Tuesday, 24 June 2014
New Notebooks of Note
I'm fully versed in all my high school films, and know that at about this time we should be throwing our notebooks in the air along with our mortarboards in jubilation at the end of term, I've seen so many darn nice notebooks recently I know I'd be clutching onto mine long after the school bell rang for the final time.
I'm clinging to an illusion, as well as a notebook here, as my schooldays are long past me. These notebooks, however, are suitable for proper grown-ups, with proper things to. You know, like having to exclaim 'What the Fuck?' at several points each day. This notebook from 1973 is perfect for those people.
The School of Life sells beautiful 'mood notebooks'. But can a notebook emblazoned with 'Daring' encourage you to be bolder? And will a one called 'Productive' stop you faffing around on Facebook? You'll notice I've chosen to be sceptical.
Also piling the pressure on is Anthony Burrill's Think of a New Idea! notebook. Alright Anthony, let me finish my tea first. Eating cake for breakfast, meanwhile, that's definitely an idea I can get behind.
If you don't like your notebook to be bossy, perhaps you'd like it to be bright. This colourful set of three notebooks comes from Pedlars for £17.95.
This letterpressed, handbound sketch book is definitely the arty choice. It's made by TADA for the Royal Academy so you'll be supporting art by buying it too. It's £12.
Couverture and the Garbstore sell beautifully patterned, beautifully bound A5 notebooks from Papier Tigre for £13 each. But the best bit about them? The space left for your name/title of your amazing novel-to-be on the front of each notebook.
But for serious patterned paper porn, head to Choosing Keeping where they stock such delights as this notebook, produced by illustrator Nathalie l'Été for Astier de Villatte. They're so eager you order yourself the right colour, they only let you order this design over the phone. Yes, really.
They also sell these does-what-it-says-on-the-front notebooks. The notebook: a useful tool for life, and all the good and the shit that goes in it.
Monday, 23 June 2014
Excellent Women: Nell Gifford
For the last decade, the highlight of the summer for my family has been Giffords Circus coming to town. From May onwards, the 1930s inspired circus travels around the Cotswolds with their unique brand of family and animal friendly fun packed up in vintage caravans. This is not the kind of circus that shows wild animals: the only creatures at Giffords shows are horses, dogs and occasionally the odd duck or goose that wanders into the ring from backstage.
My sister Phi being an usherette at Giffords Circus!
My siblings and I have grown up with Giffords Circus - I had my 21st birthday party there with guests dining alongside the circus troupe backstage after the show: fresh local food served on starry Emma Bridgewater crockery. Last year my sister even interned there as an usherette and dancer.
Emma Bridgewater is actually Nell's sister!
Giffords is the brainchild of Nell Gifford, who first ran away to the circus when she was 18. She made time to come back to reality long enough to get a degree from Oxford university, but then was straight off to the circus again after graduating.
'When I was 18 I went to join my brother in America at Circus Flora and it was there that I fell in love with the art of circus and the first seeds of Giffords were sown. I went on to work on a variety of circus shows including the prestigious Circus Roncalli in Germany. It was here that I experienced a vision of the future - a happy place, cared for and loved, where children and animals played together in sunshine, and the workplace was a huge candy striped tent, full of music'
The Giffords
Nell has just written a book about the first ten years of Gifford's Circus, an altogether family affair which she runs with her husband Toti Gifford, with the help of their gorgeous twins, Cecil and Red, who regularly perform in the shows with their tiny pony. Jugglers Bibi and Bichu are their godfathers. It's all like something out of a fairytale. You can see some behind-the-scenes photos from their idyllic life here on Nell's blog- and buy 'Giffords Circus: The First Ten years' for the full story.
Of course running away with the circus sounds very glamorous, but as with all show business, the reality involves a lot of hard work.
'‘Glamorous’ is certainly not the first word that springs to mind! In the early days, muddy boots, rats and no loos were a regular occurrence. Since then we’ve come a long way. When we’re on tour throughout the summer, Toti, the twins and I live in a restored 1930s showman’s wagon that’s towed behind a vintage lorry. The wagon was rescued from a roadside ditch and Toti has spent a long time restoring it to its former glory with added mod cons of a TV and fully fitted kitchen. It may surprise some people to learn that we do actually live, eat and sleep on location throughout the tour and that the children come along too.'
Red and Cecil's tiny pony Tom!
Vogue has referred to Giffords Circus as 'possibly the greatest show on earth'. So...no pressure then! I asked Nell how she manages to keep coming up with the goods.
'Rehearse and rehearse! Circus season is a relentless and repetitive machine of activity and the whole team, animals included put heart and soul into the entire tour. We run very much on a family atmosphere and as a result, all keep an eye out for each other. The troupe of 50, including performers such as clowns, acrobats, a five-piece band, a director, a musical director, a choreographer and animal trainers have just three weeks to learn the entire show before performances start. After that, we have a two-hour rehearsal every week. As performers, the audience’s reaction is what feeds us and spurs us on to improve year on year. Their laughter, the collective gasp after an amazing feat and the look of wonder on a child’s face is worth everything to us. '
Giffords regular Nancy performing her Andromeda act with doves
Animals are always a huge part of the Giffords experience, and this year's show The Thunders, inspired by Ancient Greek myths, is no different.
Domino and Tarquin in action!
One of my favourite photographers Ellen Von Unwerth shot this glorious video for Lula magazine, which I think truly captures the spirit of Giffords.
Giffords Circus are touring their new show The Thunders until mid September - see if they're coming to a village green near you by checking their schedule here.
Labels:
excellent women,
Gifford's Circus,
Katie,
Nell Gifford
Etsy Pick: Luna on the Moon
I'm almost giddy with excitement because I've got to a great new source of glitter before Sara or Laura B. But, aside from the pleasure of self-congratulation, it's almost impossible not to feel happy when you look upon the joy that is Luna on the Moon. Who needs a fried egg handbag? Probably no-one, but goodness knows I want one. This is just on the glittery egg on top of a glittery pile of gladness.
Had enough of pineapples yet? How about a glittery one? London-based Kirsty Fate makes these pieces of supreme wonderful ridiculousness with her husband Steve. The shop is named after their rabbit, as all good shops should be.
Perhaps watermelons are the new pineapples. This handbag is almost enough to convince me. At £60, it's also a tenner cheaper than the pineapple bag.
It's hard not to love a heart handbag. This design comes in loads of different colours, all of them splendidly sparkly.
I'd like to hang this close to my mirror as a diagram for perfecting my shadow/liner/mascara. This eye handbag seriously has it going on. There's ones available for all you green and, err, pink eyed beauties out there too. Or you can buy this as a brooch/hair clip.
Because leaving aside the awesome bags, Luna on the Moon also sells a range of hair clips that double as brooches. This brooch is probably the only time I'd want a pigeon anywhere near my hair. And this one only gets away with it because he's so damn handsome. He's £25.
How do you make awesome pink hair even better? Put an egg hair clip on it, of course!
And the answer for how you can make a rainy day even better has to be the colourful craziness that is this rain hat. Glastonbury goers, you'd be wise to snap one up now.
Shop in the Spotlight: The Calm Gallery

I'm in the process of redecorating my flat. It's a bit like painting the Forth Bridge: never-ending. My hall could do with a complete overhaul, but I'm just going to throw a lot of colourful and interesting prints at it instead, to deflect attention away from the scuff marks and misjudged drill holes.
My one-stop shop for aforementioned colourful and interesting prints is The Calm Gallery. Formerly Keep Calm Gallery, we've featured some glorious bits and bobs from them before, but now let's settle down with a cup of coffee and examine my complete wishlist, yes? YES.
Heading up the Hallway Print Gang is this Tutti Frutti print by Hand & Eye, which should have anyone who sees it singing and dancing all day long. This is exactly what I need beside my front door.
If I had this Clouds print by James Brown (I KNOW: Little Richard and James Brown, and we're only a few paragraphs in! It's like the Wheel of Fortune), I could assess the clouds from the comfort of my own home, and decide what to wear each day without the unreliable input of the weather app on my phone. At £35, it's cheaper than ruining my suede shoes.
Yes, I feel confident that my hall is exactly where the magic happens. This is another James Brown print, and it's £45.
We already really like Double Merrick, aka British-printmaker-working-in-France Merrick Angle (also possessor of The Best Name). He likes to makes beautiful prints inspired by classroom wall charts and children's reference books. This Planets print might help me finally learn the order of the planets from the sun. Yes, yes, I know there's a mnemonic for that. No, no, I can't remember it ever.
It's not all about the sky's goings-on in Double Merrick's world. To French-speaking visitors, this Chat print will act as a warning: I HAVE A CAT, AND HE WILL GIVE YOU THE EVIL EYE. To those who can't speak French - Girls Aloud, for example - it's simply a call to action.
Wise advice indeed, but what if I want to be underlined? This Type Rules print by asintended is £25.
Go and have a rummage through the other prints (and tea towels!) that The Calm Gallery has to offer. Very soon, all our hallways will be colourful and interesting - no paint required.
Labels:
home sweet home,
laura b,
prints,
shop in the spotlight
Friday, 20 June 2014
Friday Wishlist: Gorgeous things you'll want to buy RIGHT NOW
The perfect tropical fruit print dress. £50 from Rock My Vintage.
The perfect silk parrot cushion. £130 from Silken Favours.
The perfect sunglasses. £16 from Urban Outfitters.
The perfect clutch bag. £65 from French Connection.
The perfect fairy tale stamps. £4.50 from Present & Correct.
The perfect patent platforms. £79.99 from Zara.
Sluttery Sales Spy: Zara, French Connection & Topshop

The sun has got his hat on*, and he got it half-price in the sale.
* Hat-wearing suns subject to availability. See weather forecast for full terms and conditions.
THE DRESSES
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| Louche Julita dress, £29 (was £59), Joy |
Joy's Julita dress is such a lovely shape, and it's made even lovelier by the fact it's covered in a "conversational William Morris-style print". So let's have a conversation about the William Morris-style print, shall we? It is SO NICE, until you realise that it appears to be showing us a glimpse into our Orwellian future, where cats the size of houses preside over the countryside. Round the back, there's a pig on two legs, and a stramash about a windmill.
Let's have a closer look, so we can be prepared:
French Connection is in the midst of a tremendous sale. No fannying about, just ruthless slashing of prices left, right and centre. It's a money massacre. This Shimmer Shower dress has made the cut, and it's down from an unachievable £250 to a doable-on-a-good-day £75. You'll be like a walking meteor shower, but hopefully without having to field constant questions about whether or not you killed the dinosaurs. SO TEDIOUS.
I hear overgrown toddler chic is very in this season. WHO AM I KIDDING: it's always in. Toddlers are COOL. These Margate shoes from Topshop are suitably garish, cutesy, and resplendent with straps and buckles. I LOVE THEM. Give the stonewash rolled-up jeans a miss, though - toddlers do not approve of that shit.
I'm making it my mission to get a scalloped edge into every Sales Spy. This week's scallop action comes courtesy of these gold slingbacks from Zara. Now, you might say this is more of a wave, a squiggle - an undulation, even. But I consulted an Independent Scallop Adjudicator, who just happened to be a scallop himself, and he said: DEFINITELY SCALLOP. I use the past tense here because I ate him straight afterwards.
The Cressida bag from Joy is "styled like a vintage camera bag", and WAIT FOR THIS GUYS... I might buy it and use it as a camera bag. It's not padded, and it doesn't have all those fancy dividers inside, but it's got to be better than the large sock I am currently using to house my camera. You don't see David Bailey whipping lenses out of a sock, do you? I mean, you don't seem him whipping them out of a Joy handbag, either, but whatever.
The official name of this satchel is Large Clean Satchel. I'm imagining the Topshop bag naming meeting: it's been a long day, the coffee's running out and everyone just wants to go home, put on their pyjamas the moment they walk in the door, and eat Lotus spread out of the jar (such a coincidence that they all want to do that very same thing, but I guess it must be a pre-requisite of the job or something). Anyway, having spent the day coming up with a constant stream of retail gold ("This one reminds me of Scotland, and that girl from the Fantastic Four!"... "Totally getting Irish hill vibes from this one!"), they are now at a loss as to what to call their last beautiful bag. "Well", says the work experience girl, "it's, um, large?". "BRILLIANT!", says Ian, Head of Bag Naming. "Think of one more word to describe it, and we can all go home!". "Uh... it's... well... it's CLEAN!". *cheers* *back-slapping* *instant offer of permanent employment for genius work experience girl*
Question: why don't I already own scissors that look like an elephant? Answer: because they used to be £18. Now they're in the Anthropologie sale, and I'm going to fill this huge hole in my stationery arsenal immediately. There's also a stapler that looks like a... what? It's orange and stripy, so I'm going for tiger, but I'm unsure.
Shit just got real, kids. Shit just got really fucking real.
Some animals are more equal than others, I guess. SOMEBODY FETCH THE DREAMIES QUICKLY.
![]() |
| Shimmer Shower dress, £75 (was £250), French Connection |
French Connection is in the midst of a tremendous sale. No fannying about, just ruthless slashing of prices left, right and centre. It's a money massacre. This Shimmer Shower dress has made the cut, and it's down from an unachievable £250 to a doable-on-a-good-day £75. You'll be like a walking meteor shower, but hopefully without having to field constant questions about whether or not you killed the dinosaurs. SO TEDIOUS.
THE SHOES
![]() |
| Margate shoes, £18 (was £32), Topshop |
I hear overgrown toddler chic is very in this season. WHO AM I KIDDING: it's always in. Toddlers are COOL. These Margate shoes from Topshop are suitably garish, cutesy, and resplendent with straps and buckles. I LOVE THEM. Give the stonewash rolled-up jeans a miss, though - toddlers do not approve of that shit.
![]() |
| Gold slingback sandals, £15.99 (was £25.99), Zara |
I'm making it my mission to get a scalloped edge into every Sales Spy. This week's scallop action comes courtesy of these gold slingbacks from Zara. Now, you might say this is more of a wave, a squiggle - an undulation, even. But I consulted an Independent Scallop Adjudicator, who just happened to be a scallop himself, and he said: DEFINITELY SCALLOP. I use the past tense here because I ate him straight afterwards.
THE BAGS
![]() |
| Louche Cressida bag, £19 (was £39), Joy |
The Cressida bag from Joy is "styled like a vintage camera bag", and WAIT FOR THIS GUYS... I might buy it and use it as a camera bag. It's not padded, and it doesn't have all those fancy dividers inside, but it's got to be better than the large sock I am currently using to house my camera. You don't see David Bailey whipping lenses out of a sock, do you? I mean, you don't seem him whipping them out of a Joy handbag, either, but whatever.
![]() |
| Satchel, £20 (was £36), Topshop |
The official name of this satchel is Large Clean Satchel. I'm imagining the Topshop bag naming meeting: it's been a long day, the coffee's running out and everyone just wants to go home, put on their pyjamas the moment they walk in the door, and eat Lotus spread out of the jar (such a coincidence that they all want to do that very same thing, but I guess it must be a pre-requisite of the job or something). Anyway, having spent the day coming up with a constant stream of retail gold ("This one reminds me of Scotland, and that girl from the Fantastic Four!"... "Totally getting Irish hill vibes from this one!"), they are now at a loss as to what to call their last beautiful bag. "Well", says the work experience girl, "it's, um, large?". "BRILLIANT!", says Ian, Head of Bag Naming. "Think of one more word to describe it, and we can all go home!". "Uh... it's... well... it's CLEAN!". *cheers* *back-slapping* *instant offer of permanent employment for genius work experience girl*
THE STATIONERY
![]() |
| Bourney scissors, £9.95 (was £18), Anthropologie |
Question: why don't I already own scissors that look like an elephant? Answer: because they used to be £18. Now they're in the Anthropologie sale, and I'm going to fill this huge hole in my stationery arsenal immediately. There's also a stapler that looks like a... what? It's orange and stripy, so I'm going for tiger, but I'm unsure.
![]() |
| Shit Just Got Real notebook, £4 (was £6), Urban Outfitters |
Shit just got real, kids. Shit just got really fucking real.
How are you all, and what have you been buying this week?
Labels:
bargains,
fashion,
home sweet home,
laura b,
sales,
sluttery sales spy
Let Her Eat Cake: Tres Leches Cake
I will admit, I was sceptical when I first heard about Tres Leches cake. 'Why would I pour three types of milk and cream over my freshly baked cake?' I thought. Then I made it, and wondered no more. I know it sounds absurdly rich, but it really isn't. It's moist and sweet and perfect served slightly chilled on a hot day, which explains why it's popular in South America.
It's been given a bit of a British twist here with the addition of strawberries, in honour of all those folk running around after balls out there, so it's sort of a tres-leches-victoria-sponge-cake.
Tres Leches Cake (makes enough for lots of hungry sports watchers)
Preparation time: 25 minutes (plus 20 minutes chilling time)
Baking time: 35-40 minutes
You will need:
For the cake:
- 4 free-range eggs, separated
- 200g caster sugar
- 200g self-raising flour
- 100ml milk
- 1 vanilla pod, seeds scraped out or 1 tsp of vanilla essence
For the sauce:
- 200ml evaporated milk
- 400ml sweetened condensed milk
- 200ml double cream
- 2 tbsp rum
For the topping:
- punnet of strawberries (optional) sliced
- 200ml double cream
- 1/2 tsp vanilla essence / 1 vanilla pod
Make it!
- Preheat the oven to 180 C / 350 F / Gas Mark 4. Grease and line the bottom of a deep, square cake tin. (I used a 23cm x 9cm one, but you could use two smaller ones if you don't want to cut your cake in half: they will take less time to bake, so keep an eye out and adjust accordingly).
- Place the egg whites in a clean bowl and use an electric whisk to beat them until tripled in size and peaks form.
- Gently fold in the caster sugar, then the egg yolks, one at a time.
- Add the flour, milk and vanilla and carefully fold in until just combined and no streaks of flour remain.
- Tip into the prepared tin and bake for around 35-45 minutes, until risen and set and a skewer inserted comes out clean.
- Whilst the cake is baking, make the sauce by putting the evaporated milk, condensed milk, cream and rum in a jug and stir together.
- Leave the cake to cool for a minute or two (no more) then carefully slice it in half horizontally using a sharp, serrated knife.
- Place the bottom half on the plate you intend to serve the cake on, and pour over 1/4 of the sauce.
- Scatter the slices of strawberries over the bottom half.
- Sandwich the second half of the cake on top, carefully poke holes all across the surface with a fork, then pour on 1/2 the remaining sauce.
- Cover and place in the fridge for 20-30 minutes to chill.
- Whip together the double cream and vanilla until stiff and spreadable.
- Remove the cake from the fridge and pour over the remaining sauce (you might have a little too much left, just, err, eat this with a spoon, or something).
- Frost the top of your cake with the cream, spreading right to the edges, the top with extra strawberries to decorate.
- It's best served straight away: use a cake slice because that bottom layer will be, oooh so soft...
Labels:
food and drink,
laura h,
let her eat cake,
tres leches
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