Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas!

It’s been a tradition here that we make John’s famous brandywine.  It’s a wonderful addition to every gathering we’ve ever had.  Usually it takes a month to make, but seriously, you could make it now and it’ll be quite wonderful for Christmas Eve.  Then, as time goes on, it’ll be great for New Years and every occasion thereafter.  Give it a try.  Merry Christmas!

Here’s the recipe. Yes, I did the art.

Sometimes I wonder why

Sometimes I wonder why

I’m up a bit late for me.  But a song came into my head (“What’ll I Do?”  Irving Berlin  1924), and it made me wonder.  What would people do if we lost the places we remember and didn’t try to keep.  I know preservation has been a pretty big thing since the 70’s, but does anybody really try to do something?  Sure they will if it’s connected to someone famous.  But what about the commonplace places?  The places we take for granted, you don’t notice until they’re gone.  They had a place and purpose.  Folks walked through, ate, greeted, said good-by, created new lives and lost others.  But to others they’re just crap.  Should be torn down, discarded, tossed off like an old tissue.  Have you ever thought about those who have been there?  Celebrated a birthday, asked her to marry you, was told he was killed in the war or sent him off to the war to fight?  Brought him home when he came back?  And those that go off in search of the future.  It’s all high hopes and it usually is.  But in that place we were there to welcome them back when they needed it.  And always pie as a prize or consolation.  Here, I offer a few of those places.  With all the dirt and grime, wear and tear that they’ve lived through.  I got the best compliment about the diner.  “I like it! It smells bad.”  That’s because it’s had a life.  Imagined, yes, but a life.  Images should say that.  You don’t have to have action, you just have to look closely.

There’s always a first time

There’s always a first time

I was asked to design custom wallpaper.  Now, I’ve designed patterns for fabric many times before and found this to be just the same.  It’s just an all-over, seamlessly repeating pattern.  This time the subject was the New York City subway system.  The map was suggested, but if you’ve ever looked at with an eye to make it repeat endlessly it would be maddening and not something one could stand looking at for long, much less live or work with.  Being a major fan of the system, I was beyond thrilled to take this on.  I decided to use the signage and train routing information.  This gives you lots of color and something managable to work with.  I designed it in two colorways.  Any of you New Yorkers can check me on the listings.  With the exception of dropping a few stops due to redundency, the listings are correct.  And the route names are correct.  In design, you have to do your research.  If you don’t you’ll just make yourself and your client look bad.

What Color Should I Paint my Room?

Recently, I was asked the ongoing question, “What color should I paint my room?” Normally, this shouldn’t be a bad question. But, I’ve discovered, many people mave a real problem picking interior colors. They end up with the proviberial “Beige”. Good in some cases, but come on show some spunk. What colors do you REALLY like? Some of this comes from outside influences and some from ethic upbringing. Here in Florida beige is king. If you’re really daring, maybe two tones of beige. With white trim, of course. This may be fine for builders and those afraid of color, but may folks seem to think that they have to follow that rule. Don’t get me wrong, beige is fine for some things, but many people would like to push out of that and try new colors. Great! They go the the paint store and find a color they like. Buy a gallon or two of said color. Paint a wall and hate the color. First problem: NEVER pick the color at the store! Pick several shades and tints around the color you like and take the samples home. Paint stores probably hate me but, I’ll walk out with dozens of chips similar to the color I think I want. I then take them home and decide from there. Big thing is that color changes according to the room light. It might have been great in the store, but once home it might not be what you thought. I suggest, take the chips into the room to be painted. Go through all of them and find the ones that still appeal to you. I like to fold the chip to color I like and tape it to the wall. This way tou see it vertically. Colors change depending on whether you look at them vertically (on the wall) or horizontally (looking at them on the counter). Do this with ALL the colors you still seem to like. Walk away for a while (15 minutes is good). Go back and see what you still like. Pull down the ones that don’t quite work anymore. Something I was told MANY years ago was that whatever color you like for a wall, take and grey them a bit. Remember, your looking at a tiny spot of the color. Once you paint the wall that really nice red, you’ll end up feeling like your in a stop sign. Really stong colors are best for accents. And so if you dim them down (usually by lightening them and maybe not using them for a whole room) you’ll find that they look much better. For the wall, really dim them. Colors on walls get stronger once multiplied over a larger surface. My friend wanted her bathroom to be orange. Not my most favorite color, but she really likes orange. Instead of saying go with a lighter color like peach, I suggested a more terracotta type of color. This after she had already painted the room primary orange. We came up with a slightly darker, washed out terracotta that she thought she was going to hate from the small sample. Once on the wall, it multiplied to a rich, warm orangeish tone that she really liked afterall.
Something else.  Don’t be afraid to use a darkish color in a small room. I depends on the lighting. A bathroom with bright light and white walls is too bright. Try a deeper color, I’ve done beige (but a more coffee color), red (but washed down to a rich terracotta/pink) and a denim blue. None of which had white trim.
If your going with color, use color on the trim. Example, the beige bathroom has slightly lighter beige trim (the cabinets were off-white). Safe, yes. The red bath has natural oak trim and cream/terracotta/pale moss green accents. With the remaining trim a warm grey and an off-white tile floor. The denim bath is more daring when first thought about. It has denim blue walls, off-white tile and floor, but the ceiling is metallic silver as is the trim. Silver can be used as a neutral because it picks up the tone of the colors around it. The door was painted a very deep, rich royal purpleish blue. Very strong, but it’s just the door.
The ethnic choice of colors is a problem for many. Don’t use the main, primary, color. Ethnic yellow (French’s mustard yellow) or other strong yellows are popular, but painfull to live with. Dim or wash it out. The color most likely will be very overwhelming if you don’t back off from it a bit. Not to say, don’t use those colors. They make you happy. Just back off a bit on the strength and use them as accent walls or use an accent wall to relieve the strength from the primary color. Example: a soft blue room, jazzed up with a rich terracotta accent wall.
Don’t just figure white is the only color for trim. There are many others choices. In fact, if you do go with a deep color for the walls, don’t use white trim. It stands out too much and with give you a caged in feeling.
That’s all I have to say at the moment. Ask me your questions. I’m more than happy to help.