Mockingbird Hill Cottage

Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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You are here: Home / Archives for china and pottery

When Do You Start Decorating?

December 1, 2015 at 8:37 am by Claudia

12-1 insidethecabinet

A late afternoon peek into the china cabinet in the den.

That teeny little dog belonged to my grandmother, my dad’s mom. I never met her, as she died before I was born. Last year, my cousin Eileen sent it to me. My favorite aunt, her mom, had always had it on display and when she died, Eileen inherited it. Since I don’t really have much from my dad’s side of the family, this is a beautiful treasure I will always cherish.

Elsewhere in the photo: McCoy, my china pattern by Edwin Knowles way in the back, a piece of my great-grandmother’s Havilland china and a hand painted sugar bowl from France.

12-1 insidethecabinet2

Some of my Roseville. The edge of a framed picture of Riley and Scout in the back, along with a lovely piece of hand-painted china from France.

If my dreams could come true, I’d have a bigger house with lots of wall space for more cupboards filled with china and pottery. And room to hang a slew of Maxfield Parrish prints. And a fireplace. And a downstairs bedroom. And a mudroom – oh, how I long for a mudroom! Even if the only thing I could get out of the dream was a mudroom, I’d be happy.

It’s a rainy day here and I find myself not  reading a lot of blogs because everything is about Christmas and Christmas home tours. This has nothing to do with the grief I’m feeling. No, I feel this way every year. Way too much Christmas, way too soon. We just finished Thanksgiving and, frankly, I need a little breathing space before catapulting into the Christmas season. When the line between holidays blurs, it reminds me of suburban sprawl, where a suburb morphs into another suburb which morphs into another suburb and no one can tell which is which.

Anyway, if you’ve been reading my blog for any length of time, you know my rule. No decorating until the second week of December. Even though we will be pulling back on the decorating this year, we will have the small white tree in the living room and we’ll hang the lights out on the porch and we’ll hang a wreath. But not until sometime next week.

I talk about this every year because I’m sure that some of us begin to decorate at about the same time our parents used to decorate. Mine never decorated early – always mid-month. And my dad’s family, influenced by my grandmother’s German roots, didn’t put up their tree until Christmas Eve. We didn’t do that, but Dad used to talk about putting up the tree and decorating and singing carols on Christmas Eve. I can see the appeal and I know many people who still do that.

The stores start selling all things Christmas earlier and earlier each year. Home Decor bloggers feel the pressure to have everything up and picture perfect by the day after Thanksgiving. Surely that must take some of the joy out of the season? Maybe it doesn’t and if so, great. But here’s my question: why do these posts have to be so early in the season? Is it due to competing tours? The pressure to be the first tour that’s up and running? Or maybe simple scheduling requirements? I don’t know.

Anyway, I can’t look at any Christmas home tours on November 30th. Or even the first week of December. I’m in the no-decorating-this-early zone.

What are your thoughts? If you celebrate Christmas, when do you start to decorate? Do you jump in the day after Thanksgiving? Do you wait a bit? I’m curious. I know all of you have your traditions. Some of you might be decorating this very minute!

Happy Tuesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

 

Filed Under: china and pottery, Christmas 85 Comments

Back in Time: Cambridge Circa 1992

November 15, 2015 at 9:43 am by Claudia

I’ve often written about my years in Cambridge, MA, when I was on the faculty of Boston University. I lucked into a rent-controlled apartment on Harvard Street, just a few blocks from Harvard’s campus. The source of that luck was my colleague Judith (who just retired this year) who taught dance and movement in the theater program and who had an apartment in the building. I stayed there for a few days when I was looking for a place to live, but still living in Philadelphia. Her apartment was charming and I thought longingly of it the whole first year I was in Boston, living in the smallest studio in the world. Even then, Boston rents were high and I was earning very little money.

So when Judith called me one day during the summer after my first year of teaching and told me an apartment had opened up and, if I wanted it, I had to call the landlady right away, I dialed that phone so quickly your head would spin. It was exactly the same as Judith’s apartment, but on the third floor rather than the first. I spent several days painting it white and then I moved in. Much, much less rent and a tree-lined street and Cambridge, for heaven’s sake! I was so happy.

I thought I didn’t have any photos of that apartment, but in my parents’ things (they saved every photo ever taken) I found some that I had mailed to them. I thought it would be fun to share them with you. We might subtitle this post: Living on an extreme budget in a very expensive city. Or: I’m still doing the same thing, just in the country.

You might recognize some pieces. I tend to keep things around for a long time. (I’ve scanned these photos, so they aren’t the best quality. I’ve also had to resize them several times to get them looking somewhat decent.)

11-15 cambridge fiesta

In the kitchen: my Fiesta collection. Sigh. I sold it many years ago. What was I thinking? Recognize those chairs? I found them in a used furniture store in Cambridge and I’m still using them today.

I gathered that Fiesta bit by bit, on a very small budget. All vintage. No ‘newer’ Fiesta.

The kitchen was bright and sunny. It had very little cupboard space, but I added a wooden cabinet, and there was a great pantry. There were two big windows facing Harvard Street. I saved up for that table, it was made of black ash.

The Fiesta. It’s breaking my heart.

11-15 cambridge dresser

In the bedroom. Recognize the dresser? I found it on the street in Cambridge and my friend and I carried it several blocks and then up three flights of stairs. It’s been painted three times and is currently aqua and cream. The trunk was my grandmother’s and is in our office now. This must have been about 1991 or 1992 because that’s my brother’s hat on the radiator and he died in 1991.

11-15 cambridge bed

My bed. Or rather, my futon sofa/bed. In my studio apartment this was a sofa most of the day. Here, I didn’t need to close it up by day and open it up and remake the bed every night and that was a big treat, let me tell you. The quilt was made by my friend Jan. This was several years before I started quilting. Those red chairs were in an apartment I lived in in Philadelphia. I think they were Thonet. I painted them glossy red and brought them with me to Boston.

I’m pretty sure I left them in Cambridge when I moved to San Diego. The guy who took over the apartment was on the faculty at BU and I left him a dresser and those chairs. Now I would like them back, please.

11-15 living room

You can see why I loved this apartment. It was on a corner and there was a bay window on one side of the living room and double windows on the adjoining wall. It was filled with light. Plants thrived there and I had them hanging everywhere.

Recognize the chair? Yep. Still have it. The sofa belonged to my friend Judith. I eventually replaced it with the loveseat I still have to this day.

11-15 Cambridge loveseat

And there it is. It has a slipcover these days. I loved that table, which I found in some antique shop and carried all the way home. And I mean carried. Many, many city blocks. I didn’t have a car.

Diamond-paned windows, lots of hanging plants, wood floors….and Cambridge, with bookstores everywhere.

I miss Cambridge.

11-15 Cambridge fireplace

Dark and blurry, but there was a beautiful, non-working fireplace as well.

I mean…what single girl wouldn’t love this apartment?

11-15 Cambridge black chair

Black leather chair and ottoman. The table? Found in the prop room at BU, used in my office for a year or so, then moved to this apartment. I still  use it. It’s painted a creamy color now and Mabel (my Featherweight) lives there. The lamp was found when I was in my early twenties at the now-defunct J.L.Hudson’s annual warehouse sale in Detroit. It worked like a charm up until a year or so ago. That’s a LONG time.

I was clearly working on some needlepoint – where the heck did that piece go?

11-15 Cambridge mom

Me and my mom outside the apartment building. She came to visit me during my last summer there. It was horribly hot and humid while she was there, but we were determined to see everything and we did.

Same legs and bony knees. I’m definitely my mom’s daughter.

mycambridgeapt

There’s the building I lived in. I took this a few years back when I was working in Boston on a coaching job. Count up three floors on the corner and you’ll see my apartment.

I probably could have lived there happily for many more years, but I was terribly underpaid and I needed to move on. It was only because of that, because I LOVED my job at Boston University. Loved my students. That apartment went on to be lived in by the gentleman I spoke of earlier in the post and then by my dear friend Eve. Eventually, Eve had to move because the landlady died and the building was sold and turned into condos.

Sob.

So I moved to San Diego. And met Don.

So there’s that.

Happy Sunday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

Filed Under: Cambridge, china and pottery, decorating, life 44 Comments

Chautauqua Miniatures

June 21, 2015 at 9:13 am by Claudia

I had some free time yesterday morning – and it wasn’t raining – so I grabbed the opportunity to visit Chautauqua Miniatures. Last year, I drove there but it’s really just down the road (about a twenty minute walk,) so this time I walked it.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis

It’s in an old barn and, along with all things mini, there are also sections of the shop that sell gifts and women’s clothing. Isn’t this a neat building?

I renewed my acquaintance with one of the owners, who, it turns out, used to work at the Chautauqua Institution, as did her partner in this business. Several years ago, they left their jobs to start this shop. I sure am grateful!

I’ve taken a lot of photos, but there’s really no way I can fully and adequately show you what’s there. Just like last year, I made a promise not to photograph artisan pieces, so I can’t show you the details of all the room boxes and the incredible creations that were everywhere in the shop.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis 2

There are finished dollhouses everywhere and display cases full of minis. The display case to the left in this photo holds lots of artisan creations. I may have purchased a few things from that very case.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis 3

I love this finished dollhouse.

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And this one.

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There’s a whole pet section. I need to look more closely at that section next week – during their (gulp) sale.

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There’s a section devoted to fairy garden supplies.

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Gorgeous.

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Talk about a porch!

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Upstairs you’ll find lots of building supplies and dollhouse kits.

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Love this vintage dollhouse.

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Need a bed?

Needless to say, there is even more and I promise to take my camera along when I go there next weekend.

I had a little bit of money set aside (I hid it in my desk) to buy some minis – specifically for the rooftop garden. And I did buy some.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis planters

I bought two picket fence planters.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis basket

I bought a basket.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis hangingbasket

I bought a hanging basket of flowers. Isn’t it pretty?

WWW - dollhouse kitchen 3

And I bought another corner shelf kit – like the one you see in the kitchen. I purchased this one last year and I thought it would be nice to have a matching shelf in the opposite corner.

But, my friends, I must confess: just as in real life, I was diverted by pottery. Gobsmacked, really.

First, I saw this (the picture doesn’t do it justice):

6-21 Chautauqua Minis mccoy

This little white vase, which is just like a real-life McCoy vase. You see that I had to have it, don’t you?

And then…and then…I saw three pieces that blew me away. I was going to pick one. Just one. But I realized I was kidding myself, and I bought all three.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis roseville(s)

Miniature Roseville Pottery.

You have my permission to gasp.

I am so in love with these pieces that I can’t find the words to express my adoration.

Let’s look a bit more closely and give them the chance to take a bow.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis roseville 1

Oh, my goodness. I can’t stand it.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis roseville 2

I’m dying here.

6-21 Chautauqua Minis roseville3

Perfection.

They are made by Jeannetta Kendall Miniatures. I, of course, want even more. I have no idea where or how I am going to display them, but I’m thinking there needs to be a shelf devoted to them.

Caroline has made no secret of the fact that she likes and covets my pottery collection. Do you think she’ll appreciate this sacrifice I have made for her?

One can only hope.

The winner of a copy of Disclaimer  is Vera. Congratulations, Vera! I’ll drop you an email right away.

Happy Sunday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: Chautauqua, china and pottery, dollhouse, miniatures, On The Road 55 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

Thanks for stopping by.

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Scout & Riley. Riley left us in 2012. Scout left us in February 2016. Dearest babies. Dearest friends.

Winston - Our first dog. We miss you, sweetheart.

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