Reclamation at Grand Designs Live

One of the new additions at this year’s Grand Designs Live was a reclamation area with items from Lassco and English Rose kitchens on display. I would love to spend hours (and no doubt hours more) perusing a whole market like this, so was really pleased to take a legitimate wander around in a "well-we're-here-dear-we-should-take-a-look" kind of way.  You see MOH is much less of a ‘make do’ kind of person (and I mean that in a make do and mend way) and likes to have good quality items, that last. I think that's great, but for some items I like to think I’m more adaptable and open to reclaimed items, and have a much more flexible approach to fittings and furnishings with character, which at times can be tricky, but usually we end up with a compromise. 

I think the closest I've got him to a salvage yard is Maltby Street Market, but when it's been turned into a hip weekend market and usually involves a burger and cakes, actually we haven't even done that for a while...  

door knobs and tiles

But presented with a whole area of the show dedicated to recycling and reuse I was keen to make the most of the opportunity.  I’d also been lured over by the brass knobs and pretty tiles, yes I can be such a magpie...

taps on sackcloth

MOH soon picked up though when there were lights to look at, not necessarily these, as these are far too pretty, and too small for MOH’s big sell (to me) project.  I liked the fluted shade, and the brown wire though, but they wouldn’t do for our dining area, as they're too delicate, but would be great over a dressing table or as bedside lights. One day, we may find a light we agree on - I haven't given up hope!

porcelain pendant lights

I was enthralled by this old gymnasium flooring, MOH humoured me, and I know while he made sympathetic noises that really he’d be trying to peel or clean off the sticky markings around the red sections. Seriously. I once bought a bottle of wine that came covered in dust, on purpose, he dusted it...

a gymnasium flooring

This would make great flooring in a high traffic area wouldn’t it?  I'd be wondering where it came from, what sports and sports men and women had played on it, and if it had played host to any famous trainers.  

Ah, more brass knobs!  Rose brass no less, I didn’t even know that was a thing - but it does look great, and so do the pink patterned tiles. 

brass door knobs

In the English Rose kitchen display, it was knobs of another kind that caught my eye.  These traditional shaped, but colourful handles made me smile - we don't have kitchen handles like this anymore do we?  Well in fact, I don't have any kitchen handles at all in our kitchen, and (obviously) I like that too.

english rose kitchen handles

The kitchen units which had been spruced up looked great, it's not a kitchen that I would go for but I admired how it'd been given a new lease of life and brought up to date with a modern look and feel.

A refurbed kitchen

Clearly there's still some work to do on this one!

still some work to do on this kitchen!

But look at the shape of the units above, our local kitchen shop has this very shape units in its window, so it just goes to show that quite often styles come back into vogue, even in homewares.

I mentioned lights before and this is the one thing that I think MOH would happily have a reclaimed piece without any questions, in fact we'd both happily have something like the one pictured below if we had the space, and if we didn't already have two standard lights.

a bulkhead light I'd happily find home for
 
lights of all kinds and the shiniest of kitchen cabinets

It's the style of lights pictured below that we disagree on.  It's not that I don't like them, but I'm not convinced by the amount of light they give out and think one chunky light while looking industrial above the table, isn't really the look I want - and I'd be concerned that it would fall on my table!  

industrial lighting at Grand Designs Live

The green enamel type lights in the background are also good but I'd want to be convinced by the light a single pendant gives out, I think these would look better in a row of three, and that means more work and making holes in the ceiling which I'm less keen on.  That's really our dilemma, wanting something more modern than we currently have but not compromising how much light it gives out.

We'll get there, and in the meantime we'll have fun looking at many, many lights, reclaimed or not!

Bunting my way

Those tissue paper pom poms which I posted last week reminded me of the bunting I insisted on making back in the summer for our 110th party, and how I hadn't shared more about that here. It appeared in the pictures from the party, but that's about it.

BUNTING MADE FROM SCRAPS

BUNTING MADE FROM SCRAPS

Every party needs bunting I think. And in fact I think everyone should have bunting, at least some anyway. I'd frustrated MOH ahead of the party by disappearing and knocking up a couple of strings of bunting when in his opinion there were more important things to be done. They didn't take that long to make and were a good stash-buster too, so pretty and resourceful.

I have a habit of saving ribbon and braid from boxes of chocolates, bouquets and even those posh paper carrier bags, and these came in useful for my bunting. I also have a fair bit of material, so I started by sorting out some of that. I'd hoped to go with the small floral Liberty-style patterns, but when it came to it I still didn't want to cut into some of that material. So instead I opted for material that I'd had for a while, was generally floral and fun.

Out came my pinking shears and I made a triangle template to cut around, cutting through several layers of material at once. I thought the shape didn't need to be exactly perfect to get the bunting effect, and I was right. The central one in the photo above proves that, and I bet you only notice the mis-cut on the left hand side as your eyes scroll back up. 

FROM A BOUQUET OF FLOWERS

FROM A BOUQUET OF FLOWERS

AND FROM A BOX OF CHOCOLATES

With the sewing machine threaded up, I started by joining my braids and ribbons together, and then simply attached my cut out triangles to that leaving approximately the width of the bunting between each flag.  Again that wasn't precise, but it worked out well. I didn't want the bunting to be too spaced out, and I did remember to leave some extra ribbon at each end so it was easy to tie into place.

A PILE OF BUNTING READY FOR ANOTHER TIME

I'm really pleased with how it turned out, and I think I'll be making more.  In total I made two lengths with about twenty triangles on each, and in truth it was so much fun and pretty addictive soI could have gone on for much more. 

A simple craft, but one that was quick easy to do and one that I think can't help but bring a simile to people's faces. 

Recycled plastic rugs, that don't look like recycled plastic rugs

I suspect that when you read that you thought of stiff, shiny woven rugs didn't you? I know that my mind had some trouble computing when I read the sign and saw the attractive looking - and soft to the touch - rugs in the box from Eco Braids, which I spotted on that trip to the House & Garden store at Snape Maltings.  But they are the recycled rugs in question and I tested them they're not stiff or shiny at all. In fact I don't think you'd know about their green credentials unless you knew, if you know what I mean.

100% recycled plastic rugs in the Homes & Gardens shop at Snape Malting Suffolk

They can be used inside or out and are machine washable - just as the sign says.  The colourways have some cracking names too: paprika, putty, sapphire, wasabi and pewter. I'm very tempted for when I replace the mat we have by our back door.

IMG_3603.jpg

What do you think?

A Green and Rosie Life