Beautiful slow design by Andrea Brugi


I've written about Andrea Brugi's beautiful wooden craft before, 
and here some new images from his studio in Italy


Andrea Brugi: I never decide how a piece should look. 
It is the grain and the shape of the piece of wood that determines the final result. 
You may find his work at the SlowFashionHouse online. 

WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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Trompe L'oeil paint your wall and fireplace

What a clever way to paint a concrete wall, 
when you want to make a space more personal. 
I guess you need to fix the dominant focal point in the room,
before you start to draw the lines on the walls and on the chimney. 

Any color combos will do, of course.
If you are not into color, how about shades of grey?
I saw this great idea by artist Ernst Caramelle here
WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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Enter here - exit there


Again, a few images of what interest me a lot: 
the borders between outside and inside. 
This time doors/entrances. 
I'm trying to pick a favorite, but cant! 
They are all awesome! 

Can you pick one? 


In her comment below, Eva Thury made me aware of the term Liminality
and wanting know more, I found this information at Wikipedia

In anthropology, liminality 
(from the Latin word līmen, meaning "a threshold"[1]) 
is the quality of ambiguity or disorientation 
that occurs in the middle stage of rituals, 
when participants no longer hold their pre-ritual status 
but have not yet begun the transition to the status they will hold 
when the ritual is complete. 

During a ritual's liminal stage, participants "stand at the threshold" 
between their previous way of structuring their identity, time, or community, 
and a new way, which the ritual establishes.



Click on images to go to the source. 
WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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Today I listen to: Monica Zetterlund



Video of the fantastic recording of Some Other Time, with Bill Evans Trio, 1965. 
From a Swedish documentary, where Monica Zetterlund looks back 
at her singing and acting career. 

WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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Gotland summer house: just the basics


You can find this stunning atrium house by Tham & Widegård Arkitekter, on the island Gotland in Sweden. The house sits in an open, undisturbed landscape with grazing sheep all around. All wood and concrete interiors. Simple and relaxed. 



 The house is beautifully situated on the shoreline, overlooking the Baltic Sea
More photos and information on the architect's website  
WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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How do you see colors?


Interior decoration is really, really hot in Sweden. "Everyone" wants to work as an interior decorator - something I'm aware of as a blogger and educator (my courses are always fully booked). At my courses, the students spend a full day studying, analyzing and discussing color in theory and practice. In one exercise I let my students "calibrate" their brains (!), to understand how different we all interpret color (good to know when you meet your clients). Sounds like fun, doesn't it? Today I found an interesting test online, where you can test YOUR color vision. I just did, and I wasn't perfect ;-) I made 4 misstakes. Test your own color vision here.
WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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Today I listen to: Jamiroquai


WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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December 13: Lucia celebrations in Sweden

 


On December 13 we celebrate Lucia in Sweden Then, in the wee hours of the morning, young people knock on doors of family and friends, and wake them up with a song, hot coffee and Lussebullar (saffron buns recipe here), as in Carl Larson's painting below. (The two young ladies in the 1919 photo above are Anna Bylander & Kerstin Johansson.)

One theory claims that the Lucia celebration evolved from old Swedish traditions of star boys and white-dressed angels singing Christmas carols at different events during Advent and Christmas. The current tradition of having a white-dressed woman with candles in her hair appearing on the morning of the Lucia day, December 13, started in the late 18th century and spread slowly to other parts of the country during the 19th century. (Wikipedia)


Above: In the Lucia procession in the home, depicted by Carl Larsson in 1908, the oldest daughter brings coffee and St. Lucia buns to her parents while wearing a candle-wreath and singing a Lucia song. Other daughters may help, dressed in the same kind of white robe and carrying a candle in one hand, but only the oldest daughter wears the candle-wreath. (Wikipedia)

Lucia use to scare the living daylight out of the Nobel Prize Winners and their families, while still in Sweden after the festivities. Nowadays the laureats are asked in advance if they want to be woken up by a singing Lucia and her entourage. Why miss out on an old Swedish tradition? Most of them say yes. 

If you are still curious what this Lucia tradition is all about, check out the beautiful video below, filmed some years ago at painter Anders Zorn's studio in Mora:


(This post is a repost from last year.)

Today I listen to: Fläskkvartetten



WABI SABI Lisbeth Williams @ Williams Design
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