the Cape. The Packards have their own gallery in Provincetown, in an old church. The building is quite lovely. (Cynthia also shows at Chase Gallery in Boston.)

About nine years ago, I purchased a small painting by Cynthia Packard, using funds I had set aside from stock I received at AOL. I still love the painting, which is of her daughter Emma. Cynthia often paints her children; she has four.

packard

Cynthia’s current work is fantastic, especially the large scale nudes. (Unfortunately those cost about as much as a small car.) Here are some photos I took this weekend at the gallery, as well as images from the Packard Gallery website.

P1010056

P1010060left: Departure; right: Eternal

depature 36x60 18,000Departure

CPeternalEternal


studio nude

Studio Nude

sisters

Sisters

emmaEmma

in the lightIn the Light

Picture 3

(a new work)

Picture 5(another new work)


smaller gallery

Clockwise: Boudoir, Pink Lace, (unidentified), In Thought

boudoirBoudoir

in thoughtIn Thought


Pink LacePink Lace


Turquoise LaceTurquoise Lace

flowers in galleryPink Roses II

Flowers & Gardens: Style Carrot’s Flower Shop

Ok, not really my shop, just my kitchen. But I must say I am impressed that these came from my garden, even if I didn’t really plant them all myself. But even the cutting and arranging takes time. (This photo caught the process midway.) I now know why those who can have flowers done for their homes regularly. The whole enterprise can take over an hour, never mind the time spent catching (and disposing of) the spiders that inevitably hop all over the countertop. And then there’s the discarding of the dead blooms a few days later. But while they’re thriving, they’re simply gorgeous.

flowers 1Daisies from the front side garden threaten to take over the plot. Black-eyed Susan’s are the result of packets of wildflower seeds we threw haphazardly over the fence. Of course cutting now involves climbing over said fence.

flowrs 2

Love, love, love my blue hydrangea. See the pink ones at the bottom? They’re ok, but the goal is to get them blue next year too. The pink roses on the far right smell heavenly, like candies. Smarties perhaps.

flowers 3

Do you notice that there’s way more pink than last time I posted? These dahlias are from our brand new back garden. There’s a barren hill back there that looks awful. Not so bad any more. Unlike the front of the house, where I only allow white and purple blooms, the directive for the back is plenty of brights. I asked the gardener to plant right pink, bright yellow, and bright orange roses, (no wimpy colors please!)  as well as dahlias.

He’s going to dig up the dahlias at the end of the season and store them in his garage. Seems sorta high maintenance, but he insists it’s no big deal. Maybe they’ll eventually grow as big and tall as the ones in my mother-in-laws garden, which look like huge pom poms.