Organise | an excellent toolbox

Make DIY days a thing to relish by spring-cleaning your tool box into submission

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We do like a Very Useful Thing, and what we like even more is a Thing that is Very Useful as well as Very Lovely. Toolboxes are an excellent example of something that should be truly useful but are infinitely improved by containing items that are lovely to hold, pretty to look at and give you a smug sense of satisfaction every time you lift the lid.  Here are a few items that we think deserve a place in every toolbox. 

Hammer
A ball hammer and a claw hammer are both useful, but if you’re only going for one, get the claw hammer so that you can pull old bits of wood apart as well as knock things into walls. A nice wooden handle that sits neatly in the palm of your hand is what you’re after, with a pleasingly cool, metal head that will sink nails into anything you like with ease. 

Tape measure
A good metal measuring tape that locks solidly and then retracts smoothly with a satisfying thunk is a must for any toolbox, and especially handy for scoping out rooms for new items of furniture. 

Jar of screws
Like a good button box, a screw jar really ought to be a little bit of history. Ideally, it should once have belonged to your Dad or Grandad and contain mostly screws that you have absolutely no idea of the heritage of but will one day be precisely the thing you need. 

Socket set and wrench
By Golly, there’s little quite so satisfying as being able to shift an unshiftable bolt whenever you want to. And having a gleaming set of sockets so you always have exactly the size you need is really very pleasing indeed. A set of Allen keys is handy for the same reason. 

A set of screwdrivers
Or at least a Phillips and a flathead and some of those teeny tiny screwdrivers you get in Christmas crackers that are good for essential spectacle maintenance. 

Torch
A nice slim metal one, with a flash function, because that’s always fun, but mainly for finding things that have rolled under furniture. 

Sandpaper selection
A few different grades are useful from 5 o’clock shadow through to pebble dash, to allow you to sand finely or roughly shave a few centimetres off fast. 

Pliers (and long-nose pliers)
Useful for a hundred domestic difficulties for things that are stuck in, up and on things, things that are shut fast, wrenched open or just difficult to reach. A nice, heavy pair of pliers is a joy to have in your hand. 

Putty knife
Look for one with a good bend on the metal so that you can get your putty neatly into any nook and cranny that needs filling. 

Hack saw
A small hack saw is very handy for making adjustments to dowel, curtain poles and anything else that’s in desperate need of shortening (apart from your in-laws’ visits). 

Stanley knife
Excellent for crafting as well as DIY. Look for a knife that fits snugly into your palm and has a pleasing weight to it. 

Spirit level
It’s not a simple meeting of alcohol and physics. It’s an magic straightening bubble, worked by elves. We won’t have it any other way. Surely the most attractive item in any tool box. Get a nice wooden one with a lovely green bubble to help with hanging shelves and the like. 

Stud detector
Great for helping you put up pictures, mirrors etc and very exciting too because they give you that feeling of metal detecting in your own home. 

Duct tape
For temporarily sorting everything from leaks to slow punctures. We recommend Gorilla tape, or Duck tape. Because who’d want a tape without a gorilla or a duck on them when you could have one with?

Pencil
All pencils are not born equal. Don’t just stick an HB in there from the kitchen drawer. You’ll only end up borrowing it back next time you need to write the milkman a note. Get yourself a proper square-shaped carpenter’s pencil that won’t roll off surfaces and will make you feel very well-equipped indeed. 

In our January issue, we are talking Cups of Tea with Louise Hames of Tinker and Fix, which sells very lovely things for your tool box, garden and more. Turn to page 30 to find out more about them. 

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Tea and scent pairings

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Some simple pleasures are even better for being well paired: a glass of wine and a plate of cheese, coffee and walnut cake, a good book and a comfy chair… But if you’ve never thought of pairing a cup of tea with a scent, you may have been missing out. “Taste and smell are intimately entwined, and when scents and flavours are paired beautifully, they can create fantastic experiences,” says Chantal M’Biki, founder of House of Lilah, specialists in pairing tea blends and candle scents.

Our modern and fast-paced lifestyles don’t always allow time for creative stimulation and that’s what House of Lilah hopes to put right. Whether you want to relax your mind, awaken your senses or stimulate your imagination, there’s a tea and scent pairing that might help. It turns out there’s a bit more to it than matching a cup of Yorkshire Tea with the aroma of a nearby Chocolate Hobnob… Here are a few ideas from Chantal that you can recreate at home for pairing scents with Earl Grey:

Earl Grey is a British classic with a very recognizable floral taste. It’s great for those who want a little caffeine fix without the bitterness. Originally, it was a black tea base flavoured with bergamot oil, delivering a lemon taste with a hint of grapefruit. Nowadays, it’s also produced with a green tea base.

Try a candle with aromatic top notes such as basil, rosemary or sage, which will complement the Earl Grey aromas and can help create an uplifting atmosphere. We’ve created a similar feeling with our House of Lilah Freedom pairings, such as the Tutti Frutti loose leaf tea with the Sun in a Pot soy candle.

If you’d like to read more about Chantal, she appears in our My Day in Cups of Tea page in the July issue, which is on sale now. And if you’re interested in buying any matched teas and candles from House of Lilah she has a few suggestions below:

The Slow Motion candle and Loving Kindness tea is a beautiful duo that brings mindfulness to everyday life. The candle’s citrusy top notes beautifully enhance the orange and cinnamon aromas to induce alertness. The earthy taste of the red rooibos tea echoes the candle’s smoky, woody base notes, to create a warm and enveloping atmosphere conducive to full relaxation and reconnection with yourself.

Our Tomato Leaf candle and Tropical Escape tea is the perfect pair for those who want to open their mind to new horizons. The herbal and slightly bitter sencha green tea intensifies the candle’s leafy green base notes. The tart tomato accents complement the sweet and sour flavours of mango and pineapple, to create an unexpected fruity fusion.

Follow House of Lilah on instagram @houseoflilah_london.

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Long weekend compendium

 
Photography: Kirstie Young

Photography: Kirstie Young

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Projects, Pastimes and Proper Jobs to throw yourself into at home this month

There’s such joy in spending spring days at home when, as well as hunkering indoors, there is pottering in the garden, sewing that can be done into light evenings and the chance to really enjoy your home at its best.

With two long weekends to get stuck into this month (as well as, let’s face it, plenty of time at home), now is the ideal opportunity to do all those jobs and projects you never have time for and enjoy a bit of being busy doing nothing, too. And it’s a prospect to relish so take it slow and plan this well.

In our May issue, we have a special feature on Crafternoons, with delightful projects that will absorb you for just a few hours, but if an afternoon pleasantly whiled away isn’t enough for you, here are our ideas for whiling away an entire day or weekend productively.

Here’s our Simple Things Compendium of projects, pastimes and Proper Jobs that will make you wish long weekends could last all week.

Projects

Long weekends are made for good projects. The best sorts are fun to plan, absorb you completely and leave you with a glow of satisfaction. It’s a good idea to practise in advance your expression of nonchalance and an airy “oh it’s just something I knocked up at home” for when friends comment admiringly.

A simple project you can do in an afternoon is always satisfying and paper crafts are ideal for this timescale. An origami corner bookmark, homemade notebook, or dip-dyed stationery are good for paper craft beginners. For semi pros there is a plethora of paper ideas on the internet. We are coveting the paper sea scene under a little glass dome from Etsy maker My Papercut Forest. If you can repurpose some old paper for a project, award yourself an additional grown-up gold star - old maps, dressmaking patterns and tatty books or old newspapers can all look beautiful used to cover books, lampshades or even the walls of your loo. 

We do love a kitchen table day. If you have a box of neglected essential oils lurking somewhere (who doesn’t?) you could spend a happy morning experimenting with scents to make room sprays (three parts water to one part witch hazel and your choice of oils), or even a cleaning spray for your yoga mat (a few drops each of tea tree, lavender and peppermint in distilled water). Neal’s Yard sells a range of ‘base’ products called Create Your Own if you want to branch out into lotions and potions.

In fact, how about dedicating a day (or even an entire weekend) to kitchen projects? We spend so much time in the kitchen on everyday food prep. How much lovelier to spend a day pottering in the heart of the home, radio murmuring, creating delicious things to store away for another day. We don’t think you can ever have enough jams and chutneys but if you fancy something different, try pickling vegetables or making green onion kimchi (pictured above) or turmeric pickled cauliflower, and you’ll always have something impressive to fancy up a cheese on toast lunch. A long weekend at home is the ideal time to get out those foodie kits thoughtful souls gave you for Christmas and you never got round to. They’re a fun way to try out a new kitchen project, from making your own cheese to brewing your own beer. Who knows, you could have a cottage industry started by Monday. And if you don’t have one in the back of a cupboard, make it a gift to yourself.

Keen stitchers might enjoy the opportunity to make the most of the light evenings, when fabric fun times need not be curtailed by 40-watt lightbulbs. How about stitching a hammock for the garden, re-covering a deck chair, or digging out your embroidery threads and customising a shopping bag with the name of your hometown? You might try a craft you’ve never tried to make something to you never knew you needed… needle-felted dachshund or macrame market bag, anyone? 

Fancy a weekend spent making your garden a little lovelier? You could make a newspaper nursery for seedlings, by planting veg seeds in homemade paper pots, give your herb garden a complete makeover, or create one from scratch, planting them in something quirky, from the ubiquitous pair of old wellies to palettes, an old metal tub, concrete blocks or apple crate. And while you’re outside, if you can source some tins from the recycling turn them into garden tea light holders for the longer evenings: just clean thoroughly, spray-paint, fill with water and freeze and then punch hole patterns in them using a hammer and nails. Projects complete, we suggest you light your tea lights and spend the evening in the garden with something delicious you made earlier. 


Pastimes

Is there anything nicer than being in a holiday cottage and having nothing but a pot of tea, and a book you found on the cottage’s bookshelf to occupy you? We think not. You can recreate that holiday cottage feeling by spending a day or two slowing down and whiling away a few hours on completely pointless things you love.

Along with mince pies, jigsaws are a joy we think should be indulged in all year. They’ve enjoyed something of a makeover recently. No more puzzles of Labrador puppies posing with carnations: there are endless ‘cool jigsaws’ to purchase (we love Jiggy Puzzles and Piecework Puzzles), with images beautiful enough to frame afterwards.  We’ve even created an online puzzle or two of our own you might enjoy.

If a jigsaw has you in the mood for more puzzles, spend a morning with the crossword. If you’ve done newspaper crosswords regularly in the past you’ll know the joy of getting to know the quirks and in-jokes of the various ‘setters’. If you’re new to them, try The Telegraph for a good cryptic crossword that isn’t completely outfacing, but you’ll find a paper and a setter you get on with. All you need is a decent ballpoint pen and a large cafetiere of coffee.  

We all ‘read’ but when was the last down you sat down to do nothing but read for a whole afternoon? (It was in that holiday cottage we mentioned, wasn’t it?) With a whole weekend to waste wonderfully, you could read a book you’ve never got round to, one you read when you were too young to appreciate it fully (we see you, Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca) or finish one you started and then put aside. And on that note, what happened to that novel you once started? Alternatively, get everyone in your house to pen a short story and read them aloud in the evening. You can see others telling stories at The Moth if you need a bit of performative inspiration. 

Get out the board games, too, from old favourites like Cluedo and Battleship to the whizzier new board games, such as Sagrada, in which you build stained glass windows, or the spooky Betrayal at House on the Hill. And board games aren’t just for cold winter evenings; take them outside. There’s a plethora of garden games available, from Kubb to Giant Chess and, let’s face it, like tennis, Scrabble is more fun played on grass.

If you’re struggling to think of ways to pass the time on a slow weekend, cast your mind back to childhood. Chances are you’ll enjoy the same things now you loved then. Perhaps you have a neglected musical instrument in the loft you could get down and tune up? And when was the last time you spent an afternoon drawing, painting or doing calligraphy? You probably still had name tapes in your clothes, let’s be honest. Get out your pencils and a sketchbook and give it a go again. If you want a little guidance, try a Sketchbook Club online

Talking of pastimes from past times, consider photography. Not the snap-happy stuff you do on your phone. Dig out your old camera and give it some love. Whether digital or analogue, the act of considering composition, light and shutter speed bring the skill and the joy back to taking a photograph

A weekend at home is also a great opportunity to try something new - whether it’s scrapbooking, researching your family history online, or learning to play Mah Jong, whiling away some time never looked so appealing. 

Proper jobs

We do like to bask in the glow of a job well done, but the best jobs are those that you can really get absorbed in at the time. How about making this the year you come over all Moley from The Wind in the Willows and do a proper spring clean?

Pop on our Spring Clean playlist and invest in some really lovely cleaning products you want to use then start at the top of the house and work down, dusting first, and doing floors last.

Alternatively, a couple of free days are a good opportunity to give a neglected spot a new lease of life. You could bottom the greenhouse; scrub the empty flower pots, sweep the spiders into a corner (but leave them somewhere to hang out), hang tools on walls so you’ve got some room to work, and voila, you have a sunny room of your own to escape to with a cup of tea and that crossword. Or treat your home’s exterior to a facial - wash down windowsills, scrub your front step (1950s housewife skirt tucked into knickers a plus but not a necessity) and Brasso your door furniture.

There’s something meditative about ‘enjoyable cleaning’. Decluttering your whole house, however, can feel like something of a chore, and we’re here for the fun jobs so we’d suggest choosing a small area to make lovely: sort out your coat cupboard, perhaps. Or what about your books? Would it make you happier to see them arranged by colour, author, subject matter or Dewey Decimal system?  Imagine getting completely on top of your pantry… finding all those tins of weird things we all have at the back of the cupboard and actually making something with them, then sorting everything out with beautiful storage so a row of jars and tins greets you pleasingly as you open the door. Aaah… that’s better.

And there are a hundred small but enjoyable jobs to ‘do well’ on a weekend at home, from washing your cushion covers and polishing your cutlery to hanging that framed print that’s been standing in the hall for a year and finally, actually putting all your photographs into albums. 

Don’t forget to reward yourself regularly with tea and cake for your efforts. And make it some decent Earl Grey and a proper homemade cake. If a slow weekend is worth doing, it’s worth doing properly, we think.


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From our May Scrapbook issue…