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Herriott Grace: For the Love of Wood

I have a confession to make. OK, I have a LOT of confessions to make (as you’ll learn over time). But today’s confession? I. Love. Wood. I love trees. I love all the verdant and varying shades of green that come alive in springtime. I love raw wood, turned wood, solid wood, hand-carved wood, exotic woods and all the potential they hold for creating something new. And that is why I am in swoony-heartsick-LOVE with Herriott Grace.

Recently introduced to me by a lovely friend, this heart-warming, Canadian father-daughter duo have me utterly smitten. Their story is a cross-Canada romance of familial love and the now-nearly-vintage charm of receiving packages via Canada Post. (It’s a real thing! People still send packages in the mail. Even brown paper packages tied up with string. It really is one of my favourite things.)

Lance and Nikole Herriott live 3400 kilometers apart: his workshop is in Victoria, British Columbia, and her studio is in Toronto, Ontario. When she first made her home more than halfway across the country, they started to send packages back and forth.

In some of those packages, Lance began to include his own hand carved spoons. He had been collecting wood since the early seventies, and used his best pieces for these gifts. Nikole loved them; their balance and shape, the pieces were made with unmistakable care. She knew they were something special.

One day it dawned on her that others might appreciate her father’s talent as she did, so Nikole asked if he would ever want to share his work. Lance took a few days to think about it. And, after some convincing, he agreed to her plan, but only with people that understood and cared about the time and effort spent on each piece.

She told him, “Leave it to me, I know just the sort.”

And with that, Herriott Grace was born.

(italicized copy via the Herriott Grace website)

There are so many reasons I love this story. First and foremost, it’s about the warmth of relationship between a daughter and her father. It’s about love and belief and possibility. It’s about transcending distance to remain meaningfully connected. And this beautiful process of love and care results in – as you can see below – a stunningly beautiful product. Here are just a few of the lovely pieces now on my personal wish list:

These feather cookie cutters are positively delicious. No doubt the feel of the smooth wooden handles in one’s hand makes the process of creating these lovely cookies all the more delightful.

These gorgeous teak spoons are the sort you will pass on to your grandchildren. Perfect for a fig compote served atop freshly baked scones on a sunny afternoon. To be enjoyed with a cup of tea and conversation with a sweet friend, of course.

I don’t think I would be able to choose which cutting board would be the one for me! Perhaps just one of each, please and thanks.

I might just have to take up the art of pie making if I come to be so lucky as to have one of these lovely, hand-turned rolling pins in my kitchen one day!

This simple, raw-edged, hand-turned bowl reminds me of the one atop a stack of books in my living room. I love the collaboration between artist and nature. As Lance says: “the wood decides.”

On creating the art: “Wood should be treated with hands, not machines. Once you take the money value out of something and do it just because you want to do it as a passion, that’s when you get quality. If you’re doing it for a dollar, pretty soon your value drops and drops, and pretty soon you’re just the same as anybody else. If it’s about how many you can make for a dollar, it isn’t art. It isn’t carving. It just becomes another job.” – Lance Herriott

On receiving the packages: “That box comes and it smells like my parents’ house, and it smells like his wood shop, and it smells like home… I like the mail. I like the post. I like it when things arrive “just so” and when a package is “just so” and when things are put together in a way that is reminiscent of the past. Like a box of just beautiful things with tissue and string and a tag, and as much care went into packaging it and wrapping it and sending it in the mail as went into making it. I like the tradition in that. Things used to arrive in the mail with string around them, and if a little object that we can send can be like that in even a small way, I think that that’s a nice thing.” – Nikole Herriott

I look forward to the day my first Herriott Grace package arrives in the post. No doubt it will be a very nice thing, Nikole. Thank you for inspiring me with your relational, beautiful process and your heart-warming-ly beautiful product.

xo
s.

All photos courtesty of Herriott Grace

By |June 28th, 2012|0 Comments

For the Detailistas: My Dining Room

So as it turns out, I am not alone. I believe that details are a love language, and it appears that you do too, as many of you have already been asking about details from a couple of my first posts! Remember the post about my garden peonies? Well many of you Detailistas out there noticed the art and furniture in my dining room and wanted to know more…so it is of course my pleasure to oblige! Here is the photo that started the questions:

And here, my lovely friends, are the answers! First, the ART! (that’s always my favourite place to start)

This piece by Kathleen Weich came to us from Art Interiors a few years ago now. I love the palette, the texture and the movement in it. Here are a few close up shots so you can see more of the delightful details:

We engage with this piece every day, and it speaks quite elegantly to the other art we have in the space. I think it makes the dining room quite special with its modern and sophisticated statement.

Next, the chairs! These Louis Ghost chairs – designed by Parisian designer Philippe Starck in 2002 – are an iconic design classic from Italy’s Kartell. They are a truly modern twist on design history: a reinvention of the classic Louis XVI armchair now done in this transparent lucite, a material invented in 1931 by Dupont. These chairs have been called a postmodern triumph of technical innovation and historical style. If you’ve been to visit Versailles, they should feel familiar to you (minus the ornate, small-scale print fabrics and gilded woodwork, of course).

For me, they are a perfect juxtaposition against my classic panel moulding and my clean-lined, contemporary, live-edged white oak dining table. The panel moulding carries across the shared dining room and living room wall, breaking it up and giving it the dimension it needs to frame and define each space. At a cost of $70, it was a great investment! Now here’s the table:

This live-edge, solid European raw white oak table actually came from Crate + Barrel! It fits the space perfectly and we love the raw wood…or at least we do now. When the table first arrived, the almost dusty looking raw wood finish made me giddy. I loved the quiet, driftwood-coloured palette and the organic simplicity. Then we ate at the table. No matter what meal we ate, we left indelible “evidence” behind in the form of grease marks and stains. No amount of scrubbing would remove them. I was losing my mind! Rings and drip marks on this perfect slab of nature would not do!

First, I had my furniture maker sand it and put on a coat of water-based finish. We got about a week out of that before this very thirsty table once again began to absorb every stain.

My next move was a stroke of genius if I may say so myself. I decided to go with the “if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em” rule of life, pulled out a beautiful Tuscan olive oil and poured it all over my table. I let it sit for a couple of hours, wiped up the excess with some paper towel, et voilà! My beautiful table was circle-and-drip-free and restored to it’s simple perfection. Now we oil it every few months. The oil soaks into the thirsty wood but prevents other grease and finger marks from making me crazy. Sanity restored!

Last but not least, this simple, rectangular drum-shade light fixture came from Restoration Hardware. I’ve used it on a few design projects for clients and find it to be very harmonious. It casts a beautifully distributed, even glow on the table due to the frosted acrylic base and the large rectangular linen shade. Its clean lines and simplicity don’t fight the art, the paneling or the furnishings while still complimenting the proportions of the room and anchoring the table quite nicely.

So there you have it! The details for all you Detailistas out there. Hope this provides some inspiration for your next design project.

xo
s.

P.S. Feel free to post your questions and comments in the comments section below each post. I’d love to get our dialogue off of FB and onto the blog so we can share it with everyone!

By |June 27th, 2012|10 Comments

The Art of Discovery: Anthropologie Home Furnishings

As promised, today I’m going to share with you a few of the treasures I stumbled upon on a recent visit to Oakville’s Anthropologie store. The new store finds its home in a renovated and extended old bank building on Lakeshore Road in Oakville’s charming downtown core. The architects and designers involved in the design planning are in my good books. Rather than attempting to create a seamless extension off the back of the original building, they kept the gap between old and new on the second floor to create this lovely gallery opening above. I think it does a delightful job of narrating the story of the space by making it a feature rather than burying it into the proverbial woodwork.

Housed within this inspiring structure are countless inspiring pieces just waiting to be found. Just take a peek at a few of my fav finds:

A bold, painterly floral puts a modern twist on this classic bergère chair. Also love the burlap on the arm rests. It’s all about the details for this curvy little number.

I absolutely LOVE these Splattered Pull Up Chairs,  the perfectly proportioned occasional chair that could tuck quite nicely into a front entry, a nook under the stairs or in the corner of a bedroom in need of an infusion of colour and whimsy. The splattered denim upholstery, handpainted by New York artist Carol Horn, is what defines this chair’s refreshingly casual, carefree charm.

This vibrant orange linen upholstered Howell Wingback Chair is the perfect juxtaposition of a classic silhouette with a modern palette. Bold in its colour and yet simple in its textured loveliness, this is a statement piece to enliven any living room or perhaps to serve as “his and hers” chairs for the head and foot of a large dining room table.

These green antique French bistro chairs – complete with peeling layers of history in the form of perfectly chipped paint – are available as a set of four! A rare find at a reasonable price for the sense of story they will bring to the space they get to call home. They would be the perfect perch for morning coffee in the garden.

Another pair somehow makes me think of tennis matches played in long skirts in the 40’s. Perhaps it’s the shape of the chair back and the perforated metal? Onlookers might have comfortably taken in the game in simple metal chairs such as these – a lovely pair to bring a nostalgic warmth to any front porch.

Check out the recycled glass bottle chandelier! So unique.

And this one which was hand-made out of jute and melted plastic cups (among other things) by the amazing team of creative artists who work for the store! This one is display only, but here’s something very similar that you might be able to track down if this becomes a “must have” on your list!

They offer an endless selection of inspiring home + design books from which to choose. Well worth  perusing. “Paris Vs. New York” is already on my wish list.

Also offered is a lovely collection of cabinetry pulls for those looking to refresh an old dresser or side table.

Remember those antique signage letters I stumbled upon at the Christie Antique Show? These zinc letters have a similar feel and are available all year round…in every letter of the alphabet, of course.

Love this hot pink, ikat-upholstered linen sofa with the classic English roll arm style and turned wood legs. Feels like something I could have inherited from my English grandmother and then reupholstered in a contemporary fabric to suit my modern tastes.

As I’m sure you’ve discovered just from reading today’s post, Anthropologie is not just about apparel. In fact, the more time I spend in the store, the more treasures I discover for house + home. They will definitely be on my regular hit list for sourcing inspiring and unexpected home décor. And so we say: Welcome to Oakville, Anthro! We’re so delighted you’ve made yourself such a lovely and inspiring nest in our neck of the woods. We plan to visit frequently to see what surprises you’ve got in store for us.
xo
s.

By |June 26th, 2012|0 Comments