Yes, I've been bad, reeaaally bad, at posting in recent months. Excuses excuses, life gets in the way, busy busy busy, blah blah blah. Anyway, I'm back and will do better. So here's a little something for everyone that loves daffodils (who doesn't?). Currently sitting in a little retro jug on my table, I must say the smell is quite intoxicating. Instant smile and instant antidote to this leaden, solid January weather.
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Friday, 27 January 2012
Friday, 7 October 2011
Chamber of delights (part one)
A little taster of the wedding flowers I put together for the wonderful Emma Walker of craftscotland and her now husband Mick Pritchard. The mantra we all repeated was 'celebratory and joyful' and Emma's love of colour ran through the bouquets and the reception (more of that to follow). Thank you Emma for letting me be part of your day and trusting my creative vision.
Fragrant roses from an English country garden
Polka dots and striped haberdashery loveliness
A little buttonhole magic (and a white rose for a Yorkshire born groom)
A little something vintage and blue for the bride
A love poem to start the day
Wednesday, 5 October 2011
Mary, Mary, How does your garden grow?
Mary Katrantzou Spring Summer 2012
I do like a flower installation and Mary Katrantzou really wowed me with her carnation catwalk at London fashion week recently. Her collection was "inspired by nature, but viewed through a hyper-real lense". This proves that the humble carnation has serious flower power when a creative eye has a hand in it. Image courtesy of The Guardian
Saturday, 13 August 2011
I know that rose, like I know my name
Long way going to
Get my medecine
Sky's the autumn grey of a lonely wren
Piano from a window played
Gone tomorrow, gone yesterday
I found it in the street
At first I did not see
Lying at my feet
A trampled rose
Passing the hat in the church
It never stops going around
You never pay just once
To get the job done
What I done to me,
I done to you
What happened to the trampled rose?
In the muddy street
With the fireworks and leaves
A blind man with a cup I asked
Would he sing 'Kisses Sweeter Than Wine'
I know that rose,
Like I know my name
The one I gave my love,
It was the same
Now I find it in the street,
A trampled rose
I found it in the street
At first I did not see
Lying at my feet
A trampled rose
Passing the hat in the church
It never stops going around
You never pay just once
To get the job done
What I done to me,
I done to you
What happened to the trampled rose?
In the muddy street
With the fireworks and leaves
A blind man with a cup I asked
Would he sing 'Kisses Sweeter Than Wine'
I know that rose,
Like I know my name
The one I gave my love,
It was the same
Now I find it in the street,
A trampled rose
-Tom Waits/Kathleen Brennan
Listen to Alison Krauss and Robert Plant's beautiful version of this song here
Tuesday, 2 August 2011
A palette of pewter, sage, ash and milk
A gentle, textural combination showcasing the beauty of the dahlia. Victorians loved the flamboyance and variety of this flower and a prize of one thousand pounds was offered in 1826 for the first blue dahlia but no one has produced one (yet).
Monday, 1 August 2011
Yedda Morrison
This work takes as its starting point the human desire for permanence, a desire made acute by the inevitability of our passing. If photography itself is a manifestation of this desire, our attempt to arrest or “still life,” plastic plants and flowers are a low-rent corollary. Suspended mid bloom and scattered throughout graveyards and empty parlors, they offer the promise of perennial youth, an eternal flowering, life ever after. Fake flowers both immortalize and render static the natural world. As such, they articulate a crisis between beauty and horror, desire and loss, artificiality and “the natural.”In our fall from the “pre” or “no” time of Eden, we have landed squarely in the artificial garden, the stilled remains of paradise. These sights of frozen or no time and the scale, duration and technology that make them possible, work to articulate a world where boundaries between the real and the artificial are increasingly blurred. If, in our contemporary moment, we are experiencing a gradual substitution of the machine for the body/mind, the image for the thing, and the simulation of the environment for the environment itself, then perhaps we are realizing Robert Smithson’s “frozen actuality,” the hallucinatory disjunction where “nothing is known but the impenetrable surfaces,” where “the artificial ingenuity of time allows no return to nature.”Bioposys are reconstituted artificial flowers and plants, mutant strains, improbable and permanent hybrids. The larger pieces attempt to envision a constellation of flower bombs, offering glimpses into possible futures of plastic and mishap. In others, the crude undersides begin to show through, revealing the cheap materials and human labor that ultimately destroy any illusions of “real.” And they offer more questions than answers; what happens when the “artificial” becomes a stand it for the “real?” When our pursuit of perfection, symmetry, longevity leads to ecological disaster? What is our relationship to “nature” as it mutates, rebels or ceases to exist? And what if we find the mutations themselves desirable? What constitutes beauty in an age of environmental crisis? Is simulation the new preservation? If a “real” plant is a statement from another time, are we already after nature?-Yedda Morrison, August 2007
Yedda Morrison is a visual artist and writer from San Francisco. These scanned images of artificial flowers from her Bioposy series have an ethereal beauty and a dark and tangible softness. They entice me to the shadows beyond, there's a mystery there waiting to be discovered. They are reminiscent of 17th century Dutch still life paintings but with a luminescence that makes them entirely modern and other-worldly. You can see more of Yedda's work on her website
Sunday, 31 July 2011
A Summer wedding (part two)
More lovely shots of the table flowers, replete with summery blooms and topped off with little retro world flags on knitting needles (made by the bride's fair hands yet again).
Saturday, 30 July 2011
A Summer wedding (part one)
The brief: a high Summer wedding celebrating all things seasonal, colourful, joyful and natural. The bride: ridiculously creative, she made everything from the hand printed invitations to the beautiful ceramic bowls for the table flowers. What you can't appreciate here are the wonderful finishes and glazes on the inside of the bowls (more of that to follow).
Thursday, 28 July 2011
J'adore Pivoines
Am I just a hopeless romantic or has this peony bloom styled itself into a frilly love heart? Okay, don't answer that ( but I think it's rather beautiful).
Wednesday, 27 July 2011
Feast the eyes (and soul)
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| Lys Cheri, 2008 |
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| Amaryllis Rubis, 2008 |
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| Pivoine Grand Jour, 2009 |
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| Tulipes, Baiser Rose et Baiser Rouge, 2009 |
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| Chrysantheme Flamboyant, 2008 |
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| Lys d'Hiver, 2008 Sandrine Bihorel is a French sculptor who turned her hand to painting to create these large decorative panels. The fusion of clay and paint gives these pieces a textural surface that has been described as old embossed leather and the patterns peeking out from behind the blooms are inspired by her collections of fabrics. For me they are reminiscent of many things: the glossy cracked ceramics of my childhood, travels to exotic souks and heady Moorish nights, the smell of mysterious Victorian volumes depicting strange and wonderful floral specimens. I'm never quite sure whether I prefer the beautiful printed textile motifs or the curling, fluid lines of the flowers but in truth I can't imagine one existing without the other by her hand. You can see more of her work here |
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