INTERIORS

Every child needs…

Posted by Jenny

A kitchen with a blackboard wall

Thinking of moving into a bigger house??? Check this out…

Posted by Jenny

Well this is the sight for you, unlike your normal estate agent you don’t view houses by no. of bedrooms instead you view by period/style.So if you are like me and have a BIG fetich for 1950/60/70′s and Brutalist architecture you are going to love this site WOWHAUS

WISHLIST - KEITH HARING

Posted by Jenny

I really regret not buying these when i first saw them months ago ;(
They are the best tea coasters ever!!!

Lesson of the day - If you see something you like, just buy it!!!!

A XMAS LIST WANT WANT WANT - PLSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS

Posted by Jenny

Who said home ware had to be boring???

Barbara Kruger, the famous conceptual artist who is most known for her photographs overlaid with bold text captions, designed this beach towel for Works on Whatever – a non-profit organization that raises money by introducing art to new people in the form of every day items. For her beach towel, Kruger did not steer too far from her usual designs, in particular using her signature Helvetica Ultra Condensed font, which lends itself to a bright, intriguing and declarative towel design that will be a head turner for whoever decides to fold it out next time they hit the beach.

A LONDON TREASURE YOU REALLY HAVE TO SEE!

Posted by Jenny

If you haven’t been to The Wallace Collection, then you are defiantly missing one of London’s true treasures! But not too worry, now is your chance to check it out!

It puts Versaces OTT chintz to shame! Even if OTT kitsch is not your thing, there is something here for everyone! Whether you are interested in product/interior/graphic/fashion design or just art - The Wallace Collection is just something you have to see! And as soon as you do you will not believe you have never visited before, as it is a stones throw away from Oxfords Streets, Selfrdiges.

They have a cafe there too, so before we embark on a journey through the wonderful world of decadence we can meet for a coffee.

See you at the cafe at 1pm, 23rd November, 2011. Oh and its free to get in woooohooooooooooooooooooooooooo! Oh and you can take pictures! What more could you ask for!

If you could drop me a mail, and let me know if you want to come that would be great! [email protected]

Click here for The Wallace Collection site

Feel like nesting??? Get 50% off Laura Ashley

Posted by Jenny

Here is your chance to get a few bargains, click here and check the site for 50% OFF selected items

These are a few things that took our fancy in the sale.

Do you need a change of scenery? But dont have the $$$$$

Posted by Jenny

If you fancy getting away but don’t have the cash to jet off, here is your opportunity to get the hell out here and explore the world with your lil one! Have a read of the story below from one of our fave sites to browse GUARDIAN HOME EXCHANGE

 

It is such a great concept which is based on trust, is this something you would feel comfortable doing?? If so, we cant think of a better way to see the world than through a locals home and lifestyle. After all being a proper tourist aint that much fun!!

My house is yours

Exchanging the keys to your own home can be a daunting prospect. But as two swappers explain, it’s also a great way to experience a city.

 

Dorothy Savage

Lives in a ninth-floor, two-bed apartment in upper Manhattan, New York. Swapped to a smaller 11th-floor apartment in the 13th arrondissement, Paris

The image that stays with me, after another hard day’s nosing around central Paris with my friends, is of getting back “home” and sitting out on the balcony with some French bread and delicious white wine, staring out over the city to Montmartre and the (slightly less appealing) Pompidou Centre. There’s just no comparison to staying in an impersonal hotel - in atmosphere or cost.

This was my first house swap. Friends had kept telling me that with a two-bed flat in Manhattan, I’d be inundated with offers. I liked the look of the Geenee.com website and registered, and once I’d got some pictures done, it’s true, the offers rolled in, from Berlin, Las Vegas, Rome and even Australia.

Not all the proposals suit me, of course - some are just too short-notice, and I’d never want to be away from my family at Thanksgiving - but Danielle’s offer looked just fine. She’s a professor and, although her flat was a little smaller than mine and her balcony had a slightly more urban view, the prospect of staying a fortnight in the heart of Paris for nothing was mindblowing.

For two glorious August weeks we’d eat breakfast and a light supper every day at the apartment, making our holiday extremely affordable despite all the sightseeing! What made it extra special was the fact that Danielle had stayed to welcome us before heading to New York with her daughter. That made us feel right at home, especially as she introduced me to her friend across the hall who helped us when there was a little problem with the plumbing. Danielle was already an experienced house-swapper, so she knew the best things to do beforehand to make sure the swap went smoothly. The website’s written agreement is helpful too, and, of course, because you are living in each other’s apartments at the same time, you both have a strong incentive to keep the other place clean.

I’m recently retired and always knew I’d want to travel more - but house swapping has changed the way I think about vacationing completely. Right now I’m busy so am in a “receiving” frame of mind; I’m not suggesting swaps and am just leaving it up to chance. It’s so exciting to get an offer of a swap every so often on my email - it could be from anywhere in the world. I’m sure I’ll fix another swap up soon.

In fact, the place I really want to go is a beautiful little town in northern Arizona called Sedona, right in Red Rock country. Now if I could just locate someone up there …

Daniele Abecassis

Swapped her Paris flat with Dorothy’s New York apartment

This was my second time in Manhattan with my daughter. We stayed on 125th Street in Harlem, which is a real melting-pot. We lived in a neighbourhood with black people and with Mexicans. It was good to meet people on the street and talk for five minutes and live the way New York people live.

I have a lot of very happy memories of the city, of visiting Staten Island on the ferry, walking over Brooklyn Bridge or going to Times Square in the evenings. The city had a good vibration.

My first house swap was seven years ago and I have swapped with people all over Europe, in Ireland, France, Austria and Spain. I have had six or seven visits to my flat, which is in the centre of Paris. It’s not big, only 50 square metres, but it is very, very central. By Metro, you can get anywhere - the Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame - in five to 20 minutes.

When I prepare my flat for a house swap, everything must be perfect. I leave everything out, my computer, my telephone. I want people to feel as if they are in their own home so they have internet access and use of the telephone. I leave shampoo in the bathroom and drinks in the fridge so people feel good about being there.

But not everyone can do it. It takes time and energy. There’s the cleaning but also the precautions. It can take between five and six months for me to organise a house swap. I have a method now. When I contact a person, I want to get to know them, because they are going to be living in my home. I want to be sure the person lives where they say they live so I ask for a copy of their passport and proof of their address. So many people are naive and don’t take precautions, but I have a contract that I send out, which has to be signed. If it doesn’t come back, you know the people aren’t serious.

I don’t like to stay in hotels any more. If I rent a hotel room, I am a tourist. I prefer to exchange flats, because that way, not only can you travel two or three times a year, but you can live in exactly the same way as a person from a different country. In Manhattan, I had the same habitat. I was an American for a month and that’s the way I like to travel.

The best accommodation swap sites

Geenee.com is a slick addition to the house swapping roster - and right now it’s free to sign up, too. Houses mainly in North America, UK, France and Australia.

Homebase-hols.com Active and well-organised site started in 1985. A one-year listing costs £29, but that gets you a highly detailed list of free swap offers. A founder member of the First Home Exchange Alliance.

U-exchange.com is free if you want to swap homes for a holiday. Listings also include other barter offers (jeep, anyone?) which can get a bit confusing.

Sabbaticalhomes.com is for the academic community only. It’s free to post a “home wanted” ad.

Mindmyhouse.com offers to find free accommodation in exchange for house/pet sitting duties, and membership is currently free.

MAKE BEDtime FUNtime

Posted by Jenny

I really don’t need to give these beauties a intro, they speak for themselves. WE LOVE THEM!!!!
For more info check HERE

SCORCHING HOT MONDAY MM MEETING, ANYONE???

Posted by Jenny

On Monday we heading to Brockwell park to check out the award winning Lido Cafe (Time Out Eating and Drinking Awards 2010), we have booked a table for 1.30pm and then we are planning on a stroll around the park to burn all those delicious calories and take in as much serotonin as possible as it is suppose to be pretty miserable on Tuesday.

If you want to come along, drop me a mail [email protected]

Look forward to seeing you ladies!!
x

Check out what Time Out says HERE


What to do when your baby is having a afternoon out with Grandad???

Posted by Jenny

Ok so you have a afternoon to fill, a whole 6 hours with no baby. There are a million things you could do;
Get a manicure, go shopping, sort your wardrobe out or maybe just slob out and watch a film. These are all things I wanted to do today.

But as I seem to spend so much time at home since becoming a mum I decided to deal with something that’s really been bothering me! That was to GIVE MY BEDROOM A BIT OF LOVE!

It really wasn’t as hard or tiring as I had built it up to be. I used just one paint brush and one dust sheet. No messing about with masking tape etc, I just took my time and extra care on the corners (I was imaging I was in some kind of Buddhist temple being tested on my mindfulness and attention to detail. I’m nuts I know. But it worked!)

I’m really happy with how it looks, I just need to do a full on, massive collage on the other wall for the room to be complete. But that can wait for another day.

So ladies if your home is doing ya head in and it needs a lil TLC. All it takes is a paint brush, pot of paint and a dust sheet to turn your palace into your special lil love nest. And as it’s winter around the corner, it’s a good idea to get your home as cosy as possible for all those dark cold nights ahead.

As Nike says, JUST DO IT!

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