Archive for the ‘bookmarks’ Category

Bookmarks – Flea Market Chic

Friday, April 6th, 2012

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"Flea Market Chic" by Liz Bauwens & Alexandra Campbell surrounded by vintage items bought at flea markets, charity shops and car boot sales

This book looked right up our street when we opened the envelope… and we haven’t been disappointed.

cover of "Flea Market Chic" Liz Bauwens & Alexandra Campbell

What better way to grab our attention than a front cover image featuring a gorgeous kitchen diner – bright, modern & relaxed with a contemporary rustic look. A perfect blend of old & new with cream coloured AGA, vintage enamelware, fresh fruit & flowers, 1970s chrome chairs with bold orange fabric seat pads, whitewashed walls & painted floorboards.

vintage wire cooling racks and aluminium stovetop coffee percolators on a kitchen shelf

It combines neutral, natural shades with bold flashes of colour – a look we love – and, with the light streaming in through an open sunny window, it’s an idyllic scene. This room encapsulates the Flea Market Chic eluded to in the title.

kitchen diner with wooden farmhouse table and mix and match chairs

When done well, it looks stylish & effortless – and this great little book by Liz Bauwens & Alexandra Campbell is a helping hand along the way.

framed artworks above a bed covered with a vintage patchwork quilt

The book covers all those second hand sources from where pre-owned goods can be purchased – car boot sales, garage sales, antique fairs, junk shops, charity & thrift stores.

vintage blue and white china and decorative objects in a kitchen

The obvious starting point is the actual house & room scenes from which to draw inspiration…

four photos of blue and white vintage crockery and kitchenalia

…real people’s living spaces, beautifully photographed by Simon Brown.

vintage crockery and kitchenalia images on the opening page of the "Recycled Kitchen" chapter

The authors manage to skillfully weave their story around the photos – drawing in the types of room to be furnished, the different looks that can be achieved and so on.

shelves covered in vintage cream coloured pottery, crockery and wooden utensils

The accompanying text picks the brains of the owners – all dedicated flea market shoppers.

cabin kitchen area decorated and kitted out with pretty vintage finds

The types of property might vary greatly – house, flats, cabins and even a boat…

white vintage pottery jug of flowers in front of a porthole

… but common threads run through them – the homes have evolved naturally over time to incorporate their vintage finds – and the owners have a very good eye!

cabin sleeping and sitting areas decorated and kitted out with pretty vintage finds

The book also goes into further detail about the types of object to look out for, sought after names, designers – and the nitty gritty of restoration & associated costs. It’s crammed full of little tips.

view through a whitewashed doorway into a hallway with encaustic tiled floor and shabby chic coat rack

These flea market finds can add individuality, warmth and character to a house.

vintage decorated monochrome bedroom on the opening page of the "New Romantic" chapter

There’s the fun of hunting of course (although some of the early mornings can’t be described as fun). The recycling/upcycling angle is also a great selling point too.

four photos of different areas of a vintage decorated house boat

If you want to avoid the ‘house full of old junk’ look, finds have to be used intelligently and creatively.

collection of vintage wooden shoe lasts on an antique chest of drawers

This book is the perfect guide in achieving this.

whitewashed walls with a group of natural wall hangings

 If we’ve piqued your interest, Flea Market Chic is available in our Amazon bookshops – UK & US.

[Many thanks to Cico Books for this review copy]

Bookmarks: Creative Space

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

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"Creative Space" book in the H is for Home work space

Today’s book review features a fascinating little read.

cover of "Creative Space" book

Creative Space – Urban Homes of Artists and Innovators by Francesca Gavin

wall covered in art with a coffee table stacked with art and interior design books

The book takes a peek inside the homes of creative types – artists, designers, writers, photographers etc…

plastic dinosaur figure

…and explores the style of the spaces they inhabit.

large loft type living space with huge poster of a girl with flowers in her hair

Some people combine work & living space, whilst others keep some degree of separation between the two… but even in these cases, the taste & influences of the occupants is very interesting. How their interior spaces affect their work -  and how their work affects their homes & contents.

shelves with books and a framed portrait with the words "After Death What?" written across it

The homes featured are located all over the world – with their unique cultural & social influences, environment and climates.

anglepoise lamp in front of a pine chest of drawers

The book is quite a backlash against minimalism.

cardboard boxes made into seating

The rooms are filled with an eclectic array of furniture, completed and ongoing work projects, pieces by  fellow artists, flea market finds, collections of objects, reference material and so on.

shabby chic leather club armchair

In fact, quite the antithesis of the cool, white spaces much loved by many glossy interior magazines. These spaces are inventive & spontaneous, less staged perhaps – less pristine and more chaotic in many cases.

live/work space with bare cast concrete walls

They’re full of interest & colour.

wall of shelves holding books and toys with a red Belgian brasserie sign above

In addition to the photos of each space, there are also Q&As from the occupants.

mid century modern furnished sitting room with huge floor to ceiling windows

The narrative delves a little deeper into what makes them and their homes tick – why they’ve chosen to live where they do, any alterations they’ve made, details of their work, how they use the space etc.

loft apartment with rope swing hanging from the ceiling

There are 30 creative spaces featured – in cities such as Barcelona, Berlin, London, New York, Paris and Tokyo.

workspace with bright orange painted walls

Just to highlight a few of the occupants:

  • Fafi – a Paris-based artist, illustrator and designer
  • Nicola Formichetti – a fashion director and stylist living in Shoreditch
  • Leah McSweeney & Rob Cristofaro – a fashion label couple who’ve made a New York loft apartment their base
  • Julia Schonlau – an illustrator and character designer who lives in a two-bedroom flat in Berlin
  • Juan Redon – a Barcelona-based architect, curator and pop collector
  • Yukinori Dehara – a figure illustrator, toymaker and animator in Tokyo

workspace with bright orange painted walls

It’s certainly a great little book to dip in & out of – you’ll notice something new every time.

white-painted work room with two large windows with bright red curtains

The photos full of ideas & inspiration…

man working at a large wooden table with a huge red painting in the background

…but having said that, we wouldn’t choose to live in all these homes, although there are a few that we’d definitely quite fancy!

workspace with one wall decorated with various masks

If you’re thinking of getting yourself a copy, the book’s available from the Laurence King website and Amazon UK or USA

[Many thanks to Laurence King Publishing for the review copy]

Bookmarks: How to Make Bread

Friday, November 4th, 2011

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How to Make Bread book with apples and homemade, buttered bread

This edition of Bookmarks is a little different…

cover of the "How to Make Bread" book

title page of the "How to Make Bread" book

…it’s a hybrid – both book review and cookery post.

cornbread recipe from the "How to Make Bread" book

hot cross bun recipe from the "How to Make Bread" book

Longtime followers of this blog will know that Adelle is partial to a bit of bread baking and she squealed with delight when this book, How to Make Bread by Emmanuel Hadjiandreou, came through the letterbox!

sourdough chapter page of the "How to Make Bread" book
image of an unbaked loaf being slashed with scissors to decorate in the "How to Make Bread" book

The recipes are divided up into basic & other yeasted breads; wheat-free or gluten-free breads; sourdoughs and pastries & sweet treats.

olive " herb bread recipe from the "How to Make Bread" book
pizza recipe from the "How to Make Bread" book

There are also really useful chapters on the basics of breadmaking and a list of suppliers & stockists of all the wonderful flours, grains and breadmaking paraphernalia.

page showing a stack of bannetons, breadboards and other baking implements in the "How to Make Bread" book

image of bread & cheese from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

Beautifully staged photographs by Steve Painter and to die for props – Justin’s been emulating them with his breadboards, wooden spoons, herbs and dustings of flour!

instructive images on how to knead dough from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

pitta bread recipe page from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

The book is fantastic for a real bread beginner. It has clear, step by step images. It has inspired the resurrection of the starter that was killed in the pantry by the central heating when it was turned on last winter (that sounds like a game of Cluedo!)

tomato bread recipe page from the "How to Make Bread" book

rye bread recipe page from the "How to Make Bread" book

After an age pouring over all the different bread and pastry recipies, she chose the beer bread as her first attempt.

beer bread recipe page from the "How to Make Bread" book

ingredients gathered together to make the beer bread from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

Here’s the recipe…

Makes 4 rolls (Adelle made 1 large loaf from the same quantity dough)

Added notes: long proofing/dough rising basket (900g/2lb capacity), greased baking sheet lined with parchment paper,
(warning, you’ll also need a collection of different sized mixing bowls!).

  • 400 g/3¼ cups malthouse flour (or 2 cups unbleached bread flour, ¾ cup multigrain blend and ½ malted wheat flakes)
  • 10 g/1 teaspoon salt
  • 200 g/1 ⅔ cups malthouse or unbleached strong/bread flour
  • 2g fresh yeast or 1g/¾ teaspoon dried/active dry yeast
  • 200g/200ml/6oz organic ale or other beer (Adelle used Marston’s Oyster Stout)
  • 4g fresh yeast or 2g/¼ teaspoon dried/active dry yeast
  • 200g/200ml/6oz organic ale or other beer
  • rolled oats, for coating

…and here’s the method…

  1. Into one (medium) mixing bowl, sift the 400 g/3¼ cups malthouse flour (or equivalent) and empty the sifted larger grains into a shallow dish. Set aside.
  2. Mix the salt with the sifted flour and set aside. This is the dry mixture
  3. Into another (smaller) mixing bowl, sift the 200 g/1 ⅔ cups malthouse flour (or equivalent) and empty the sifted larger grains into the dish with the rest of the reserved grains.
  4. Into another (larger) mixing bowl, weigh out the 2g fresh yeast (or equivalent). Add the 200g/200ml/6oz ale and stir until the yeast has dissolved. This is the wet mixture. (Leave the second batch of ale in a cool place, but not in the refrigerator.)
  5. Mix the 200 g/1 ⅔ cups sifted flour into the wet mixture until it comes together.
  6. Cover and let ferment overnight in a cool place.
  7. The next day, in a (smaller) mixing bowl, weigh out the 4g fresh yeast (or equivalent). Add the remaining 200g/200ml/6oz ale and stir until the yeast has dissolved. (Don’t worry if the ale has gone flat.) Pour into the fermented ale mixture and mix.
  8. Now add the reserved dry mixture and mix with a wooden spoon until it comes together.
  9. Cover with the bowl that had the dry mixture in it and let stand for 10 minutes.
  10. After 10 minutes knead as follows: [in the bowl, pull a portion of the dough up from the side ans press it in the middle. Turn the bowl slightly and repeat this process with another portion of the dough. Repeat another 8 times. The whole process should only take about 10 seconds and the dough should start to resist.] Cover the bowl again and let stand for 10 minutes.
  11. Repeat this step three times, but the last rising should be for 1 hour.
  12. When the dough has doubled in volume, punch it down. Lightly dust a clean work surface with flour. Transfer the ball of dough to the floured work surface.
  13. Divide the dough into 4 equal portions using a metal dough scraper or sharp serrated knife.
  14. Take each portion of dough and roll between your hands until you get a perfectly round, smooth ball.
  15. Add as many oats as you like to the reserved dish of malted grains and mix.
  16. Roll the top of each ball of dough in the grain mixture. Place, grain side down, into a prepared proofing basket/banneton.
  17. Let the dough rise until slightly less than double the size – 30-45 minutes.
  18. About 20 minutes before baking, preheat the oven to 240°C/475°F/Gas Mark 9 and put a baking stone in to heat up. Place a roasting pan at the bottom of the oven to preheat. Fill a cup with water.
  19. Tip the basket upside down onto the bread peel and lift it away from the risen dough. Slide the bread onto the hot baking stone, pour the reserved cupful of water onto the hot roasting pan and lower the temperature to 200°C/400°F/Gas Mark 6.
  20. Bake for 30 minutes.
  21. To check if it is baked through, tip it upside down and tap the bottom – it should sound hollow.
  22. If it’s not ready, return to the oven for a few minutes. Set it on a wire rack to cool.

…and here’s Adelle’s finished loaf…

beer bread from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

sliced & buttered beer bread from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

close up view of beer bread from the "How to Make Bread" cookery book

You can get your copy of How to Make Bread from the Cico website. And as usual, it’s also available from the H is for Home Amazon aStores in the UK and USA

[Many thanks to Sarah at Ryland Peters & Small and Cico Books]

Bookmarks: 70s Style & Design

Friday, October 14th, 2011

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cover from the book, "70s Style & Design" styled with vintage 1970s ladies handbags, dress & jewellery

In terms of style & design, the 1970s is sometimes dismissed as being a bit naff or as the decade that taste forgot.

title page from the book, "70s Style & Design"

This is very wide of the mark – its influence being both wide ranging and long lasting.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a page from a 1970s Habitat catalogue

This book, 70s Style & Design, by Dominic Lutyens & Kirsty Hislop clearly demonstrates this.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a siting room with a large yellow sofa

The decade was remarkable for its diversity – its range of cultures & counter cultures. It began with hippies & flower power and ended with punks & new wave!

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing groovy "paint just took a trip" illustration

There was a “loosened up spirit of fashion & design” during this period – a strong sense of doing your own thing, experimentation, freedom and fun.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a neon ceiling

There were trends & fashions of course, but it never descended into a bland homogenisation.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a model wearing a black & white striped jumpsuit posing in front of a red brick wall with the Chrysler Building in the background

It was a very eclectic decade in terms of style & design – psychedelia & flower power spilled over from the 1960s, then there was the strong influence of Art Deco and Art Nouveau, nostalgic Victoriana, the folksy/back to nature style – and later on a harder edged industrial look.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" entitled, "Pop to Postmodernism"

It has been referred to as a decade of ‘the self’ – whether that be individuals looking towards & analyzing their inner self – or an outward expression through personal appearance or living & work spaces. This resulted in a real blossoming of creativity.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a model in glasses & headscarf

The book highlights the influence of various music scenes, movements such as gay rights & women’s lib, the importance of an increasing awareness of the environment, the political & economic factors prevalent at the time, the increasing & diverse student population, the new DIY ethos in both fashion & interiors, a craft renaissance – and the impact of shops such as Habitat, Mr Freedom, Biba and Granny Takes a Trip.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a model in facepaint holding a "Black is Beautiful" poster

Divided into four chapters, From Pop to Postmodernism, Belle Epoque, Supernature and Avant Garde, the book tackles these subjects in great detail and does a remarkable job in drawing all these strands together.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a number of black performers including Boney M and Diana Ross

The text is informative, articulate & well researched – the accompanying photographs capturing all the spirit of this fabulous decade.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" at the "Global Pillage" chapter

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing a large foundry building in Arizona, USA

The 70s isn’t a particularly well documented era in terms of style & design – this book helps redress the balance.

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing people who choose to live in hippie communes or have a macrobiotic diet

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing David Bailey's Notting Hill flat

As well as having their own dedicated website, the authors write the Flashin’ on the 70s blog which features even more 70s (and 70s inspired) gorgeousness!

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing models wearing colourful clothes & platform sandals

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing models wearing folk inspired fashion

As usual, the book is available both direct from the publisher and through our H is for Home UK & US Amazon aStores

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing several photos of punks

page from the book, "70s Style & Design" showing several androgynous style people including Mick Jagger, New York Dolls and Dr. Frank-N-Furter from the Rocky Horror Show

[Many thanks to Thames & Hudson for this review copy]

Bookmarks: Menu Design in America

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

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"Menu Design in America" book surrounded by vintage menus

We have a really fabulous book for today’s Bookmarks post.

front page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

It’s Menu Design in America, 1850-1985 by Steven Heller & John Mariani and edited by Jim Heimann.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

The book charts the history of menu design in America in the 19th & 20th centuries.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

The menus featured inevitably incorporate the evolution & development of food…

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

…but they also draw in American and social history, politics, immigration, civil rights, prohibition, social taboos & norms for various eras – some of which can be quite an eye opener.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

Fans of graphic design and typography will also be in heaven!

page from "Menu Design in America" page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

There’s a broad subject overview at the start of the book followed by further insightful captions on each page.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

They add details for specific venues or menus – artists/designers, who owned/frequented an establishment, its popularity, dates, details about the food – chefs, new introductions, where items may have been sourced etc etc.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

In some cases, there are accompanying photographs of the actual restaurant locations, buildings, interiors and the diners themselves.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

The menus are the real stars of this book of course. There are nearly 400 pages crammed full of fabulous examples – both the stunning covers and their menu contents will give hours of pleasure.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America" page from "Menu Design in America"

We’ve included lots of images for this post, but even this is only a small proportion of those contained within the book.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

Art Nouveau to Art Deco, Jazz age to Space age – it’s all here!

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

The menus are sourced from hotels, restaurants, nightclubs, diners, steamships, cruise ships, trains & planes.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

We know one thing though – after browsing this book for an hour we were starving!

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

Some of the menus had up to a hundred items to choose from.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

There are familiar dishes such as steaks & burgers (done in a myriad of different ways of course).

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

Others have choices that were new to us – ‘stewed terrapin with hominy’, ‘fried smelts with figaro sauce’, ‘calfs head en tortue’.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

There are enjoyable aspects to take from all the menus – our favourites in terms of design & artwork are those dating from the 1930s and the 1950s. There’s a few in this book we’d love to add to our collection.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

We started acquiring vintage menus some time ago. In fact, we’ve blogged about the subject before.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

We love both the artwork and browsing the dishes on offer. They can be stored in a folder, but also look great framed – and as you can see from the wonderful examples in this book, the designs can be just stunning.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

So we were sold even before opening a page, but if you are a newcomer to the subject, this book can be enjoyed as pure eye candy or will provide a fascinating insight into the history of a nation through its culinary culture.

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

Mouth-watering stuff – we can highly recommend it!

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

Menu Design in America, 1850-1985 is also available from the H is for Home Vintage Design bookshops – UK & US

page from "Menu Design in America"

page from "Menu Design in America"

[Many thanks to Taschen for supplying this review copy]

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