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Taking time to live well
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Photograph: Lottie Storey

Photograph: Lottie Storey

Escape | A hipster hideaway in London

Lottie Storey September 12, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Lottie Storey heads to The Culpeper, London - much more than a pub with rooms

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Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things – turn to page 62 of the September issue for more of this urban adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Lottie Storey is The Simple Things’ digital editor and a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. Find her on Instagram @lottie_storey and her Bristol-based travel and lifestyle blog, oysterandpearl.co.uk. 

 
  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

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

 

More from the September issue:

Featured
Sep 25, 2017
Nest | String of hearts
Sep 25, 2017
Sep 25, 2017
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Sep 23, 2017
Recipe | Coffee & walnut mini loaf cakes
Sep 23, 2017
Sep 23, 2017
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Sep 22, 2017
Creativity | Meet the makers using waste as a material for art
Sep 22, 2017
Sep 22, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom inspiration:

Featured
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Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
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Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
In Escape Tags travel, this is your kingdom, london, issue 63, september, pub
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Event: Thornback & Peel screen printing workshop (closed)

Lottie Storey August 26, 2015

 

Want to get into print? Come and learn screen printing at a special workshop hosted by Thornback & Peel at their London shop. You'll print your own mixed box of Christmas-themed hankies.

If you’ve ever fancied giving screen printing a go, here’s your chance. The people at Thornback & Peel are offering the chance to print your own mixed box of festive hankies, at a special workshop evening.

You can take your efforts home, so you’ll be ahead of the game when it comes to getting organised for Christmas. It’s an intimate event with just 12 places, so hurry to book yours.

About Thornback & Peel

Thornback & Peel was established in 2007 by Juliet Thornback and Delia Peel (Delia’s home is featured on the previous pages). They celebrate the quirkiness of British humour and design by borrowing imagery and combining modernist geometric patterns with 19th-century wood engravings. Their work is inspired by an eclectic mix of Victoriana, Mrs Beeton’s household management, Mr McGregor’s garden, 17th-century microscope imagery of the natural world, and Norfolk and Devon.

The Simple Things screen printing workshop

All equipment will be provided, just bring your enthusiasm. Enjoy a glass of fizz to get you into the festive mood, then pop on a pinny ready to screen print your very own Christmas- themed hankies.

Date: Thursday 12 November 2015, 6.30–8.30pm
Location: Thornback & Peel shop, 7 Rugby Street, London WC1N 3QT
Price: £25 per person
To book: Contact Emma on emma@thornbackandpeel.co.uk
Find out more thornbackandpeel.co.uk 

 

Read more:

Enter our competitions

Another reader event

Ready for Christmas?!

September's The Simple Things is on sale today - buy, download or subscribe now.

In Making, Magazine Tags reader event, event, christmas, issue 39, september, london, 2015
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Meet the bloggers: Lottie from Oyster & Pearl

Lottie Storey July 13, 2015

In the May issue we introduced you to four bloggers on The Simple Things team. In the second of a series of guest posts, Lottie Storey, Digital Editor and author of Oyster & Pearl, shares a blog post describing her first Airbnb experience.

Travelling may be one of life’s greatest pleasures, but feeling like a traveller? Not so much. Standing on an unfamiliar street, squinting at a map, the realisation it might be time to croak out a few words of GCSE-learned language to ask a passerby for help. These are the things that make me cringe a little. I’d much rather appear effortlessly native. Who wouldn’t?

Last month, when in the capital for Blogtacular, the Mollie Makes Handmade Awards, a Team Simple Things planning meeting, and a rather exciting craft workshop (more to come on those!), we chose not to stay in a hotel. Although there are many wonderful hotels in London - more than 700 at the last count - we were staying for a long weekend and it felt like the right time to pop our Airbnb cherry.

Airbnb is an absolutely brilliant idea. Seriously. Over a million properties all across the world are up on the site allowing you to stay in a real home rather than a hotel, wherever you may be visiting. The place we chose was a boho cottage in Bloomsbury owned by Ben (I’m a sucker for alliteration; it was fate). As you can see from these pictures, it’s about as far removed from a sterile hotel as you can get.

 

My parents are big fans of house swaps, meaning we travelled a lot as kids and stayed in countless real homes. The thought of sleeping in someone else’s bed is not so Goldilocks to me. Just to make us feel extra welcome, Ben was there to hand over the keys, show us round his abode, give directions and recommendations for local cafes and restaurants, and he’d even stocked up the kitchen for us with basics like bread and milk (and a bottle of wine - definitely a basic in my book). After he left, we got a bit giddy exploring this delightfully decorated little cottage.

The ground floor - an open-plan kitchen/diner and living room - was comfy and cosy, books covered most walls and a turntable and stack of vinyl was left out for us to peruse. The sofa and armchair were large and squidgy, various knick knacks adorned the mantelpiece. But the most fascinating thing for me was Ben’s collection of art. Classic oil paintings were hung alongside music memorabilia and pop art prints. I loved his style.

 

Upstairs, the bedroom felt grand, with its heavy mustard velvet curtains, antique furniture, and doors through to the adjoining dressing room (which also has a pull down bed to allow the cottage to sleep four). A stack of old suitcases were stuffed on top of the chinois wardrobe, a dressmaker’s dummy wore a bowler hat, and a beautifully painted screen made me want to have packed an impractical nightdress and fluffy mules. Elsewhere, two tiny bathrooms were cleverly fitted into otherwise unusable spaces - up in the eaves and under the stairs.

 

And the neighbourhood? Well, if I were to move to London, all things being equal I’d pick Bloomsbury. The cottage was a few minutes from Kings Cross and Russell Square stations, but an easy walk from Oxford Street, Soho, or Tottenham Court Road. On the night we arrived we headed round the corner to a pub that served amazing tapas, and further down the road was a Waitrose and many other lovely shops and caffs. After the tapas, we went for a stroll to see what we could see, and stumbled on the Foundling Museum. I’ve always wanted to visit this London institution. It tells the story of the parents who left children they weren’t able to take care of, along with a trinket by which they hoped to identify them when they returned. Sadly, we didn’t manage to visit this time but I hope to go back.

By the end of the weekend we were exhausted but didn’t want to leave. The little cottage had begun to feel like home. Without an inflexible checkout time, we were able to pack at our own pace, which removed some of the stress of travelling back to Bristol. But not the sadness. Airbnb is such a reassuringly easy way to travel. I can feel plans brewing already… Here’s to adventures ahead!

You can find details of the boho Bloomsbury cottage here. This property worked out at about £195 per night for two adults. If you are new to Airbnb then you can sign up here and you will get £16 off your first booking.

Read the rest of our Meet the bloggers series.

In Escape, Magazine Tags travel, london, blogger, meet the bloggers
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Shop of the month - Mason & Painter

David Parker May 12, 2015

Meet Michelle of Mason & Painter, our Shop of the Month in May's The Simple Things.

'Mason & Painter has been open on Columbia Road since October 2013 - just over 18 months. The location is famous for its Sunday Flower Market so, like most of the shops on the street, we only open Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Sunday is always our busiest day. Last Autumn we moved across the road to a premises double the size of the original shop, to number 67 Columbia Road, and now have more space to house the vintage furniture and homewares.

'The products we stock are inspired by the horticultural flavour of the market though not exclusively. We buy from antique fairs up and down the country as well as France so we stock a real eclectic mix, ranging from 1950s French cafe chairs, old trestle tables, vintage fabrics and the occasional piece of Victorian taxidermy. We also stock new homewares, books, toys and candles, and one of our most popular items is the pre-war Dolly wash tub; customers use them as planters for trees and shrubs. I'm currently interested in illustrations from old books of birds and butterflies, which we mount in lovely zinc and copper edged frames. I've also designed a couple of tea towels especially for the shop showing Columbia Road market and another one with Chelsea Flower Show, both of which sell incredibly well to locals and visitors alike.

'We try not to get too attached to things - our shop motto is everything's for sale. Even the counter! Vintage school wall charts of the botanical and biological variety are always popular and we sell a lot of handblown glassware - large, old preserve jars that make great vases and vessels. And I design mugs, wallpaper, rugs and fabric for cushions which means we have a comprehensive mix of old and new.

'Outside the shop, we work on takeovers such as the Festival Terrace shop at the Southbank Centre in March. We curated all the products around a floral theme and even built a potting shed in the window. Now, we're giving our shop a new coat of paint, adding some colour, and bringing in new products to get ready for summer.'


Mason & Painter,
67 Columbia Road,
London E2 7RG

In Interview Tags shop of the month, shop, london, issue 35, may
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Anyone for Kitchen Table Tennis?

David Parker February 9, 2015


If you are in London on Wednesday 25 February, join us for a game of table tennis at the The Old China Hand, Tysoe Street, Clerkenwell EC1, a ping pong ball’s throw from The Simple Things Office.

We’ve reserved a table from 6-9pm, the bar, which has a fine selection of English ales, will be open and you can order traditional pizzas, delivered from the ristorante across the road - RSVP by dropping us a line to thesimplethings@icebergpress.co.uk. 

We aren’t very good so if you are you’ll be obliged to teach us a few moves!
 

In Magazine Tags table tennis, february, issue 32, event, london
2 Comments
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  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
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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.

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