meta name="p:domain_verify" content="83432fc69a1d6df071f49df584f9d839 Laurl Designs: July 2013

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

The ABC's of arranging shelves

Arranging shelves can often foil folk, but it need not! Let's look at a couple of tricks to trick out your bookshelves!

First off, there is The Last Supper. Really. You remember in your art appreciation class in college when they flashed up an image of The Last Supper and then started going on about the perspective and all the triangles? Now, let's put that art appresh class to use.

Above is an image of The Last Supper with colorful triangles. Each triangle creates a vignette in the image. Just as Michelangelo created triangles in his painting to create a pleasing composition, so can you on the bookshelf. Choose one of the triangle shapes- Equilateral, Isosceles and Scalene and build the bookshelf with your building blocks.

Below is a chart with the building blocks of a good bookshelf- The ABC's.

A stands for accents. These are your one-of-a-kind items you want to use in the bookcase. Great items that you do not collect, they simply stand on their own, like a lamp, some art glass, or you favorite aunt's soup tureen.

B represents books. It is a book shelf, after all. You want to appear well read. Books add gravitas, repetition, and an air of intellectualism to bookshelves. Don't have books because you read everything on your kindle? Buy them! Antique stores, online book sellers, some really good thrift stores- all have new and old books. Mix them up, or do all old books. All new books can be expensive to purchase... and risky if people start asking you about the plot!

~~* Book shopping tip *~~
Estate sales are great places to find books. The ones I shop offer hardbacks for $2-$4 and paper backs for $1-$2.
SUPER TIP-go on the second day of the sale, or toward the end of the sale, typically everything is half price! If you are not planning on reading them, half price day is an instant collection on the cheap!

C is for collections. Here is where your personality shines. Most people collect something and they are usually personal. From a Star Wars collection you started in 3rd grade to vintage camera because you dabble in photography. Pull out your best of the best and make your triangles!

Remember books are not just for making you look smart. In the design world, they are also used as risers on bookshelves. Much like the phone book you sat on for holiday dinners at the "big" table when you were 5, books are a great source for adding height and repeating colors in you collection. By creating various heights, thus triangles,  you create a more visually interesting and pleasing bookshelf.

Let's look at a couple of good book shelves and their triangles.

Less Is More
Great space from Better Homes and Gardens. Now let's see those triangles.

Note that a vase of flowers is upside-down triangle!


Really lovely space! You can click on the image without the triangles to see the space on Houzz.com.  I particularly like the shelf that the triangle is actually the "negative" space, though I drew the triangles as two over the positive space (the part with the stuff).

If you like what you see in the ABC's chart, all those items art available in Interiors and Antiques in Vestavia Hills! Please follow my blog to see and read more design techniques, great shopping, and green living ideas. If you would like help with your shelves and you are near the Birmingham area, please send me an email (laurlself@gmail.com). I'd love to help you make your space the best it can be.






Monday, July 29, 2013

In a Pickle!

Every summer I dally with pickling, usually cukes... though there was that period that I was obsessed with the perfect chow-chow... then there was the crabapple ketchup. This summer, I'm giving half sour pickles another go. My pickle muse and guide is a blog I have been following for a while called Nourishing Days. Shannon also blogs for Cultures for Health.

So I was inspired by Shannon to try half sours again. My last experiment started to scare me when the pickling liquids turned cloudy and formed a "scum". By the way, as a Southerner, I know about vinegar based pickling, which requires boiling water baths for canning- cloudy and scum equals tossing out food or becoming very sick. Historically half sours are not tackled in the south, because it is so hot that they "sour" quickly. But as the south is typically air conditioned indoors, I'm going with it.

I decided to keep the small batch (one jar) of pickles next to the air conditioning vent- cold and relatively dark. I am growing two kinds of cucumbers in the garden, so both are in the jar for the first harvest. You can find great recipes with measurements at Cultures for Health, so I will not need to reproduce their recipe here. I used the one that required tree leaves for crispness- I went with oak from the front yard and washed them carefully!

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Here is my pictorial essay of the pickling process. By the way, I tried them after about a week and they were delish. Thanks, Shannon!

Cukes, salt, dill, peeled garlic, peppercorns, red pepper flakes and some little oak leaves on my favorite cutting board.


Layering the herbs in the bottom of the quart jar.



Last layer. Topping the cukes with dill, oak leaves, peppercorns and red pepper flakes.



Pouring the brine.


Lovely jar of future pickles!

So, cucumbers, dill, and oak leaves from the yard/ garden, peppercorns and red pepper flakes from Penseys, garlic from the store... future crunchy pickles, indeed!



Sunday, July 28, 2013

Back to school- bookends

I have run across a plethora of bookends recently and thought I would share! They are great for back to school bookshelves and to send those kids back to college! Please click on the links below to purchase!







 




Saturday, July 27, 2013

Sale with a view

Finding a hidden gem at and estate ale is a treat! Sometimes those treats are not for sale, but free for everyone to enjoy!

This little babbling brook was next to the drive up to the estate sale today. The gentle gurgle reminded me of CBS Sunday Morning show in those segments of nature. Really lovely.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

my 200th post!!!... and an awesome table pick

Today's fave pick was the Mersman table (below) and  I'm adding a lesson on picking. This table is one of the hot design trends- dark wood and brass together. You can see it in Helix Coffee Table - RoundDesign within Reach's new line called Helix,


and in
Claude Walnut bar

Jonathan Adler's walnut furnishing with brass accents.

The brass brings light and sparkle to the dark wood. This table has fantastic dark wood with a characteristic Formica top. Now don't be put off by Formica, it is a typical surface from the 50's and 60's and is extremely durable. Counter tops aside, I love finding a great Formica topped table. The desk I am currently writing from is Formica topped and I can set sweaty glasses of iced tea as well as big mugs of hot tea directly on it with no worries.

Picking always includes time spent with cleaners. And, on this journey I am remembering all the "old" cleaners for woods, metals, glasses and fabrics. Today's pick required a trip down memory lane to my childhood of staying with grandmother and great grandmother during the hot summer days and the weekly cleaning of the house. Windex, Pledge, Old English, Wright's Silver Cleaner each with their own cloth rubber banded to the bottle... they were very practical ladies devising the forerunners of the Windex wipe, Pledge wipe, etc. And, it is surprising how easy it is to clean with the results you would want with these older cleaners! And now that my cleaning cloths are all rubber banded back to the bottles, here is my pick of the picks for this weekend!


 

Interested in buying this Mersman 8198 table? Or need advise on cleaning, I'm getting really good with my deep knowledge of cleaning odd stains. Just ask!

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Holiday Sale- 25% off all items in my shop

If it is in space 6 with the dealer code LARL, then it is 25% off when you pay with cash or check! BIG BIG sale all month, including all my new arrivals! Many other shops are having a sale as well.
 
I've included some images below from the store, everything in the images is available, except the giant birdcage shelving, that sold last week!
 
Interiors and Antiques in Vestavia Hills (in the old Ethan Allen building)
The are closed on the 4th, but open on the 5th.