29.4.10

Perfect Porches: Book Signing and Reception


Paula Wallace, president and co-founder of the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) will be at The Paris Market and Brocante today. A reception and book signing introducing her latest tome “Perfect Porches: Designing Welcoming Spaces For Outdoor Living” is this evening at 6pm. Join us for an exclusive opportunity to meet this visionary educator and designer. The recipient of numerous awards and accolades, including the inaugural Elle Décor Vision Award, Paula Wallace is responsible for transforming SCAD into the most comprehensive art and design university in the world.

27.4.10

SCAD Style Week


Fantastic guests and incredible events highlighting every aspect of the fashion and design industry are brought together for the next nine days of SCADstyle’s annual extravaganza. The streets of Savannah are literally littered with the icons of the industry. Wasn’t that Fern Mallis? Isn’t that Hamish Bowles? Hey look, it’s Thom Filicia. You never know whom you might bump into on the street, so pull out your latest mags, browse the coolest e-zines and blogs, because the game is on. No rumpled and frumpy the next couple of weeks – unless you can make rumpled and frumpy glamorous and chic. Uber-latest outfits, killer heels day and night (ohh my aching feet, how do those Parisian women do it?), hair down, jewelry on, face perfect, wry smile …okay I’m ready, are you?

5.4.10

Hasta Luego, Texas






Well, the truck is packed, the driver well caffeinated, hotel bill paid (ouch!), and we are ready to hop a flight back to Savannah. I leave you with some final images from Round Top.

4.4.10

Two Breezes





Set on three hundred sprawling acres of rolling hills dotted with wildflowers and traversed by meandering streams, The Inn at Dos Brisas is a spectacular destination unto itself. A luxury horse ranch, intimately secluded with only four “casitas”, driving through the gates you are instantly transported to another world of Texas high style and elegance. Ditch the car and climb on board your own private golf cart (no golf course here, just your green-mode of transportation while at the ranch). Whether you like skeet shooting, fly-fishing, horseback riding, or just a private massage on your own loggia, this is the place to relax.

The best part of this experience is the paring with the only 5-star restaurant in Texas. Under the direction of Grand Chef Jason Robinson, hand-picked herbs and spices from the Inn’s own organic garden, seasonal produce from the farm, and naturally produced ingredients are transformed into culinary masterpieces. Eat in the elegant dining room overlooking the infinity pool or (as we usually did), have your own picnic basket delivered to your room. You can also revel in the envy of your fellow Round Toppers. While they are holding a boiled hotdog with mustard dripping down their arm, you are opening your picnic basket of fresh cut fruit and just picked vegetables, house-made cheeses, lobster salad petit sandwiches, and just baked pastries.

Sleep, eat, shop, eat, and sleep. Ahh, the perfect day.

3.4.10

Round Top Respite



The problem with rural flea markets is finding a good place to stay. Since Round Top is located halfway between Houston and Austin, smack-dab in the middle of nowhere, just down the road from bumf-ck, the selection in this case is more limited than usual. The choices range from the usual generic small town hotels, to some kinda cute bed and breakfasts (which are unfortunately fully booked at least 2 years in advance), to staying in Granny Smith’s weird seasonal rental (most which look like a cabin from one of the Friday The 13th movies).

So if you are sick of rubber breakfast buffet eggs, cross eyed hotel proprietors, or just want to avoid being part of the 6 o’clock news, another options awaits.

2.4.10

Round Top Roundup




There is something for almost everyone at this market. Big stuff, small stuff, cool stuff and weird stuff. The more seasoned shoppers skip the “grand openings” of the more famous Marburger Farms and Red Barn. Well covered and even air-conditioned, here you are definitely going to pay a premium. Come early and scour the fringes, just off highway 290 and again closer to Warrenton, this is where the bargains and variety abounds. It is a well known fact that some of these items find their way over to the Marburger booths were they suddenly acquire pedigree and provenance. This is a pickers paradise, the food is fried, the vendors are friendly and extremely conversant and the hunt is exciting - alas beware reproductions, they seem to have infiltrated all levels of product.

31.3.10

Deep In The Heart Of Texas


Twice a year Round Top, Texas – population 77, explodes into a flea market bonanza of epic proportions. Highbrow antique dealers intermingle with lowbrow farmers selling their wares ranging from exquisite European masterpieces to pots, pans and pictures dug up from the church attic. Spread out along a byway in the middle of nowhere Texas, this sprawling market encompasses dozens of smaller collections of every collectable imaginable. Require that last Hummel figurine to round out grandma’s collection, or perhaps a vintage stone fireplace mantle from the Black Forest, no problem, it’s here.

Initially overwhelming but never intimidating this is the perfect time of the year for Texas. The fields are covered in wildflowers, the sun is warm and not too high in the sky, the small towns are ooh-so-cute and everyone is so syrupy friendly you think you just landed in some charming southern fairytale (although in this fairytale everyone has a holstered weapon and a mag-wheeled SUV!).

So put down that skeet rifle, take off your boots, loosen your belt buckle and prepare to be wowed.

30.3.10

photoSHOP





Like I said before, I usually find a couple of cameras here, a couple of camera there, …here a camera, there a camera, now its everywhere a camera, camera (sorry, you try to hold a six month old and write a blog at the same time).

Projectors, viewfinders, magic lanterns, cameras in all shapes and sizes, even one to take exotic pictures of distant stars and galaxies. Come fiddle and click to your heart’s content, we have more knobs and buttons than NASA.

28.3.10

Alphabet Soup


Letters, letters everywhere. Big ones, small ones, wood, steel, copper – spell your heart out. Collect your initials, make a rhyme, or just make your partner blush. Authentic and original, we have literally thousands and thousands to chose from.

27.3.10

Truthful Likeness




On August 19th, 1839 a bold inventor, Louis Daguerre, premiered his invention a “truthful likeness” at the French Academy of Sciences meeting in Paris. These daguerreotypes created a highly detailed image on a sheet of copper plated with a thin coat of silver without the use of a negative. Seductively beautiful, these earliest photographs required a significant amount of skill.

Whenever I hit a flea market, I always end up looking through old photos and picture albums, or fiddling with antique cameras and film equipment. Something about these fading images of someone else’s past, lost loves, fantastic journeys, or fabulous sites can keep me spellbound for hours. The art of the photograph has been lost somewhat. It used to be quite a big deal -the preparation, the chemistry, the manufacture, now all replaced by the digital age. Capture, edit, delete or save, print or send, copies? ..no problem. Usually I find a small assortment of items, browse for several minutes purchase a few favorites and move on. This time, however, I never moved on. My husband, who usually gets bored with “smalls”, was totally immersed in a conversation with the stall proprietor regarding a series of “magic lanterns” and an overwhelming pile of halotypes (glass plate images, the precursor of modern slides). I had not looked up from the thousands of daguerreotypes, tintypes and carte-de-visites. We finally looked at each other incredulously and, after some back and forth haggling, purchased the entire lot: cameras, film, equipment, photos, pictures, and the like. One truckload to go please.

Anyway, over the next few days I will show you some of the wares. Too much to explain, you have to come see it to believe it.