Friday, May 29, 2009

So You Think You Don't Like Poetry


In class the other day (I'm taking a nonfiction writing workshop this summer), I watched "Storytellers," a documentary made in 1985 by the PEN Center featuring a bevy of famous writers (Kurt Vonnegut, Toni Morrison, Tom Wolfe, Joan Didion) talking about their craft. Essayist Fran Leibowitz described the process of writing as "slowing down your thinking to 1/100th of its pace." Didion said she writes in order to find out what she's thinking. Morrison, who said she unapologetically focuses on classic themes like love, loneliness and death, decried the lauding of originality as a virtue in and of itself. Wolfe, as expected, talked about co-ed dorms and X-rated movies.


Seeing all these writers together was inspiring -- but also, wow, what a bunch of oddballs.

One such oddball is poet Andrew Hudgins. Here's one of my favorite poems by him; it's very funny and the language is refreshingly idiomatic, and yet he manages to sneak some profundity in at the end.

Praying Drunk

Our Father who art in heaven, I am drunk.
Again. Red wine. For which I offer thanks.
I ought to start with praise, but praise
comes hard to me. I stutter. Did I tell you
about the woman whom I taught, in bed,
this prayer? It starts with praise; the simple form
keeps things in order. I hear from her sometimes.
Do you? And after love, when I was hungry,
I said, Make me something to eat. She yelled,
Poof! You’re a casserole!—and laughed so hard
she fell out of the bed. Take care of her.

Next, confession—the dreary part. At night
deer drift from the dark woods and eat my garden.
They’re like enormous rats on stilts except,
of course, they’re beautiful. But why? What makes
them beautiful? I haven’t shot one yet.
I might. When I was twelve, I’d ride my bike
out to the dump and shoot the rats. It’s hard
to kill your rats, our Father. You have to use
a hollow point and hit them solidly.
A leg is not enough. The rat won’t pause.
Yeep! Yeep! it screams, and scrabbles, three-legged, back
into the trash, and I would feel a little bad
to kill something that wants to live
more savagely than I do, even if
it’s just a rat. My garden’s vanishing.
Perhaps I’ll merely plant more beans, though that
might mean more beautiful and hungry deer.
Who knows?
I’m sorry for the times I’ve driven
home past a black, enormous, twilight ridge.
Crested with mist, it looked like a giant wave
about to break and sweep across the valley,
and in my loneliness and fear I’ve thought,
O let it come and wash the whole world clean.
Forgive me. This is my favorite sin: despair—
whose love I celebrate with wine and prayer.

Our Father, thank you for all the birds and trees,
that nature stuff. I’m grateful for good health,
food, air, some laughs, and all the other things
I’m grateful that I’ve never had to do
without. I have confused myself. I’m glad
there’s not a rattrap large enough for deer.
While at the zoo last week, I sat and wept
when I saw one elephant insert his trunk
into another’s ass, pull out a lump,
and whip it back and forth impatiently
to free the goodies hidden in the lump.
I could have let it mean most anything,
but I was stunned again at just how little
we ask for in our lives. Don’t look! Don’t look!
Two young nuns tried to herd their giggling
schoolkids away. Line up, they called. Let’s go
and watch the monkeys in the monkey house.
I laughed, and got a dirty look. Dear Lord,
we lurch from metaphor to metaphor,
which is—let it be so—a form of praying.

I’m usually asleep by now—the time
for supplication. Requests. As if I’d stayed
up late and called the radio and asked
they play a sentimental song. Embarrassed.
I want a lot of money and a woman.
And, also, I want vanishing cream. You know—
a character like Popeye rubs it on
and disappears. Although you see right through him,
he’s there. He chuckles, stumbles into things,
and smoke that’s clearly visible escapes
from his invisible pipe. It makes me think,
sometimes, of you. What makes me think of me
is the poor jerk who wanders out on air
and then looks down. Below his feet, he sees
eternity, and suddenly his shoes
no longer work on nothingness, and down
he goes. As I fall past, remember me.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Liquor and cocktail storage

Candy
Is dandy
But liquor
Is quicker.

-Ogden Nash (1902 - 1971), "Reflections on Ice-Breaking"


My cousin is looking for inspiration for liquor storage for her impressive collection. (Or rather, we were..) So I thought I'd go digging in my files...


As seen in Apartment Therapy.


Tea trolleys




Alex Papachristidis Interiors



As seen in Apartment Therapy.



Ashley Roi Jenkins


Sideboard


Joe Schmelzer


Bureau/secretaire
Placed in your dining area... it could be such a statement. I love how this blends in with the decor as not to appear too garish. It's a gorgeous way to store and display your liquor. The fold down desk is the perfect way to mix your drink.



A bookcase
DIY instructions from Apartment Therapy

What about utilising an antique card catalog specifically to store your precious wine??


As seen in Apartment Therapy.


If you have the large room and a spectacular console, it could be the perfect place to display/store your liquor! Love the presentation in the image below... all neat and symmetrical... totally unattainable for me! (Surfaces are meant for husband and child to store their stuff.)


Eileen Kathryn Boyd Interiors


Or a small console/side table:


Robin Bell via coco+kelley


Or if you have plenty of moolah, get a custom designed built-in with a uber cool front... like what Amy Lau did for a client:


Amy Lau Design via Desire to Inspire


Or why not go all out and bring in a BAR!

Robert Couturier via Desire to Inspire


Quite a few options... huh, Sue? :)

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

It's wedding season, y'all!


I have a big announcement: I'M GETTING MARRIED!!!!!!!!!



Someday. Groom TBD, but I'm working on it. (For explanation of the above photo, keep reading)

Memorial Day marks the official beginning of Wedding Season. For the past several years, I've been averaging two weddings per year, which is manageable. And while yes, the gifts/travel involved are tough on the wallet, I gotta be honest: I love weddings. I always have -- in 1st Grade, I dressed up as a bride for Halloween. My 1st Grade boyfriend, Colin, was supposed to dress up as the groom. When he showed up in a pirate costume instead, I knew the relationship was doomed.


This past weekend, I attended my first 2009 wedding in Rochester, NY. It was a beautiful ceremony and, as usual, I cried during the vows (as did the groom). At my own wedding, I'm sure I will start bawling as soon as my Dad starts walking me down the aisle. My Dad giving me away might be the thing I'm looking forward to most in my wedding. I mean, that and the whole committing-to-the-person-I-want-to-spend-the-rest-of-my-life-with business. That will be pretty cool too.


Getting married strikes me as wonderfully hopeful. The odds are against you, though the oft-repeated claim that "60% of marriages end in divorce" is not statistically accurate (according to the Census Bureau, 60% of
second marriages end in divorce; the rate for first marriages is closer to 40%). When you get married, you are making a promise. You are saying to your partner, in front of your family, friends, and whatever God you believe in if you believe in a God, that you hope to love and stand by him/her no matter what. Your other relationships may have failed, but you think this one won't. You hope it won't.

But enough philosophy. How much do I love weddings? Well, for my 22nd birthday, the theme of the party was...my wedding. To Jon, my gay best friend (also celebrating a birthday). We decided we liked weddings so much that we had to have one. Check out the photos -- realistic looking, no?


We even had a cake, courtesy of Shaw's supermarket:

Who knows, maybe for our joint 30th birthday, we'll have a bar mitzvah!

Inspired...

I am so inspired (and moved to some degree of desperation) by this image (no, not the person's bum anatomy)...



I LOVE the combo of white, black and raspberry red. The trend of recent was black, white and yellow... or black, white and kelly green... but this is sharp, feminine, chic, happy and adult :)

I want this for my bedroom. WANT.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Greentea's Offer on step chests

My sponsor Greentea Design is offering 20% off all step chests!! (Thanks to Kim for the heads up)



I've always wanted one in the kitchen to use as a spice cabinet (I use BOTH Asian and Western spices). So I have things like candlenut powder, candlenut whole, chicken curry powder, meat curry powder, screwtape powder...

Of course, you can also use it to store DVD and CDs...

20% off is a great deal! Grab your own!!

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Waxing poetic....about waxing



For a long time, I resisted the Waxer. For several reasons, including low pain threshold, a vague sense of feminist outrage, and being a cheapskate. I am a woman, dammit! I have pubic hair!

But eventually, I became curious. Many of my close girlfriends confided that they liked how it felt, being hairless down there. It wasn't just about pleasing a man or giving the illusion of being prepubescent. Educated, sexually-empowered women were going bare. I was already toying with the idea when the guy I was seeing mentioned he thought it was hot, so I decided to go for it.


I made an appointment at a salon in my neighborhood run by middle-aged Polish women. I was nervous and asked a lot of questions. Once I was pantless and on the table, it suddenly bothered me that I didn't know my waxer's name. I mean, she was looking directly at my lady parts and about to cover them in hot wax. I needed to feel like we knew each other, at least superficially. So I grabbed her hand en route to my bikini line and said, "What's your name?"


She stared at me, confused, then said: "Dorothy."


"Ok," I said. "I'm Katie. Nice to meet you. Go ahead."


I have to admit, I didn't love how it looked at first. My "vagnino" somehow seemed less dignified. I was worried it was uglier than average. But the boyfriend seemed to approve, so I made another appointment a month later. When I came over afterward, he dumped me. I was outraged. And every time I went to the bathroom, there was a reminder of him. My hairless crotch was mocking me.

For the next two years, I stayed away and did my own maintenance. I got no complaints, but recently, I decided to give it another go. My new boyfriend didn't pressure me at all, but I thought it might be a fun way to mix things up. So I made an appointment at
Milano Salon, which is less than a block away from my apartment in Allston.

Let me now sing the praises of their waxer, Joan. The woman is awesome. Friendly, but no nonsense. And just chatty enough to distract you from the pain. She gives good, clear directions ("Lift your ass!") and is happy to share amusing anecdotes too, about bizarre shapes she has been asked to create (Celtic crosses, lightning bolts, initials).


So I've come full circle (full bush?) from not waxing, to waxing, to not waxing, and now waxing again. I think women should do whatever makes them feel comfortable and sexy -- it's definitely not wise to get a Brazilian for someone else's benefit. No one is worth that much pain. NO ONE.


This is a picture I found on Google Images, searching under "Brazilian waxing." Let me just say that I would definitely not allow this man anywhere near my privates!

Friday, May 22, 2009

Etsy Spotlight: Janet Hill Studio

I love paintings of rooms; vintage and new. I wrote about Anne Harwell's fantastic prints a while ago (visit her Etsy store here: Annechovie)... but never blogged about another favourite Etsy seller: Janet Hill Studios.


She Liked To Call Them Her Canary Shoes by Janet Hill


I love Janet Hill's work... here's some of my more favourite pieces from her store.


1. Sarah and her Fan, 2.Rosecutter's Cottage, 3. Summer Dresses, 4. Flowering Orange Tree, 5. The Reader Paige Has New Books, 6. Port And French Cheeses, 7. Dressing, 8. The Music Box, 9. Irises
Taken from JanetHillStudio's Etsy Store


Rush to her store to pick up your own Janet Hill!

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Random shots of beautiful Melbourne Part 1

Yesterday I brought my sister and her friend from Philadelphia for a tour of Melbourne from a semi-insider. I must admit, while travelling with my little girl was trying at times, I fell in love again with Melbourne CBD.



Studying here almost 10 years ago, I would walk the streets of Melbourne almost daily, dealing with loneliness and other things. For those of you who don't know, the Melbourne CBD is contained within a small, walkable grid. So I would walk the grid. Ten years on, and so much has changed... and yet so little.

An historic city of such diverse lifestyles, almost contained in streets. Collins St, the business, high fashion street. Bourke Street, the shopping strip. King Street, the gentleman club strip. Russell Street, Asian grocery and eateries. Little Bourke, Chinatown...

But for today I want to focus on the little arcades Melbourne is famous for... mainly concentrated between Bourke and Collins Sts. If you allow yourself to be dazzled by popular brands along the streetfronts, you might actually miss these almost hidden pathways filled with quaint shoplets and their exquisite seductions.





There's a store only selling thousands upon thousands of Babushkas, aptly named Babushka, in the Royal Arcade. One of its neighbours is Koko Black, a tiny chocolate cafe offering decadent chocolate drinks, sweets and truffles. Block Arcade boasts some gorgeously decorated places as well, like the simple, tiny tiny French Jewel Box, selling only the best antique French jewellery...



or Hopetoun Tea Rooms at the Block, an Alice in the Wonderland type surrounding, with rich Kelly greens hugging the walls and swaths of green fabric hanging from the ceiling.



And then at the epicentre of these arcades are these beautiful high domed centres... you might forget to view the architecture while being dazzled by beautiful wares... like in the Block Arcade.



Ancient mosaic tiles on the walls, the floors of the arcades, high ornate ceilings, super ornate brackets and signs... Contrasted by super modern, super beautiful glassware in the super white, bright store.





I'll stop here for today with the Melbourne GPO (General Post Office) which suffered a fire in 2001. Business relocated next door but because the GPO was a landmark, heritage listed building, it was painstakingly restored and is a swanky upper-market shopping mall.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

The Story of my Side Table and other tables


Via La La Lovely



Via Jonathan Adler


I love artful arrangements on desks, tables, sideboards, dressers etc. Of course, I have no Anna Spiro-esque, Jonathan Adler-esque or Kelly Wearstler-esque eye (or budget) for it myself and am constantly honing my eye when it comes to arranging things on surfaces that are functional yet pleasing to the eye. (Yes, yes I know it's all styled for the shot... but I'd like to think there is something that remains beautifully arranged after said photographer and stylist leave.)



Nate Berkus in his book Home Rules has a good guide on the Art of Display:
- Three or more like objects create a more purposeful and powerful statement than just one or two.
- Grouping different items by colour can also create a cohesive collection-all white pottery, mirrors in gilt frames.
- Three or more collections in a room will distract attention from one another. Your home may wind up feeling more like a store.



Via Jamie Drake


I have been very dissatisfied with the only side table in the living room so a few weeks ago, I did some swopping around and I must say I am pleased. (Again, budget of $0.00.)



Eddie Ross recently did an educational blogpost on how to create gorgeous tablescapes which was very informative.

I love the informal, pretty feel of this side table below in such a vibrantly coloured home. I love white walls with plenty of colour in furnishings and art. The pink glass birds add a superb touch to the setting...



Here's what I finally did, with the stuff I had lying around.

- Switched the side table to another slimmer, taller one. Because it's darker wood, it stands out from the wall and window trim and contrasts with the taupe lounge. It also picks up the warm tones of the wood blinds on the window and somehow complements the green grass just outside. Because it's a taller piece, it's now easier to place and reach for a mug.

- While the colouring and toning works well with the pieces around it, it is MUCH smaller. I know lots of interior designers crave symmetry... but because it is smaller and I have no pairs of lamps or vases yet, I decided to go asymmetrical.

I was also encouraged by Kelly Wearstler who says this in her book, Modern Glamour:
Symmetry is graphic thinking at its most instinctual level... Does this mean I avoid asymmetry? Hardly... but I won't apply them in an unbalanced way - especially where accessories are concerned.

So it was a conscious decision... and I also knew exactly what I needed on my side table.

- I was also dissatisfied with what I had on display/kept on the table. Something had been missing. Eddie made me realise: I had no bling! :) I added a silver box my mother gave me a few years back and repeated the metal/shine in a round, 50s Ranleigh silver serving tray.



The former side table now graces the hallway and displays my vintage typewriter, some Raynham urns and a large really pretty sampler I scored from Vinnies for $10. I'd love a bit more of a presence... like a Hollywood Regency faux bamboo small chest of drawers in a brilliant vermillion, but I guess I'll have to make do.. ;)



Although a bit shabby... I love the legs. One day I'll paint it turquoise or lime green.

I only have this small side table because the main "coffee table" is an ottoman I had made specifically to store Hannah's toys. I've always loved ottomans as coffee tables, I find it adds a real luxury to the lounge room.

Because Hannah loves to access it all the time for her toys (and jump up and down on it), I can't pile it with stuff. So I like to keep it plain for propped up bare feet and a tray...



(Pardon the poor workmanship... the carpenter got my instructions wrong... the upholstery on the lid is starting to sag. But I still love the large pop of colour in the lounge room, amongst my colourful art and pieces.)



I love the one above... love love love. Simple tablescape... beautiful buttonhole... gorgeous vintage castors and slim, low design.

Doesn't this side table below hold the right ingredients for a bedside table? A lamp, some pretty flowers, a clock and a little bowl to hold rings, earrings, hair-ties and clips... I'm inspired!

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Mom-mentary


Just spent 10 consecutive days with my mother and though she is a great lady (and a reader of this blog!), I admit that I'm a little wiped out. My mom has a lot of energy and charms most that she meets, but we are very different people. Emotionally, we are wired the same way -- to put it bluntly, I get my "crazy" from her. Which might be the best part of me and also the part that I struggle to keep in check. Though incredibly smart, my mom leads with her heart and makes no apologies for it. And while her irrationality can be exhausting (for instance, when she refuses to take public transportation because while radically more expensive and slower due to traffic, cabs *seem* more convenient), it's also sometimes refreshing. Logic schmogic!

My mom is also very vocal and opinionated -- whenever I watch a movie with her, in a theater or at her home, she can't resist commenting on everything. This tendency is now referred to in our family as "mom-mentary" and it came out on this trip, when I took her to the comedy club where I used to work. My mom....well, she kind of heckled. The mom-mentary comes from a good place and my mom was just trying to participate, but her outbursts led one comic to pronounce, "We've got a live one!" I was a teensy bit embarrassed. But also a little proud.


My mom is a huge foodie and we went to a number of awesome restaurants when she was in Boston, including Cuchi Cuchi, Maurizio's, and Top of the Hub (read my Yelp reviews here). We also took a day trip to Salem, where we took an odd pedicab ride with a tattooed guy named Jimmy who knew very little about Salem's history and couldn't pronounce "Episcopal" ("Here on the right is the, uh, Escobal Church"). We ate oysters and drank raspberry martinis. We also took in a Jane Monheit show at Sculler's Jazz Club. All in all, it was a fun visit. I'm probably ten pounds heavier, but whatever. It's not quite swimsuit season yet.

I have 3 brothers and used to wish for a sister, but ultimately, I think I prefer being the only girl. I get to see a special side of my mom and we have a unique bond because I'm her only daughter. If I didn't exist, whom would she give crazy gifts to, such as my collection of Barbie dolls dressed as Scarlett O'Hara? Or this wooden plaque that I hung above my shoe rack:


In short, my mom rules.

p.s. This is my 100th post! Thanks for reading!

Friday, May 15, 2009

Dining chairs makeover

My cousin sent me an SOS for a dining table and chairs when she moved into her rented apartment a few weeks ago. She had very little budget but didn't want to settle for cheap and nasty. I like my cousin's eclectic style... and was pleased when she said she wanted a wooden, "classic" set.

We found this at the local Salvos and picked up the lot for only $250. Sturdy chairs, no chips etc etc. This is it in her dining corner of her rather open plan living/dining area.



The next SOS my cousin sent me was this past Wednesday... to help her re-cover the chairs in time for her house warming do next weekend. So we popped over to Spotlight for some fabric... and got to work with my staple gun.

This is what the lounge area looks like (just so you get an idea of the entire room)..



The chairs before:


Recovering her chairs seats weren't easy because they had these corners! So took longer than expected.


My husband posing ... actually he was great help. This is him doing the last chair (I did the previous 5) and declared a rest.



And this is the result, just before being served a thank-you-so-much-you-guys-rock dinner of some buttery-soft steak and morrocan spice roast vegies, yum!



I wanted the area to look as nice as possible... so I insisted her pictures be hung... that large beautiful one is painted by her talented father.

It's not finished though. I'd love her to gather a small collection of bright yellow vases/holders... for her centrepiece for a pop colour... and perhaps some small plants for her window sill...

We've also been scouring ebay australia for a dinner service. My cousin's eclectic... so she's been fancying a retro dinner service. So the journey to a great place to live continues!