Clear lines.
Pure white.
A glint of gold.
A passionate splash of red.
An elegant foundation of navy blue.
>>>All of these wonderful products can be found on Etsy.com under: http://www.etsy.com/treasury/MTU4NDY5OTV8MTkwNzE3MDMwOQ/minimalism-jan12?index=0
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Finding home...in France. Part 1: Finding a place to stay.
After having lived in so many different English speaking countries I have arrived this year in France.
As in any country where you don't speak the language, the most ordinary his in your daily live can become an almost insuperable obstacle.
So here what I learned along the way in this past year in France.
Part 1: Finding a place to stay.
Without an income (and I mean a really good income) it is almost impossible to get a flat for yourself in Paris. A one bedroom flat of 33m² for 1300€, excluding all bills, is standard. We therefore decided to go for a shared flat or house where my boyfriend and I would share a room but would be able to 'escape' each other in the common areas.
And yes we found one. The greatest one there was, so much in advance, but the way to get there was rather complicated in comparison to my experiences in the UK.
There is several websites specialised in flat-sharing or "colocation" as they say in France. I was a bit shocked that you have to pay in order to get the contact details. But that's the way it is here. The real estate market is one of the biggest hotspots in Paris so in order to have just truly interested people according to the conditions stated: you have to pay. Depending on the site it's something like 2€/day or ~25€ for 10days.
We went with appartager.com and found what we were looking for. After viewing dozens of ads and just as many phone calls, we got selected for interviews and got lucky in the end to be chosen by the flatmates.
The landlord required us to give absolute disclosure about our income revenue and on top to produce a warrantor who would sign and commit to pay in case we wouldn't. We chose to go with my boyfriends dad, just because it was easier than producing all documents in French instead of having to translate German ones.
As in any country where you don't speak the language, the most ordinary his in your daily live can become an almost insuperable obstacle.
So here what I learned along the way in this past year in France.
Part 1: Finding a place to stay.
Without an income (and I mean a really good income) it is almost impossible to get a flat for yourself in Paris. A one bedroom flat of 33m² for 1300€, excluding all bills, is standard. We therefore decided to go for a shared flat or house where my boyfriend and I would share a room but would be able to 'escape' each other in the common areas.
And yes we found one. The greatest one there was, so much in advance, but the way to get there was rather complicated in comparison to my experiences in the UK.
There is several websites specialised in flat-sharing or "colocation" as they say in France. I was a bit shocked that you have to pay in order to get the contact details. But that's the way it is here. The real estate market is one of the biggest hotspots in Paris so in order to have just truly interested people according to the conditions stated: you have to pay. Depending on the site it's something like 2€/day or ~25€ for 10days.
We went with appartager.com and found what we were looking for. After viewing dozens of ads and just as many phone calls, we got selected for interviews and got lucky in the end to be chosen by the flatmates.
The landlord required us to give absolute disclosure about our income revenue and on top to produce a warrantor who would sign and commit to pay in case we wouldn't. We chose to go with my boyfriends dad, just because it was easier than producing all documents in French instead of having to translate German ones.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Mix of cultures.
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To be found under: |
http://www.etsy.com/listing/83775919/preppy-porcelain-ornament-check-pattern |
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http://tinyurl.com/676vp57 |
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Blue, yellow, turquoise>white |
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http://tinyurl.com/5tujbru |
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http://tinyurl.com/5tujbru |
What do you see when you look at this ornament?
A folk inspired colors? maybe indios, Maya?
Or maybe Norwegian style pattern and design?
Does it look a bit preppy? The 90's with united colors of Bennetton, Ralph Lauren...
I love getting inspired by all kinds of styles and periods and then mix them all up.
Now, I can see this ornament fanhing from a very unconventional Christmas tree, but also as a colorful window decoration.....actually they are so much fun, you could wear it as a pendant from a necklace.
Whatever you feel like - Enjoy it!
And make sure to have a look in my shop to see my different designs.
www.LaNiqueHome.etsy.com
They are all unique, as I decide spontaneously, just as inspiration hits me, how each piece should look like. Sometimes this is a process over hours as I lay it by side thinking it's ready....but looking later at it I feel like extending the design.
Well, it also happens that I am not happy at all and decide to polish it all off and start over again.
Not only the paint, but also the disc itself is handmade by me.
Monday, October 3, 2011
ETSY October trends.
I personally like products that tell you a story. May it be that they are vintage and have "history", or a photograph that captures a fragment of a tale. Or the ones that make you come up with new fantastic stories and ideas.
After having been featured so many times these last days, it is time to give so gratitude to all those brilliant curators. So here is my tribute to ETSY October trends 2011
After having been featured so many times these last days, it is time to give so gratitude to all those brilliant curators. So here is my tribute to ETSY October trends 2011
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LaNiqueHOME treasury @ETSY |
Friday, September 30, 2011
The making of: star ornaments.
I have been working now for a while on my range of porcelain ornaments and after getting some real great feedback on my snowflake edition I have been looking for a while to find more interesting motifs to create a new series. Et voila - on one of my treasure hunts I came across some vintage lace pieces that inspired me to make 'une collection franc̨aise' and I am looking forward to see what people will say about it.
But I have also been thinking about producing a very minimalistic version. No snowflakes. No lace. Only pure form. But it is a very thin line between beautiful purism and plain old uninteresting nakedness of things. I decided to go for a rather simple shape, a star, and make it light and delicate. I started to test how thin I could go with my raw porcelain.
I came down to almost 1mm.
But I have also been thinking about producing a very minimalistic version. No snowflakes. No lace. Only pure form. But it is a very thin line between beautiful purism and plain old uninteresting nakedness of things. I decided to go for a rather simple shape, a star, and make it light and delicate. I started to test how thin I could go with my raw porcelain.
I came down to almost 1mm.
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Atelier work @LaNiqueHome |
Now as you can imagine the minimised thickness bares a very increased fragility. Working with soft porcelain at this stage becomes a work of precision and very, very slow moves.
The 'casualties' are high on this road of success. Many stars tear when not handles carefully enough during the production. Others crack if I haven't worked the material well enough or I dry then too quickly. And even when all this went well, the polishing stages and too much pressure can finish the last bit. I think it is safe to say that only about 1/5 of my stars make it in the end. But those that do - the are so gorgeous!
And as you can see in the picture above, it becomes impossible to make those ornaments flat. Giving them a parabolic shape increases the stiffness of the final product. And once painted nicely in a pearl color on the inner side, the delicate light reflections are simply like in a fairytale.
Thinking now in business terms I came to realize that I would have to charge a tiny fortune because the manufacturing time simply takes sooo long. And how would I ship them to my customers?
I keep thinking of taking an egg carton and and bed the stars in soft, white, fluffy cotton. As "shabby-chic" as this solution is: I think it would convey just perfectly how delicate the actual really product is.
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
I am a child of the IKEA generation! (Part1)
I have recently been asked if I would
like to be featured with my Etsy Shop on someone else's blog. Well,
OF CAUSE I do!
So I got sent the little interview with
some neat clear instructions and a short description of how the
blogger will present it later on their site. 10 short and clean
questions that I wanted to answer just as crispy clear, but....
It is not that easy. My thoughts come
to me as short brackets of words, that immediately come with another
association of these words and at the end of this almost endless
chain of words and thoughts and meanings I realized: I am a child of
the IKEA generation!
Now that sounds strong doesn't it? You
read it and are impressed (at least I was), but you don't know what
that means. At first you see the brand name and then the word
generation and think: oh oh! That can't be good. A secret society
covered by an enterprise appearance slowly taking over world power.
Waaaahhhhh!
But then I thought: “Wait a minute.
If I now now where I came from, maybe that's a chance for me to see
where I want to go to?!”
But let me first reconstruct roughly
how I came to my conclusion in the first place.
So two of the questions were: tell us a
bit about yourself AND how did you come about to open an Etsy shop?
So digging in my personal history I thought:
My shop is about little home
decorational elements that make your home more YOU. More special,
more unique, more personal. And since I am the maker of things, they
will have a bit of me in them, so what is MY life about?
My life is marked by my many many
moves, school changes and later in young adulthood by country and
even continent hopping. In the last 10 years I have lived (on
3continents,
with 4languages and 5 countries) nowhere
longer than 2,5 years. And even in those 2,5 years I moved 3times
inside the same city.
Moving is never easy. Not as a child
and certainly not as an adult. It is hard work, stress and very
exhausting. In my case it always meant “Take what is important.
Take what you can carry. And if you can't carry it, it can't be that
important” As a result I learnt very well to distinguish between
what is necessary, what is unnecessary (and can therefore be thrown
away without second thought) and what is replaceable. In the end we
always kept your
- furniture (cause it was an investment too expensive to throw)
- housewares (but even that got replaced rather often)
- family memories (like photo albums)
- and some of our cloths, I say “some” cause as I was a kid and was growing quickly out of stuff, many things got left behind as well.
Seeing my first friends having kids
now, I noticed that I have nothing left from my childhood days to
pass on to my future children. No funky 80's cloths, no toys, no
books, no school stuff. Hmmmm, not even a place I can show and say:
this is where your mommy grew up. Sounds sad, I know, but I guess the
world is my home, so to say. And I can pass on A LOT of cultural
knowledge and awareness. YES, that last point makes things sound a
lot more positive, hu?!
When I decided to keep this life style
going into my adulthood I got even more drastic. I managed to
dissolve an entire household (and life so to say) in 10days. Leaving
me literally with 2suitcases.
OWNERSHIP+TIME+COMFORT=HOME.
My definition of home is connected with
the words ownership and time and comfort. Ownership over time gives
comfort and equals a sensation of “being home”. Simple equation.
So how did I get to open a home
decoration shop without having a real home? I never own anything very
long.
Well, as I said, I got good at
distinguishing different levels of importances. I will not buy an
entire new wardrobe, just because I move. I take what's nice the rest
gets left behind.
That's the difference between necessary
and unnecessary.
But the really interesting things are
the replaceables. Swap nice new modern German architecture and
environment for a bit gothic victorian style Edinburgh, it's all new
and exciting and wow. But once you are past the sensation of new and
you will at some point wish to have some of the 'old', the known the
steadiness of your old life back. You go and find the German baker,
the Polish delicatessen and buy the design items you recognize. In my
case IKEA.
I remember that my parents wanted to
get me finally new furniture by the time I was 15, cause the old was
old and battered by so many moves and I was too old to live in a
childrens' room. But I happened to disagree in style expectations and
my mother ended up gritting her teeth saying: “If don't like what I
offer you to buy. You will have to buy the things you like with your
own money!” I had none at 15. But I found a job in a supermarket
after school and for my 16th birthday I bought myself a
whole new bedroom from my own money. From IKEA!
I had my will and I had my style. A
cheap version, but hey! 'Fake it, till you make it'!!!
I admit to be a fan of IKEA. I am in
general a fan of Scandinavian design and architecture. And IKEA items
are very true to their Scandinavian roots. Never too overcharged.
Crisp, clean lines in their forms and here and there a splatter of
rich color and/or pattern. They do their design job well and when it
comes to design engineering they even better. Building furniture
deals with a many-piece-construction that has to have stability. And
producing stuff that any child can assemble takes a lot of brain work
and planning beforehand.
Chapeau!
Naturally if you push limits of affordability up, something else might have to lower, most likely quality. But all in all, all realists know what they buy when you buy from IKEA. And because the brand is what it is, it is replaceable. That's where it's popularity roots. You don't have to invest for life. And many many of my friends have taken the same path and we are almost all children of the IKEA generation.
Chapeau!
Naturally if you push limits of affordability up, something else might have to lower, most likely quality. But all in all, all realists know what they buy when you buy from IKEA. And because the brand is what it is, it is replaceable. That's where it's popularity roots. You don't have to invest for life. And many many of my friends have taken the same path and we are almost all children of the IKEA generation.
I am a fan – stylewise.
Becoming older and thinking more about
quality and more importantly: Sustainability issues. Not so much a
fan of this brand.
I was told once that it is a common
phenomenon that people that find themselves far from what they call
home (or home environment) get an appreciation for so called
“non-places”. Supermarkets, train stations, even churches for
some. That's because the atmosphere and the protocol of how to behave
and move is known. The concept of all these places is more or less
the same in every region or country. It is comforting.
Nowadays, when I get to see my friends
who moved in together, or bought a house and I get to 'admire' this
new new achievement and I see again and again and again Billy,
Iktrop, Poäng or Lack if feel like being in one of those non-places.
Known, constantly 'new' (cause it has been replaced by same thing
just newer version) and in the end very very monotone.
So why did I open a home décor shop?
Cause I want to bring some individuality and quality, as in 'made
with love', into all those homes of IKEA children.
X Nic*
P.S.: If you really made it down the whole post: WOW. you got stamina...in any case, thanks for reading through!
P.S.: If you really made it down the whole post: WOW. you got stamina...in any case, thanks for reading through!
Friday, September 16, 2011
The Blooming Thread: Summer may be ending, but that's no reason to stop eating ice cream!
Oh wow! Found this on a wonderful fellow blog and simply HAD TO link up to it. How wonderful and yummy! Have a click below!
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