Posts Tagged ‘eco-friendly’

holiday crafting

instant inspiration

November 25th, 2011

i love making holiday crafts.  this year i have been making some card board wreaths and i love they way they are turning out.

 

stickwork – - – patrick dougherty

homes and habitats

October 19th, 2011

 

many years ago we went to visit an installation at clemson university by patrick dougherty. (for you old school readers out there, we featured photos from this excursion on ideas for creative living, the predecessor to beauty everyday…)

it featured this woven castle…made from bent, woven, and wrapped saplings, or sticks.

it was to our delight that we recently found a copy of his book, stickwork, while on a visit to terrain.
enjoy looking!

 

 

 

read more about the sculptor here.

 

 

it’s never too hot to knit

instant inspiration

July 29th, 2011

in the south the last thing you think about is knitting a sweater or scarf in the heat of the summer.  the other day, my friend gretchen came by my shop and installed a big sweater on our sign.  this concept makes summer knitting a little more joyous.

red clay dyeing

instant inspiration

July 8th, 2011

only in small town georgia would you find this!

playing with nature and the sun

instant inspiration

June 3rd, 2011

don’t forget about sun paper !  check out rinne’s amazing light drawings if you need some ideas or inspiration.  what a great way to document the seasons.

tire garden

instant inspiration

May 27th, 2011

we got a bunch of tires to plant potatoes in last year, but never got around to it.  this year i put them out front, filled them with potting soil, and went crazy at the store, getting everything that struck my fancy.  all the plants are doing super good.  i think the black tires soak up the heat and keep it warm, and the curved tops help keep the moisture in, so the plants really like it.  now i’m looking for more tires…

atelier bridal show… handmade in the south!

instant inspiration

January 7th, 2011

we are excited to be involved with atelier, a bridal show that celebrates good design, handmade, local,  and sustainability.

if you are around next week, come by and check it out.  there will be a fashion show and the best dressed attendee will be awarded a prize… could be you!  even if you are not planning a wedding any time soon, we think it is going to be an inspiring event

where:  hotel indigo

when: sunday, january 16 at noon

moving a house

homes and habitats

January 5th, 2011

The Land Trust didn’ t want it, and the skeptical friends I took to
see it couldn’ t fathom why I did. The boarded-up house stood
scarily close to the highway, and inside there was a hodge-podge
of paneling, creaky floors, and small, close rooms obviously
fashioned from materials at hand. I never saw the bathroom: It
was deep in the bowels of a place made dark by hovering pines and
darker still by covered windows. But something about the house
called to me. I was compelled to save it.

I could sense it deserved some peace and quiet after the incessant
whooshing of trucks whizzing up and down the connector to
Commerce that ran just beside it. I could see the resourcefulness
of the use-every-scrap mentality of the person who had put the
place together. But the pride and humility of the 1940s had fallen
to the fifties love of the streamlined, the sixties weakness for sleek.
I have no idea what decade it was when the house was finally
abandoned to the past, but I was stubbornly determined to give
it a shot at a future. My partner James Askins, whom I’ d seen
turn “ nothing places” into absolutely amazing “ something spaces,”
gave me the go ahead: He said it could be done.

The man who owned the house was all too happy to sell it to me
for a dollar. The house had to go. It was too close to the road, and
zoning laws precluded its remaining on the property if anything
was ever to be done with a smaller, sturdier structure that still sits
on the site. I saved the owner the considerable costs of demolition
and removal, and I saved a house – for me, the ultimate expression
of my commitment to reuse and recycling.

I thought we’ d move the place to our wooded lot in Winterville.
But James’ design ideas – a broad front porch, a dormered second
story – cried out for an expansive view. We were fortunate to have
another parcel across from our neighbor’ s lovely horse pasture, so
we ignored my original instinct, and sent the house to its rightful
setting on a gentle rise overlooking grazing Clydesdales.

Admittedly, the house has its quirks: A new foundation left the
wide-plank walls of the dining room slightly askew. The stairs
to the new pine-paneled upstairs are narrow and steep. A weird
seam in the living-room wall became a built-in bookcase. But
the dark narrow kitchen and shabby porch that held trash and old
appliances were combined into a bright breezy space with small-
paned windows on three sides. James dragged a set of 1940s metal
counter-height cabinets from a friend’ s abandoned house in the
woods, and the absence of any overhead cabinetry gave me a good
excuse to go antiquing to search out pieces for storage.

I love what we made of that house. A Dutch door from the kitchen
swings open to pine boughs in the foreground, a dirt road lined
with cedars, and the horses just beyond. The sun now reaches into
the heart of the house. There’ s a small, screened porch out back to
stow away on; the wide one in front is perfect for passing the time
and waving to the occasional neighbor passing by.

And after years of rotating tenants, all of whom have settled in
for just a while, the house now has two creative caretakers. They
blessedly tell me that in this sweet and crooked farmhouse, they
finally feel that they’ ve found home.

tiny farm

homes and habitats

August 25th, 2010

i am always amazed…and inspired by how much food can be grown on a small plot of land.  recently i visited my friends maggie an lacy out at their farm that they appropriately call tiny farm.   they have 2 garden sized plots of land where they grow food for their 11 person CSA and local restaurants.  every tuesday volunteers come out to help and be involved with the growing of their food.  take a peek at what i saw!

visit thier blog here for farm news and recipes and be sure to check out the weekly comic by member eleanor davis.