Sunday, May 5, 2013

The Art of Tree Climbing

 
photo credit - Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times

Growing up in the San Fernando Valley we did a lot of tree climbing. Alongside our driveway was a hearty Maple tree that held my brother and I safely as we ascended to its top.  Using the sturdy thick branches as stepping stones and the willowy thinner ones to stop us from falling we'd navigate to the highest views. 

At night in the summertime, our gang played a game called ditch, a tag contest where one child was "it" and the others hid in bushes, behind fences or under cars until captured.  If swift enough, we'd escape by dashing towards a designated "safe" Jacaranda, one of the many purple flowering trees on our tree-lined cul-de-sac. The braver of us also climbed those Jacarandas. Their trunks were thicker and taller with fewer low hanging branches so you had to be strong enough to shimmy-up first, like a phone-company pole climber, before grabbing an accommodating branch to help you along.   Hiding in a Jacaranda at night was only for the lean and lithe, pressing your body against a branch and melding into the tree.

Across the street from our house on a strip of grass dividing two homes was an 80 foot California Pine. One warm summer night when I was about nine, I went outside alone and ended up climbing that tree. There was a slight breeze as I worked my way up the branches and needles with the wind circling around.  You could smell the pine's sweet, sticky scent.  Winding my way up one branch at a time, the rooftops of surrounding houses began to appear and then climbing higher I could see across the Valley's basin.  What a view.  Twinkling lights on slowly fading street grids.  Just the two of us, the tree and I, swaying back and forth under the stars. 

A smile and a memory came back yesterday when I read Debra Prinzing's Los Angeles Times article, "An Ally with Deep Roots" about Venice architect Carlos Zubieta and designer Tatiana Barhar who decided to build around an established ficus tree smack-dab in the middle of their residential lot, instead of demolishing it. 

You can read about that ficus and the redesigned family home by clicking here.

 photo credit - Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times

Monday, April 1, 2013

American Made Monday

Check out these heavenly linen products from Rough Linen.  Based in San Francisco, they use natural linen
to design basic but beautiful products.  To learn more about the company's CEO, click here:

All photos from rough linen website.

I would make good use of the pinafore (third photo down), and of course, the daily view from the last photo wouldn't be so bad.

 duvet cover


nautical linen curtains called St. Barts, made of mid-weight linen


 pinafore: a pocket for keys, a pocket for your phone


 practical and smashing


Friday, March 29, 2013

Mid Century Mod Flip

Pretty cool So. California Mid Century Modern transformation from Contractor Tom Tarrant.



Friday, March 22, 2013

Santa Barbara Road Trip

We took a road trip to Santa Barbara last weekend.  California Poppies are in bloom at the beautiful Santa Barbara Botanic Garden.  This is a great outdoor space to explore with kids, older folks or your sweetheart.


photo credit - me


Yep that's me below hugging a California Redwood.  
I look pretty silly but it felt good.




While in SB, I ran across this article in Santa Barbara Seasons about interior designer Carol Magness who recently updated a 1919 Wallace Neff home.  Carol's attention to detail is fantastic: shabby chic combined with traditional notes and modern twists like saddled-stitched leather poufs and acrylic console tables.  I love the original front door hardware shown below.



photo - ciro coelho


photo - ciro coelho


If you'd like to see the entire article in Santa Barbara Seasons - click here for the downloadable pdf.  This house is now on the market.  You can see the listing here but it doesn't show in its former glory (sigh).  Also some very creative soul put together a vimeo of the house before it was remodeled which can be seen here.

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On another completely unrelated note, check out this groovy modern, retractable bedside sconce from a Southern California based company called Cerno Lighting.  And watch it in motion here if you have a second.  A very cool fixture indeed, created, manufactured and sold by three young Cali-design studs.  You'll see what I mean when you check out their website.

photo - cerno website

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And finally, from Tania Vartan, I'm loving this wallpaper called Chinese Horses.  It comes in two colorways: oatmeal and wine.