Holiday Gifts For Kids


This is London by Miroslav Sasek, $17.95, Conran Usa

This is New York by Miroslav Sasek, $17.95, Conran Usa

This is Paris by Miroslav Sasek, $17.95, Conran Usa

Pirate Rocker Ship, $240.00, Conran Usa
www.Conranusa.Com

Deluxe Blue model T Pedal Car, $239.00, Classic Pedal Cars
www.Classic-Pedal-Cars.Com

ABC Blocks, $39.00, Brook Farm General Store

Holiday Gifts For the Home

Porcelain Cow Milk Jug, 28.50 Pounds, Dee Puddy

porcelain Bowl “From the Sea,” 9.50 Pounds Each, Dee Puddy

Set of 3 Porcelain Tea Labels, 12.50 Pounds, Dee Puddy

Recycles Glass Vase, $48.00, Brook Farm General Store

Woolen Blanket, $185.00, Brook Farm General Store

All Items From:

Dee Puddy
Salisbury Road
West Willow, Romsey, Hampshire
SO51 6BW

Brook Farm General Store
75 South 6th Street
Brooklyn, New York
1 1 2 1 1


Must See Christmas Film: "Its Complicated"

Every couple years my all time favorite, Nancy Meyers writes and directs another brilliant and awe inspiring film. Each movie she has directed is on my list of favorites. Even though most of her leading characters are falling apart at the seams, she still knows how to perfect their whole world, down to their dream like home and wifely ambiance. Every film I watch, I always find my self saying…”I wish I lived in that beautiful home, with the cozy decor and adoring family to match.” It would be a thrill to meet Nancy Meyers and pick her brain on every subject under the sun (wishful thinking). If your fans of “Somethings Gotta Give,” “The Parent Trap,” “Father of the Bride 1 and 2,” “The Holiday,” and “What Women Want.”…. Then “It’s Complicated is just the movie for you.













In Theaters Christmas Day

Dream House: "It’s Complicated" Interior Set Design

Take a serene Santa Barbara setting with to-die-for interiors, add a triangle mixing love, divorce, and renovation, and you have all the elements of an unusual romantic comedy.

In theaters on Christmas Day, the sophisticated yet relaxed California-style interiors in Universal’s upcoming film It’s Complicated will vie for attention with a star-studded cast–Meryl Streep, Steve Martin (both seen here), and Alec Baldwin. The comedy weaves the tale of a divorced mother of three and bakery owner (Streep, as Jane) involved romantically with both her ex-husband (Baldwin) and the architect (Martin) helping in her kitchen renovation.

Written and directed by Nancy Meyers (who has given us such design-rich films as Something’s Gotta Give and The Holiday), It’s Complicated is reminiscent of the classic Hepburn-Tracy comedies of the ’50s (think Desk Set). In true Meyers fashion, it features a strong female lead, snappy dialogue, a memorable sound track, and trend-setting interiors.

Besides being a master with pen and camera lens, Meyers is a dedicated design devotee as well. From the Hamptons beach house of Erica Barry (Diane Keaton) in Something’s Gotta Give to the Wallace Neff bungalow in The Holiday, with Amanda Wood (Cameron Diaz), Meyers’s imprint is seen in every club chair, paint color, and light fixture. Apparently it’s in the genes–Meyers’s mother was a designer who worked well into her 80s.

As in all her movies, the house as character plays a major role in the latest Meyers film. After a decade as a divorcée and now facing an impending empty nest, Streep’s Jane decides to redecorate her 1920s Spanish-style ranch.
“Since more than half of the movie takes place in the house, we really get to know the place,” says Meyers. “What the characters wear and how they live and decorate really say something about them.”

The film reunites (for the fourth time) the director with production designer Jon Hutman. “My job is to try to understand and interpret Nancy’s vision,” says Hutman. “What I do, with strong and special guidance from Nancy, is make the sets real, striking something in people.”

Working with set decorator Beth Rubino (who decorated the interiors of the much-admired beach house of Something’s Gotta Give), Hutman designed the sets with a key component in mind–storytelling. “I like the sets to look the way they feel to the character,” he says.

The overall design direction came directly from Meyers, who wanted a “Belgian look that is reflected in the house’s furnishings and a quiet palette with natural linen.”

Meyers also took her design cues from the color of the rooftops of the idyllic coastal town of Santa Barbara. “What I like about Santa Barbara is the rich color that saturates your vision at every turn,” she says. From cashmere throws and chair upholstery to a bowl of fruit on the dining table, the color orange (think of the orange/brown color of an Hermès box) is used as an accent throughout the film. The decor had to accent Streep’s fair complexion as well, so Meyers used “creams and beiges that would capture the beauty of her skin.”

Rubino mixed high-end furnishings–Calvin Fabrics and Dessin Fournir and George Smith furniture–with antiques from 1st Dibs and items from West Elm. “My goal was to capture the essence of Meryl’s character as someone who dances to the beat of her own drum, ” she explains.

The open kitchen that receives a makeover in the movie plays a pivotal role. “The kitchen has individual style,” notes Hutman. “It’s makeshift and funky.”
Hutman and Rubino studied Tuscan, California, and French kitchens to arrive at the finished product–a functional room that reflected Jane’s tastes as well as her budget.

Ever the method actress, Streep inhabits both character and space when making a movie. The Academy Award-winning actress advised Meyers to reduce the size of the kitchen and add water damage to the ceiling for a touch of realism. “Meryl got involved very early in the process,” says Hutman. “She had special ideas on who the character was, how she lived, etc.”

The sets also included a bakery that was influenced by everything from London’s Daylesford Organic to New York’s City Bakery and Dean & Deluca, among others.

Even the nuances of bread display became a factor–the design team worked closely with Martha Stewart alum, Julie & Julia food stylist, and cookbook author Susan Spungen on the details.

Unfortunately, Meyers’ next production will never be seen on film. She is building her own house with the help of her long-time interior designer and film collaborator James Radin (whose California design aesthetic can be seen on Meyers’s past three films). A true design aficionada (she admits to following the design blogs), Meyers looked at hundreds of images for the film’s interiors, and plans to purchase some of the set decor for her own house.
she’s an independent career woman and mother who is building a house, she appears to have much in common with her main character. (One exception–she is not involved with her architect!)

This designing director clearly writes what she knows.
– Article and Photo From Traditional Home





Art by: Mitchell Johnson
www.mitchelljohnson.com.


Art by: Mitchell Johnson
www.mitchelljohnson.com.

Art by: Mitchell Johnson
www.mitchelljohnson.com.



Holiday Decor: Kissing Ball

Just in time for those of you who like to sneak stolen kisses under the Mistloe is William Sonoma’s Copper Ribbon Kissing Ball. Made up of Magnolia Leaves, Noble fir and of course Mistloe! Perfect to hang in any door way over the Holiday Season. William Sonoma $49.50