The Simple Things

Taking time to live well
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • SHOP
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Work with us
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • SHOP
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Work with us

Blog

Taking Time to Live Well

  • All
  • Chalkboard
  • Christmas
  • Competition
  • could do
  • Eating
  • Escape
  • Escaping
  • Fresh
  • Fun
  • gardening
  • Gathered
  • Gathering
  • Growing
  • Haikus
  • Interview
  • Living
  • Looking back
  • Magazine
  • magical creatures
  • Making
  • Miscellany
  • My Neighbourhood
  • Nature
  • Nest
  • Nesting
  • outing
  • playlist
  • Reader event
  • Reader offer
  • Shop
  • Sponsored post
  • Sunday Best
  • Think
  • Uncategorized
  • Wellbeing
  • Wisdom
Photograph of The Norfolk Brickyard, Wells-next-the-Sea, from Almost Wild Camping

Photograph of The Norfolk Brickyard, Wells-next-the-Sea, from Almost Wild Camping

How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping

Iona Bower May 22, 2021

Live a simpler life, closer to nature, even if it’s just for a night or two

If you fancy the idea of the simplest of existences for a week, sleeping under the stars and living entirely out in nature (but perhaps aren’t quite ready to forego a shower and running water yet) you might like to try Almost Wild camping.

In our April issue, James Warner Smith told us where to find some of the UK’s best almost wild camping spots. You can read all about them from page 18. Here are some of his tips for getting started if you’re feeling wild (but not THAT wild).

*Check the facilities Availability of toilets, showers and washing-up areas may vary so check before you book and you’ll know what to expect.

* Stock up Few campsites will have an onsite shop, or it may be very basic. Find the location of the nearest shops before you travel and bring adequate supplies, just in case.

* Cut the clutter Try not to pack the kitchen sink. Aim for being able to fit everything you need into a wheelbarrow (often provided) as you can rarely park by your pitch.

* Book early For the best spots, plan ahead and book early, especially in (this) summer. Check if children and dogs are allowed, too.

* The right pitch Practise putting up your tent at home and check you have all the necessary parts.

* Cook out Most sites let you have a campfire, which goes against the grain of the ‘Leave No Trace’ ethos of genuine wild camping. Ditch the camping stove and get creative.

* Slow down Switch off your phone, embrace the slower pace of life and just take time to enjoy where you are.

Almost Wild Camping: 50 British Campsites on the Wilder Side by James Warner Smith (Punk Publishing)

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More camping inspiration…

Featured
Camping Alamy.jpeg
May 17, 2025
Outdoors | Camping Truths
May 17, 2025
May 17, 2025
max-hermansson-w5uE11FiAc8-unsplash.jpg
Jun 18, 2024
Adventures | Stay in a Bothy
Jun 18, 2024
Jun 18, 2024
Caravan pic.jpg
Aug 9, 2022
Cooking | Meals for a One-Ring Burner
Aug 9, 2022
Aug 9, 2022
In Escape Tags issue 107, camping, wild camping, outdoors
Comment
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg

Ways to spend time in a window seat

Iona Bower May 18, 2021

A window seat is at the top of our home nook swishlist. Here are a few ways to make the most of yours if you’re lucky enough to have one.

  1. Take tea in it. Proper china, mind. In fact, you probably want to invest in one of those trolleys for cakes and sweet treats, so you can perch your teapot and milk jug on top and not have to make too many needless trips to the kitchen.

  2. Read in it. The obvious thing to do with a window seat is to sit down with a good book and look very picturesque and intellectual from the outside, even if your reading matter is a Jackie Collins and you’ve simply buried the front cover in your lap. Somehow, a window seat increases the appearance of culture in the same way spectacles do. Make the most of it, we say. 

  3. Get a bit Gothic. Go all Wuthering Heights and sit and watch the rain lashing at the panes of glass while thinking wistfully of lovers long out of reach. 

  4. Flaneur the hell out of it. Sit with the intention of doing absolutely nothing but people watching. If your window looks out only onto your garden you might have to employ a gardener first or send your family out to do some chores so that you may observe them hard at work. Try to make them the occasional mug of tea to avoid becoming a bit irritating. 

  5. Become a wildlife expert. Whether it’s birds, butterflies, foxes or merely the local cat population, a window seat affords the opportunity to become au fait with all the living things that pass through. 

  6. Turn informant. If your seat looks out on a public byway, get yourself a notebook and come over all Miss Marple. You never know what you might notice that proves useful at a later date. If you don’t spot anything you can always just pretend to be on a stake out, which is just as exciting. 

  7. Cloud watch. The original and best bit of mindfulness available. Spot dragons, medieval battles and giant rabbits, all from the comfort of your seat in the window. 

  8. Turn the window on its head and become an art installation. Dress up. Use props. Imagine your way into various scenarios and let others enjoy ‘viewing’ you each day, rather than you viewing them.

If you are feeling inspired to creat a window seat of your own, don’t miss our My Place feature in the May issue, in which Lottie Storey has gathered together some of her favourite window seats from Instagram and beyond, including this one, pictured above, which belongs to Jason Korinek @westcross_property_renovation. The May issue is in shops now or available to buy in our online store.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe


More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More inspiration for you home…

Featured
@mycambridgefairytale.jpeg
Feb 11, 2025
Nest | 5 Famous Chairs
Feb 11, 2025
Feb 11, 2025
Shade Liz Boyd.jpg
Aug 15, 2023
Think | In praise of shade
Aug 15, 2023
Aug 15, 2023
Marilyn Harrison My Place.jpg
Jul 13, 2023
Wellbeing | Why the Sea Makes you Happy
Jul 13, 2023
Jul 13, 2023
In Nest Tags issue 107, my place, windows, window seats, home
Comment
Photography: Kirstie Young

Photography: Kirstie Young

Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas

Iona Bower May 15, 2021

The two fruits of the moment are pink, squeaky stemmed, forced rhubarb and lovely sour gooseberries. Either could be used for this spring cocktail, and should be treated the same way: stewed in a little water and honey to sweeten their sourness and then sieved to make a smooth syrup. Gooseberry is the more traditional ingredient for a Whitsun feast, but rhubarb makes a particularly pretty pink drink.

Serves 6

6 stems forced rhubarb (as pink as you can find)
Runny honey
1 bottle champagne or other sparkling wine

1 Chop the rhubarb into 5cm chunks and tip into a saucepan over a medium heat with a small splash of water – rhubarb contains plenty of water so you only need just enough to get it going. Let it bubble away until the rhubarb has completely softened and then use a fork to break and mash the pieces up.

2 Strain into a bowl and add runny honey to taste.

3 Pour your syrup into a jar and chill in the fridge. When ready to serve, fill half a glass with the chilled rhubarb syrup and top with sparkling wine.

This is just one of the recipes from our Nature’s Table feature by Lia Leendertz. The other late spring recipes include confit duck with petits pois and Lincolnshire Whitsun cake. You can find it starting on page 8 of our May issue.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More tipples to try…

Featured
Fireside Old Fashioned.jpeg
Jan 4, 2025
Tipple | Fireside Old Fashioned
Jan 4, 2025
Jan 4, 2025
Hedgerow Fizz.jpg
Sep 7, 2024
Tipple | Hedgerow Fizz
Sep 7, 2024
Sep 7, 2024
Sherbati.jpg
Jul 6, 2024
Tipple | Rose, Chia & Almond Sherbati
Jul 6, 2024
Jul 6, 2024
In Eating Tags issue 107, cocktail recipes, cocktails, cocktail, summer drinks
Comment
Photography: Fanni Williams/tillyandthebuttons.com

Photography: Fanni Williams/tillyandthebuttons.com

Design | characters who rock a stripe

Iona Bower May 11, 2021

How a Breton top gives anyone a bit of an edge

Striped tops have become a wardrobe staple for many of us in recent years, but no matter how ubiquitous they become, they always make us think of a few famous stripes wearers.

Funnily enough, despite stripes being fairly commonplace now, there’s always something about a fictional character who rocks a stripe. They tend towards the unorthodox and rebellious. In Medieval Europe a stripe was a symbol of disorder and also difference, worn only by societal outcasts such as lepers, hangmen and clowns. So perhaps that’s one reason why characters who are a little ‘outside’ the bounds of normal are often portrayed in stripes. That, and the fact that we all know they just look cool, of course. 

Here are a few characters from fiction, film and television, who must have earned their stripes in the stripes-wearing stakes. 

Dennis the Menace

Dennis’s stripes have a long history. When he was first drawn in 1951 he had plain clothes and just a striped tie. Just a few months later the black-and-white tie became a black-and-white jumper and only a few months after that did the jumper become the signature black and red Dennis is famous for.  

Pippi Longstocking

Astrid Lindgren’s curious, kind and superhumanly strong nine year old character, Pippi Longstocking has become sort of synonymous with stripes, though we remember her most for her knee-length, mismatched stripy socks. 

Ernie and Bert from Sesame Street

Rocking a stripe in completely opposite ways, Ernie’s stripes are horizontal like his big wide smile, while Bert’s are vertical, like his long face. But they complement each other perfectly. 

Where’s Wally?

Known for his red-and-white-striped jumper, as well as his red-and-white beanie and round specs, Wally is drawn by Martin Handford, usually tiny and surrounded by other red-and-white-striped things so as to make finding Wally trickier. 

The Cat in the Hat

Also sporting red and white stripes but far more ostentatious is Dr Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat, a six-foot-tall cat wearing a red-and-white-striped top hat. As if a massive, rhyming cat with a paunch might otherwise go unobserved...

Bee from Ant and Bee

Another character from children’s fiction who must be mentioned for their stripes is Angela Banner’s Bee from the Ant and Bee books. Although we’re not sure whether or not Bee counts as rocking a stripe, since he is stark naked and his stripes are all natural. Does that make him <more> stripy for being striped to his very core? Or less stripy because he didn’t choose his stripes? These are the sorts of big questions we are unafraid to ask here at The Simple Things. 

The chaps from O Brother Where Art Thou?

Literally rocking a stripe are Ulysses, Delmar and Pete, who escape in their prison stripes from a chain gang, head off in search of buried treasure and have an accidental hit record as The Soggy Bottom Boys. There’s something about those stripy prison slacks that looks a bit cooler in O Brother Where Art Thou’s faded sepia tones, too. 

Betelgeuse

In his vertical black and white striped suit there’s no mistaking Tim Burton’s obnoxious poltergeist. He might not have got away with that outfit in life, but he certainly cuts a dash in those stripes now he’s dead. Which just goes to show how a stripe really can lift any outfit. 

You can read more about the stripy Breton top in our Wearing Well series on page 83 of the May issue.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe


More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More musings on style…

Featured
Water Boatman.jpg
May 24, 2025
Nature | Pond-Dipping for Grown-ups
May 24, 2025
May 24, 2025
RS2832_iStock-1278591330.jpg
May 23, 2025
Sponsored Post | Get your family active with Youth Sport Trust
May 23, 2025
May 23, 2025
Screenshot 2025-05-21 at 08.52.06.png
May 21, 2025
Playlist | Great Heights
May 21, 2025
May 21, 2025
In Think Tags issue 107, style, stripes, fun
Comment
Photography: Yossy Arefi

Photography: Yossy Arefi

Cake Facts | Upside-down Cake

Iona Bower May 8, 2021

Deliciously sweet and silly at once, we defy that hardest of cake haters not to smile at the sight of an upside-down cake.

But who first thought to invert perfection? Well it’s likely that the idea is quite old and began when breads and cakes were cooked over fires in skillet pans. Our cake-eating ancestors would have added fruit and sugar to caramelise it on the bottom of a pan and then poured a simple cake batter on top before cooking it over the fire. Turned upside-down, once cooked, it would look a lot more appealing than the top, which of course would cook eventually but may not brown so well when not done in the oven.

But as with many of the most fun things in life, a few centuries’ of knowhow and the invention of new gadgets and gizmos are what made the upside-down cake truly great. Around 1911, when James Dole’s company invented a machine that could cut pineapple into pretty, easy-to-deal with rings, and with the modern convenience of ovens to boot, the pineapple upside-down cake had its moment in the sun. The addition of a tinned maraschino cherry was literally the icing on the cake.

In our April issue, we have a recipe for the classic upside-down cake with a spiced twist, pictured above. Why not give it a go? You can find it on p25.

This delicious recipe is taken from Snacking Cakes: Simple Treats for Anytime Cravings by Yossy Arefi (Clarkson Potter). Photography by Yossy Arefi

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe


More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More cake facts

Featured
Pineapple Upside Down Cake.jpg
May 8, 2021
Cake Facts | Upside-down Cake
May 8, 2021
May 8, 2021
Beetroot Chocolate Cake.jpg
Oct 10, 2020
Cake facts | root veg baking
Oct 10, 2020
Oct 10, 2020
Simnel Cake Sam A Harris, Fitzbillies.jpg
Mar 21, 2020
Cake facts | Simnel cake
Mar 21, 2020
Mar 21, 2020
In Eating Tags issue 107, cake facts, cake in the house
Comment
Illustration by Zuza Mysko

Illustration by Zuza Mysko

How to | Become a Dormouse Monitor

Iona Bower May 3, 2021

Here’s how you can do your bit to strengthen the dormouse population

Numbers of hazel dormice have dwindled dangerously in recent years but they’re still there, particularly in southern England and parts of Wales. They’re fascinating creatures, which you can read more about on our Magical Creatures page this month (page 33), and a joy if you manage to spot one, or even signs one has been about. 

The People’s Trust for endangered species has lots of information about dormouse monitoring on its website but here’s a bit about how to get started. 

Carry out a nut hunt

Dormice leave a distinctive hole in hazelnut shells. They eat them when they’re green straight from the tree but the empty shells later turn brown and fall to the ground and are a sure sign dormice are about. That information can help organisations like The PTES protect those dormice in the future by advising landowners and woodland managers on ways in which they can help look after the little fellers. 

It’s best done in Autumn when the shells start to fall but you can start looking for spots to monitor now, and the PTES have produced a really useful Dormouse Monitoring sheet you can print out on all you need to know but here are the basics so you can get thinking about it.

  • First, identify some land with hazel (The PTES sheet has instructions on how to spot hazel), and make sure you have the permission of the landowner if needed. 

  • Take a container with you and spend about 20 minutes gathering hazel nuts and shells beneath each tree, group of trees or section of hedgerow. 

  • Once home, go through the nuts with a magnifying glass to identify any that may have been nibbled by dormice and set them aside. 

  • You can then send them (or good quality photos of them) to the PTES along with your name and contact details and an Ordnance Survey grid reference for them to check. 

  • Congratulations! You’re officially a dormouse monitor.


More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More magical creatures…

Featured
Water Boatman.jpg
May 24, 2025
Nature | Pond-Dipping for Grown-ups
May 24, 2025
May 24, 2025
Moths2.jpg
Oct 10, 2023
Learn | To Tell Moth Jokes
Oct 10, 2023
Oct 10, 2023
Stoat Zuza Mysko.JPG
Jan 11, 2022
Magical Creatures | Weasels vs Stoats
Jan 11, 2022
Jan 11, 2022
In magical creatures Tags issue 107, magical creatures, dormice, wildlife, nature
Comment
Pit Stops pic.jpg

Fun facts | British Motorways

Iona Bower April 25, 2021

Surprise and delight your fellow passengers with these fast motorway facts

We’re all so excited to be planning and enjoying a few jaunts further afield now. In celebration of that we’ve put together a Pocket Guide to Pit Stops of places to stop, eat and enjoy just off the motorway around Britain. You can find it in the April issue with instructions on how to cut it out and fold it into your very own pocket guide to pop in your glove box. 


While you wait for your copy to arrive so you can plan your next sojourn, we’ve put together a few fascinating* facts about British motorways for you to share with your fellow passengers on the journey. Strap in! This could be a bumpy ride!

* The Simple Things can take no responsibility for what you or the next woman considers to be fascinating. We’ve led a sheltered life for the last year. 

  • The first full-length motorway was the M1 but if we’re splitting hairs the first ‘stretch’ of motorway was in fact the Preston Bypass (now part of the M6), which was opened by Harol Macmillan in 1958. It was just eight and a quarter miles long. 

  • The first motorway service station, meanwhile was Watford Gap, built on the M1 just a year after it opened. 

  • Britain’s widest stretch of motorway is 17 lanes wide (both sides of the carriageway) and is found on the M61 at Linnyshaw Moss in Greater Manchester where the motorway meets the M60 and the A580. 

  • The most haunted motorway in Britain is the M6, with sightings of Roman soldiers and a woman screaming at the side of the road. (Perhaps she’d seen the price of the service station coffee). 

  • The longest motorway in Britain is the M6 (236 miles long), which runs from Catthorpe in Leicestershire up to the Scottish border, while the shortest is thought to be the A635M in Manchester at just under half a mile. 

  • Rumours tell that there are dead bodies from gangland killings hidden in the concrete and cement that was used to make the M25. 

  • On a more pleasant note, the M25 is also the only motorway we know of that has a cricket pitch on it. Well, ok, above it. There’s a cricket square on the Bell Common tunnel which the M25 passes under between Junctions 26 and 27. 

  • The M1 has no junction 3. When it was built they planned to add in Junction 3 at a later date once the link road to the A1 was built. But the link road was cancelled so the junction was never built and a service station now sits where it would have been. 

  • When the M25 first opened it had no speed restrictions. We assume they foresaw a time when speed restrictions on Britain’s busiest motorway would be pointless since it was at a standstill much of the time anyway.

    Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More fun for the journey…

Featured
Pit Stops pic.jpg
Apr 25, 2021
Fun facts | British Motorways
Apr 25, 2021
Apr 25, 2021
motorways.jpg
Feb 19, 2020
Good stops just off the motorway
Feb 19, 2020
Feb 19, 2020
Jun 19, 2016
Listen: Journeys playlist
Jun 19, 2016
Jun 19, 2016
In Escape Tags journeys, journey, issue 107, car journeys, motorways, outings
Comment
Photography: Emma Croman  Recipe and styling: Lousie Gorrod

Photography: Emma Croman Recipe and styling: Lousie Gorrod

Recipe | Hot Smoked Salmon, Caper and Dill Tart

Iona Bower April 24, 2021

A simple tart that will have everyone reaching across the picnic blanket for the biggest slice

A tasty and filling savoury tart that is ideal as the centrepiece of a spring picnic or a light lunch in the garden with friends. Serve with a big green salad or just cram it in with fingers and have cherry tomatoes on the side. Tastes as good sitting on the car boot with a view of the sea as it does out on the patio.

Serves 8

375g shortcrust pastry
2 tbsp olive oil
1 small onion, peeled and finely chopped
180g ready-to-eat hot smoked salmon
35g capers, drained and rinsed
3 eggs 150ml single cream
50ml milk
15g fresh dill, fronds picked

1 On a lightly -floured surface, roll out the pastry and use it to line a 35cm x 13cm flan tin (alternatively, you can use a 26cm circular flan tin). Trim any overhanging pastry and prick the base with a fork. Chill in the fridge for 20 mins. Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 200C/Fan 180C/Gas 6.
2 Once chilled, remove from the fridge, line with foil and fill with baking beans. Bake for 10 mins, remove the foil and beans and bake for a further 10-12 mins, or until the pastry is crisp. Set aside to cool.
3 Heat the oil in a pan and gently fry the onion for 5 mins, or until soft and golden. Spread over the pastry base, then flake over the salmon and capers.
4 In a bowl , beat the eggs, cream and milk together, then stir in the dill and season to taste. Pour into the pastry case and bake for 35-40 mins, or until firm and golden. Leave to cool before slicing into portions.

This recipe is just one of the picnic ideas by Louise Gorrod in our feature A Vintage Day Out. You can find all the recipes, including Rainbow Chard and Feta Borek, Herby Hoummous, Strawberry and Mint Shrub, Summer Wraps and more beginning on page 54.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

From our May issue…

Featured
Almost Wild.jpg
May 22, 2021
How to | Go (Almost) Wild Camping
May 22, 2021
May 22, 2021
westcross_property_renovation1.jpg
May 18, 2021
Ways to spend time in a window seat
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Rhubarb Mimosa.jpg
May 15, 2021
Tipple | Rhubarb Mimosas
May 15, 2021
May 15, 2021

More picnic recipes…

Featured
Picnic.jpg
Jun 2, 2024
Fun | Games for Picnics
Jun 2, 2024
Jun 2, 2024
Turmeric gingerade.jpg
Sep 2, 2023
Tipple | Turmeric Gingerade
Sep 2, 2023
Sep 2, 2023
Fridge cake Rebecca Lewis.jpg
Jul 1, 2023
Recipe | Ginger & Orange Chocolate Biscuit Fridge Cake
Jul 1, 2023
Jul 1, 2023
In Fresh Tags issue 107, May, picnic, spring, outings, Savoury bakes, salmon
Comment
Playlist.JPG

Playlist | How does Your Garden Grow?

Iona Bower April 15, 2021

“Hello sunshine
So glad to see you sunshine
Hello sunshine
It’s been dark for a very long time”

A bit of sunshine, a bit of rain and a lot of love. Hear the playlist here

DJ: FRANCES AMBLER

In playlist Tags issue 107, April, playlist, gardens
Comment
Featured
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

Buy, download or subscribe

See the sample of our latest issue here

Buy a copy of our latest anthology: A Year of Celebrations

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

Listen to our podcast - Small Ways to Live Well

Feb 27, 2025
Join our Newsletter
Name
Email *

We respect your privacy and won't share your data.

email marketing by activecampaign
facebook-unauth twitter pinterest spotify instagram
  • Subscriber Login
  • Stockists
  • Advertise
  • Contact

The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

facebook-unauth twitter pinterest spotify instagram