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4 COMMENTS
Wow! I have never seen this pattern combined with autumn colors before, but it looks amazing!
Thank you for your blog, by the way- it is my very favorite. It has become difficult to find design magazines and blogs I like, since most things seem so stark & cautious & masculine. Your blog is the opposite of all that… I especially love your embrace of all things feminine and historical. This is the only place I can turn for home inspiration, so I hope you keep it up!
I would love to see some tablescapes in this pattern using the very inexpensive “faux china” tin plates in this pattern from the Metropolitan Museum Collection. They’re about $10′ each – folks starting out on a tight budget can still set an elegant table (to protect the tin, top with a clear glass plate).
I do have the “real thing,” i.e., Mottahedeh Tobacco Leaf salad plates that go with my Mottahedeh Blue Lace chargers and Imperial Blue dinner plates. However, I have the faux dinner tin plates as well – to keep them from moisture & possible corrosion/rust rust, I put each on a pretty charger and top with a clear glass vintage Camdlewick plate – gives the illusion of fine china. I use the Candlewick atop my Haviland-Limoges china, too.
Wow! I have never seen this pattern combined with autumn colors before, but it looks amazing!
Thank you for your blog, by the way- it is my very favorite. It has become difficult to find design magazines and blogs I like, since most things seem so stark & cautious & masculine. Your blog is the opposite of all that… I especially love your embrace of all things feminine and historical. This is the only place I can turn for home inspiration, so I hope you keep it up!
Dear Julien,
That is the nicest comment ever, you just made my day!! I am so ready for pretty to return, and I am glad you agree. 🙂
Yours truly,
Andrea
I would love to see some tablescapes in this pattern using the very inexpensive “faux china” tin plates in this pattern from the Metropolitan Museum Collection. They’re about $10′ each – folks starting out on a tight budget can still set an elegant table (to protect the tin, top with a clear glass plate).
I do have the “real thing,” i.e., Mottahedeh Tobacco Leaf salad plates that go with my Mottahedeh Blue Lace chargers and Imperial Blue dinner plates. However, I have the faux dinner tin plates as well – to keep them from moisture & possible corrosion/rust rust, I put each on a pretty charger and top with a clear glass vintage Camdlewick plate – gives the illusion of fine china. I use the Candlewick atop my Haviland-Limoges china, too.
Hi! May I ask where the pink colored glasses are from?