Post Comment Love 2 - 4 November

Erm, how is it November already?

Sorry, hello and welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo - but I’m sure you know what I mean?

If you were here last week, it was great to see you. If you’re new here this week, then you’re very welcome. Both Morgan and I are sure you’ll find some posts, and possibly new-to-you-blogs, that will keep you entertained. And if you do, don’t forget to share some of that #PoCoLo love and let them know.

How’s your week been?

Mine’s been ok, I’ve managed to shake a bit of the inertia smog but I’m not so keen on it getting dark so early. Or the rain. I don’t mind that it’s turned chillier so much, crisp autumnal days are great, the wet damp ones less so.

I’ve consoled myself with some craft shopping and now I’ve even more projects whizzing around my head and hopefully soon there’ll be some wooly and paper creations to share. I need to write a craft to do list as we hurtle towards Christmas, or else I won’t get anywhere close to what I want to do. Actually I might not get close to what I want to do even with a list, but the list will help me make sure what I’ll class as essentials are done. So that’s something at least.

I struggled to find a photo for this week’s post, but eventually settled on this one from this year’s Chelsea Flower Show, where goodness knows what that pose means, but I’m in the Chelsea hall of mirrors, or as it’s more likely to be, somewhere where I spent some time lusting after a mirror or two.

At the Chelsea Flower Show

Blogger Showcase: Becky from the Bonafide Brunette

Becky is a Canadian blogger who loves fall and believes in karma. She says her blogging challenge is remembering to take cute photos, something I can identify with right now! She’s not a cake gal but has asked for toast with peanut butter instead, which is ok by me, especially as she describes herself as Introverted extrovert and hungry!

Do pop over and check out her full answers on Morgan’s blog this week and take some time to connect with Becky on her social channels: Instagram - Twitter - Pinterest - Facebook

A dark and citrus living room

Room sets are a great way to get an idea of how colours go together, or how they might work in your own rooms without actually doing the hard work of decorating. And they’re also somewhere where you’ll find me drooling over them at the home shows, such as Grand Designs Live. At the show earlier this year, the room sets were, shall we say, provocative and often a bit marmite. The rich in colour and pattern bedroom, which I shared a while back emphasises that point, I think.

Today’s room set, a living room, is also bit more out there than those at the Ideal Home Show, which are generally (but not always) more traditional. Grand Designs Live has it’s own USP which in some ways is a bit more edgy and encourages bolder decoration, with colour - or dark walls in this case, and soft furnishings that really have some zing.

And when they said citrus, they really meant it.

A tangerine chair against a grey background with storage from the roomset at Grand Designs Live

Yes, orange, yellow and green mixed with the grey - that has citrus covered doesn’t it? Or actually perhaps the colours are tangerine, lemon and lime to be more accurate. It’s the use of those three colours together, that gives it the zing, and makes you grateful for the grey. And it’s the grey that makes it work and pulls all the brighter colours together.

A different view of the dark and citrus living room set at Grand Designs Live 2018

It’s the rug though that my eyes keep coming back to. The orange tub chairs have the zing, but the rug. Its pattern. My eyes are constantly trying to work it out. What is that pattern? What era does it come from? Is it a pattern, or just splodges? Do I like it, or am I just intrigued by it?

… so many questions, and for that last one I’m really not sure if I like it, think I should like it or don’t like it at all.

a lime green occasional chair, a patterned rug and comfy throw

There is a touch of the seventies about it isn’t there?

And maybe that’s it, maybe it reminds me of something from our first home. I remember that the living room was yellow and orange at one point, and I’m certain we also had a grey and pink carpet much later on when the walls weren’t quite so citrus. Maybe this room has a bit of everything my mind’s eye remembers from my childhood home.

Dimming the lights for effect in the room sets at Grand Designs Live

For me, the lights have a touch of murano about them too. And the matching vases.

Again that could just be reminiscing, as our first family holiday abroad was to Italy - how cosmopolitan were we?

A closer look at the table lamps

The sofa though, now I have grey sofas (many of them) but back in my childhood there was an orange one (yes really) and one finished in brown velour, but I don’t remember anything grey.

What do you think of the room set, and what evokes memories of the decor in your childhood home?

My garden in October

October has been a lovely warm month, I think I read somewhere that it’s been the warmest for seven years, but suddenly this last weekend it changed and now we know that winter is on its way, but until then let’s hope for some more clear and crisp autumnal days. There’s only been a bit of pottering in the garden this month and we’ve yet to put the garden to bed for the year, covering up tables and chairs and moving pots into more sheltered places but I’m hoping that the weather will continue to be kind and we’ll have some time to do that before winter really kicks in.

The garden manages quite well without us and during that time pottering I grabbed some snaps too. This year the cyclamen arrived early, but they’ve also put on many more leaves than I’ve noticed before, so I’m hoping that means lots more cyclamen over the winter and in years to come.

cyclamen in flower and more bountiful than I remember

Our agapanthus have had a quieter year this year, with only three or so flowers. The seed heads are dropping off now but the structure of the head remains, for now. I’ll need to cut the stems soon so that the plants can regenerate and provide plenty more flowers next year. We lost a couple of our agapanthus plants this year, I think because they got so wet, so I’ll be covering them with fleece again this winter to offer them some protection.

The agapanthus still providing structure

Yes, more cyclamen. They are slowly creeping around the garden, but I don’t really mind.

more cyclamen creeping around the garden

The sedums have been stunning this year, the colours are so vibrant. I’m sure there’s a scientific reason which pins this down to the warm and dry summer, but whatever it is, I’m pleased to see them when they’re as beautiful as this.

ANYONE ELSE SEE A HEART?

ANYONE ELSE SEE A HEART?

Strangely the lettuce seems to have come into its own. Yes, in the month when I’m least likely to eat salad I have lettuce a plenty (and don’t worry, that darker green leaf of the left of the picture below, I know that’s not a lettuce, so we’re not about to eat it).

The lettuce are still going strong
I’LL SKIP THIS TOMATO IN THE SALAD, THANKS

I’LL SKIP THIS TOMATO IN THE SALAD, THANKS

My ‘best’ tomato didn’t survive my week away. It looks as if someone, or something, else had their eye on it too and got there before me. They didn’t get my borlotti beans though, but as borlotti beans were in the meal I ate before being ill on holiday, I’m off those at the moment and our crop is drying to be used as seeds next year instead, as I’m hopeful that I’ll be able to look a borlotti bean in the eye by then.

The pots are doing well, in fact too well. It looks as if I’ve some unexpected Lords and Ladies in with my rhubarb - I thought that wasn’t growing, but now that the rhubarb’s in there it seems to have sprung into life. Typical hey?

RHUBARB IN A POT, THE SMALLER OVAL LEAVES ARE LORDS AND LADIES

RHUBARB IN A POT, THE SMALLER OVAL LEAVES ARE LORDS AND LADIES

And behind the bamboo in a pot that we haven’t used this year I discovered a self seeded and flowering primula. I really don’t mind when plants self-seed, and I’m doubly impressed when they manage to get themselves into a pot too.

ANOTHER OF THE EVERLASTING PRIMULAS, EVERLASTING BECAUSE THEY JUST KEEP ON GOING

ANOTHER OF THE EVERLASTING PRIMULAS, EVERLASTING BECAUSE THEY JUST KEEP ON GOING

The other thing that I have to mention in this monthly update, is the leaves. They’ve started - it is autumn after all - but as you can see it’s going to be something that keeps us busy, until they’re all down.

leaves everywhere at the moment
THE START OF THE LEAVES

THE START OF THE LEAVES

Secretly though, I think MOH is willing them down so he can get out the leaf blower again…