Monday, 27 January 2014
Pictures that Speak for Themselves?
I love words. I like the way they feel & taste, their nuances & hues, & frequently I'm guilty of using too many. So here I will give them a rest & let these pics of my orchids speak for themselves. Enjoy!
Carnival Colors & Home Decor? by Lea Ann Robson
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Moko Jumbies (stilt dancers) at 2013 Crucian Carnival |
In an earlier post (Fabric (of my Being?) I vowed to tackle my second bedroom décor with zeal equalling that which I applied to the first. As you can see by this photo, Iappear to have done so with wild abandon. First, let me state that this room is more evolutionary than planned. At least that’s my defense & I’m stickin’ to it!
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New bedding...Same dog! |
The irony here is that despite the aforementioned zillion or so yards of upholstery fabric languishing in my closet, I succumbed to Anthropologie’s irresistible offer of an additional 50% off clearance, & purchased instead of made most of these linens.
Regret? Not one iota.
Back when our cable provider offered Sundance Channel in our lineup, I was addicted to ‘Man Shops Globe,’ the episodic saga of the head buyer for Anthropologie & his travels around the world. He had perhaps the one life I would trade mine for…Naaaaa. But I loved Anthropologie & their quirky, arty, none-too-informative but delightful catalogues long before I caught that show. Bits & bobs of their merchandise crop up all over my house, & I have never been disappointed in anything I have purchased from them, from my 3D white floral shower curtain to my happy Portuguese ceramic baking dishes & rolling pin (someday I’ll make a pie…really I will). They are one of the best satisfiers of my Mom’s sage advice: If you’re going to interact with something on a daily basis, make sure
- You love it &
- It is well made.
Seems simple enough, but too often (& I’m guilty, Lord knows) the temptation wins to settle for bargains (that aren’t) or mind-numbing generics instead of flair, pizzazz, & quality. I can say, most enthusiastically, that Anthropologie purchases never fall into those categories. So on to the bedroom & the aforementioned clearance sale.
It started with this plaid throw (on the footboard) that at once unified & electrified the first bedroom design, like a big fat cherry on an already delicious sundae (can you tell I skipped breakfast?). Since the final price reduction brought it to under $20.00, it inspired me to go through the clearance items again to see what new finds were lurking. I was just looking for a throw to put at the foot of the second bed, to incorporate the colors of the mod print burnout velvet drapes I made for that room (to cover the rolling chrome racks full of craft stuff) & the bold cushion covers I had already paired with the white down comforter. I found this one (pic at the head of this post), made from recycled silk sari strips. The saturated colors thrilled me, & though it was substantially pricier than the first throw, it appeared to be (& turned out to be, upon delivery) absolutely worth it. Since I had addressed & dressed the foot of the bed, I also found & ordered 2 euro shams for the head. Their patterning & color palette reminded me of my Aunt Effie’s quilting from years ago & also had a bit of a Hawaiian quilt feel, which worked for our tropical setting.
After adding two sets of my biggest Anthropologie weakness—their amazingly diverse jacquard woven dishtowels (that frequently incorporate the quirky orange of my kitchen cabinets), I had finished my order…
And then I saw the quilt that went with the shams…& it featured hand embroidery & appliqué, & was so reasonable after the discounts…& you know the rest.
This summer I’ll probably go with my original plan to use the white duvet & just accessorize with the color & pattern at either end. For now, I’ll use the whole shebang & every time I glance at that room in passing, I’ll feel the joy & excitement of the ‘carnival’ that is the décor in that room. My Mom just scheduled (after much wheedling & begging on my part) a visit in April & I’ll let her take her choice between the ‘sunrise’ room & the ‘carnival o’ color’ option. If she questions my palette inspiration, I offer these pics of this year’s Crucian Christmas Carnival as my defense. On second thought, my choices may ‘pale’ by comparison?
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Moko Jumbies in a sea of feathered dancers |
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
Serenade of the Seasons
Serenade of the Seasons
So it’s December 17th …are you sick of Holiday music yet? How ‘bout if it was cranked out a public address system from a live band on the back of a flatbed truck…in the WEE hours of the morning? If such a thing slowly drove through your neighborhood at 3 or 4 a.m. , would you pull the pillow over your head & grumble, or do what we do & tumble out of bed to go out in the streets in our P.J.’s to dance behind the truck as it goes? Would you offer the musicians expletives & ire or as we do, refreshments & greetings?
Such is the Crucian traditional ‘Serenade,’ & I heard it in a ‘neighboring neighborhood’ at around 4:30 this morning. Local favorite band Stanley & the Ten Sleepless Knights earn their name this time of year, with these nocturnal mobile parties trouping from area to area & rousing the sleeping with festive local twists on traditional holiday songs & completely original calypso & quelbe compositions befitting the holidays our land of no snow. (In a documentary, I heard Quelbe defined as a mixture of Quadrille which is our local version of a called or square type dance & Belbe, which no one ever defined further??). Whatever it is, I don’t begrudge any lost sleep due to the refrains of ‘I want a piece of Pork for Me Christmas,’ “Santa Lookin’ for a Wife,’ or any of the other clever ‘carols’ we twist with a wink & a nod to their more traditional counterparts.
The best Serenade experience I ever had was one morning at dawn when I was snorkeling by Dorsch Beach on the West end of the island. Blissfully face down & focused on my fish friends & sea glass quarry, it took a moment for the approaching strains describing a Crucian’s concern that without a chimney, ‘How Will Santa Get In?’ to register. Wending through nearby communities, the truck never came into view, but I hummed into my snorkel as the refrains became nearer & clearer.
Here’s hoping your holidays are tuneful & fun, & if you want to start some new traditions don’t forget to look for (lots of local stores have them) CD’s of Stanley, or Bill Bass, Ebenezer Methodist Church or Rising Star Steel Pan carols. Once again proving Culture is like yeast, if you don’t combine it with other ingredients & make something of it, it disappears.
Ho Ho Ho from Paradise by Lea Ann Robson
Oh what fun it was to be on St. Croix
this weekend! Our little berg was
holiday hoppin’ on all four burners & we were repaid in breezy, lovely days
for all the great rain we’ve had lately.
The Coquito (homemade rum cream—think eggnog with a St.
Croix twist!) was flowing, & though it’s not snowing, everyone
was showing up for events far & wide (OK, enough rhyming!).
Saturday was the Governor’s Christmas Fair at Government
House & the First Lady’s Children’s Party on the lawn at Fort Christavaern . The beautifully manicured lawn around the
Fort was the perfect setting for the kids & parents, & crafts (some
sponsored by Home Depot), games & book giveaways were in stations all
around. Of course Santa showed up, & fun was had by all.
As night fell & everyone flowed (& glowed! Glow-in-the-dark hoops were everywhere!)
toward the wharf to get front row seats to the Boat Parade. Spectacular entries floated by to cheering
crowds. Some of the ‘boat floats’ used laser
light shows, fire twirlers (Kiki & the gang really outdid themselves),
& live bands to thrill onlookers.
My friends & I slipped out after the first boat lap,
before the second & third & the fireworks finale. We had been at the Governor’s Fair since
morning & despite the wonderful local Pate’s, tarts, fermented Sorrel (sort
of a spicy, Port-tasting delight from Grizelle Davila), ginger beer & other
local delicacies we’d been sampling while I sold ornaments & jewelry there,
we had managed to work up yet another appetite.
So while everybody on the waterfront ‘re-oohed’ & ‘re-ahhhhed’ to
the boats again, we slipped up the street to Kendrick’s for a wonderful meal
(between the four of us, we taste-tested
& revelled in the chipotle onion garlic soup, the spinach salad,
fillet mignon kebabs (why didn’t I think of that!?), & what were pronounced
the best patty melts EVER.
On Sunday morning, we decided to milk a good thing by
driving out to the worst kept, best secret for brunch—Blue Water Terrace. I had the epic Quesadilla & my friend had
the ‘Double Love’ which can only be described as one chotamama plate full o’
fantastic breakfast food! Shops were
open in town, so on the way back we hit our favorite décor store—Sampson
House--& had a great time looking through all the gorgeous items
there.
Despite being dangerously close to post-brunch comas, we
stopped by the annually held local Woodworker’s Expo at the UVI campus to see
evidence of the talented artists & craftspeople we have in the VI, yet
again. I am a self-professed &
unashamed woodworker groupie (my Dad was a talented woodworker, so I can’t help
myself), so I enjoy seeing what’s new & catching up with the people who
work their magic on local materials.
This year’s crop was as inspiring as ever, with some new twists on this
venerable art form.

Next weekend is a ‘three-shipper,’ as in we have a cruise
ship in port Saturday, one Sunday & one Monday. I'll spend evenings this week knuckling down & trying to refute grade school teachers' prophesies that I'd never apply myself & live up to my potential. I'll create as many new sea glass designs as I can (& yeah, I probably should have been doing that this weekend). But I can't bring myself to regret one second of this delightful weekend of friends & festivities & now I get to work next to my cute little tree, in my happy little house with my blissed out little dog. Could be worse!
So we’re here, full of cheer, & hope you’re having as much fun, wherever you are!
Thursday, 12 December 2013
Outside the (cigar) Box
(written in September)
I had cleaned out Home Depot’s precut Plexi shelf, buying
the 9” x 11” sheets by the dozens. To
create a floating appearance, I sandwiched the gouache prints between 2 sheets,
using black binder clips top & bottom to hold all together. I had 2 boxed sets of the prints, a dozen per
box. Midway through mounting them, I
found a pile of orchid photos I had printed on vellum & hadn’t affixed to
boxes. Sandwiched between the Plexi
sheets & atop the cigar box display shelves, slightly tilted to allow light
through the picture, these orchid images fairly glow.
I was first confused & later horrified by an email I
received this morning touting a pre-sale on HALLOWEEN decorations…EEEEK! Shaking my head to realign my mental calendar
pages, I moved from full denial (but it is still SPRING…Why Halloween???)
through incredulity (OK, so it is SUMMER…but we’ve got tons of time until
Autumn…How dare they start pelting us with Halloween ads when it is ...) to
utter defeat (OMG!!...August 21st!!???...I’ll never be ready for
Christmas. Might as well take a nap.).
I’ve been benched this summer with an injury that prevented
me from lifting my equipment to vend over the last couple of months. As much as I love vending, I haven’t missed
it nearly as much as you’d think. I’ve
missed talking to visitors, working by the waterfront (sounds like a
Longshoreman?) & selling what I make.
It’s just that setup & takedown of my tent & displays has never
been the fun part & I’ve found so many great activities to occupy my time
without that component.
Aside from my usual marathon fruit (pineapples, mangos,
bananas, etc.) harvesting & storing mambo, this off-season has also
afforded me the time to catch up on some of the zillion ideas I have during the
high season when there is no time to act on any of them. A note here:
Admittedly, not all these ideas are gems warranting action—storm season
equates to brain storm season in my head.
This summer, interior & exterior décor have been front
& center on my to-do list. After
living in my little house five years, it is finally starting to look less like
a blank slate & more like I feel—upbeat, exuberant, colorful…& a little
over the top!
Wall art was a necessary first project. I mounted espresso-toned modern cigar boxes
as display cubes, a task I had been procrastinating about for ages. The delay was because masonry walls, while a
definite plus in the Caribbean , are the
natural enemy of hurricanes & drill bits.
I have burned up many bits & friends, just mounting curtain rods
& a microwave. Hanging art here can
be quite a commitment in time & effort because by the time you’ve drilled
through cement block to mount it, you can be sick of something you loved just
days before.
To avoid that, I’m keeping displays flexible and mounting
all with what I consider to be the greatest invention of the century…OK, I’m
being a little hyperbolic but I really love them—COMMAND STRIPS! The boxes aren’t heavy, & I’m only using
them to support Plexi-mounted art prints, so the strips aren’t overtaxed. Originally, I had in mind Plexi-sandwiching
some beautiful handmade gouache prints I bought in boxed sets from my beloved
Anthropologie some time ago, & only using the modern cube boxes.
And then I remembered something liberating—those are my
walls (OK, mine & the bank’s) & I can do what I want…& COLOR happens
to be what I want. This hit me when I
was sorting through the cigar boxes & found a bunch I had altered a couple
of years ago. I love orchids & I
love photographing them, so as mine bloomed I had taken extreme close ups,
printed them on translucent vellum, & then ‘wallpapered’ them to the front
of some older cigar boxes, applying a paste wax to protect them after they
fully dried. And then promptly shelved
& forgot about them.
When I added a few of these bright image boxes to the wall
arrangement, it came to life & united the colors of my mod crimson sofa
& crazy tropical print drapes (also Anthropologie) in an unexpectedly
harmonious din. And yes, I know that is
an oxymoron, but then so is my house.

So I mixed the plain & printed boxes, Anthropologie
prints & my photos, threw in a couple of mercury glass candlesticks & a
little yellow enamelware teapot, & now my walls speak volumes. It may not be a language to everyone’s
liking, but it suits me just fine. It is
impossible to be depressed in that house.
Next project: the
‘sledbed’ room. Stay tuned!
Fabric (of my being?)
Hi Lea Ann (you freak!).
I can’t claim hoarder status because at 51 I wasn’t alive
during the Depression, nor did I lose all my belongings in a natural
disaster. I just really, REALLY like
upholstery fabric…in large quantities. Rarely do I buy it in rolls of less than
15 yards…because you never know when you might need to recover a sectional sofa…or
make drapes for a room full of windows…or…OK, I have a problem.
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The porch is an outdoor room here |
This week I’ve been turning that problem into pure
joy—sewing up a radically bright facelift for my bedroom. My house footprint is small & manageable,
only topping 1000 square feet when you include the spacious covered porch. The reason it doesn’t feel cramped, & one
of the biggest selling points for me when I bought it is the beamed cathedral
ceilings. I grew up in a house with vaulted ceilings, & as a result can’t
stand squinchy, stingy, low-ceilinged dark spaces. Here in the land of a whole lotta sunshine,
open spaces seem even more appealing.
That said, the ‘master’ bedroom (truly a misnomer since the
one large-ish bathroom in my house doesn’t attach to anything other than a
hallway) has a rather ridiculously small footprint for the giant ‘sledbed’ that
was & is lodged in there. The
previous owners of my house were a wonderful young, international family who
relocated to the husband’s native Switzerland so their bilingual
toddler & his baby sister could become TRI-lingual while their brains were
still sponge-like. They already spoke
English & Mom’s native Mexican Spanish, but for these sharp, energetic
people, two languages & cultures weren’t enough. Since they were relocating from the US Virgin
Islands to Switzerland ,
they were traveling light & not taking their furniture. Some had already been parsed out to island
friends before I bought the place, but since I was moving from a furnished
rental apartment to this first house of my own, I needed what they didn’t &
negotiated a package deal for some of the remaining furnishings.
Enter the ‘sledbed.’
This was how the husband described the sleigh bed to me when we were
striking our deal, & the name stuck among my friends. It is a beautiful bed & I loved it immediately. Philippe was a reasonable man & I paid a
reasonable price. Which is a good thing
because it doesn’t come out of that room without tools & possibly a shoe
horn & a tub of Crisco. So there she
sits, dark & large & well…THERE.
In the five years since, I’ve had blasphemous visions of
painting the dark rich wood cream or white…or of removing the inset panels in
the head & footboards & replacing them with caning (I have 2 rolls of
caning—don’t ask) to allow light through…or sawing the footboard off completely
& using it as a headboard for the bed in the spare room…or of making a
tie-on slipcover in Belgian linen (OK, they’re painters’ tarps I got on sale
from Home Depot, but after they’re washed they LOOK like Belgian linen). And yet there it sits, like a shipwreck on a
sandbar, enormous & imposing & unchanged.
So I sewed. (and
sewed & sewed). I keep a white duvet
on the beds in both rooms, allowing me to accessorize with any color I choose
& change looks on a whim. Aside from
the dark, warm wood tone of the bed, the other furnishings in that room are
honeyed shades of split bamboo & the walls are a creamy Danish yellow. And of course the ceiling beams are espresso
colored.
So, I went ‘spectral sunrise,’ (to coin a phrase)-- hot geranium, ‘push up’ orange & warm
yellow shams on the 3 sets of bed pillows.
A slightly more elegant orange & khaki print linen that reads old Hawaii to me for the
closet drape & tailored cover for the corner shelves. A warm yellow cushion sham for the oddly
proportioned wooden chair in the corner (dubbed a slipper chair because it is
low enough to be conducive to put on slippers…or heels) And I had already made
a wall arrangement of orchid prints & cigar boxes interspersed with cut
recycled metal framed mirrors from up island (Puerto Rico &
Hispanola). And the inspiration for the
whole room—the Tjord Boontje laser cut drapey paper lantern that looks like
curtains of flowers & leaves in shades of red, rose & orange.
It feels like a successful transformation. The lantern glows at night & the colors
glow during the daylight. When I wake up
& look around I am energized, happy & inspired…to tackle the next
bedroom!
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Buss Up Shut
Buss Up Shut by Lea Ann Robson
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Bread Nut after boiling & draining, or the start of Buss Up Shut? |
As I’ve mentioned, St. Croix is a wonderful ‘mash up’ of
cultures, flags, traditions, & people.
Today was a great example. I had
dinner with my two favorite ‘Southern Suitors’, my dear friends Miles &
Philip. Among the local restaurants we
tend to have our favorites & form our ruts, but tonight we branched out a
bit & tried a lovely bistro called Salud.
There we had a wonderful array of tapas that I feel sure would rate well
with any food critic, anywhere. But my
culinary adventures weren’t over for tonight.
When I got home I remembered a kindness my friend Joan gave
me as a holiday treat this morning. She
vends (colorful wraps, bags, & pretty much everything else!) next to me by
the sea when the ships are in & has become a great friend. She is from Trinidad, has a voice you’ll
never forget once you hear it, & a fiendish sense of humor. She also has a work ethic & positive
outlook that is rare. She
packs a substantial amount of wisdom in her not so substantial frame, put her kids
through school & is a veritable dynamo. She loves to garden, & makes all manner
of local fruit preserves, jams & chutneys that are a big hit with patrons
of our annual Agricultural Festival. We
chat a lot while vending & the topic is frequently gardening or
cooking.
So Monday when the Jewel of the Seas was in port, we were
gabbing about what is growing & what we’re doing with it & she
mentioned she had a bread nut tree laden with nuts. Bread nut trees have longer ‘fingers’ on
their giant hand-shaped leaves than the more common Breadfruit, & breadnuts
have a mild flavor & texture that I loved when I tried them a few years ago,
kind of like a cross between a chestnut and a fingerling potato. I mentioned I liked them, & this morning
she had me stop at her veggie stand in front of Ag Fair grounds to pick up the
bag of nuts she had cleaned for me. She
told me they still need to be boiled, & I thanked her & rushed off to
my other job.
It wasn’t until after dinner out this evening that I
remembered I needed to boil the nuts…& I had no idea about the specifics so
I typed the question into my phone & as always, up came multiple
answers. I found one website,
simplytrinicooking.com that had several pertinent entries. The most interesting posts were from ‘Felix,’
who seemed trustworthy if colorful in his advice. So I boiled the nuts (as he said) for 25
minutes in a deep pot of water, added salt (no idea how much—Felix doesn’t work
from specifics) & boiled them 25 minutes more. They are resting in their water as I write,
& we’ll see if I made Felix proud or filled him with shame.
Some of the breadnut curry recipes on that website were very
interesting, but their names are more so than the actual recipe. One recipe is called Buss Up Shut, & if I
have success with the nuts, I may get brave & try that…mostly for the
opportunity to say that name to people!
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