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Café Culture

Future Admin August 23, 2013

In every issue of The Simple Things, owner of online interiors store Bodie & Fou, Karine Kong, seeks out inspiring spaces to work and play. Accompanied by photographer brother Francois, this month the pair explore Artisan Café in London. From its iconic hammered copper counter to benches made from recycled scaffolding planks, Karine identifies the essential design details to steal for your home! Find out more in issue 14 of The Simple Things.

"Artisan Café is our family’s favourite haunt for various reasons." says Karine. "From my New Zealander husband’s point of view, they make a great coffee. It’s a very different culture and taste compared to the general chains in the UK. My daughter enjoys a toasted bagel after football practice, and for me it’s the interior design that does it."

"The space is filled with natural light and they’ve used reclaimed materials to create a welcoming space with a soft industrial vibe. The floor and benches are made out of wood and scaffolding pipes. The naked hanging shades add an airy feel and can be sourced from junk shops or flea markets. The striking copper counter was designed by artist Tansy Brown-Hovelt and would look amazing in a family kitchen. I love the copper pipes running across the ceiling – a striking feature I’ll use in our kitchen in France when we finally get around to connecting the pump of our American fridge to dispense ice and chilled water."

"Edwin and Magda Harrison decided against nine-to-five jobs after a trip around the world – instead they set up Artisan, launching their first café in Putney. What became more of a five-to-nine job (with a huge learning curve) also became a tribute to their hard work and passion for making the best coffee and providing great service."

"Having been there at various times of the week, I can vouch for the atmosphere. From ladies back from a walk in Ravenscourt Park to teens hanging out after school, families with young kids or freelancers working from their laptops (there’s free Wi-Fi), Artisan Café is a great, inspiring place to hang out." concludes Karine.

Feast your eyes on more inspiring photos of Artisan Café by Francois Kong in issue 14 of The Simple Things.

In Living Tags interior design, photography
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Inspired by...ice cream!

Future Admin August 2, 2013

You'll never met someone who didn't like ice cream, celebrate your love for this summertime treat with our favourite recipes and ice cream inspired accessories from around the web.

Top row (left to right): Wheel thrown ice cream bowls JD Wolfe Pottery, strawberry and mint froyo, mint chocolate ice cream print Painter Peeps

Bottom row (left to right): Roasted strawberry and coconut lollies, personalised ice cream pots Randomalia Designs

Find out more about everyone's favourite summer treat from our ice cream expert inside issue 13.

In Eating, Living Tags ice cream, inspiration, round-up
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Craig Sams: The Simple Things interview

Future Admin July 26, 2013

Sharon O’Connell meets Green & Black’s co-founder and biochar champion Craig Sams.

Unlikely as it may seem, sweet-toothed foodies with a fondness for Green & Black’s organic chocolate have the US Navy’s inefficiency to thank for their fix. When company co-founder and Nebraska native Craig Sams was in his late teens, his life path seemed set. Kenneth Sams was a military man, so his son would serve two years in the Peace Corps and then – capitalising on the year he’d already spent in the US Navy Reserve while at the University of Pennsylvania – would become a pilot.

Fate, however, had a different plan. When he first went to Pensacola, Florida for training, the young Craig was unimpressed. “In the barracks where we were staying the heating had failed,” he remembers. “The aircraft carrier we were on had the wrong kind of oil in the training planes, so we couldn’t fly them and the plane we were flying back to Philadelphia in turned around and landed at Pensacola Air Station because the wing was falling off. I kind of wondered, ‘Do I want to be a pilot in an organisation like this?’”

The answer was clearly no. Instead, Craig stayed in Philly, where he completed his economics degree and became increasingly involved with the city’s nascent macrobiotic scene. His conversion was the result of the dysentery and hepatitis he contracted while travelling through India and Asia on his gap year in 1965. He cured the former by a simple diet of unleavened, whole wheat bread and unsweetened tea, but the hepatitis left him with frequent, terrible sugar cravings, which he satisfied with junk foods on his return home.

“I had macrobiotic friends,” Craig explains, “and one day they marched round to my house, gave me brown rice, sesame seeds, some carrots and a bottle of tamari and confiscated my syrup and my Aunt Jemima’s Pancake Mix. They said, ‘Just do it for two weeks, Craig.’ I did, and within two weeks I felt like a dead man who had been resurrected.” Craig has followed a macrobiotic diet (“happily, not strictly”) ever since.

It’s part of an alternative lifestyle choice that’s returned more than just health benefits for the upright and energetic 69-year-old, whose exercise regime includes Pilates, Prop Cycle workouts, gardening and daily walks in Hastings, where he lives with his wife (and Green & Black’s co-founder) Josephine Fairley, in a three-storey Georgian house. It’s also made him an extremely successful businessman, who sold his chocolate company to Cadbury in 2005 for a rumoured £20 million. “Supposedly,” Craig says wryly, “but nobody mentions the shareholders.”

A green journey

We’re talking over tea in his office on the third floor, which overlooks a large, brick-walled garden that features a bountiful kitchen plot and herb bed, plus an apple tree and an old mulberry stand that he says could well have originated from a tree in Shakespeare’s Stratford-On-Avon garden. Craig talks with deliberation – doubtless the result of his public speaking experience – and wanders enthusiastically off-piste. Our conversation breezes through his appreciation of both Wagner and the blues, Detroit’s move from manufacturing exclusively “pretty” cars in the 1950s to “jalopies and hotrods” in the 1960s, the conquistador Pizarro’s Amazonian exploits and the fact that it’s almost impossible to get a decent cup of tea in France.

Craig’s green journey stretches from the Whole Earth Foods company he founded in 1967 with his younger brother, Gregory, a year after moving to London and Seed, the Paddington restaurant he opened in 1968 (“we had a lot of fun, and it rocked,” Craig says of the place patronised by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Terence Stamp and members of the Stones), to Green & Black’s success and his latest enterprise, biochar manufacturing company Carbon Gold. Biochar is a soil-enriching alternative to peat and has enormous potential to cut carbon emissions and thus help reduce the effects of climate change. It’s made by burning organic waste without oxygen (a process called pyrolysis, which avoids the production of carbon dioxide) and locks carbon in the resultant charcoal-like lumps.

Craig agrees that climate change is the biggest threat faced by humankind – and that time is running out. So what of his own carbon footprint, which includes an annual trip to Dubai, where he stays in a luxury resort? “I don’t eat meat,” he reasons, “so that knocks tons off my carbon footprint. I eat predominantly organic food – at home, always – and I have a car that I drive 2,000 miles a year. At that rate, it will last me the rest of my life.

“I don’t spend much on clothes, I download MP3s, so I’m not buying plastic and through the Carbon Gold business, I’m putting biochar in the ground. That more than offsets my own footprint, and it probably also offsets the footprints of the other seven people in the business.”

Cocoa and carbon gold

Given the critical state of our endangered planet, it might seem that “think global, act local” is no longer a sensible directive, that dutifully digging charred organic waste into our allotments and gardens is nothing more than a drop in the (polluted and over‑fished) ocean. Craig disagrees. He’d like Carbon Gold to play a significant part in global carbon sequestration, but he believes that direct action at local level is key to environmental rescue, and cites the big move to plantation cacao farming in the 1980s to make his point.

“It failed, really badly,” he says. “Now, chocolate manufacturers are all pushing smallholding cacao, because they’ve realised that it’s far better to have a cocoa supply chain that relies on, say, one million farmers, each of whom has five hectares of land, than to have massive, state-of-the-art plantations where disease can wipe them all out. It’s about resilience, and resilience doesn’t happen on that sort of scale.”

Craig also supports local-level initiative GIY (Grow It Yourself), an emerging global network of community food growers whose members share skills and provide mutual encouragement for those wanting to produce their own food. Carbon Gold sponsored this year’s inaugural UK gathering, at which Craig gave a talk on “the slippage of power away from big to small. Big, out-of-town supermarkets aren’t working so well any more,” he reckons, “and smaller versions are steadily moving back into the town centres they eviscerated 20 years ago. People are realising that going shopping once a week and buying food you’re going to throw away isn’t a very intelligent way to waste your money. If you’re going to do that,” he laughs, “then spend it on drugs or booze or holidays, not on pizza and lettuces!”

Broach the subject of biotech crops with Craig and his blood pressure clearly rises a degree or two. Of the recent statement by Owen Paterson, UK Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, that Britain has a moral obligation to help developing countries adopt GM technology, because it could solve the problems of starvation and agricultural poverty, he says: “His is attitude is condescending. The idea that Africans are too stupid to know what’s good for them, when they’ve been farming for thousands of years, and without subsidies.”

Going with the flow

So, if Craig had the chance to make a single recommendation to the UK government, with the guarantee that it would be made law, what might that be? After some deliberation, he decides, “My one request to all world governments, including the British, would be that they stop subsiding farmers completely. It’s immoral to take money from people who don’t even have a garden and give it to people who have 2,000 acres in Gloucestershire that they can pass onto their children, inheritance tax‑free. The big guys get vast amounts of money for being rich, and that’s wrong. They could spend the money on something useful – like educating kids about nutrition.”

Looking back on the past 45-odd years, is there anything he would have done differently? “I very rarely have regrets. ‘Going with the flow’ I suppose describes how I do things.” How about selling Green & Black’s to a confectionery giant like Cadbury? The move drew plenty of criticism at the time. “We still love the brand, and the brand still loves us,” Craig says, evenly. “I have a very close relationship with the team running it, in that I meet with the business leader once a month and they keep me updated on new product developments and the like. I’m about to sign a new contract, which will make me brand ambassador for Green & Black’s.”

“Changing the world, one bar at a time” was his former company’s slogan. Craig’s measurement unit may now be a block of biochar, rather than organic chocolate, but green evolution is still very much his business.

Craig’s list From prospective pilot to outspoken organic pioneer: the Sams CV

1944 – Born in Nebraska, USA.

1966 – Moved to London.

1967 – Co-founded Whole Earth Foods, with his brother Gregory.

1968 – Opened macrobiotic restaurant, Seed, in west London.

1991 – Launched Green & Black’s organic chocolate, with his wife Josephine Fairley.

2001-2007 – Chairman of Soil Association.

2007 – Founded Carbon Gold

2007-09 – Chairman of Soil Association Certification Ltd.

Currently – Director of Soil Association Certification Ltd.

Interview and archive photographs from Craig's fascinating CV in issue 13 of The Simple Things magazine.

In Growing, Interview, Living Tags Carbon Gold, farming, featured, GM, interview
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Things to do in July

Future Admin July 10, 2013

Our list of music, film, events and festivals not worth missing in July, see you there?

Photography: Carly Lesser and Art Drauglis

Shucking knives out! Whitstable Oyster Festival cracks open on 27th July

The world’s largest classical music festival clears its throat on 12th July

Pack a festival hamper for Latitude from 18th-21st July

Take a trip with Greg ’n’ Aud as Roman Holiday returns to the big screen on 19th July

Join in with the hot hot fun at Birmingham Chilli Festival from 19-20th July

In Living Tags activities, festivals, local events, summer outings, things to go out and do
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Calling all passionate amateur interior designers

Future Admin July 9, 2013

When a new issue of The Simple Things lands on your mat are the first pages you flick to home inspiration and home tours? Is your simple pleasure making the most of where you live, and do you have a natural eye for design? If so, read on, because BBC TWO are on the look out for Britain's best amateur interior designers for a new show and we have details of how to apply.

BBC TWO are searching for Britain's best amateur interior designers, so if you're passionate about interior design and think you have the ability to transform other people's homes into special and unique spaces apply to take part in their new television series on which contestants will compete to be named the UK's best amateur interior designer.

If you think you have what it takes please call 0207 534 2018 or email designing@studiolambert.com in order to receive an application.Standard geographic charges from landlines and mobiles will apply

In Living Tags homes, interior design
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Sponsored post: A summer escape in Somerset

Future Admin June 28, 2013

Somerset Yurts is run by husband and wife team, Mark and Emma Cavill along with our two young boys, Will and Tommy. Having spent 10 years in hectic corporate life around the Thames Valley, we decided the time was right to move back to Mark’s family farm and settle down in our beloved West Country. Spending many weekends traveling back and forth from Somerset to Berkshire, while we were still working, we really grew to appreciate the slower pace in Somerset, the countryside, big skies, and peace that the farm provided. We started hatching plans to share this slice of rural tranquillity with people looking for a break from their daily stresses; and knew that yurts, combined with the beautiful Somerset countryside, would provide a really unique ‘glamping’ experience, so Somerset Yurts was born!

Our farm is a dairy farm, with around 120 cows over 300 acres. We love showing guests around our farm, introducing our cows and calves, and showing the milking process. Children particularly love this, and it’s great to see them getting a grasp of where their milk, cheese, butter, cream and yoghurt comes from.

You will find your yurt nestled in a beautiful, peaceful field that boasts stunning, uninterrupted views over Taunton Vale and the Blackdown Hills beyond. In such serene surroundings you’ll soon unwind and find yourself immersed in the countryside.

Our four yurts are all luxuriously furnished with a double bed, double futon, dining table, throws, rugs, and a wood burner to keep you cosy and warm during your stay. You'll also find a BBQ and gas stove in your private picnic area, or you could opt for campfire cooking over the communal fire pit.

The Dutch Barn is the unsung hero of Somerset Yurts. Home to a spacious and fully equipped communal kitchen/dining area, and a large bathroom with proper flushing loo’s and hot power showers – the perfect partner to your lovely yurt!

The Simple Things readers can enjoy 10% off their Somerset Yurts glamping escape using SPRING13 in the voucher code area of the booking form.

Visit www.somersetyurts.co.uk or call 07811 350176 for more information

In Escaping, Living Tags camping, featured, outdoors, outing, special offer, Sponsored story
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Sponsored post: Learn a new skill for free with The Amazings

Future Admin June 24, 2013

Have you heard of The Amazings? It’s an online platform for skill-sharing, where older teachers (over 50s, AKA ‘Amazings’) teach the younger generation skills for life. Whether that’s carpentry, crochet or jewellery making.Classes have been running in London for over a year now but the exciting news is The Amazings has recently launched online craft classes, meaning you can take part from anywhere in the world.

There are currently 8 online classes available , and you can choose from: Make Your Own Natural Beauty Products Retro Hair Dos Make A Mosaic Flower Pot Make an Heirloom Patchwork Quilt How to Make an Altered Book Upcycle a Man’s Shirt into a Summer Dress Make a Butterfly Pendant From Silver Metal Clay Loom Knit Your Own Beanie and Bobble Hat

Normally classes start from £8 but for a limited time you can get your first class for free if you sign up using this link.

New classes will be added every week and a little birdy told us there’s going to be a Big Knitting class, Wet Felting class and Millinery class coming up soon, so be sure to keep an eye out!

In Living, Making Tags craft, experts, featured, free, online classes, special offer, Sponsored story
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Sponsored post: Happy glampers in Herefordshire

Future Admin June 20, 2013

If your tastes run to a touch of up-market camping accommodation set amid the glorious Herefordshire countryside, then look no further than our chic new Glamping units.

We have two high-class bell tents, which are sited on raised wooden decking. The tents are spacious and well equipped, with luxuries not normally found when camping. These include king-sized beds, a heated shower room and a separate loo.

And the comfort doesn’t end there. With compact kitchen area complete with fridge, kettle, toaster and microwave, glasses, crockery and other utensils are made available as part of the package. We’ll complete your stay by providing bedding and other necessary linen. And there is plenty of storage space too so no need to live out of damp rucksacks!

Outside each of our tents is a seating area with table and chairs where you can’t help but relax and take in the surrounding landscape. Unwind in your own private space and perhaps enjoy a BBQ.

Our units are located in three acres of serene scenery but within easy distance to the market town of Leominster. Just a few miles away you can take advantage of a variety of pubs and restaurants.

Vist the Herefordshire Glamping site you find out more or ring: 01568 720371

In Escaping, Living Tags camping, featured, living, outdoors, sponsored, sponsored blog
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Wordless Wednesday: A journey through Southern Italy

Future Admin June 19, 2013

Dreaming of getting lost between olive groves, discovering secret caves on the coastline, and marveling at the Baroque architecture.

To find out more about Puglia visit the Inntravel website.

In Escaping, Living Tags cycling holiday, explore, featured, outdoors, travel, walking, Wordless Wednesday
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Spoil yourself with 15% off at Idyll Home

Future Admin June 13, 2013

For the next two weeks the lovely people at Idyll Home giving every reader of The Simple Things 15% off their gorgeous home and garden accessories.

You've probably spotted Idyll Home before inside The Simple Things as their furniture and accessories are often featured in our 'Things To Wake Up And Want', we've always been big fans of their selection of unique things for the home and so are really pleased to say you can now get 15% off online as a reader of The Simple Things.

To claim your discount use the code simplethings15 at the checkout.

Happy Shopping!

In Living Tags discount, exclusive, for the home, furniture, gift idea, home, interior design
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A second brew with Sophie Cornish from Not On The High Street

Future Admin June 13, 2013
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Put the kettle on and grab a few biscuits from the tin as we share a few more cups of tea with the co-founder and executive director of Not On The High Street, Sophie Cornish.

When is your first cup of tea? First thing in the morning I go downstairs, have a little potter and a sort, then sit down at our big table. The house is completely silent and I drink my tea whilst mentally preparing myself for the day ahead peacefully. I always have a quick chat with the most agreeable pet in the house, usually our dog Rufus but today it's Daisy.

What's your first break? My days are usually pretty packed so I don't have a specific time set aside, I just grab one when I can. I do always try to get in earlier to the office than everyone else so I can sit at my desk, have a cup of tea and go through my to do list!

What's for lunch? I'm quite health conscious so usually have a salad. Today it's salmon and watercress followed by fruit salad. But don't think I'm smug - my afternoons are all cake and chocolate. I'm a terrible sugar fiend.

Did you drink tea as a child? I remember when I first got into tea. I must have been about 8 or 9. My mum used to give me tea with lots of sugar. Lovely. I did the same for my children. Naughty.

What is your favourite kind of tea? Earl Grey, as strong as I can get it, with lots of milk.

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Do you trust other people to make it the way you like it? Generally yes. If it's hot and milky I'm happy. I used to be ridiculously uptight about it being right (how painful I must have been!) but I've mellowed and just feel grateful now.

Do you drink different teas at different times of day? I drink tea all day long. I have special kinds of brew - short, strong and sugary when I'm really tired. (I call that an espresso tea). Long and weak when I'm thirsty. Earl Grey when I'm trying to give up my morning latte (yes I go through phases of having that too!)

Can you say no to biscuits or cake? And are you a dunker? I'm not a dunker - that spoils both tea and the biscuit. But I love biscuits, cake, chocolate. The office is fully of fabulous bakers so there's always something amazing in the kitchen and everyone knows I'll be the one to eat it.

Do you slurp? No. I sigh contentedly after the first sip though.

Which is your favourite cuppa of the day?

The first.

Is there one break that's non-negotiable?

Nope. Tea doesn't mean a break for me. It often means the opposite - cracking on and getting focused.

Share a day in cups of tea with Sophie inside Issue 11 of The Simple Things out now in UK shops and available to download.

In Living, Magazine Tags design, exclusive, expert, featured, interview, tea, tea culture, The Simple Things
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Win your own classic bike with Dawes and The Simple Things

Future Admin June 7, 2013

We've teamed up with the lovely people at Dawes to bring you an amazing giveaway in which you could win a Countess bike worth over £500!*

To enter, simply like Dawes on Facebook and fill in our short form.

Mobile device users enter following this link: http://bit.ly/11jLaSb

*UK only, Ts&Cs apply.

In Escaping, Living Tags bikes, exclusive, featurued, giveaway, living, prizes
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*Sponsored post* A way with windows

Future Admin June 3, 2013

*This is a sponsored blog post from Hillarys*

Simplify the process of choosing blinds, curtains and shutters by booking an appointment with an advisor from Hillarys who can advise on style, fittings and proportions as well as colour and patterns. Our Signature Service includes measuring and installation too, perfect for those who can’t quite get the length of their curtains right, aren’t sure where to put the poles or don’t know their recess measurements from their cord tidies!

There’s a massive choice of gorgeous fabrics and styles and we’ll bring our ‘shop’ to your home so you can mix and match with existing furnishings. Simply call us on 0800 389 1659 to arrange your Signature Service appointment.

In Living Tags home, interior design, interiors, Sponsored story
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June's book club

Future Admin May 16, 2013

something something, with something too, we'll have you something for something with something when something.

Zero Waste Home - Bea Johnson

BEA JOHNSON LIVED the consumerist dream: huge house, lavish holidays, Botox – yet she wasn’t happy. She and her family downsized, disposed of everything they didn’t “use, need or love” and rethought their lives. Deeply concerned about the environment, they became committed to reducing waste: buying in bulk, rejecting packaging, and making their own bread, mustard and cheese. They worked out a “Zero Waste” philosophy to aim for, applying the mantra “Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Rot”.

In this inspiring, thorough book, Johnson explains how you too can do just that too. Sensible rather than preachy, this is an honest, entertaining and campaigning guide to living a more environmentally friendly life.

 

Stylish Dress Book - Yoshiki Tsukiori

THE COOL LINES of Japanese fashion are explained in this first English translation of celebrated designer Yoshiko Tsukiori’s new book of sewing projects. The photographs of her designs are as tempting as a still cool pool on a hot day, with drawstring tops, loose smocks, peasant dresses and sharp shirts, styled in a palette of soft blues and greys. Basic design patterns are also included, and while the small diagrams may alarm some novices, Tsukiori’s designs are so gorgeous, any fan of DIY fashion will want to get their head down and have a go.

 

Our Songbirds - Matt Sewell

ARDENT ORNITHOLOGIST Matt Sewell captured bird lovers’ hearts last year with Our Garden Birds and charms again with a collection of warblers for every week of the year. Illustrated with Sewell’s signature watercolours (he has painted murals for the RSPB and a bird hide for Port Eliot festival), this lovely giftbook also includes his idiosyncratic descriptions of the birds, where a Turtle Dove is a “glamorous granny resplendent in lace, doilies and pastel knickerbockers”. The Charlatans’ lead singer Tim Burgess provides a foreword.

 

 

Manly Food - Simon Cave

“NO-HOLDS-BARRED, all-action cooking” is promised in Manly Food, an unashamedly blokey cookbook with the motto “Flavour First”. And tasty-looking it is too, with recipes such as Crab with Chilli and Black Bean Sauce and Pea and Ham Hock Soup. Manly Food is ambitiously meaty, with recipes for suckling pig, hare and boar, yet despite the macho tone (salted caramel fudge is perfect for “an extended hiking trip in the wilderness”) Cave is clearly serious about his ingredients, methods and tools. Makes cooking exciting.

 

All the Birds, Singing - Evie Wyld

APPREHENSION TREADS THROUGH the pages of Evie Wyld’s second novel, which is the follow-up to her much-lauded debut offering, After the Fire, a Still Small Voice. Jake (no, she’s a woman) Whyte lives in a farmhouse deep in an unspecified part of the wind-lashed British countryside. Solitary apart from a semi-feral dog, Whyte tries to concentrate on raising her flock of sheep – but someone, or something, is leaving them “mangled”. Jake’s hardscrabble past in Australia is revealed in alternate chapters as we slowly learn what it is that she’s so afraid of. Tough, capable, vulnerable, Whyte is a compelling character, and Wyld’s writing – particularly her descriptions of the Australian bush, oven-hot and roving with spiders – is exquisite. An unusual novel that should win its author even more prizes.

 

Tomorrow there will be Apricots - Jessica Soffer

 

SELF-HARMING TEENAGER Lorca wants to win her neglectful mother’s attention with a perfect dish of Middle-Eastern speciality masgouf – and chooses as her teacher Victoria, an Iraqi widow who still mourns the daughter she gave away. The healing power of making and eating food is almost a literary cliché, but 25-year-old New Yorker Jessica Soffer’s debut novel combines a fresh twist with a warmly told narrative.

 

 

 

Mouse the Cossacks - Paul Wilson

 

AFTER A FAMILY TRAGEDY, eight-year-old Mouse lost the ability to speak, communicating only via emails and notes, and sending forlorn texts to made-up numbers in the hope of a reply. Mouse and her mother move into a farmhouse in the Pennines once occupied by a lonely old man, William Caxton, whose mysterious unsent letters still clutter the rooms. As Mouse investigates Caxton’s past, she begins to find a way through her own sadness.

 

 

 

Sketcher - Roland Watson-Grant

 

SKID BEAUMONT IS GROWING UP on the outskirts of New Orleans in an alligator-patrolled swamp where “nothin’ moved except for maybe a dragonfly testin’ the water with its toes”. His father has had a drunken premonition that the swamps will make them rich, and Skid believes that his brother Frico, the “sketcher” of the title, can influence events by drawing. A beautiful and funny coming-of-age story.

In Living Tags Book Club, books, cooking, reading
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Spend a day with Wayward Daughter (closed)

Future Admin May 16, 2013
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Take a glimpse into everyday city life in Edinburgh, as Cait from Wayward Daughter shows us round her home city, and how to style Barbour's new Dress Tartan collection...

Don't forget we're giving away a His and Hers Barbour outfitinside issue 10, so make sure you pick up your copy for a chance to win!

In Living Tags barbour, blogger, competition, giveaway, My City, spring
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My City: Helsinki

Future Admin May 9, 2013

Take a special tour around blogger Lauren Memarian's home city of Helsinki not seen inside this month's magazine...

What’s your best discovery about your city? We’re still discovering new things every day about this little city- that’s one of the great things about here. I suppose the best discovery so far though has been the people! People really make a city, and the people in Helsinki make it a great place to live- especially for a foreigner who is trying to learn Finnish! Thankfully nearly everyone here speaks almost perfect English- which is helpful when words are about 30 letters long sometimes and look like the noise you make when you stub your toe. Riiuuyoaie. See?

Tell us about the colours of your city? The city’s colours are quite understated. The architecture tends to favour muted olive greens, blues, yellows and pinks, and stone doorways and building facades are common. Even the sea is a pale slate-grey. In stark contrast are the flowers outside of shops and in window boxes - they overflow with colour, and the Relandersgrund café boat is a welcome splash of bright red in the harbour.

What is the light like? Do you have long, light summer evenings, etc? The light here is fascinating. Though the winter days are short and cold, once summer arrives the days become nearly 20 hours long and we’re rewarded with beautiful, pure light. As the sun sets it gives everything a soft glow that lasts for a few hours and always makes me think of Sofia Coppola’s films!

What types of shop do you most like to visit? Have you discovered anything really special or different? I can usually be found poking about in fusty old second- hand shops, digging through old vinyl records to find that one horrendous album I can’t live without (last week it was Pia Zadora and Jermaine Jackson- the Rock Aliens soundtrack!). I also have a sad fascination with the kitchen appliance section of our local department store. They have a gadget for everything! There are so many tiny and interesting shops in Helsinki that it’s hard to narrow it down to a few favourites. Pino (Frederikinkatu 22) is a great place for design-led storage solutions, while Papershop (Mariankatu 15) is a perfect little place to find letterpressed cards and printed wrapping papers.

Do you like people watching? I am an obsessive people watcher! I like to draw the people I see, and try to work out as many details about them as I can- while trying not to totally creep them out, of course.

What games do you play as you go about your everyday life? There’s a city webcam mounted to a building looking over the harbour, and I always stop and wave to it when I walk by. I know my family like to peek in at the feed sometimes, and I always wonder if we’ll catch each other.

What keeps you in the city now? The supremely addictive cinnamon buns! (But really my husband’s job.) We’ve also made a great group of Finnish friends, and they act as our surrogate family as we’re so far from ours.

If you could change one thing about the city, what would it be? Ok, this may sound petty, but I would make at least one decent take-away. Unfortunately, while Helsinki’s restaurant scene is bubbling over with talent, the take- aways are sorely lacking. Sometimes I do miss a good Chinese...

Don't miss the rest of the tour in this month's issue of The Simple Things.

In Escaping, Living Tags blogger, exclusive, featured, interview, My City
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What I Always Wanted: celebrate their Birthday with 20% off

Future Admin May 8, 2013

Whatialwayswanted.com is an online marketplace selling gifts and homeware by British designer-makers. The company celebrates its first birthday this month, was set up by friends Deborah Bancroft and Ann Ellison. Many of the products they sell are handmade from locally sourced or recycled materials and some are exclusive to their site - perfect if you are looking for something a little different for that special gift!

To celebrate their birthday, the people at What I Always Wanted are offering our readers 20% off everything on the site up to 19th May. Just enter the code ‘SIMPLY BIRTHDAY’ at the checkout www.whatialwayswanted.com

In Living Tags British made, exclusive, home, offer
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Things to do this bank holiday weekend

Future Admin May 2, 2013

Three days to forget about work, remove yourself from the sofa and go out and find adventures in new places. If you're stuck for what to do this weekend, fear not. Our friends at The National Trust have put together the perfect guide to events happening up and down the country.

Here's three of our favourite activities for the weekend...

Parade along the bluebells- nothing says British springtime quite like a sea of bluebells. Find your nearest bluebell walk here.

Cheshire's Victorian May Day - from maypole dancing to Punch and Judy, and a whole host of activities in between.

May Fayre - Morden Hall Park, London - stalls, crafts, shows and live music throughout the entire weekend.

Click here to find an event in your area.

Have a happy bank holiday!

 

In Escaping, Living Tags outdoors, round-up, spring, The National Trust, walks
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Cakes in the house

Future Admin April 29, 2013

You readers have been making our tummies rumble this week by sending us in pictures of the cake in your house. If the following confections don't have you reaching for the flour and eggs in your kitchen, we don't know what will.

Top: Hannah Jade sent in this 3 layered cake of chocolate delight, yum, bottom left: a delicious looking baked blueberry and coconut cake with lemon glaze from Chelsea and mini Victoria sponges from Ailie.

Left column: the recipe for this rhubarb cake was left on our Facebook wall by Margarida, Tipple Tails has a lovely fruit cake in the house, Toni's home is currently occupied by every chocoholics' dream - you can see more of her cakes here, and this classic carrot cake belongs to Katie Knott - can we have a slice?

Right column: a lovingly baked birthday cake from Libby Hayes, a scrummy looking chocolate cake from Laura Dodimead, and some cantucci from Ria Berends not cake but delicious too.

 

 

In Living, Magazine, Making Tags baking, cake in the house, featured, inspiration
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My City: Rue Cavallotti art

Future Admin April 25, 2013

Writer and photographer Nichole Robertson shows us round her favourite free art show in the city of Paris. It occurs twice a day on rue Cavalotti (close to Monmarte) at dawn and closing time... Photography: NIchole Robertson

Fall in love with more of hidden Paris inside Issue 9.

 

In Escaping, Living Tags art, featured, My City, photography
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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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