Vive la layette!

Nothing has a bigger "awwwww" factor than a baby's layette. Add a little French touch, and "awwwww" becomes "oh la la!" It also means a lot of fun for this new Nana!

For several years, I've collected French layette booklets from the '30s, '40s and '50s , and the one pictured at left is one of my favorites. It is filled with ideas for everything from knitted dainties to the classic styles in the center spread below. The soft tones of shell pink and powder blue make you want one of each.

I had the pleasure of learning to "knit in French" when I lived in Paris. French women love to knit, and there are shops with everything knitters and other needle workers need in most every neighborhood. (These merceries stock hose and stockings, too. No clue what the connection is!) I especially like the little knitted romper style, like the one below left, that the French call a barboteuse. I can see one knitted in cotton for our little Zoë.

I am particularly enchanted by this booklet. For years, the French knitting magazine, Mon Tricot, published an annual layette edition. The cover always featured a head of cabbage, no doubt a reference to where babies come from!

Many French women over the decades have saved pristine copies of their layette booklets. I'm grateful that a few of them have found their way to eBay!

à bientôt...Tatie

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

She'll be Running With Scissors!

This is a post I've waited a long time to write. Sometime around 20 April, my precious daughter and son-in-law will make my dear friend, Cathy Lind, and me grandmothers of a little girl named Zoë. I won't bore you with a doting grandmother's ramblings. But I will take this occasion to launch a creative project I've had in mind for several years: a couture line for little girls, called Running With Scissors. I'll be introducing prototype styles here at atelier chéri, like the dresses above and below, created for Zoë. These two tiny frocks are repurposed couture -- each was a wispy adult blouse that I restructured as a baby girl's "float," as I like to call them. Chouette (meaning owl), at top, features the tiny pleats and clever buttons of the original, along with olive rayon ribbon rosettes at the shoulders. Lapins aux violettes (rabbits amid the violets), right, was recreated from a voile blouse with the tiniest bunnies all over. The rayon ribbon violets were added. No layette would be complete without the ubiquitous Onesies. I've added some flounce with ruffles all around. Ciel moderne (modern sky), at right, is trimmed with a retro flour sack print that I found at Scott's antique market in Atlanta. Rose baroque (baroque pink), below, is ruffled with a pink and baroque print with tiny bunnies hiding amid the swirls and flourishes. Both feature tiny ribbon blossoms.
Another layette fundamental is the receiving blanket. Nuages à la campagne (clouds in the country), right, is crafted with green cotton flannel, with a Venise trim edging and a felted lamb or bunny at each corner. If you haven't yet touched any of the bamboo sustainable fabrics, do so at your earliest opportunity -- it's as soft as a puff of spun sugar. I found a pack of three bamboo receiving blankets and created Rosier des nuages (rose bush in the clouds), below, featuring roses made of ombre picot ribbon and old French lace. I'll make Zoë one more of these comfy covers and reserve the third one for my own snugly needs!
Nothing says baby like a hand-knitted pair of booties. The pair below, Crème de beurre (butter cream), are set off with flowers fashioned from pastel lace tape and pearls, and silk ribbon ties. I have a collection of old baby knitting books, and I turned to an Australian volume for these.
Every little girl needs a treasure box, and I restored the doll trunk below for Zoë. The figures on top are from a sheet of French paper dolls, and above the clasp is stamped "Mademoiselle."
I filled the chest with all the layette items above, plus a few more, and presented it to Olivia and JR at the magnificent baby shower given by my sisters, Sissy Watson, Kit Reuther and Mickie Marberry; JR's aunt, Kathleen Dillehay; and my best friends, Rebecca Pierce and Carolyn Long. Just a few of the yummy things on the menu: Carolyn's handmade pastel marshmallow peeps, Sissy's pork tenderloin and chicken salad on rolls, and Olivia's favorite, petit fours from Sweet and Sassy, topped with, what else, pink icing booties. It was a wonderful day with dozens of friends -- only to be topped by the day coming up in a few weeks, when we welcome Zoë, as we did her mother, at Baptist Hospital. It sho' will be a happy day! à bientôt...Tatie  

Pink and green: a marriage made in ... Paris

How special to find the interplay of favorite pastel colors captured on the blog, French Beauty Mark. Note the boxes, in palest green above and shell pink below. (A little personal tribute to my Alpha Kappa Alpha friends, my sisters under the skin!)
These delicious little containers are from Ladurée, a pair of pastry shops/tea rooms (salons de thé) on both sides of the Seine, in Paris. I'm especially fond of the rue Bonaparte location, below. (I described the exterior in an earlier post as robin's egg green!)
I have quite the little collection of Ladurée boxes myself, filled with memories of the incredible macarons they once held. (The green one in the back is a little faded -- it normally holds earrings.)
While pink and green are on my mind, I must share a serendipitous find. The Art Deco fan vases below did not come as a set -- I've had the green one several years, so imagine how thrilled I was last weekend to find the pink one! Also in the tableau: a doll size hobnail beverage set and a very vintage bride's maid, part of a complete little bridal party.
I don't know about you, but certain color combinations speak to my sensibilities. Not eye candy exactly (see below) but a visual treat you can almost taste.
à bientôt...Tatie - Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Fill an Easter basket at Cottontail Cheri

Papier mache robin's egg candy box with artisanal details Being German-American, I have a special affection for the holiday traditions from the homeland of my ancestors. Each year, I have a lot of fun applying my own creative touch to traditional German Easter treasures. This year, I have created Cottontail Cheri, an Easter market like those held in Germany. (Sadly, much of last year's collection was destroyed in the flood.) I particularly enjoy decorating papier mâché eggs my own way, like the one above. I started with a robin's egg treatment and added a curious medallion made of old German type and plaid paper rope (untwisted), centered by a tiny bunny. Martha Stewart's coffee bean-edged pink ribbon finishes it off. Papier mache Easter egg candy box covered with Florentine paper, blue metallic German Dresden trim. I really heart Florentine designer paper, and it looks just stunning on a papier mâché egg. Add Dresden foil trim, and you have a family heirloom. By the way, that fellow who's helping me show off my Easter eggs is a little replica of a longtime Reuther family heirloom, Bummy Rabbit, a wrought iron rabbit that my grandmother, Mammy, had in her yard when I was a little girl. The full-sized Bummy now sits in my patio garden, a proud survivor of last year's flood. Papier mache Easter egg candy box, bronze with paper medallion Here's the German script medallion again, this time with pleated Florentine paper, on a bronze painted papier mâché Easter egg. Scalloped green Dresden trim is the finishing touch. These eggs make the best candy boxes, to hold little treats and nestle in an Easter basket. Papier mache egg candy box with German diecut decoupage If you've followed this blog, you know what a fan I am of D. Blumchen & Co., where they specialize in imported German craft and holiday specialties. That's where I got my papier mâché eggs and German die-cut scrap, like the bunny on the egg above. I used a dimensional découpage technique to apply the little fellow to this robin's egg painted candy box, which is a little smaller than those above. The tall bunny showing off this egg is destined to become a family heirloom.   Papier mache Easter egg candy box with Florentine paper, small Again, beautiful Florentine designer paper, on a smaller papier mâché egg, finished with Dresden trim. Papier mache Easter egg candy box with elegant medallion, small The smaller bronze egg here has a German text medallion with pleated Florentine paper, this time centered by a prim little paper rose. I do hope you'll visit my Cottontail Chéri Easter market and make one of these creations an heirloom for your own family. Each item in the market includes a link to Etsy, where I am selling this collection. And stay tuned to Atelier Chéri, where I'll be telling you about some of the other Easter treasures at Cottontail Chéri. à bientôt...Tatie

La Poste: Banish the chill as blossoms burst forth




Are you listening for that soft pop! that sounds when spring's first lush blooms burst open? I hadn't given it much thought until I ran onto these busty blossoms, above and below (ranunculus, peonies perhaps) at Paris Apartment.


As we shake off that last blast of cold here in Middle Tennessee, I went on a little blog odyssey. I was in search of something to brush away the cynicism of March's damp chill.


What holds more promise than wild violets and snowdrops and grape hyacinth? Thanks to the garden at Trouvais for this sweet reminder.


Many thanks to Faded Charm Cottage for sharing your first forsythia cuttings of the season, above.


Count on La Pink Paperie to put the prettiest posies on paper, with a rococo flourish, above.


I'm not sure that anything makes a prettier table than a prim sterling vase filled with lusty blossoms, like those above from Chic Provence.


How about waiting out winter's dying breath in a glass conservatory like the ones above and below? Thanks to my friend at Aged and Gilded, who always finds fantaisies like these to feed our dreams.


Hang in there, for it'll only be a few weeks until we're enjoying coffee in the morning and a glass of something wonderful at sunset in a place like the one pictured below, courtesy of Louisville's European Antique Market.


Whimsical Easter treasures coming very soon. à bientôt...Tatie La Poste is an occasional feature of Atelier Chéri where I share a particularly good blog post or newsletter item from my email inbox. Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

La Poste: In Paris, go for the food, stay for the decor

at table in Mollard of Paris A recent newsletter from my home-base hotel in Paris, Hotel des Grands Hommes, included a critique of the old standard, Mollard, above, a seafood restaurant across from the Gare St. Lazare. The upshot is that while the Art Deco style of the place is stunning, the food...not so much. At table in Chartier, Paris It brought to mind the rap that Chartier, in the Faubourg Montmartre area of Paris, often gets -- neat place to go but no gastronomic temple. The tables, covered with the signature red and white jacquard tableclothes and large white paper sheets -- where the waiter scratches out the order -- are seen above. This way to Chartier Chartier may not carry any Michelin stars, but they serve good, hearty French fare, especially for the student budget. Such was my situation when I discovered the restaurant, known back in the day as a "bouillon." Through the corridor to Chartier Similarly impoverished friends came up from Rome for a weekend, and we were just damned pleased with the good meal and a bottle of French wine (well, several bottles). It's hidden away a bit, on a side street and down the corridor, above. Mirrors everywhere at Chartier Above is a particularly lovely view of the first floor dining at the airy Chartier, where it is not unusual to see a bird flying amongst the rafters. It's in a not-to-be-missed part of Paris for me, not only for a sentimental meal at Chartier, but also because it is just around the corner from three 19th century Paris shopping arcades: the Passages Jouffroy, Verdeau and des Panoramas. Passage Jouffroy, a Paris shopping arcade I'll save the details for another post, but the Passages are where I buy most of my treasured trinkets when I'm in Paris. Passage Jouffroy is above. But I digress. The old restaurants like Mollard and Chartier are a little touristy, but so what? They stand as witnesses to many a meal enjoyed in an ambiance that is the real deal. Chartier's Deco logo   á bientôt...Tatie   La Poste is an occasional feature of Atelier Chéri where I share a particularly good blog post or newsletter item from my email inbox.

Chouette: Baccarat crystal, oh so rococo

At the Baccarat musuem in Paris From the latest newsletter sent by my favorite Paris hotel: a field trip to the Cristal restaurant at the Baccarat museum. The French never miss an opportunity to set a pretty table and put on a culinary spread! Black chandelier at Baccarat museum in Paris I'll leave the restaurant review to the folks at Hotel des Grands Hommes. What I loved about the newsletter was all the radiant images of glass -- chandeliers, stemware, and yes, more deer! Room at the Baccarat museum in Paris Not an original thought, but I think what endears chandeliers to us is the way they replicate the softness of candlelight. Chandeliers at Baccarat musuem in Paris A style with several centuries under its belt, I'm pretty sure the idea of tiny shades on chandeliers is here to stay. Chandelier and window at Baccarat museum in Paris The reviewer visited Baccarat's Cristal Room during the day. Natural light seems like a bit of an intruder. Chair at Baccarat museum in Paris Had to share the chair with you -- the color looks like a macaron or a sorbet at the end of an intimate diner à deux. Oh, Paris! It's all about the senses, isn't it?

à bientôt...Tatie

(My Chouette posts take a look at other blogs, newsletters and what-not, all of which bring a little aesthetic to the table.)

Chouette: aged, gilded and bellissima

Stroll over to Aged and Gilded, a delicious design blog, with an emphasis on palazzos and interiors. I especially like the Mosaic Monday feature, when Aged and Gilded posts a collage like this one, with a tulle theme. (And I adore all things tulle!): Mosaic Monday from Aged and Gilded This is just one many design blogs that I keep on the homepage of my iPhone for when I want to dream a little. I will be introducing these treasures from time to time, with a Chouette announcement. Enjoy more below from Aged and Gilded. à bientôt…Tatie