{ Archive for July, 2009 }

organic bedding from restoration hardware

restorationsheets organic bedding from restoration hardware

I have a thing for crisp, clean white bed linens and Restoration Hardware’s high-quality bedding is among my favourites.

This organic Italian 200-thread-count percale linen has a lovely added touch — it’s embellished with satin stitching in Chocolate, Flax, White, Celery, Sky or Silver Sage (clockwise from bottom left). Beautiful!

Available at: Restoration Hardware stores or online at www.restorationhardware.com

Price: from $89 for a standard sham, $269 for a full/queen duvet


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Do you have a pretty product you’d like to recommend for this blog? Email me at naturalchic@styleathome.com!

htc dream

htc google android htc dreamThose who know me well know about my iPhone obsession. I’ve blogged about it, dreamed about it, wrote about it in the magazine. Basically, we’re in love.

But … I think I’ve cheated on my dear iPhone.

I recently played around with the HTC Dream, and is it ever dreamy. Available in white or black (obviously the white is très chic), this phone comes with a touch screen and a fold-out QWERTY keyboard, for people like my boyfriend whose fingertips just mash the tiny touch keypad of the iPhone. And this dual punchpad phone doesn’t just slide up — the top screen glides to the side in a semi-circle motion. Very sexy.

“But what about my super cool App Store?’ my iPhone contested. Well, the HTC Dream is on your tail. With the Android Market, users can add thousands of apps or songs and also it features a barcode scanner so you can scan items in stores and get all the product details.

Even though it’s been out for several months now, I can’t help but daydream of this Dream … even when I’m spending time with my iPhone.

Contact your wireless provider for pricing details; htc.com

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western digital my passport elite

wdfmypassport elite mlz western digital my passport elite

‘Cause we are living in a digital world, and I am a dig-i-tal girl…

Although I’m a sucker for pretty paper and journals, I much prefer the ease and convenience of digital organizing. I use my iPhone’s iCal for keeping track of appointments and meetings, and I prefer to type up charts and such on a computer rather than write it out the old school way.

Which is why I love Western Digital and their supersleek external hard drives. I have a white My Passport Essential that’s featured in Style at Home‘s Tech Style column in the September 2009 issue, but I’ve since spotted the bronze My Passport Elite and just finished wiping the drool off my desk. I mean, how gorge is this?

Besides the fact that it’s a fabulous colour and has a sexy design, this hard drive packs a lot of punch. This 500 GB beauty holds a heck of a lot of data (100,000 digital photos or 190 hours of video) and is small enough to slide into your purse. Really, what’s not to love?

$150 US (also available in other colours and data storage sizes), Western Digital.

For more digital organizing gadgets, check out the Tech Style column in the September 2009 issue of Style at Home (on newsstands August 3rd).

harry slatkin pineapple candle

pinkcandle harry slatkin pineapple candleThe pineapple — already recognized as the universal symbol of welcome — just got even more welcoming.

Celebrity scent-master Harry Slatkin has just added this frothy pink concoction to his ever-growing collection of fragranced candles at Bath & Body Works, and I think it’s absolutely adorable. Even once the Island Nectar scent has burned away, you can totally re-use the ceramic pot as a so-sweet stash for pens and pencils.

 

Slatkin & Co. Island Nectar Figural Candle 

Price: $19.50, 5.5oz ($14.50, 3.5oz.)

Available at: Bath & Body Works


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style at home day on cityline

Set your VCR/Tivo or prepare to call in sick… 

Join Kimberley Seldon, Style At Home’s new editor-in-chief Jane Francisco and yours truly on CityLine, airing at 9AM (EST) on Tuesday, July 28!

In this ep, Kimberley talks railings and outdoor furniture, while Jane adds a Price Is Right-style twist to Style At Home’s ever-popular High/Low column. I’m on-hand to share some tips and tricks on easy, breezy summer table settings, and some must-have Scandinavian lines that are heating up the tabletop.

Be there! icon smile style at home day on cityline

bamboo salad bowl beauties

cbbamboobowls bamboo salad bowl beauties

Crate & Barrel does houseware basics beautifully, and these bamboo salad bowls are no exception.

Made of pressed natural bamboo grown without fertilizer or pesticides, they’re handmade, foodsafe and waterproof!

Available at: www.crateandbarrel.com

Price: $32.95 US (serving), $9.95 US (individual)


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meet debbie travis!

dt1 meet debbie travis!

Debbie Travis, the doyenne of DIY done right, is making a rare appearance in Toronto!

On Wednesday, August 5, Canadian Tire is hosting “What Women Want” — a day of music, free product samples, large prizes and interactive booths focusing on home decor, organization, kitchen, fitness and lawn and garden. 

Things get rolling at 11AM at Yonge & Dundas Square, with Debbie speaking at 12:30PM, and signing autographs afterwards.

Other special guests throughout the day include artist Walter Campbell, BBQ master Ted Reader, professional organizer Clare Kumar and yoga instructor Cynthia Rose.

What can you expect to see in Debbie’s Canadian Tire product preview? Here’s a sneak peek…

dtlamps meet debbie travis!
dtbaskets meet debbie travis!

dtbathroom meet debbie travis!

dtdinnerware meet debbie travis!

dtkitchentext meet debbie travis!

dtutopia meet debbie travis!

And of course…

dtpaints meet debbie travis!

Sounds like a great day out with you mom, sis and girlfriends — and a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to meet this decorating legend face to face!

Oh yeah — did I forget to mention it’s FREE?!?! Craziness!

 

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tracy kendall’s wonderful wallcoverings

tklacescroll tracy kendalls wonderful wallcoveringsTracy Kendall’s “Lace Scroll” – Lace from a Parisian flea market that Tracy exposed directly to silkscreen along with the original gaps and tears. “I wanted to leave it alone and showcase it in the condition I found it,” she says.

 

It’s redundant to remark that wallpaper is back. So what’s new?

In short, Tracy Kendall.

The British designer approaches wallpaper from a delightfully off-the-wall angle. Eccentric, distinctive and fashion-forward, Tracy’s wallcoverings have garnered awards at the ICFF (International Contemporary Furniture Fair), and hang in museums such as the Copper Hewitt in New York.

I recently had the chance to chat with the woman who’s out to challenge our conception of wallpaper when she dropped into Hollace Cluny – the Toronto boutique that stocks her striking innovations. Here are some highlights…

 

STYLE SLEUTH: Your wallcoverings range from scrolls that hang from the wall to more conventional pasted-to-the-wall papers. Are you ever suprised at the applications homeowners and designers have in mind for your creations?

TRACY KENDALL: What’s nice is that people can use the work in whichever way is appropriate for their environment. I’m not dictating to them how it should be applied. Rather, I’m giving them the opportunity to find ways to make it work. I’ve seen a whole room full of my Peacock Feather. The fronds of the peacock take on the appearance of stripes running horizontally, because there’s so many of them. But other people have just a single peacock feather, and it’s their choice — I think it’s nice that the work can actually take either level of installation.

Tracy Kendall’s “Peacock Feather” – stunning in its simplicity!

peacock tracy kendalls wonderful wallcoverings

 

STYLE SLEUTH: Can you let us in on your design process?

TRACY KENDALL: Sometimes designs come to me really fast — I’ll see something, get inspired and do two or three designs instantly, but other designs will take a couple of years before I’ve thought them through enough. I try very hard to make everything very, very simple. To me, there isn’t that much of a leap from A to B, because it’s actually one simple idea, shown in its simplest form. It might be quite extreme, but that is only a feather on the wallpaper. Those are only jigsaw pieces. There are no layers of ideas — I can’t do complex layers of ideas; my brain doesn’t work that way. I believe you should show what you want to show, and that can be very complex.

Tracy Kendall’s “Books” scroll

tkbookscroll tracy kendalls wonderful wallcoverings

 

STYLE SLEUTH: Do you ever surprise yourself, seeing your designs full-scale and applied in an actual room setting?

TRACY KENDALL:  When I’m screenprinting one of the big works, I’m very much in control. I’ve been screenprinting for more than 35 years, so I know exactly what’s going to happen. But I like working with mosaic pieces like Jigsaw and In The White Room, because you’re only working on a very small section at a time, and it’s only when you see the full length of it up on the wall that it hits you. At the ICFF, when we put up a whole wall of the Jigsaw, it was kind of like, “Ooh, you’ve really done something there!” I like not being entirely in control. In some ways it’s a risk, but it’s like cooking — if all the ingredients are good, then you should have a good meal.

Tracy Kendall’s “Jigsaw”tkjigsaw tracy kendalls wonderful wallcoverings

 

STYLE SLEUTH: Would you ever do a 10-by-10′ focal wall of “Puzzle” for instance? How long would that take? Just as importantly, how long would it last?

TRACY KENDALL: Certainly. It took about six days to set up a 10-by-10′ wall for the ICFF, and thousands of people were poking at it throughout the week. The tactile nature of it is part of the joy of it. When pasted to the wall, it’s highly durable and very strong stuff!

STYLE SLEUTH: Some of your earliest designs simply involved blowing up everyday items to larger-than-life scale. Where did that idea come from?

 

TRACY KENDALL: I needed some wallpaper for myself at home, but at the time, I couldn’t afford any of the large-scale wallpaper prints that I liked. Id’ always done quite large prints (I’d trained for art printmaking for my first degree, and then worked for years in fashion textiles), so I worked out what size would fit my room and came up with this seven-foot-tall cutlery set. As soon as I’d actually produced the first one, I knew that I hadn’t seen it anywhere before. I immediately did some flowers straight afterwards, just to check that the concept wasn’t going to be confined to a one-off thing. I’d love to say it was all planned and calculated, but none of it is! 

Tracy Kendall’s “Cutlery” – flatware on a grand scale!tkcutlery tracy kendalls wonderful wallcoverings

 

STYLE SLEUTH: Will the cutlery be your lasting icon?

TRACY KENDALL: Either that, or In The White Room. Those are my two most instantly identifiable designs.

Tracy Kendall’s “In The White Room” – a mosaic of wallpaper pieces attached by the finest stitched lines

tkwhiteroom tracy kendalls wonderful wallcoverings

 

STYLE SLEUTH: What’s the most surreal idea you’ve ever had for a wall treatment?

TRACY KENDALL: I’ve got some fibre optics sitting in the cupboard, and I think it would be really nice to see if I could make those work technically, because unfortunately, they need to plug in, and I love the challenge of overcoming that. I also love the challenge of making wallcoverings work for a residential environment. I’m generally dealing with something that a wallpaper hanger will have to paste to the wall, something they will be able to understand and work with, and something that’s got a nice durability. 

 

STYLE SLEUTH: What do you hope your designs inspire in others?

TRACY KENDALL: To go with your heart, really. It’s quite a big commitment to put a seven-foot feather in your house. I think you should go with things that you love at first sight.

 

Tracy Kendall wallcoverings are available through Hollace Cluny, 888-968-7660.

 

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white mountain ice cream maker

picture 4 white mountain ice cream makerI’m not sure about the rest of you Canucks across this fine land, but summer here in Toronto has been less than desirable, to say the least. Alas, this does not make my cravings for ice cream dissipate, and I’m constantly feeling the urge to pound back a tub of mint chocolate chip.

Check out this neat-o White Mountain electric ice cream maker at Williams-Sonoma. Just follow the instructions, and your gallon of ice cream or frozen yogourt is ready to go in 20-40 minutes. It’s also available with a manual crank, but I’d rather be sipping on a mojito while waiting for my frozen goods to be ready.


$170 for manual or $230 for electric, available at Williams-Sonoma.

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twitter inspired laptop bag

il 430xn76495576 twitter inspired laptop bagYeah, I’ll admit it — I like to tweet. For those of you in the technological Dark Ages, tweeting is the biggest phenomenon to hit social networking since Facebook. A ‘tweet’ is a 140 character message/update you can send out over Twitter, and people who are following your message feed will be able to read it.

Moving on from Twitter 101, check out this über-cool laptop bag I found at the Mareri store on Etsy. The little bird silhouette is so obviously paying an homage to the Twitter logo (or it is in my world, anyways), and the bag is padded to protect your precious hardware.

$50 US, available at Mareri on Etsy.

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