Category Archives: General living and fun stuff

Tulip vases


vazen2In the 17th century, tulips were at the height of fashion. So much so; that in the 1730’s, bulbs were often sold for what was at least ten times the annual salary of a skilled craftsman. This period in Dutch golden age history is often referred to as Tulip Mania. Nowadays, the term “tulip mania” is often used metaphorically to refer to any large economic bubble. Tulips however, have never lost their charm and are in style pretty much always. New types being introduced all the time, often named after famous people. They can be bought pretty much year round and can be found all over the world. No matter what your taste is, or what rocks your boat; there’s a tulip to match.

 

Tulips look great in a simple glass vase. Yet in recent years, the classic tulip vase has seen a revival. Design shops stock them again, in all shapes and forms. They can be glass, plastic, metal or porcelain, and come in symmetrical or anything but symmetrical shapes. A selection:

Pol's Potten white porcelain tulip vase

Pol's Potten white porcelain tulip vase

Dutch interior shop Pol’s Potten stocks this white porcelain number. It’s design is inspired on corals, according to designer Norman Trapmann. Norman might be the guy responsible for the come-back of the tulip vase actually. He designed many of the currently popular ones. He makes use of classical shapes, and pagoda style layers, or simply stacks existing shapes on top of each other to create new ones. Most of his designs are sold through Pol’s Potten but he has a website where you can find some of his work too.
 
Silver coated tulip vase, also by Norman Trapmann

Silver coated tulip vase, also by Norman Trapmann

I REALLY love his work actually, so an article on him coming up shortly!
Flat Flowers 

Flat Flowers

 
This classical vase is actually a flat window adhesive/sticker. Do you remember those bright coloured figures and letters you could stick to the window in your parent’s car?  This is how that works.  You just stick the adhesive to your window. It looks great if you have a table with one end facing a window. From  distance it looks very real. Dutch online shop Bijzonder Mooi sells them in different colours and styles.
 
Another Dutch design shop online, Lilian’s House, stocks a few tulip vases. Smaller modern ones, and larger ones inspired by the classical tulip vase as seen in the Golden Age.
Lilian's House selection
Lilian’s House selection

The website is a design nightmare (hence the crappy images, size was useless), and it’s mainly a resell website, but they do have some pretty cool items.

 

 

Living large in small spaces


My stylish and fabulous friends at Apartment Therapy (who have yet to meet me and decide to let me do their PR in the Netherlands but will, one day) areon their annual quest for the coolest small homes around the globe. Pretty much an American party but the contest does allow international submissions. 

If your house is 1200 square feet or less. You can submit 5 pictures and a floor plan. There are 5 categories: teeny-tiny, tiny, little, small and international.  You can bring out your votes too.

1200 square meters is a whopping 111 m2 by the way, which is another great example of the fact that everything is bigger in the US, even small apartments… 111m2 is considered pretty big for an Amsterdam pad. Mineis 140m2 and makes quite a few people green with envy.

Below a few examples of current entries.

Mobius' 295 square feet (27m2) NYC studio

Mobius' 295 square feet (27m2) NYC studio

Antony's 300 square feet (28m2) Brooklyn 1 bedroom flat

Antony's 300 square feet (28m2) Brooklyn 1 bedroom flat

Rajiv's Bangalore (India) 500 square feet (45m2) 1 bedroom flat

Rajiv's Bangalore (India) 500 square feet (45m2) 1 bedroom flat

The Crying Boy myth


We all have seen it, a painting of a crying (gypsy) boy. The late nineties saw a revival or at least trend of over the top kitsch and pre-gangster rap bling with religious statuettes, Alpine landscape pictures with backlighting, knitted bed spreads with gold and rose ornamented applications, fake gold chandeliers shaped like cherubs and to top it all, a picture of a gypsy woman or a crying boy.

There are several different paintings around of crying boys. Pretty much reproductions only, printed on hardboard and put in a simple wooden frame. The most common ones are portraits of boys with a morose expression and mostly a single tear running down their cheek. Often looking straight into the eyes of whoever is looking at the painting.  There is no certainty that these boys were Gypsy children, but they are often linked to Romani Gypsies.

Bragolin's crying boys

Bragolin's crying boys

The creator of this much disputed series of art  was Italian painter Bruno Amadio(1911-1981), popularly known as Bragolin.  Bragolin was a painter by trade and profession. Reportedly he produced the paintings in Spain after the war, selling the originals and reproductions to tourists in Venice to make a bit of extra cash. He likely sold several thousands and many more reproductions were made from the originals. This means that the boys can be found in pretty much all corners of the world, adding to the mystery of the creator. A group of fanatic fans and art enthusiasts tracked him don in the 1979 and found him to be alive and well-to-do and still painting in the city of Padova.

Bruno Amadio in 1970

Bruno Amadio in 1979

The crying boys are the lead in a notorious urban legend. Bragolin was an enthusiastic fascist and socialist and made a lot of money in the 1930 painting propaganda images. He reportedly fled to Spain in the 1940’s. It was here where he first realized the commercial value of grieving children.  He found his models in a local orphanage and painted around 27 different boys. Legend has it that the orphanage burned down and all 27 boys lost their lives in the fire. Their saddened souls lived on in the images of their mortal appearances. In the 1980’s, again, this is according to legend, England was shocked by a sudden increase in domestic fires. Often, the only thing surviving the flames was a painting of one of Bragolin’s crying boys. In other cases, owners would get ill, victims of bankruptcy, floods or whatever bad luck one can encounter. In Spain they even did a series of TV shows where people would demonstrate recordings of their copies sobbing and crying for their mothers often enough with drops of water dripping down the painting.

With this in mind, I might consider myself a bit of a danger seeker. Just a few weeks ago, on an evening stroll with my dog Lola, I stumbled across one of Bragolin’s boys put outside with the trash a few streets down, to be picked up the next day. Well chuffed with such a great find, I took it home, cleaned it and put it up in my upstairs loo.

I am expecting nothing, but often, at night, I hear a faint muffled cry of what seems to be a Spanish kid calling out that I forgot to flush, again.

One of Bragolin's boys in my upstairs loo

One of Bragolin's boys in my upstairs loo

Back of the boring house


Further to the front of the dull house in my previous post, I also tried to alter the back a little.
It looks as if I actually painted on the pic, but it’s all Microsoft Paint’s tools I used. Very basic, and nothing like Photoshop, but I do like the result 😉

Back of the house before

Back of the house before

This is what it looked like before. The window frames in the garage are a different colour from the rest of the house. Also, the terrace is too small and they only have one single door leading to the garden from the main house. That is where the kitchen is. The window on the left is the bedroom.
Here’s what I tried.
Dull no more!

Dull no more!

To start, the exterior walls are painted white to match the front of the house.  The window on the left was changed into a double door. This allows immediate access from the bedroom to the garden. Then a conservatory was added back to the kitchen. This also makes the house look more elegant, and it creates an extra room inside. As it is adjacent to the kitchen, one can have coffee or breakfast there when the temperature is too low to sit outside, but the sun is out.
Obviously adding a bit of season, literally as I added spring, helps. The plants are in bloom, and there are leaves on the trees. Also, the glass fence between this garden and the neighbour’s is now covered in ivy. Flagstones lead to the back of the garden where there’s another terrace and an outside fire place. I don’t think I will be able to alter that photograph anymore today, but I might post it later.
I hope you like these tricks. It looks better I think 😉