Thursday 27 September 2012

Curiosity Shop #4

Curiouser & Curiouser

“Curiouser and curiouser!” Cried Alice (she was so much surprised, that for the moment she quite forgot how to speak good English). “Now I’m opening out like the largest telescope that ever was! Good-bye, feet!” (for when she looked down at her feet they seemed to be almost out of sight, they were getting so far off). “Oh, my poor little feet, I wonder who will put on your shoes and stockings for you now, dears? I’m sure I shan’t be able!”

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Chapter 2, by Lewis Carroll




The surprise and appeal of unexpected proportions  has always been an intriguing conundrum for one to ponder. Lewis Carroll’s Alice found her changing height so disconcerting that she wondered “Who in the world am I?’ Ah, that’s the great puzzle!” In the interior landscape, a pop of something unexpected can enliven our everyday experience. I came across this disproportionately large, bulb-shaped bottle at Burslem & Co on Stoke Newington Church St and straight away it inspired me to play with porportions in my own home.




Made of clear, transparent glass it's exaggerated form reduces the delicate nature of the material from which it is made, that the bottle becomes more a looming fixture than a vulnerable vessel.



The correct name for my Alice in Wonderland bottle is a demijohn. Demijohn’s were originally encased in wicker and used to transport and store liquid, particularly alcohol, from the 17th to the early 20th centuries. They were imported from Europe to America in the 17th and 18th centuries until America started producing their own from the mid - late 19th century. Many were free blown, others blown into a dip mold, turn molds or on a plate base. The shapes produced are varied and eye catching: ovoid, kidney, cylindrical, round, teardrop, apple and heart shaped. These very large ones are called carboys. Such a brilliant name that adds even more allure to these charming bottles!



Taken out of their functional context and into a decorative setting, the demijohn or carboy becomes a striking interior accessory.






Clustered together in groups they create an interesting focal point in a neutral room.  




Turn your world a little topsy-turvy by adding surrealist touches such as the exaggerated shapes and sizes of the demijohn bottle. The fashion photographer Tim Walker has long since played with surrealist proportions in his fashion shoots for the likes of Vogue. His extraordinary sets take us on an imaginative journey through wonderland. Let him inspire your living space!






Summer Thornton’s Lewis Carroll inspired interior gives the fantastical a real-life twist.


Aside from accessories, large chairs or lighting can add that Alice in Wonderland charm to your home.  


I love the malachite-patterned wallpaper by Cole & Son and the spruce green Tom Dixon chair which blends tradition with modernity.



Certainly worth a mention is the grouping of enchanted forest curiosities featuring petrified wood, a gold plated frog skeleton, glass eggs, and bronze rabbit showcased under glass bell jars. Dreamy!

The huge 1960’s Murano tube-glass chandelier reflected in the mirrored armoire provides a decadent detail.

The black and white harlequin floor, painted with liquid lacquer, creates a sillky effect - it's as if you're standing on water.



“So many out-of-the-way things had happened lately, that Alice had begun to think that very few things indeed were really impossible.”

Let's Little Black Book it!

Thursday 20 September 2012

Curiosity Shop #3

Animal Print


While curiosity shopping around London's East End I discovered this delightful 1960s Ercol studio couch with quirky hunting print at the newly refurbished Broadway Retro on Broadway Market.

It was the fabric, with a jolly scene of Tudor pastoral idyll, that caught my eye immediately. Then I realised I was looking at an original 1960s Ercol studio couch and my excitement went up a notch or two. Like a really great painting, the more you look at this fabric the more that is revealed. It’s a story-telling print which unfolds not just scenes of cute animals and rural bliss but a witty evocation of Old England's pastoral life including rabbit hunting.

The studio couch was designed by the company’s founder, Lucian Ercolani, and was first produced in the late 1950s. It was designed to function both as a large sofa and as a daybed for guests. It features characteristic steam bent arms and is made from solid elm and beech in the Buckinghamshire factory.

 

Ercol have recently reissued this style with a variety of modern fabrics. The smooth lines and clean design created with quality woods have ensured Ercol remains a timeless classic.

You can nab one for yourself at Twentytwentyone from £2,150 - 2,730.

This original 1960s Ercol daybed is available from Broadway Retro for £950.





The curiosity shopper can’t get enough of Donna Wilson’s cutie-pie creations! As part of TENT London, at the 2010 London Design Festival Ercol and Donna Wilson (the very cool RCA graduate, textile and soft furnishings designer) got together to create one of the cooleset studio couches ever!  



Another super-cool Ercol studio couch design is by the Love London studio.

The Love London design collection is drawn from Barbara Chandler’s Love London book, which features 180 photographs of England’s capital city and is published by Batsford. Another inspiring update of this favourite classic.


Contemporary fabrics update this classic sixties design.


Well that was a successful curiosity shopping shop! I wonder what treasure we'll stumble upon this weekend?

Saturday 15 September 2012

Curiosity Shop #2


The animals came in two by two...


  

It’s not every day that something so rare and so beautiful arrives fresh to the market. This rare pair of Japanese Kakiemon models of tigers from the Edo Period (late 17th century) have all of the makings of a sought after lot for sale at auction. Rarity, exceptional beauty and excellent provenance – they formerly came from a European Noble family. Plus there is a similar pair in the China Summer Palace, Drottingholm, in the collection of the King of Sweden and similar pairs sold at Christie's in London: 19th July 1965, Lot 96, 18th February 1975, Lot 78 and 9th March 1987, Lot 338. This pair of tiggers were formerly in the collection of H.R.H. The Late Duchess of Kent.  How they move in such noble circles!

For me, it is their intriguingly cute faces and curious expressions that enable you to fall immediately in love with them. Estimated at £100,000 - 150,000, these guys sold at Christie’s, London in May this year for a whopping £169,250. Still want to tickle their chins?



Decorated in iron-red, yellow, blue and black enamels these playful little characters are each approximately 25cm. high. Kawaiiii!!