Style

Hey Baby! – spring inspiration for a new arrival

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Whether you are a seasoned knitter or a novice with a baby bundle on the way, new born handknits never have to be old fashioned. It was the designs of Debbie Bliss that inspired me to pick up my needles over a decade ago. Debbie has always managed to combine classic lines with fresh colours to create a covetable modern vibe.

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I am convinced that the high street designers have been inspired by Debbie’s work. There are two key books by Debbie that would never leave my pattern library. Firstly get hold of the original Baby Cashmerino book. Here you will find the go-to round neck baby cardigan. I must have knitted 3 or 4 version of this design for my son. They are perfect over a baby-grow for early morning play and will look super cute with a liberty print dress or dungerees in the summer.

Both Bonpoint and Boden have been attracted to Acid Yellow and Coral tones this summer. You can make your own handknit version using Debbie Bliss Baby Cashmerino. I think I might be tempted to look to the Baby Cashmerino Tonal Collection and make a cardigan in Storm. This soft denim look will be fabulous matched with a pure white dress and matching knickers.

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My second recommendation is Baby Knits for beginners. There are loads of great designs in this book from blankets to jumpers and scarves. Every new Mum loves cute hats for her new born. So many get flung out of the buggy that you can never make enough. I feel like I have made hundreds of these cute beanies over the years. They are a quick and welcome gift that attract admiring glances on the high street. If the flavour of the baby is unknown at this stage I think that duck egg, denim and navy go down a treat for a boy or girl. Once knitted you might just attain favourite aunty or uncle status.

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Outdoor Living – a summer of crochet

summerparty15.4Two things last summer changed my view of our outdoor life. Firstly we were fortunate enough to re-landscape our garden. Not much changed really in terms of the layout, but we had new beautiful paths, two fine seating areas and finally, finally I felt we could invest our time, plans (and money) in plants that we wanted to grow.

summerparty15.3My parents have been hugely generous with their advice and plants and have helped us develop the beds in a very short space of time. I have also begged and borrowed specimens from our neighbours and friends. This summer I have become increasingly distracted and enchanted by our garden. It does my soul good. In the evening Big B and I sit late at night down at the bottom of the garden and chat, catching up on the day or the week.

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I was also inspired by the Selina Lake’s book Outdoor Living and have chatted about this on the blog before. (I will have to buy her Winter Living book very soon). This Spring I started my outdoor projects in earnest. I made a list of things I wanted to make for entertaining and relaxing in the garden. In between commissioned work I made my way through the list. Last weekend we had a few of our friends round to enjoy a summer barbecue. This was the time to pull out all the creations and enjoy a fiesta of fun.

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Crochet is perfect for summer outdoor projects. I used our granny square blankets and cushions for comfortable seating areas on the lawn. New patchwork cushion covers got a new airing and we used the food covers. The napkin weight, the new edged tablecloths and tablecloth weights were all used.

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We also made a little fairy glade down the bottom of the garden using the paper garlands I made the other week and the Breton peg-doll fairies. It was lots of fun. In the evening we lit tea-lights in the up-cycled Bonne Maman jars. Some of these quick and easy creations made great take-home pressies for guests. After months of gradually building up our crochet items stash, it was lovely to use so many of our items.

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But the real thing about entertaining is not the food, crochet, drink or the sunshine (although it does help) it is the laughter. That is worth its weight in gold and yarn.

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The Debbie Bliss Fan Club week #1 – Debbie Bliss Home

deb14home7 If you follow me on twitter and facebook you will have an inkling of why this week is a big Debbie Bliss celebration on the blog. But later this week I am going to show you some exciting patterns that I have been developing with Debbie and Team Bliss. Exciting times!

deb14home2I have kept of meaning to blog about my fabulous trip just before Christmas to London and the opening of Debbie’s new shop, Debbie Bliss Home. Being able to spend a day on the train and visiting gorgeous Debbie and her family was a huge treat and I was fortunate that we could work it around family commitments. Above is my beloved Harris Tweed Debbie Bliss project bag….you see you must always stay on message and loyal with your accessories!

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Debbie and Nell have opened a new shop in the heart of the old village of Walthamstow in the East of London (Orford Road, E17). This area of London is becoming increasingly trendy and there was a very cool vibe.

deb14home4 deb14home5 deb14home6 deb14home8It reminded me very much of the cool areas of South Manchester. As you can imagine the look and the product choice within the shop is exquisite. A great mix of affordable gifts, classic designs and homewares from Debbie’s own range.

deb14home1I spent a blissful (pub intended) day sipping a vast amount of Prosecco, catching up with yarn heroes including Sarah Hatton and meeting old friends (Debbie, Teresa and Nell). I also got a tour of Walthamstow village with the dashing Mr Barry Bliss.

DBHome4If you are in the area, go – it is a lovely haven of style and serenity. But if you live far to far away then pop by the on-line shop. I continue to love me Debbie Bliss mugs and tea towels and they are the perfect pressie for yarn fans.

Debbie is now over in India at the moment on a Knit for Peace tour – pop over to her blog to see her adventures.

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Crafty Interview – Sarah Moore – The essence of English

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You know me, I love a hero. I like to be inspired. I like to think and then ask. ‘How did you do that?’ Most people are incredibly generous if you ask them for advice or a little guidance. In my little series of Crafty interviews I have asked questions of people I admire. I want to know what inspires them, what their dreams are for the future, basically I am being nosy and hope you will want to share my discoveries.

This week I have interviewed the fabulous Sarah Moore. I have loved Sarah’s work since I was bought her first book as a birthday pressie in 2012. I wrote a review of the book here and here, and Sarah being Sarah said ‘Thank you’. Wow! Well frankly that kind attention ensured my loyalty forever. Since then Sarah’s work has gone from strength to strength. She has a regular craft column in my all time favourite magazine, Country Living. She also won the first serious of the Great Interiors Design Challenge on BBC 2. I love her aesthetic, for a long while I felt that my own particular love of colour, floral patterns, tweed, and collecting had got lost in the interiors world. That rather elegant, comfortable, worn and homely English style seemed to disappear.  But reading Sarah’s books and particularly Vintage Home  rekindled that fire. Hurrah! So please join me in admiring this wonderful creative force.

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How would you describe yourself and your work?

Eclectic and a bit unusual describes both I think! I love making and designing and breathing new life into old stuff.

Where did your interest in designing and making come from?

I think that living in the middle of nowhere as a child you had to find your own occupations to keep your self busy. I have always been a bit of a magpie, gathering interesting things on walks, or pebbles on beaches and then turning them into things that I like the look of.

I think I first became aware of your work through the Biscuiteers – is it right that you initially trained as a chef?

I ran a full on top flight kitchen for an events company in the middle of London. For about 12 years I worked a very hard cooking and later designing menus with fabulous company Lettice. I designed service equipment, food installations and cooked for hundreds and sometimes thousands of people. A lot of hard graft, but a lot of fun and great team work and sense of achievement.

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How did you get into textiles?

I am definitely a hoarder and I just found that I liked certain fabrics and I love a stack of these, mainly 40’s and 50’s linen fabrics. And you cannot really justify buying LOTS of fabric unless you are happy to make stuff and sell stuff made out of it.


What inspires your work?

The fabrics themselves inspire what we make: We have been making lots of teatowels recently because they look lovely in the house and they make a chore like drying up slightly less boring!

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How does your initial inspiration become a finished article?

I find imagining how an end product will be fairly easy and seem to be able to see very clearly how to make it in my head, so I confidently write and make things up all the time. I use a very forgiving and sweet old singer sewing machine for all my sewing, and then have a few lovely makers who come along with proper machines to speed through the real things.

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For a long time I felt the British interior style seemed a bit a sea, everything was very much in chalky colours and we all seem to have to follow the Scandinavian ideal. I think when I first saw your books, I felt ‘At last I recognise the British style which I love so much!’ When did your style emerge?

I think that colour and patterns and pretty things around the house just make living a little bit lovely. If you line your shelves with papers, fill you walls with pictures, dressers with china and sofas with cushions and layer up your favourite things I think it makes your space at home more personal and more relaxing to be in.

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Last year you won the BBC2′s The Great Interior Design Challenge, has that changed your work and did you enjoy the opportunity?

It was So much fun. Like being on holiday. I refused to work late on my projects, trying to keep things simple and enjoy everything as much as possible. I didn’t want to win, but I did want to stay in the process as long as possible, learning all the way. It has not really changed my work, but I do feel armed with a new set of skills and cant wait to try out proper room schemes at home.

What next? What do you see yourself doing in five years’ time?

FIVE years! I don’t tend to think much beyond tomorrow, possibly this afternoon. It gets me into quite a lot of trouble at times, but I love living for the moment. So I have no idea about 5 years. Our new house has some buildings and a sweet meadow with it: I would love to create some really enchanting camping there. Handmade wagons and pretty decking, cattle trough baths and recycled interiors.


What’s your favourite and least favourite part of designing or running your own business?

I can pack up my laptop/sewing machine/gluegun at a moments notice and be around for my Children, watching them play matches or being in their school plays or whatever it is that they are involved in, and then make up for it later in the day. Part of the worst bit is the looking ahead and planning side of things. I am easily distracted and truly dreadful at admin; fortunately I have mentors in town (who run Biscuteers) who guide me through accounting, tax and compliance of running a small business.


Who do you most admire in the craft or design world?

I am very taken with Marna Lunt at the moment. Properly clever lady with a needle and thread.

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What are your favourite things to design or make?

I really like the taxidermy that I make using old fabrics, wools and materials but I have to be very peaceful to do them properly. I can tidy my studio for hours before finding just the right frame of mind to crack on with them, but they are very satisfying to make.

Do you have time to make things for yourself, friends, family?

Its often quite last minute when I am making for us. But I do settle down to make a bed cover or curtain sometimes.

What has been the strangest thing you’ve designed?

A huge perspex fish tank style structure to serve layers of squid in spaghetti, caviar, sour cream and smoked salmon at a big company launch back in cheffing times. A line of funnels and tubes tied to a hedge as an impromptu loo for boys at a friends very rural wedding where the facilities had not arrived…fortunately only involved in the pre design process! And for work, a mad hatters outfit that I made without ever meeting the person wearing it.

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For over a year now you have written craft articles for my all time favourite magazine, Country Living. How did you start working for them?

They rang one day. I nearly fell off my chair. I too have always been a massive fan and they had seen a copy of my Vintage Gifts book and asked to feature it and then approached directly to see if I would contribute directly. It is probably one of the things that I am most proud of!

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You have just moved house and have the most wonderful barn for workshops, what are the plans?

We are hosting out first open Barn next month: Five favourite vintage sellers and a big winter wreath making class too. We shall see how this goes down and then make plans for more workshops in the new year. Eventually I think that we would like to make a more permanent studio space in one of the buildings as I am currently working out of a little room in the dairy.

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What advice would you give to someone wishing to get into the design and interiors business?

It’s hard work to get a little business off the ground. You have to have real conviction and a proper vision for your products, ideas and designs. I certainly wouldn’t like to have worked out my hourly rate for the first couple of years, but if you have a product that people like or a style that people want to tap into you just need to go for it! Be prepared to embrace social media, and if you have left a “proper job” be prepared to take on all the chores, (changing the ink, sending out the newsletters, filling out the forms) and it should all pay off.

The photos in this interview are taken by the fantastic photographers Debi Treloar, Katie Hammond or by Sarah Moore

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Bohemian Blanket – and the magazine rescue

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Sometimes I am not very good with colour. I wish I was consistent and had a colour style. I can’t really do that Scandi chic look, all white and grey, because the brights and the pastels creep in. I wish I was a tasteful Farrow and Ball girl, with all those sophisticated chalky whites. But then a cheeky cerise potters in, with a clashing red and bang there goes your sophisticated colour scheme.

In recent years I have been thrilled to watch and appreciate the styles of Selina Lake and Sarah Moore. I think their colour palette, their love of vintage and chintz is really where my style heart lies. It makes me happy not to feel quite so off kilter.

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Now where is all this leading to? Well there was a problem with a blanket. For all the be-moaning of my schizophrenic colour choices, I am my friends, a finisher. I do like to see the end of a project. With that in mind I am careful what I start. I also don’t like too much waste. I like to wade through the yarn stash and make something useful from all those remnants.

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About a year ago I came across a delightful baby blanket pattern. In it’s original form it would have been all fluffy duck yellow or sugar mice pink. I was keen to try a more modern palette. Using a new trick I have for pinning down my colour indecision I chose the front cover of Homes and Antiques for crochet square colours. Lots of fun was had making square after square.

bohemianImage taken from Selvedge magazine – Susanne Biovsky

When it was time to join up the squares disaster struck. I tried colour after colour, blue, yellow white – ewww. They all looked horrible and made me want to run away from my project bag. Then the new issue of Selvedge magazine arrived, July/August. There on the front of the magazine was my answer. There is a wonderful article about the Viennese fashion designer Susanne Bisovsky. Her work inspired by folk costume provided the perfect palette match for my blanket.

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The answer was to chose a charcoal grey as the backdrop to all those zingy hues. Perfect. This style also enabled me to go a bit ‘fancy’ with the edging.

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So there you go, my magazine addiction continues to save the day and one begins the inspiration and another provides the ending – perfect.

I am being a bit cheeky but I do get a mention in this issue of Selvedge Magazine on page 38 for the Gawthorpe Hall project #ambitiondone

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Style Hero – Hazel from Moth

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This year I have made a conscious effort that I want to appreciate and celebrate the people who inspire my work and my play. For many years I have loved a shop local to me, Moth.

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This shop has a wonderful combination of homewares, accessories and larger pieces of furniture. Often I will pop in to browse, with no purchase in mind. But any  visit to Moth is food for the soul.

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I think really skillful retailers know how the entice us, to curate, to inspire. The owner of Moth, Hazel is one such style maven. Trained originally in textiles and then latterly a fashion and interiors stylist, Hazel has her own style signature.

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I know customers who specifically ask her to style their home to be very ‘Moth’. Many of the items on sale in the shop are really inexpensive, but together they create a co-cohesive look. The old adage about it’s not how much you paid for it but how you wear it is definitely true, the beauty is held within the combinations, the little details, the symmetry.

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I have often joked with Hazel that if I ever get asked to present a photo of my house or workspace for a magazine – I would just fake it and ask Hazel to set up pretend desk in the shop…..oh rats, now the secret is out!

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In fact my own natural colour palette for our house is much more colourful. There are many more faded chintzy florals in our little corner of the world. But part of me wouldn’t mind just have one ‘Moth’ room, filled with Scandinavian treasures, a parred down chic with little touches of texture.

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A couple of weeks ago I took time to have a lovely leisurely coffee with owner Hazel to hear about her inspiration, how she came to own her shop and her plans for the future. Like many interiors specialist Hazel constantly keeps her style fresh and up to date. She travels extensively and frequent visits to Paris and Denmark ensure that the items in the shop a very different to those found on the high street. She has run this successful shop for over seven years, which is no mean feat in my opinion. But then the labels, the atmosphere, the wrapping of purchases is all as beautiful as the item you have bought – it is an aesthetic experience.

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I realise that I now appear to be gushing – ah well who doesn’t like to be gushed about? Treasure those who bring you joy, some beauty and inspire kindness in your life. Thank you Hazel for being one such person. Encore!

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