Showing posts with label pumpkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pumpkins. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Decorating with Antique Delft Tiles and Florentine Pumpkins




Delft tiles have been catching my eye when I have been antiquing this summer.  
They never did before, but this is why.
After receiving this pair of blue and white club chairs from my parents,
with our lake house build looming I thought they would be a good fit for that home.  
And because they are this bright cornflower blue
it has steered my decorating path in that direction as well.  
Our current home has become the test ground for the lake house!
Delft tiles are still made in Holland but I have been collecting some of the older tiles I find in  
antique shops.  As a child my parents took us to Amsterdam and we boarded
 a tour bus to visit a factory in Rotterdam.  This factory and others existed from the 17th century!
My parents bought a few souvenirs from the visit, which I have now and they are over 50 years old. 
The little clog is one of their souvenirs, while the Heineken mug
 and the pitcher are two of my finds while antiquing. 
 I love finding the older pieces and tiles are at the top of my list. 
It is fun to be collecting again, with a new perspective on blue and white.
This is a pretty castle scene, much like Cinderella's home!  
You can see the age of the tile, literally, on the back of the signed tile.
The little holes at the top are for wall hanging.
Delft Pottery, also known as Delft Blue, is a general term now used for Dutch tin-glazed 
earthenware. The city of Delft was the major production center, but it can be made elsewhere,
included England.  In the 17th and 18th century, Delft was in it's heyday, exporting all over Europe.
It is amazing to me to find so many pieces in the antique shops in America, but I see it as a 
result of the popularity of blue and white porcelain that many favor today in home decorating.
On another note, I did a crafting project yesterday.  I was inspired by some fancy pumpkins
a friend of mine posted on her blog, Edith and Evelyn.  It involved making clay molds of 
medallions and painting them. I added some gilded Dresden paper trim to mine as well as
did one with decoupage calling to mind a Cinderella castle with an internet image I printed.
It was a fun and fairly easy project and gave me some 
Florentine style pumpkins that go with my decor.
I am not an orange person, and avoid all the spooky stuff that goes
with Halloween decorating.  These are pretty, and that works for me!
Check out Cindy's blog to see the basics on how 
to do the molds and where to buy the products.
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Monday, September 23, 2019

Pumpkin Punchbowl Centerpiece


 The first day of fall has arrived in New England, and so we say goodbye to our short lovely summer.
 The nights have been cooler and the days have been pleasant, but these nice fall days are
fleeting as well, and winter weather will be next.  But until then, lets dive into decorating for
fall.  I am not a big fan of too much fall decor around the house, but one thing I do
love are the pretty fabric pumpkins that are everywhere!  Over the last several years
I have either purchased them or made my own using all kinds of materials.
 For a nice and easy centerpiece I assembled them all in my silver punch bowl that I found at the Brimfield Antique Fair.  This punchbowl has been so much fun to use for centerpieces for the various
holidays.  Everything looks good in it!  This year I picked up some pink velvet pumpkins and a tiny blue floral pumpkin, both from contacts I have online on Facebook and Instagram.  My blogging and Instagram friend, Larissa Jenkins, has a cute Etsy shop and she sold her pink velvet pumpkins there.  Her blog, Welch House 1900, is on my sidebar if you want to visit her incredible old house 
and see the masterful decorating in the style of  Glamorous French Vintage style.  
The blue pumpkin I noticed on a Facebook post was being sold by the beautiful shop called Vignettes in San Diego.  I reached out and left a note that I wanted it...the shop owner quickly contacted me with her phone number and the next thing you know, 
here it is in my punch bowl like the cherry on top of a sundae! 
This was last year's thanksgiving centerpiece using many of the pumpkins I made myself,
and some velvet pumpkins I found at Homegoods. 
 We are having a party for my mother in law to celebrate her 90th birthday,
so I made a grand buffet tablecloth for our dining room out of a pale grey and cream toile.
The centerpiece looked really nice on the cloth, and I plan to use some of my vintage silver
trays for the party to give it that fancy vintage look I love.
Making my own pumpkins is a lot of fun, as I get to use leftover home decor fabrics or
I upcycle velvets from old clothing like jogging suits and fashion them into cute pumpkins.
Enjoy the links below for either making your own or visiting independent shops and blogs
that I find very inspiring! 

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Wednesday, October 12, 2016

DIY Designer Pumpkins for a Holiday Table

We have all seen this lovely velvet pumpkins! 
 I really didn't want to pay $40 for one, 
and since I wanted a bunch of them, I decided to make my own.
I have seen them at HomeGoods for less than $10, but not in the colors I wanted.
So....here is how I made my velvet pumpkins.
There are lots of tutorials on the web about making these cute pumpkins, 
my tutorial is not entirely original, it's just what I found worked best.  
I knew I wanted purple velvet....and after looking at the fabric store and coming
up empty handed, I went straight to the local Salvation Army Thrift shop.
Tons of clothing on racks in every conceivable color, I found designer velvet
clothing from the likes of Talbots and Ann Taylor! 
So I guess I will call these my Designer Pumpkins.
This setting is a dry run for a Harvest dinner party, or even Thanksgiving.
I thought that these charming pumpkins would look pretty at each place
setting.  The purple color would look great with my purple transferware.
The list of essential pumpkin making ingredients are shown above.  
Velvet Fabric ( I got mine from a large clothing thrift shop, but look online or in fabric shops).
Pumpkin Stems (Found mine at a farmstand. Ask if you can harvest stems from their rotten pile!)
Another idea is to use wine corks for stems or driftwood or sticks from the yard.
Rice, Fiberfill Stuffing, Button Thread (heavier and stronger than normal thread) and glue gun.
Cut circles for the pumpkin body. 
The finished size will be half the size of your circle.
 I used a bowl to cut my fabric out of the sweatshirt I found at the thrift shop. 
 Leave your perfection tendencies to the side, your circle just has to be cut, but not perfect!
 Then double a length of thread about 20" long and knot the end. 
Next do the running stitch around the edge of the circle.  
A running stitch is just the basic up and down kind of close together.
 Pull it tightly as you go, gathering the circle. 
 Nearing the end, leave an opening for the filling. 
Do not cut the needle and thread off yet.  You will need to stitch it shut after filling.
 For a ten inch circle, I got a 5" pumpkin.
 I poured roughly 1/2 to 3/4 cup of rice into the pumpkin.
Then I topped the rice with fiberfill and pulled the opening close and stitched it shut. 
 Grab the glue gun and zap a blob of glue onto the bottom of the stem and position
 it over the opening and press down for about two minutes, giving it time to dry and attach. 
Tiny or large, the tutorial is the same. 
 Bear in mind that the stem should
be in proportion to the body of the pumpkin.  
I am even making some tiny acorns in the same purple velvet!  
And remember my toile chair?
I made some out of the chair fabric and one out of green gingham for our living room.
It is going to be the holidays before we know it!  My mailbox is filling up with
holiday mags, and there is one special edition magazine in the supermarkets right 
now that I just picked up by Better Homes and Gardens.  I will freely admit I 
bought it because my pal Matthew Mead has a huge how to create WREATHS feature
inside.....but when I got it home and read it from cover to cover I thought to myself,
this is one of the BEST holiday mags I have read in awhile!!! So jsut passing that 
tidbit along incase you want some great holiday decorating inspiration.
There are crafts and how-tos, but also lots of GORGEOUS homes all decked out!
In the meantime I will be happily working on my table decor as well as the entire room to pull together a festive Thanksgiving table....and then it will be onto Christmas!

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