♥ Vanity Fair



I don’t often buy Vanity Fair, not because it isn’t an excellent magazine with well researched, informative articles as well as a slew of pictures by talented photographers but because if I were to cave into to my desire to buy all the magazines I like, I would live surrounded by leaning tower of Pisa-likes-stacks of old magazines.

I bought the September issue of Vanity Fair because I wanted to read a profile in it, of French designer Agnès B (I wrote about my love of her clothes here).   Agnès B is a successful designer and retailer who doesn’t believe in advertising, so it is rare to see editorial coverage of her or her clothes, in one of the glossy magazines, as I suspect they mainly reserve editorial coverage for those who have large advertising budgets to spend with them.  The profile was a good read; an overview of a life much more than ordinary and dwelt on the many ways in which she and her company give back to society.  Naturally the article mentioned her aversion to advertising. I love Agnès B clothes (for their casual simplicity and timelessness) but they are at the top end of high street prices, so when I reflect on what a marketing/advertising budget would add to the cost of the clothes to the consumer I am glad that Agnès B is ad phobic.

The September issue of Vanity Fair also features The 72nd International Best-Dressed List. In case you haven’t heard the women on it include: The Duchess of Cambridge, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, Tilda Swinton, Christine Lagarde, Princess Charlene of Monaco…..The Huffington Post has pictures if you would like to see them click here.

Note; the photograph of Jennifer Lopez on the cover of Vanity Fair was shot by Mario Testino.

Leave a comment

Filed under Musings

♥ Meet the Romans



When I visited the Roman Baths, in Bath, I met two helpful and very knowledgeable ‘Roman’ stonemasons Brucetus and Veracundus and from them I gleaned the following information.

The invading Romans arrived in the area in the 1st Century and stayed to the early part of the 5th Century.  The native Celts had already discovered the hot spring that daily gushes up one million litres of water heated to 46°C.  The hot spring fascinated the Romans and they believed it was the work of the Gods.  Initial hostilities between the two races evaporated when the Romans built the baths and a temple for worship of a deity named Sulis Minerva (a unification of the Celtic goddess Sulis and the Roman one Minerva).



The Romans may not have found gold in the hills encircling Bath but they did find stone (00litic limestone) with which to build the baths plus the temple and lead which allowed them to lay the pipe work that channelled the hot water from the spring into a series of baths and the overflow into the river Avon.  The stone is apparently very easy to work with and the fine dust that is created when it’s chiselled was used as a face powder by Roman women.  The settlement became famous, an ‘It Spa’ of its day, possibly because of the reputed curative powers of the spring’s water and attracted many visitors from other parts of the Roman Empire.



Limestone is still mined in the Bath hills which are now honeycombed with tunnels; these tunnels came into their own during the World War Two when they were used  to store art treasures and as an underground space where aircraft parts could be made without fear of the ‘factory’ being bombed.

The Roman Baths are splendid and so worth a visit if you are in or near Bath, the cost of admission (£12.50) includes an audio guide and some of the commentary on this guide is by Bill Bryson.

To Brucetus and Veracundus if you ever get to read this, gratias vobis ago, which I hope means thank you in Latin.

4 Comments

Filed under Culture, Travel

♥ Postcard from Bath

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

A slideshow – Roman history, honey coloured stone Georgian buildings, adjacent hills, a mix of museums, the ghostly presence of Jane Austen, all part of the magnificent mélange that is the beautiful stately city of Bath.

2 Comments

Filed under Culture, Travel

♥ Dear Me//One



At the moment it is fashionable to write letters to one’s younger self. It’s possibly a fleeting fad but I like the idea so I am having a go.

Dear Younger Self,

I write this letter more in the hope that it will remind me of some things I already know but sometimes forget, than in the expectation that anything I say will influence you, as I know you will have to beat your own path across life’s torturous tundra.

In this letter I am going to talk about striving to get things done but before I do that, I would like you to know that no one is better or indeed worse than you.  I am not suggesting that everyone is equally talented, equally intelligent or equally beautiful but that everyone is unique and therefore comparisons are not appropriate.

Now on to the striving, there is a Thomas Edison quote that I like that says ‘Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration’.  I think if can safely be applied not just to genius but also to anything you wish to achieve in life however small or large.  Malcolm Gladwell’s book, Outliers – The Story of Success, is one you might like to read when you are older, it’s well written and informative and one of the chapters, the 10,000 hour rule is a much longer take on the Thomas Edison quote; apparently for greatness in any field practice (10,000 hours of it) is more important than innate talent.  I am not suggesting that you strive for great success (you can of course if you want to) just letting you know that even the smallest achievements in life require sustained effort.  One thing that may help when something seems impossible, too difficult, or simply not worth the effort is to say repeatedly to yourself never give up, never give up, never give up…

I wish I had known these things when I was your age.  I am not going to drone on and on so I will stop now but I will write to you again to talk about other things.

Love from
Your Older Self

Leave a comment

Filed under Musings

♥ Raspberry Road



I had a kaleidoscope of pleasing, peaceful, pastoral images floating around my mind as the car climbed the hilly, twisty road en route to the raspberry farm.  I had never been there before so I imagined, I would be wandering among the raspberry canes idly picking fruit while simultaneous gazing at the misty mountains and admiring the verdant fields in the middle distance.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under Food/Wine, Musings

♥ Blueberry, Raspberry and Strawberry Cobbler



This recipe for blueberry, raspberry and strawberry cobbler is from Tamasin’s Kitchen Bible; one of Tamasin Day -Lewis’s excellent cookery books.  She describes cobbler as ‘a sort of pie with a scone-like crust’.  I made it tonight to celebrate the start of the Bank Holiday weekend (in Ireland). It’s easy to make and it tastes delicious, so delicious that I ate two helpings!

Continue reading

3 Comments

Filed under Food/Wine, Recipes

♥ Shopping my Closet



I have never fully understood the manic merry-go-round on which, what was ultra fashionable a mere six months ago becomes sooo last season and what was fashionable  many decades ago becomes the dernier cri in desirable this season.  I confess that I have a fondness for the policy espoused by one of my favourite shops Agnes B, of having a small permanent collection of popular timeless pieces, which acts as a backdrop to the myriad of different garments in each new collection.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Fashion, Musings, Shops/Shopping, Style

♥ Nursery Rhyme and Personality



Monday’s child is fair of face,
Tuesday’s child is full of grace,
Wednesday’s child is full of woe,
Thursday’s child has far to go,
Friday’s child is loving and giving,
Saturday’s child must work for a living,
But the child that’s born on the Sabbath day,
Is fair and wise and good and gay.

Continue reading

13 Comments

Filed under Musings

♥ My Favourite Things//Two



Vintage Blouse:  
I like to buy vintage pieces from time to time; it’s a great way of getting something original and individual.  Vintage isn’t about trends, so the items I buy tend to have a longer closet life as I base my decision to purchase  on suitability and not fashionability.  I found this pink lace blouse in Jenny Vander, a vintage shop in the centre of the city, which I think is Dublin’s longest established vintage outlet. I love going in there in search of something out of the ordinary.  Mostly I am content to browse but from time to time I come across an item that not only fits me but is also a fit for my lifestyle.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Favourite Things

♥ Testing, Testing…



I write like a very famous literary figure. Fear not readers I have not severed all connection with my sanity but I did  put one my blog posts through the I Write analyzer (which I found via Metropolitan Mum’s blog) and it declared I write like Edgar Allen Poe!  You can try out the I Write analyzer if you click here.  It’s a bit of fun – as your writing is ‘analyzed” in just a few seconds it’s obviously not to be taken madly seriously.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under Musings