Posts Tagged ‘katy mcrae’

The Art of Handmade Living

Monday, March 11th, 2013

Cover of The Art of Handmade Living by Willow Crossley

The Art of Handmade Living: Crafting a beautiful home
By Willow Crossley · Reviewed by Katy McRae

Things got off to a good start with this book, when I read in the introduction that Willow has a son called Wolf. I also have a son called Wolf(gang), so I liked her immediately. However, I endeavoured not to let her good taste in naming her offspring bias me as I progressed through the rest of her book. I tried to be impartial and, to be honest, it wasn’t hard as having sons with the same name is pretty much where our similarities end.
 
It’s fair to say that Willow’s aesthetic is not minimalist. In her own words, “I don’t really make things that anyone might need, just things that enhance your life (or at least the way it looks).” She appears to be on a one-woman mission to decorate the bejesus out of everything. Nothing is safe or sacred. House pegs are zhushed up with washi paper, coat hangers get a fabric face-lift and no lampshade is complete if it isn’t festooned with ribbon and finished off with pom-pom trim.
 
I’m all for adding personal touches to things but Willow can be, at times, a bit excessive in her determination to beautify everything she touches. Case in point – ‘decorative sticks’. To clarify, these are sticks that have thread wrapped around them. As Willow herself acknowledges, “They don’t do anything or have any secret purpose. They are purely decorative.”
 
Realistically, I don’t think decorative sticks would have a place in my home but I do have a respect for the way Willow is determined to transform the mundane, the functional and the downright useless into things of beauty. She is a firm believer that functionality does not have to be at the expense of form.

Page spread from The Art of Handmade Living by Willow Crossley

Page spread from The Art of Handmade Living by Willow Crossley
 
The book is divided into four chapters – ‘To Decorate’, ‘To Hang’, ‘To Use’ and ‘To Nest’ – though really they are all ‘to decorate’. In the introduction she makes a point of saying that you don’t need to be a technical whiz or expert stitcher to be able to make the projects in the book, and she isn’t kidding. Some of these projects really are super, super simple. For example, putting a ribbon band on a hat (though she does include some handy hints on how to hide the join) or sticking felt to the back of an old tile to make a heatproof kitchen coaster. There are, however, some slightly more involved projects, particularly in the ‘To Hang’ section, which have real wow factor.
 
As well as being straightforward, these projects don’t require any great financial outlay (sticks, anyone?). It’s all about using what you have to hand, or what you can rummage up from nature or the local flea market.
 
As you would expect from a woman determined to make things beautiful, this is a beautifully presented book with photography that showcases the projects to best effect. It’s an easy read and the instructions are very simple – almost to a fault. At times I felt some of the steps go without saying. For example, you must leave the glue to dry completely before hanging anything from the fabric-covered coat hanger. Bit of a no-brainer, that one.    
 
The Art of Handmade Living is the ideal present for that friend who is ‘getting into craft’. It’s also a lovely addition to the bookshelves of those hardened crafters who are looking for some fresh inspiration on how to make the world a more beautiful place, one fabric-covered notebook at a time.

Katy McRae likes formica tables, sharp scissors, fabric (especially felt), strong-smelling solvents and words. She also likes to make stuff. She’s not a fan of the colours peppermint and royal blue.

A Guide to Natural Housekeeping

Monday, September 10th, 2012

Cover of A Guide to Natural Housekeeping by Christina Strutt

A Guide to Natural Housekeeping
By Christina Strutt · Reviewed by Katy McRae

Christina Strutt’s A Guide to Natural Housekeeping is your classic, entry-level handbook on how to tread lightly upon this earth. It’s not the sort of thing a survivalist would include on their compulsory reading list, but it does touch on a wide range of topics in its quest to encourage you live a greener existence.

Christina introduces the book with an apology: “If my tone wanders from technical to bossy, from stating the patently obvious to the downright cross, I apologise here and now. I have become an ‘eco-worrier’, but worrying is no bad thing when it comes to saving our environment.” It’s an apology worth remembering because the book does oscillate a bit between some good old-fashioned wisdom on housekeeping and some fairly alarmist statements. My personal favourite: “We are in a perilous state and unless we all react and understand the situation TODAY, we will be leaving our children and grandchildren a world of chaos, catastrophe and disaster . . .”

This may well be true. Some might say we are already living in a world of chaos, catastrophe and disaster . . . but it does seem a little at odds with her comments further along in the book, like her one on the value of having matching hangers. ‘Begin with matching hangers. A well-organised, presentable wardrobe will make life a million times easier and it will be a pleasure to choose from.”

A million times easier? Really? Had I known I would have done that years ago.

But in all seriousness, Christina is undoubtedly very passionate about the environment and while she clearly has a row to hoe, she does warn us upfront what to expect.
 
Double page spread from A Guide to Natural Housekeeping by Christina Strutt

Double page spread by A Guide to Natural Housekeeping by Christina Strutt
 
She has also produced a really handy guidebook that might just make you think twice about using that chemical cleaner. I’m going to have to be living in a post-apocalyptic world before I will contemplate inflicting the honey and fennel face pack on myself. However, her section on ‘The Usefulness of Herbs’ is, as described, very useful. Similarly, her chapters on ‘Keeping House’, ‘Energy for Life’, ‘The Kitchen Garden’, ‘The Well-stocked Larder’ and ‘Inspired Gifts’ are packed full of handy hints and clever ideas. She mixes grandma’s advice with some newer ideas and innovations to create a really useful resource that you’ll be reaching for every time you want a refresher on the many benefits of bicarbonate of soda (and believe me, there are many). And, as you would expect from the woman behind the fabric, fashion and interior design company, Cabbages & Roses, the book is a very pretty read.

Katy McRae likes formica tables, sharp scissors, fabric (especially felt), strong-smelling solvents and words. She also likes to make stuff. She’s not a fan of the colours peppermint and royal blue.

A Girl’s Guide to Decorating

Monday, August 13th, 2012

Cover image of A Girl's Guide to Decorating by Abigail Ahern

A Girl’s Guide to Decorating
By Abigail Ahern · Reviewed by Katy McRae

Abigail Ahern is a British interior designer, stylist and owner of one of London’s leading interiors stores. And now she’s added author to her list of achievements with A Girl’s Guide to Decorating.

As you would expect from a woman with such a reputation for style, this is one good-looking book. Beautiful photography is matched with clean, clever layout to create 190 or so pages of eye-candy. Even if you didn’t read a single word, the pictures alone would give you a good half hour of inspiration. And the paper stock is classy – I like that in a book.

Luckily Abigail can also write…which is a huge relief because there’s nothing more disappointing than a book that’s all fluff and no substance. Her mantra, if you will, is that “style has absolutely nothing to do with money” and she sets about proving her case in what is effectively a decorating how-to, packed with hints, tips and tricks of the trade.

Abigail has divided the book up into the basics of interior design – glamour, colour, texture and light – prefaced by a chapter on planning your space and ending with a chapter on ‘practical stuff’ (tools you’ll need and techniques to master). She covers everything from painting floorboards to hanging wallpaper, but specialises in ‘entry-level’ DIY which gives you the biggest bang for your buck. It’s all about giving things a lick of paint, arranging collections in clever ways, swapping the handles on your furniture (“one of the easiest ways to change the look of your furniture”) and making the most of your space rather than bashing down walls or ripping out your kitchen.

Double page spread from A Girl's Guide to Decorating – Abigail Ahern

Double page spread from A Girl's Guide to Decorating – Abigail Ahern

She also has nifty sections within each chapter where she goes into all the different options and what they’re best suited for – wall and floor surfaces, styles of curtains, shelving, options for cabinets, different types of wallpaper and so on. This woman knows her coving from her cornicing and now, thanks to her, I do too.

My only slight criticism would be that she does, at times, have a tendency to state the blindingly obvious. Case in point: “displaying personal treasures…gives a home a heart and soul.” Or my personal favourite, “paint is a great way to spruce up walls without blowing the budget”. But I can forgive her the occasional banal comment for all the good advice she then goes on to give.

As with all of these sorts of things, the closer you are in taste to the author, the more you’re going to get out of the book. DesignSponge describes Abigail Ahern’s style as mixing “eclectic elements while having fun, but not going overboard – very modern, but still so liveable.” If that sounds like your cup of tea, then this is a book for you.

Katy McRae likes formica tables, sharp scissors, fabric (especially felt), strong-smelling solvents and words. She also likes to make stuff. She’s not a fan of the colours peppermint and royal blue.

Vintage Craft Workshop – Cathy Callahan

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

Vintage Craft Workshop: Fresh Takes on 25 Classic Projects from the '60s and '70s

Vintage Craft Workshop: Fresh Takes on 25 Classic Projects
from the ’60s and ’70s

By Cathy Callahan · Reviewed by Katy McRae

I have to preface this book review with the fact that Cathy Callahan is one of my crafting idols. Her blog is one of my favourites and I stalk her on Facebook. Her collection of retro craft books and magazines is truly awe-inspiring, her passion for ’60s and ’70s craft borders on the fanatical and her sense of style just plain rocks. So when I discovered she had produced a craft book I bought it, pretty much sight unseen. I did check out the title – Vintage Craft Workshop: Fresh Takes on 25 Classic Projects from the ’60s and ’70s – and figured I couldn’t go too far wrong.

Cathy has taken some of her favourite projects and, with the help of some of her crafty friends, given them a modern make-over. She’s gone for the classics – free-form crochet vase covers, string art, painted stone paperweights, raffia flowers, paper mache. It’s a ’60s and ’70s craft-fest with all the colour and kitsch you’d expect. I have to be honest here though – sometimes the remakes are just not as cool as the originals. But isn’t that always the way?

The instructions for each project are clear and Cathy includes patterns at the back on nifty, perforated sheets that can be torn out without doing damage to the book. It’s a nice touch. The other thing that Cathy does really well is intersperse the craft projects with short biographies on crafty ladies of the era. So not only do you get to make stuff, you get a history lesson along the way.

As Cathy rightly points out, the business world of the time was dominated by men. However, in the late ’40s and early ’50s a few independent-minded women were starting their own craft supply companies, popularising supplies that brought new options to the home crafter. When craft really took off in the ’60s and ’70s these women – Aleene Jackson, Hazel Pearson  and LeJeune Whitney among others – became crafting superstars.

So while I may not be so enamoured of the actual projects, I do love the book. It’s a good retro craft resource, a great read and a welcome addition to my own fanatical collection of craft books.