Mockingbird Hill Cottage

Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Saturday Thoughts: Decorating

September 7, 2019 at 11:20 am by Claudia

Another beautiful morning. Another great walk with my husband.

It’s beautiful here.

We’ve walked six days in a row and we’ll probably take tomorrow off as it’s Farmers Market day and Don has to get going early in the morning. I’ll probably mow the lilac side of the front lawn, so that will give me some exercise.

There’s much I could and should be doing around here, but all I want to do is sit on the porch and read. Maybe I’ll clean somewhere in the house this morning so I’ll feel as if I’ve earned my reading time – maybe the bathroom – my least favorite thing to do around here.

I’ve been thinking about decorating and the continual emphasis on defining one’s style. I’ve never understood this need to categorize something. Is it that it makes one feel secure in a style choice? Like, “country” or “mid-century modern” or “boho?” Does it bring comfort to conform to one style? Or maybe it’s simply that the home/apartment owner likes that style exclusively?

As you know, I like things eclectic and undefined. I think it’s much more interesting, because that lack of confinement within just one style allows the owner’s personality and passions to shine through. We’ve definitely become more eclectic in the past several years. Almost everything here is vintage/used; different time periods, different styles. We have an overall color scheme and I think I have a pretty good eye for pulling it all together. You can’t look around our house and say that it is anything  definitively. It’s just us.

You could say it’s funky, I guess. I’m fine with that.

And hopefully, cozy. I’m fine with that, too.

I’m always bemused by the whole ‘boho’ craze. I’m of an age, you know, and boho is basically the way everyone decorated their dorm rooms and apartments when I was in college. It was an inexpensive way to adorn a space. Been there, done that. And I have a confession to make: I was never a fan of macrame, except when necessary as a plant hanger. Macrame wall hangings? No. Houseplants, yes. But houseplants are eternal and are not defined by ‘bohemian’ or ‘boho’ even though we see a lot of them in those spaces.

But we know that decorating styles recycle and eventually become the hot ‘new’ look.

Except they aren’t.

It’s all personal taste, of course, and that particular look was never my taste even when I was living it in the seventies. Neither was mid-century modern, because my parents decorated in that style. And just as my mom eschewed her mother’s style, I’ve apparently done the same. The difference being that I admire the lines of certain mid-century furniture and like to see how homeowners use it in their living spaces. (And I like decorating my modern dollhouse in miniature versions of mid-century furniture, but that’s another story.)

Anyway, I’ve always tried to dodge any sort of label, whether it’s about me, my personality, my reading choices, my political beliefs, my spirituality, or my home. I think labels are limiting and we’re all much more complex and interesting than that.

Just a little of what I’ve been thinking about on a Saturday.

Happy Saturday.

Filed Under: decorating, flowers, garden 30 Comments

Friday Ramblings

September 6, 2019 at 10:32 am by Claudia

Friday, already! The school bus is back to being a daily occurrence, a particular sound on my radar. Students here have just about finished their first week in school. This morning on our walk (and boy did I not  want to go on that walk) it was cold! It’s all relative, of course, but in early September morning temps in the fifties seem quite, shall we say, brisk!

I’ve had too little sleep for two days in a row, so it took every ounce of effort for me to chug along on our walk, but I’m glad I did it. Back inside, I made our second cup of coffee and we sat on the sofa for our morning chat.

Black walnuts, which are abundant on our property.

I finished Shakespeare and Company Paris. It’s a fascinating history of that historic bookshop and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Then I pulled out Grief is the Thing with Feathers  by Max Porter.

Max Porter is a British writer and this novel is unlike anything I’ve ever read. The use of language, the upending of the usual style of a novel, the subject matter – all of it makes for a compelling read. It’s short – 117 pages – which is why I finished it this morning and most likely won’t post it under “Currently Reading” on my sidebar. So I’ve posted it here for you.

Porter is really quite brilliant. And the ending is beautiful. I have his newest, Lanny, on my TBR pile here in the den.

And now I am faced with choosing another book to read within 12 hours of having to choose the last one!

I cleaned the dollhouse yesterday – by dollhouse, I mean the big one in the den. That usually means straightening up things that have become messy, reattaching things that have fallen off the wall, and ‘dusting’ with a small paintbrush.

I don’t know if you’ve been following on Instagram but I posted a couple of ‘series’ about the similarity between Caroline and me in Stories. The second one  is still up there. The first is in my Highlights section under Miniatures. They were a lot of fun to do.

Incidentally, you’ll rarely, and I mean rarely, find me facing my iPhone camera and talking incessantly on Stories. I only did it once and it had to do with children being kept in cages at the Border. There seems to have been a memo sent out to young (and not-so-young) IGers that their audience wants to hear from them face-to-face as it were, sharing every single thing about their day with us. I know that a lot of people love these chats, but I just see them as extended selfies. Some people do it only occasionally. But others? On and on and on until I routinely skip over them. Or, depending on my mood, unfollow. (This is only my opinion, of course.)

I know it’s generational and also my own aversion to constantly posting pictures of myself. Who wants to see that all of the time? I sure as heck don’t. Most of my posts are centered on the garden or the house or something I’ve seen on the road, or books I’ve read. An occasional picture of Don or me.

But this is the selfie generation and it sort of drives me nuts. One of the most troublesome examples of selfie-mania was something we observed in the Louvre. All these young people waited in line to see the Mona Lisa and when they finally got up to the front, what did they do? Took a picture of themselves with the Mona Lisa behind them. They didn’t stop and look at the painting. They immediately took the selfie and then moved on.

“Let’s see, a picture of the Mona Lisa itself because, how cool, I got to see the exquisite Mona Lisa in person, or a picture of ME in primary focus with the Mona Lisa a bit blurry in the background?” It takes a lot of chutzpah to opt for the latter.

Oh well. It is what it is. My parents raised me not to talk about religion (it’s private), politics (I obviously failed that one), or to make every conversation about yourself. These things were verboten in our household. Humility was Shirley’s mantra. That, and saying please, thank you, and being respectful to your elders.

Not a bad way to be raised.

Happy Friday.

Filed Under: books, dollhouse, miniatures 30 Comments

Walking Around, Camera in Hand

September 5, 2019 at 10:31 am by Claudia

The Secret Garden in September: rather wild and overgrown, even with freshly mown grass. It was a strange day yesterday, some rain in the early afternoon, then it suddenly turned unbelievably humid. Walking outside was like being hit smack in the face with a mass of wet air. There was a severe thunderstorm watch, but nothing came of it here. It’s much cooler this morning, thank goodness.

We took our walk under blue, blue skies and wispy clouds. Perfect September weather.

And we caught a quick glimpse of Henry this morning before he scurried off, frightened by some noise. We’re always happy to see him.

Yesterday afternoon, I went outside with my big girl camera and took some pictures. I find the gardens beautiful in their slow decay. I also love discovering insects on flowers and I saw a lot of them yesterday. Like this guy.

I could have spent a big chunk of time out there with my camera, but the humidity and some dark, threatening clouds eventually moved me back inside the house.

I took this picture of the front of the house so you could see how big the limelight hydrangeas are this year. It’s all due to our very wet spring. Some plants didn’t like the excess wet, but the hydrangeas thrived on it.

I’m just about to finish Shakespeare and Company Paris  and then I’ll have to decide what to start next. I have a couple of tall stacks of books on the den floor; my To Be Read stacks. (That’s not even including the TBR stacks on the bookshelves.) Nonfiction or fiction? I have no idea at the moment. And no, not Louise Penny. I’m saving that pleasure for later, as I always do.

What are you reading?

Happy Thursday.

Filed Under: books, flowers, garden, insects 40 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.

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