Showing posts with label pink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pink. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2010

The Simple Beauty of Carnations


If your birthday comes in January, first, let me say "happy birthday to you!" and apologize for the lateness of this post. Now, let me tell you about your birth flower, the carnation.

Long ago in ancient Rome, carnations were known as "Jove's Flower"; a tribute to one of their beloved gods. Later, it became known as the national flower of Spain, the provincial flower of the autonomous community of the Balearic Islands and the symbol of the Portuguese Carnation Revolution. In Korea, red and pink carnations came to be used for showing love and gratitude toward parents on Parents Day. Again, on Teacher's Day, the Korean people express admiration and respect for teachers with carnations as the flower carries for them the meanings of admiration, love and gratitude.

In Victorian times, the complex language of flowers known as floriography assigned different meanings to each of the most common carnation colors: pink for a woman's love, white for disdain, purple for capriciousness and whimsy, red for "my heart aches for you", yellow to say "you have disappointed me" and rejection, and striped carnations for refusal. Later still, in 1907 America, as Anna Jarvis founded our Mother's Day holiday, she chose the white carnation as its emblem—the color white to represent the purity of a mother's love, the flower itself because it was her own mother's favorite.


The state flower of Ohio is a scarlet carnation; a choice made to honor William McKinley, Ohio Governor and U.S. President, who was assassinated in 1901. He regularly wore a scarlet carnation on his lapel. And most of us are familiar with the iconic "white sport coat and a pink carnation" of 1950's music and fashion. (Extra credit if you know who sang that song)

The simply elegant carnation arrangements you see here were designed by lifestyle expert and favorite blogger Eddie Ross. Known in design and decor circles as the carnation's biggest champion, Eddie has managed to elevate the status of this humble flower through such creative endeavors as you can see here and here and here. If you are planning a wedding or any other special occasion and searching for big style on a not so big budget, consider using carnations. With guidance and inspiration from Eddie Ross.


While you're clicking around through Eddie's beautiful blog, you may notice a celebration taking place. Recently, Eddie was asked to represent Elle Decor magazine with the design of one of three rooms on view at Bloomingdale's. The 2010 Big Window Challenge was then judged over a two-week period by viewers who voted via text or online. Voting closed on the 28th and results were announced yesterday.


No surprise to those of us watching and voting, Eddie's window won! You can see two of my favorite vignettes below and read the whole story of how the window came to be here. Congratulations, Eddie!



Top image "Carnations" by Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell via sothebys.com. All other images via eddieross.com.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Glad Summer Sunsets


It's only the fifth of August, but I can feel fall sneaking up on me. The weather is odd. Very warm but not unbearably hot. Humid mornings, breezy afternoons. Thunder storms just over the mountains and the sun setting a little bit earlier every day. School starts in a few short weeks and regardless of what the calendar says, for many, myself included, the first day of school is the first day of fall. So before summer slips away much further, taking this particular bloom with it, I must get my Flower of the Month post published.


The Gladiolus, August's Birth Flower, has burst into bloom with the colors of summer sunsets. Their clean, tropical hues come directly from the warmest side of the rainbow-- red, fuchsia, orange, hot pink, chrome yellow. At the end of their own season in the garden, flamboyant Glads represent perfectly these bright, sultry days of late summer. Come September, summer and the Gladiolus will both be gone.

Some, perhaps not ever ready to say goodbye to summer, choose to keep the season all year 'round by bringing the warm, happy exuberance of the Gladiolus into their homes.





Both images above via "An Indian Summer"


via "Style Redux"


Angie Hranowsky


Fiona Newell Weeks

Angie Hranowsky

Kathryn M. Ireland


Amanda Nisbet


Gary McBournie

via "Style Redux"


via "Marie Claire Maison"

Stephen Shubel


I couldn't resist including this shot of a Stockholm apartment, above, designed by Swedish architects Tham & Videgard Hansson. Found on the blog Dezeen, it literally defies description. Click on the photo to read the post and see the rest of this remarkable space. Trust me, you don't want to miss it and you might not know what to make of it!


And finally, the art at the top of this post is a detail of this digital art print called "Gladiola Fiesta" by Gayle Lee, available here. I love how the bright hues are muted, and the shapes a bit blurred; blending and fading into each other like the colors and memories of a summer almost past.