Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape

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Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape

Having guests of over for holidays can be so much fun. Especially, if you love to be the host, like me. I don’t usually have people over for Easter and won’t be a host this year, but it is one of my favorite holidays to celebrate.

Ever since I was a kid, my Mom would put together an awesome basket for me and hide it. The adventure of looking for my Easter surprise excited me every year. Now that I’m older, my husband carries on the tradition because I love it so much. I can’t wait to see where he hides it this year!

There are, however, lots of people hosting Easter dinner come Sunday. Dressing your table for the holiday should be fun and spring inspired, yet simple and easy to do. I personally think the theme should be more focused on the season and its natural elements, with a few touches of Easter charm mixed in. You could definitely go overboard with bunnies and eggs, so keep it minimal, yet festive.

Here are some great ideas I hope will inspire an amazing table for you and your guests. Enjoy!

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: Between Naps on the Porch

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: Such Pretty Things

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: Burlap and Denim

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: SAS Interiors

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: Stone Gable

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: On Sutton Place

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: Sand and Sisal

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: About: Budget Decorating

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: The Blender

Welcome Spring with an Easter Tablescape
Photo Credit: Trendzona

Inspiration Photo Friday: Home Sweet Spring

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I know that it doesn’t feel like spring but it is in fact, officially here. All I can think about is the warmer weather and springtime blooms. I am dying for spring to show her face once and for all.

Dan and I have many plans these next few months so the season will be more to us than just nicer weather. Not only do we celebrate Dan’s birthday this month but our wedding anniversary is May 20th. I can’t believe one year will have gone by. Time flies like there is no tomorrow. Our anniversary trip is booked for the end of the May and we will be relaxing in Charlemont, Massachusetts with our dogs for a whole week. We found the cutest cottage for our stay and I simply can’t wait to get away from it all and be one with nature.

We also have plans here on the home front. Our home will get a number of makeovers which I am very excited about. The kitchen remodel is long overdue and we are about 80% done with collecting all the materials we need to complete it. Once April hits and our windows can be opened, its on! We are also going to work on the backyard a bit and start our vegetable gardens. This is a very much anticipated task. To be able to grow pretty much everything we eat is simple amazing and I can’t wait!

This photo was taken last May, two days after our wedding. When its in full spring mode, our backyard is a true inspiration to me. The lushness of the trees and ivy, the smell of the fresh cut grass, and the little beauties that come alive in our gardens are all the wonderful things that surround our home. All I want to do is lay outside under our cherry trees and listen to the birds sing. I am very lucky to have such an amazing inspiration right in my backyard.

I wish you all happy spring inspirations and hope that the earth can uplift your soul and whisk you away somewhere beautiful. It’s such a gift to have a natural space you can exist in and feel so alive. You don’t know how happy I am to be able to visit mine everyday by just walking out the back door.

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Guest Post: How to Choose Furniture for Your New Home

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Choosing the right furniture for your new home is important for many reasons. Not only are you are creating a cozy and safe area for you are your family, you are setting the tone for how your home will look like for years ahead as well. The fun part is experimenting with colors, materials, and styles. How do you pick the right furniture and where do you start?

Look and Feel
Before you buy anything, you need to get an idea of the feel that exact piece will bring to your home. It depends on the style you want to create. Whether you are single, married, have children, divorced, or a young  professional, your own status should lead you to the right choice. Modern furniture these days is decorative and minimalistic, the focus is on edgier furniture, bright colors, and functionality. If you want a beautiful and comfortable home, you need to spot the right furniture.
Guest Post: How to Choose Furniture for Your New Home

Buy the Right Sofa
Along with the kitchen, the living room is a main area of the home. The room’s appeal depends on the style and size of your sofa, so choose wisely. Sit on the sofa and move around to get an idea of its fit. You will spend most of your time on it, watching TV, eating, reading, or working on the computer, so you need a sofa that is the right material, the right height and size. It is one of the priciest pieces, but it’s worth the investment. A great sofa of a quality material will serve you well for years to come. A sofa made of real suede/leather will have a longer life, but suede and cloth get easily stained and are harder to clean, so think of the top leather conditioner before you buy.
Guest Post: How to Choose Furniture for Your New Home
Photo Credit: Houzz

Maintain the Theme
In order to have a well-arranged home where all the furniture pieces come together, you need to choose them in a way that they complement each other. Have some consistency and a main theme and your new home will be perfect.
Guest Post: How to Choose Furniture for Your New Home

Guest Post: How to Choose Furniture for Your New Home

Compare and Shop Around
The furniture in the SW12 house you’ve moved in is above all, a long-term commitment, so don’t buy the first piece you see, unless you are completely in love with it. Go to multiple furniture stores, check websites to read what people say about those pieces you like – for example, Palliser furniture reviews, – and compare prices. You could even negotiate your own price for a set of individual furniture pieces. It’s important to be a smart shopper at all times.

A few more things to think about:
– Choose the furniture after you’ve painted the walls or at least after you’ve determined the colors.
– Select the room accessories after the furniture pieces arrive and finish the look with wall décor and artwork.
– Classic, Mediterranean, minimalist or traditional – the theme of your home has to be in line with the furniture.
– Don’t put too many pieces in the areas of high traffic, so it doesn’t get impossible to move around the house.
– Remember, to extend the theme to the outside of your home since its the first thing people see.
Guest Post: How to Choose Furniture for Your New Home

Hopefully, with these few tips of advice, you can move forward in creating the home of your dreams. Don’t forget to have fun in the process!

{Written by Ella Andrews}

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp

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This allows for an awareness of darkness to exist in light.” If this statement intrigues you, then so will Kelly DeKenipp’s work. Built through concepts of traumatic emotional experiences and dark temptations, her pieces translate the realities of uneasy and somber motifs into objects of everyday wear. “My jewelry is executed with a sense of enchantment, paired with whimsical elements,” explains the designer.

Born and raised on Long Island, DeKenipp was always inspired by emotional experiences and romantic ideas. As a child she loved creating with her hands and crafted various jewelry pieces as well as small objects from paper and fabrics. In high school she won the Sayville Advocates of the Visual Arts Fine Artist award as well as a local jewelry design contest. She was destined to pursue an education in fine arts and followed that path by attending Pratt Institute in New York. During the Spring of 2012, she was awarded second place at Pratt’s Junior Jewelry Review and is graduating this year with a BFA in Fine Arts with a concentration in jewelry design.

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp
Jewelry Designer, Kelly DeKenipp – Photo by Chris Bernabeo

For her thesis show, titled “Adornment and Torment” this April, she plans to unveil a collection that is highly influenced by objects of torture. Traveling to England a few years ago, Kelly was drawn to the deep secrets hidden inside the area’s castles, the historic torture chambers.

Each object held a reflection of its past and was beautiful in form. I researched the romantic history of these objects and took notice of their physical forms and structures. The shadows left from the act of torture and the dramatic forms of various torture objects directly guided my design process.”

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp - © Kelly DeKenipp & Photograph by Henry Mounser
Photo by Henry Mounser

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp - © Kelly DeKenipp & Photograph by Henry Mounser
Photo by Henry Mounser

DeKenipp’s ability to turn the dark and fearful into something fresh, modern, and beautiful is effortlessly shown through her work. The idea of romance is also brilliantly expressed through the use of specific materials and whimsical elements. “Silver is used to construct the forms and gold leaf adds a perceived value to the pieces. The beautiful forms and choice of materials allow the work to be cherished and worn as a treasured object.”

The structural form of the artist’s pieces clearly represent her muse, and while objects of torture may seem scary and obtrusive, this collection oddly expresses wholeness, spunk and beauty. All the while, allowing hints of history to carry through so the original qualities aren’t lost but are remembered as remnants of the past.

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp - © Kelly DeKenipp & Photograph by Henry Mounser
Photo by Henry Mounser

Whenever one can strip away the outside layers of an object and see beyond its original intent, is remarkable in itself. Creating a new and unique experience for the object to be a part of and carrying on its essence in a totally different light, is a talent you rarely see. It’s pretty clear DeKenipp has embraced what life has thrown her way and developed a special vision from what she has experienced. The talent was always there, she just brought it to life for all to see.

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp - © Kelly DeKenipp & Photograph by Henry Mounser
Photo by Henry Mounser

I was excited to review pieces from this anticipated collection and have the opportunity to ask the artist a few questions to find out more.

(1) Are there any specific experiences in your life that have directly influenced your work?
All my work is inspired from personal experience. The designs of the jewelry in “Adornment and Torment” are inspired from a trip I took in 2009 to England. The concept derives from accepting bad energies that come into my life and being able to manipulate and transform them into positive energy.

(2) What artists/designers do you admire?
Louise Nevelson, Daniel Brush, and Alexander McQueen

(3) Are there any materials you strongly feel connected to, and if so, what role do they play in your work?
Most of my work is made in metal, especially in my current collection. It is what I am most comfortable working with. In the past I have used alternative materials such as human hair, dollhouse furniture, fur, and photographs.

(4) How do you feel school has prepared you for a career in jewelry design?
My education has prepared me to be a professional working artist. In my senior seminar class we learn to establish our own businesses. My program has also allowed for many connections to working artists and designers in my field to be made.

(5) The work you are presenting for “Adornment and Torment” are influenced by objects of torture. What has the process been like to create all these pieces?
I have had to separate myself from what the objects history are and their relationship to humanity. I focus mainly on the forms and remind myself that through this body of work I am giving these objects new meaning. I am taking a very dark concept and transforming it into something of delicacy and beauty.
Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp - © Kelly DeKenipp, Photograph by Chris Bernabeo
Photo by Chris Bernabeo

(6) What are your plans after you graduate?
After graduation, I plan to build my own studio space. This way I can continue to hand make jewelry. My work will continue to be inspired by the concepts of my current collection. I also plan to make jewelry using collage, directly inspired from memories and the emotions they evoke in a specific person.

(7) How do you think your design aesthetic influences your personal style? 
In fashion I am attracted to simpler styles with some edge to them. When designing, I look for dark and fantastical motifs to work with, I’d say I look for the same while shopping for clothes. I wear a lot of black.

(8) Since your work revolves around emotions and experience, what role do you feel it plays in society? 
I create a new way to look at emotional experiences. An actual emotion is transformed into something of substance that you can feel and wear. You can carry this emotion with you or leave it at home. The goal of my work is to capture a feeling and preserve it in a piece of jewelry.
Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp - © Kelly DeKenipp, Photograph by Chris Bernabeo
Photo by Chris Bernabeo

Featured Designer: Kelly DeKenipp

{The artist is currently working for New York based jewelry designer, Assad Mounser and living in Brooklyn. You can contact her through kellydekenipp.com}