Showing posts with label First Nations baskets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Nations baskets. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

October in The Humble Bungalow...



BOO!

Snippets from The Humble Bungalow.

October has flown by...it has been a bit of a blur.
Where does the time go?


Copper tray on the buffet...
Ojibwa duck decoys
white mini pumpkins
a dome with a dried allium inside


Vintage
First Nations woven baskets on the shelf above the built in buffet.


Fortnum and Mason baskets
with a
pudding bowl


I love baskets and have quite a few in The Humble Bungalow.
They are handy for storing things and I leave them out on display as I like the rustic natural effect they give to the decor.


Antique basket
First Nations tray on ledge
tarnished vintage silver 


dried hydrangeas in a copper vase


A peek inside the drop front arts and crafts desk


Surprise!
a headless "scarecrow" in our spare lot
someone is into the "Halloween spirit!"


Happy Halloween!

How is your week going?


~ Be Well and Be Kind ~

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Decorating ~ free, thrift shop finds and some luxurious habits.

I love using "found" or foraged things from Nature in our home and cottage decor.

Thrift shop finds also factor in when it comes to things I have added to our bungalow...often they are unusual or somewhat quirky.

I have also been known to pull the car over when I see a free pile on the boulevard.

I am not particularly talented when it comes to interior decorating.
 But I do know what styles I do like and what I feel comfortable adding to our surroundings here in The Humble Bungalow.


Sea shells in a vintage canning jar.


Big barnacle


Chunk of coral


Glass Fish floats


Large Shell


Coral and shells mixed together.


a vintage flag


vintage enamel ware


I love using basic whites...
so versatile 
vases, trays and dishes.



White vintage Ironstone


Potted orchids


Emma Bridgewater tray...I also use her bowls for my morning cafe creme


White beach glass in a Ball sealer jar.


Emma Bridgewater Black Toast Pattern


Fresh flowers in an icy modernist vase.


Simple beach stones inside a bowl to keep the soap dry.


Vintage ironstone soap dish with built in ribbing for drainage.
Lovely soap...a weakness of mine is to buy quality french scented soaps.


Silver accents are peppered throughout the house.


My all time favourite candles...a splurge I know but so worth it.


First Nations baskets.


I love this book
by Tricia Foley 

Her simple style inspires me and I like to pick this book up from time to time and get re-energized about culling and curating what we have in our home.

 Tricia's ideas help inspire me when I am out perusing the thrift shops.
I tend to look closer at the "qualities" or the "bones" of a piece and am able to evaluate whether it is something that could add interest in our home.

Do you have a certain style when it comes to your home decor?
Have you ever hired a professional interior decorator?
What style do you admire?

Hope you have a lovely weekend...
the sun is shining here this morning and the day is going to be hot!
I plan to mix up a batch of lemonade and keep hydrated.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Spring ~ Skincare, habits and tackling "the list."

Thank you all for your kind thoughts and well wishes during my recent bout of flu.
I am so glad that I am over it....and the weird thing, is that I had a flu shot earlier this year.

If you had told me that having a week "off" with nothing much to do but lay in bed would be "productive" I would have shrugged and shaken my head. I am not accustomed to lying around and find it quite a challenge.
Drowsy from cough and cold medication I managed to leaf through many magazines reading articles on everything from lingerie, lotions, sunscreen and shoes. My husband was willing to pop over to the market at my request and buy food, boxes of Kleenex and fashion magazines. Thank you Honey!
I discovered, as many of you already know, is that sunscreen is the most important anti aging product on the market. I have never found a sunscreen that worked well under my foundation and the brands that I tried were thick and often left a white residue...until now.


This formula is light and blends easily so there is no excuse not to use it every day.
Good 'cuz anti aging skin care is now up there on my radar.

I read that the second most important ant aging product is Retinol...
it has been scientifically proven to minimize wrinkles.

I thought that Retinol was too harsh for my skin until I read the latest Allure magazine.
ROC make a Retinol cream for night 
(which apparently is the best time to use it)
the ROC formulation has some "buffers" which make it gentle to use on the skin.
I am following the directions and using it every other night for 2 weeks to make sure my skin will not over react.


This is the extent of my invasive skin care action...no fillers, or Botox for the Hostess.
(I have had some IPL treatments for my rosacea in the past but they are expensive.)
I plan to book a microdermabrasion treatment in the next couple of weeks..

Moisturizer and hydration are both very important and I have always focused on these habits.
Drinking lots of water and using an emollient cream or serum to plump up the skin just seems like common sense.
I've just received L'Occitane's Divine Cream in the post, just in time as I am scraping the jar to get the last bit out!

I had lots of time to mull over focusing on a healthier regime.
There is always room to tweak one's diet, amp up weekly activity and add a new proven skin care product.
Eating. walking and skincare all things that I try to be mindful of and embrace.

The downside of being out of commission is that my stamina for walking the 5 K and 10 K routes have been reduced and so my pace is much slower and I am much more aware of fatigue.
Fortunately my walking partner is understanding so we are working up to my former speed.
So that's about it on the health front...

I like lists and use them regularly...
what I really love is crossing off the things as I complete them.




Not bad work!


Our mushroom coloured coverlet looks so shabby it's actually embarrassing.
How can things like this hover just under the radar without getting noticed?

 I zipped off to the newly opened Marshalls and found a suitable replacement.

The white towels were purchased online from Lands End at 30% off and will be arriving shortly.
The new shower curtains are installed and the old ones were bleached and will be ready when it is time to launder the new ones.

The Gap denim jacket should be here any day now and I need to spend a few moments on the phone with my day book so I can book those appointments.

The de-cluttering has started and I took a bag of things to Good Things Consignment in Oak Bay.
Stuff that just collects dust and offers no Joy is on it's way out of The Humble Bungalow!
I've declared war on dust.
Makes it easier to keep on top of the house work with fewer knick knacks.
Mr. HB likes it better this way too.


Re-arranging is a Spring time activity...
Our Pacific Northwest First Nations Baskets were moved about.

I've washed a few of the windows and am working in one room at a time.
But not trying to overdo things ~ I am pacing myself.



Going through my book shelf looking for titles to donate.
If I don't plan to re-read a book it needs to go to a new home.

I'm excited just thinking about how good it is going to feel to have reduced the clutter in The Humble Bungalow.

What Spring things are you doing in your home?
Are you doing a major clean or a total purge?

Thank you for stopping by The Humble Bungalow.
Hostess
XO

Saturday, October 16, 2010

MOA at UBC continued...

The Museum of Anthropology 
UBC campus

if you have not seen the previous post please consider reading it before proceeding here,
it is the introduction...


Vintage Cowichan wool sweater

Slight segway...
my father had one very much like this one
he wore it traipsing around the province when he was employed by the BC Forest Service
I "borrowed" it on many occasions in my youth.

I bought my first Cowichan sweater when I was 15
with my BFF 
my current one was purchased with my BFF 
a couple of years ago
the Cowichan knitter's name is Arlene
here is my sweater



The art of knitting these sweaters could be lost
I spoke with an elder at Hills when I bought my lovely daughter a sweater in September this year
and she told me the young women are not embracing knitting these today...
It would be such as shame to lose these designs and warm water resistant garments.


and now back to the MOA!


masks 
cases and cases 
of carvings


works representing all the major tribes from BC


I have a particular fondness for First Nations baskets
(if you go back into my early blog posts you can see the baskets)

I confess that I was overwhelmed by the variety and number here at the museum and after awhile stopped taking photographs
I was on sensory overload!


dolls


look at the patterns and motifs...


I have never seen a table such as this!


we walked through several rooms 
cases and drawers full


Meandering and weaving through rooms
and then an open space...


prepare yourself...
this carving was made out of one large tree trunk
skill and craft merge


from all angles it is brilliant


I walk around many times in awe...


look closely at the details


Read about Bill Reid here,


I hope that you can read the plaque


The Koerner's commissioned this piece for their garden!

The museum has many other displays
a collection of ceramics
Japanese, Chinese, and Inuvit art
travelling shows
films and photographs.

We focused exclusively on the First Nations collection
and were not disappointed
and were most impressed.

We spent a rainy Sunday afternoon perusing this museum
which has a
 tea room, gift shop and grounds with totems, outbuildings 
and paths with reflecting pools 

I encourage you to visit if you ever find yourself in Vancouver, BC
this place is a treasure
bring your camera
it is a photograph friendly place.

I'll leave you with this lasting image
of 
admission stickers
not recycled
in the suggested container inside the museum!


urban art 
at the
crosswalk to the car park...

and as a post script
P.S.

I worked at UBC...not far from the MOA
at the Computing Centre
Computer Sciences Building
mid 70's 
(a beautiful campus located slightly south and west of the city)

 the IBM mainframe computers took up several rooms
the technologists
sat at a desk with a space age looking dashboard of dials and lights
they would manually feed the tapes onto the disk drives
we had card readers
(which jammed on a regular basis)
and dial up was the handset of a telephone resting in a connection box!

How far we have come from coastal villages of indigenous peoples
to 
communicating via the internet
and blogging on laptops...