Monthly Archives: May 2012

Global and Vintage Treasures at Chicago’s Randolph Street Market

Sunday was a scorching day in Chicago — 106 degrees in the shade according to our car’s outdoor temp gauge, no joke! – and we spent it under the sun at the Randolph Street Market. However the heat didn’t feel that horrid because we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, checking out the wares and meeting people.

I have admired the global goods at Mayseek for awhile, and had the chance to meet the owner Eileen Kroll, who travels the world and brings back souvenirs … to share! With us! Yay! Here’s a few shots of her booth and items she chose in Turkey, India and other places: Kantha quilts, rugs, textiles, weekender bags and much more:

Look at these colors!

Now that I’m taking a longer look, I love that textile behind the bags:

Eileen and her daughter are off to Cambodia and Vietnam now and I can’t wait to visit Mayseek again at a future Randolph Market. We don’t have anything in our house from Vietnam yet, and with my love for Southeast Asian styles, certainly we need something. Also for  lovers of India style, she has a shipment coming from South India soon.

I was also drawn to African textiles at the market, such as the upholstery on this chair:

This chair sat greeting everyone right inside a market entrance, and I can’t believe it was still there at closing.

Similarly, check out the upholstery on this sectional:

I liked the fine work on these textiles from the Congo:

This vendor travels from New York and I hope he’s back at a future Chicago market. You know how some things you leave behind stick in your head days later? This is one of those things.

Our garden will need more trellises. I was seeking iron grates that could be repurposed as trellises, such as these:

We also met the delightful Heavy, creator of outsider art. Because you absolutely must stop when confronted with a painting like this:

We spent much time chatting with Heavy and laughing here. How could you not enjoy paintings such as these:

He paints on found wood and metal, with repurposed paints. He shared a philosophy about second chances, both for himself as well as the supplies that make up his art. Sometimes you find a second calling in life, either by choice or by necessity. We could all learn lessons from listening to what naturally drives us because that is what sustains us.

It was appropriate that we picked up a fun rooster painting for our sunroom:

Because earlier that morning over a breakfast of eggs in the sunroom, we reminisced about how flavorful the fresh eggs were in Sikkim and Thailand and Italy – everywhere we’ve been except here at home. Here, we had to smother the eggs with 3-year-old Australian cheddar to get flavor. Well, I know how to get the freshest eggs again. And I’ve been planning and scheming for awhile now. I told my husband about The Master Plan for the back of our property: a much larger vegetable garden, a shed with a cupola, and a chicken coop behind the shed that will be inside the vegetable garden fence. Living in an area with coyote and deer makes this a necessity — protection for chickens and the veggies. So then we called my husband’s friend in Nebraska who has 47 chickens (!!!) and got the low-down on chicken ownership. Or servantship. Or whatever the relationship is between humans and free-range chickens. Anyway, the rooster painting presiding over the whole scene is perfect because while others around here have chickens on their properties, there will be no live roosters here, that’s for sure.

So back to the Randolph Street Market, the current rage for country/industrial style was evident among sellers. We even found a “FRESH EGGS” basket. Here’s a few snaps of these trendy items:

From Lake County Furniture, barn wood and corrugated metal pieces are a perfect example of the farmhouse+industrial trend. We saw this cabinet at the market:

And other things that caught my eye …

Love the contrast of trade beads piled in a huge rusty industrial platter:

More industrial touches, mixed with gardening and creatively so:

Maybe the heat fried my brain, but it took awhile to figure out what these letters could spell, appropriate for this blog too!

My husband liked this scooter (made in India) with a paint job that’s more subdued in color than you see in India, but no less showy:

He was only half-joking when he said he could bid on the scooter (it was being auctioned for charity) and then ship it to Chennai for our India apartment! Or, keep it at a friend’s house in Bangalore to use when he travels there for business. Somehow I think a future project in India will involve scrawling words all over a scooter …

Randolph Street Market, discounts, and other weekend fashion sales and events (chicagoreader.com)

Festivals For Everyone (chicago.cbslocal.com)

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Citrus Colors

Today, a guest post as you can tell I’ve been busy outdoors, gardening! And this is a perfect post for the summer days ahead …

Hi! I’m Joanna, a writer for Arcadian Lighting, an online source for beautiful light fixtures and lighting inspirations. Fortunately, I spend my days gathering the loveliest interior design images and ideas from around the web. I get to share them in guest posts on blogs such as India pied-a-terre.

Citrus fruits in brilliant shades of green, orange and yellow are as satisfying to look at as they are to eat. Limes, lemons, grapefruit and oranges look lovely sitting out on the dining table or kitchen counter, but would you cover your walls in these hues? The owners of the following rooms were brave enough to introduce the colors to the walls, rugs, light fixtures, furniture and even the ceiling! Which room is your favorite?

Citrus Colors

A graphic citrusy yellow panel complements the bright hues of pink and green at the table.

Citrus Colors

A fruity orange accent wall and toss pillows contrasts nicely with a lime sofa in this modern apartment.

Citrus Colors

A traditional bedroom gets a burst of color from vibrant yellow walls and kiwi hued pillows. The black, heavy furniture adds a dynamic twist.

Citrus Colors

Limey green at the chair and windows plays off grapefruit pillows on the sofa and accents of blood orange.

Citrus Colors

Tied in with a pomegranate hue is a touch of tangerine and a bit of lemon zest. The paper hanging lanterns provide an extra burst of color carrying your eye through to the outdoors.

Citrus Colors

A lime green chandelier hangs above a bed fitted with a lime pillow and duvet lining. I also love the shades of citrus in the graphic rug.

Citrus Colors

Orange takes center stage on a velvet sofa and is carried through onto the rug and out the doorway to the outdoor living area.

Citrus Colors

I love tangerines and especially in this space. The differing shades complement one another beautifully without overdoing it. I think my favorite thing is the shiny little tangerine pendant light.

What do you think of these vibrant, citrus hued interiors? Find more inspiration and a wide selection of ceiling lights, hanging lanterns, and lighting fixtures at our website!

Images 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8

Iris and Honeysuckle and Other Garden Things

While looking for one of my cats, who was hiding under my nose the whole time under dense daylilies, I snapped shots of things flowering in our gardens right now.

Here are irises, with Japanese hakonechloa aureola grass, weigela and peonies in the background. And way over to the far left is a river of blooming lavender irises.

Here’s my little guy hiding under the daylilies, just behind the irises above. You can’t see him in the photo above, can you? Neither could I. I like the yellow columbine flowers with the yellow grass in this area.

Geranium, hosta and columbine under the river birch tree, in the shade garden between the driveway and porch.

I’ve been growing sweeps of this golden grass under trees in the shady areas on the south side of our house. The sweeps are bright enough to be seen from the street. We’re on 1.5 acres so the street is pretty far away. This grass grows slow. This sweep here is furthest along, nice and full. It’s under a crabapple tree, and behind it is a sweep of grass under a hawthorn tree. You can also see in the background, big globes of allium are emerging.

Here’s clematis, russian sage and peonies. There are gold-flowered plants here that add a nice contrast to the clematis color, but they haven’t bloomed yet. The peony plant beyond is so large, it’s all held up with four peony rings. These peony flowers are enormous, heavy and floppy and I hope we don’t get heavy rain until they’re done with their show.

Here Chaai is getting a lesson on how to climb a tree. He doesn’t really appreciate it. Maybe we don’t want him climbing trees anyway.

And here’s my gorgeous Siamese Snowshoe who was out with me today. She follows on my heels all over, like Mary’s little lamb. I have to watch every step. She was stubborn and refusing to look at the camera at all.

Moving right along to the gardens behind the sunroom … honeysuckle! There are three vines all in different colors. The red and orange are blooming right now. Also in this corner is a dark tea color heuchera (I forget the variety) and a coneflower that will soon have deep orange flowers.

I love the colors of autumn fern. My ostrich ferns (gifted from a neighbor’s garden) are super big and impressive looking, but I appreciate all the colors in the autumn fern.

I’m euphoric over euphorbia! An uncommon plant in gardens around here. I think this is supposed to be a zone 6 plant, but we’ve been having zone 6 or higher weather lately in the Chicago area, so it’s been coming back.

See how the euphorbia glows in the sun. Love this stuff!

Iris next to an armillary sphere, which is sitting atop the base of a broken leaky birdbath. In the background are ornamental oregano that cascades over a little wall, agastache, and about a 5-foot row of catnip. For the cats, of course.

This is at the edge of a sitting area behind our sunroom. I love the combination of the iris, the bright green Irish moss and the wrought iron pieces that I got for a steal at a gardening center that was closing. The little frog tile from Detroit’s Pewabic Pottery likes this area too. Although I’d like things to fill in more so the plants touch and there isn’t so much mulch to see. This garden is in its second  year now, and I’m bravely planting it under shallow-rooted trees, so filling in will take time.

That Irish moss is pretty but everything gets stuck in it. It’s almost like a carpet you have to vacuum!

Outside our sunroom door, which is off the kitchen, is a hanging basket with newly-planted herbs. Although seeing how much shade they get here, they may need to move. We’re always snipping basil to throw on margherita pizza, cilantro to add to burritos, tomatillos to make green salsa, and jalapenos to put on everything. OK that jalapeno part is my husband, not me. Our neighborhood has no street lights so it gets dark here at night. Last year I had to download a flashlight app on my iPhone so I could snip herbs and veggies at night (because of course you can’t find a real flashlight when you need it). This year I’m keeping stuff I need to snip while we’re cooking dinner closer to the house.

This hanging basket was also a major score at a local gardening shop’s going-out-of-business sale. These wrought iron pieces are from A Rustic Garden in Sterling, Illinois, and I’ll collect more as finances allow. Top on my list is a candle chandelier to suspend from a tree branch over an Adirondack chair seating area. A perfect spot for some wine at night, after working hard all day.

And of course every gardener needs a garden-themed doorknocker.

It makes a heckuva racket, but whenever I accidentally lock myself out, does anyone ever hear it? Of course not!

This is all very pretty, but working out there isn’t very pretty. Lately I’ve spent many sweaty, grimy hard hours preparing a vegetable garden and transferring plants out there. We started plants in the basement and there’s no way two people need 50 San Marzano tomato plants, 75 eggplant plants or 100 red and orange bell pepper plants. So people who know me will soon be gifted with vegetable plants. Watch out!

I love to garden and watch the plants and the composition of them together grow and change through the seasons. And yes our India apartment has a garden too, mostly belonging to my in-laws, but they’ve been taking care of a few plants that we couldn’t stop ourselves from buying last December. See some glimpses of gardens in Chennai posted last December.

I also pin garden-related images on a Pinterest Garden Board – visit to see!

A Doorbell Cover Make-Over. Yeah! Why Not?

Even the most mundane things should be pretty. Think about one thing in your house that you completely forget exists. Take a look at it. Do you like it? Could it be better? Why not make it so?

Our doorbell cover came with the house. It was sort of … prairie style? Mission style? I don’t know. All I know is, it didn’t go with our style. But c’mon I’m not  buying a new doorbell cover. So when I removed it in order to paint the wall it hung on, the time was right for a makeover.

Here’s the “before and after”:

First I filled the grooves with wood filler. A glumpy gloppy job. Yes, real high quality work here!

Then I sanded the gloppy stuff down, and painted the cover black.

The cover was originally really uneven so it’s still not a level surface, but that’s OK, I want it to look old and imperfect, like a relic we found in a souk somewhere exotic. This is to compensate for the fact that I haven’t yet been in an actual Middle Eastern or North African souk …

I next brushed on a few coats of matte Mod Podge, then sanded in one direction with coarse grit sandpaper. This made cool striations.

Then I stamped with various scrapbooking stamps and gold Tsukineko ink, with intentional uneven coverage of gold ink.

But wait. Something went a little too far with the uneven coverage! This cut-off of the stamp image bugged me even when hanging on the wall.

There’s a ridge on the surface there, and the stamp didn’t make contact. How to fix this? I used a trick shown on a video of how expert Indian block printers do their work. If you don’t want to stamp over previous work, cover it with paper. Simply genius! The newsletter from the local gardening center will do.

It’s much less lopsided feeling now.

Here it is on the wall. Much better! And it no longer clashes with the frame below it.

So if you giggle at the fact that any blogger would trumpet about the amazing makeover of a doorbell cover …. you never know, you may find yourself looking at a silly forgotten thing in your house, and making it special too!