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Looking around over the past few days, I’ve noticed that the Post-Christmas hiatus has set in. It’s that weird period between Christmas and the New Year when most people have a lot of time on their hands. We look back on the past year and re-appraise everything we’ve done – usually, with non-hilarious consequences.

AlaraApothecary to the rescue….. Firstly, don’t take it to heart. While there is life, there is hope; we will all do better next year by God’s grace. Secondly, the whole changing of one year to another is not significant in itself. Any changes we wish to make can be made today. Besides as I was saying to my nephew the other day, time itself is an artificial construct (cue long, heated argument 🙂 )  2 3

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In a bid to brighten your day, we are posting lots of images of beautiful, frivolous and amazing things which make us wonder and smile. Hope you enjoy looking at them as much as we enjoyed selecting them. Have a good one.

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Search for Enlightenment by Simon Gudgeon. Bronze, limited edition of 5. 2.2 metres high

( Photos: Ond table, Alberto Pinto; Mattia Bonetti table; Phillipe Malouin for Roll & Hill chandelier; Nigerian Parables chair by Yinka Ilori; Margo Selby fabrics; Tojukin Yoshioka Flower chair; Rupert Till sculpture; Home-made Insalata Caprese con Bresaola; Tortoise bowl – Ted Muehling for Steuben; Herve van der Straeten chandelier; beauteous Chrysler building; Roseline Assouline dress; Kumulus chandelier by Peter Nilsson; Coral shell; Darcy Miro bracelets; Peruvian costume; Mosaic wall by Sicis; Installation by Orly Genger; Abalone shell; Search for Enlightenment by Simon Gudgeon)

 

 

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Having spent most of the week struggling with using my old-skool Photoshop Elements software to insert bleed guidelines and crop marks in artwork for the printers, Sunday came as a much-welcomed day of rest. I was taking part in my first carol service since I was 8 years old. (I played a stroppy proto-feminist version of Mary who couldn’t see why Joseph had to be waited on hand and foot. He wasn’t heavily pregnant and having to ride a wretched donkey, so why couldn’t he do some housework? Plus ça change – but I can still recite the Magnificat. Still, my poor mother 🙂

This time, I was given one of the readings. Easy-peasy, Japaneasy. Apart from the fact that I suddenly became a nervous wreck which is amazing considering how lippy I am ordinarily. No problemo, I’ll just practise it over and over again. My first mistake– I usually read the King James’ version of the Bible. A couple of days later, I remembered we use the NIV at church. After a lifetime of hearing the same words in different versions, I knew the text enough to jumble all the versions up, resulting in an epic fail. Panic, panic. I must have read the NIV verses a hundred times in the last few days which unfortunately made my insane brain connect it to another work. Every time I started to read ‘In those days, Caesar Augustus decreed that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world‘, a crazy voice at the back of my mind echoed ‘In Xanadu did Kubla Khan, a stately pleasure dome decree‘. I was terrified that I would step in the pulpit and those words would come out of my mouth. Admittedly- excellent poem by opium-addled maniac poet vs revelation of the birth of the Messiah. Mixing them up, absolute nightmare.

Come Sunday, it was pretty much under control. Turned up at church to be met by one of the organisers, Lydia. ‘Glad to have caught you before the service. Just a couple of things, remember to pull the microphone down to mouth level’. Okey-dokey. ‘And project your voice’. Whaaat??? Project? What’s the microphone for? KLC design school, yes. RADA, no!!! ‘Don’t worry’ she said, ‘The microphone is on maximum anyway. It’s easier for us to turn your voice down than to turn it up’ (!!!!!) This did not help as I now had a vision of speaking thus, ‘ IN THOSE DAYS, CAESAR AUGUSTUS issued a decree…’ It would certainly wake the congregation up, but wasn’t really what I was going for. Full-on panic. Then Jill the church administrator told me we’d run out of room (lol) due to the size of the crowd,  and extra seats had to be put in. So, all of West London would witness my disaster. Quelle horreur. It was hilarious, not; my heart was pounding like a drum and I kept repeating ‘It’s for the glory of God, It’s for the glory of God’ to myself.

Of course, my tiny little part of the proceedings was hardly noticeable, and the participants as a whole played an absolute blinder. I managed to refrain from swearing, falling over the lectern or deputising as a booming voice from heaven. The service was wonderful, and the choir and solo singers were amazing. A couple of glasses of mulled wine post-service, and I didn’t care about Caesar Augustus or Kublai Khan. Thanks a lot for your blasted ear-worm of a poem, Samuel.T.Coleridge. So, make sure you attend at least one carol service this Christmas and have mercy on participants if they fluff their lines. It’s all to the glory of God. I leave you with some of my favourite paintings and if I don’t post again before Christmas, I wish you all a very merry and happy Christmas.

(Paintings: Holman Hunt’s Light of the World; Leonardo Da Vinci’s Virgin & Child with St Anne & John the Baptist cartoon; Sassoferrato’s Madonna)

Furo e Ponteruolo

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Gelateria Santa Trinita

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Green Life

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During my recent trip to Florence, I was amazed to see how much the city had changed in the year since I last visited. There has been a substantial increase in the number of small shops offering artisan-handmade and eco-aware products. There has also been a corresponding increase in the number of hipsters 🙂 The two go hand in hand, of course.

My two favourite finds were Paolo at Furo e Punteruolo, and Green Life, both on Via del Giglio. Paolo runs a one-man factory, making the most beautiful bags, rucksacks, belts and other leather goods by hand. I particularly loved seeing him work with his old-skool Dickensian-style tools and the shop smells incredible. We agreed that he definitely needs to take on an apprentice so his skills don’t die out. He’s hoping to talk one of his children into it; if not he’s promised to take on someone else. His work is beautiful, make sure you visit and buy one of his gorgeous bags.

Green Life is a couple of doors away. They stock clothing and products made from sustainable fibres– bamboo, eucalyptus, etc. Their T-shirts are so soft, it’s ridiculous. I fell in love with a mustard-yellow handwoven jumper. The colour was a vegetable dye made from onion skins. Oh me, oh my. Definitely worth a visit. I cannot omit Gelateria Santa Trinita from the list. Their ice-creams are sublime, the girls working there are really sweet and they fully understand the importance of making an ice-cream choice 🙂 They are a good reason for crossing the Arno, and there’s a whole artisan community on the other side of the river that’s well worth visiting.

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Then you have the showroom that rejoices in the name ‘Musee des Fabrics’ which always makes me smile. The above fabrics are hand-painted silks. I didn’t get a chance to go inside but what I could see looked terrific.

Finally, there was the usual roster of fabulous products from the high-end brands : Prada, Ferragamo, Gucci etc etc.

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Just in case you are now beginning to feel that Italians have gone soft, make sure you get a look at L’Importuno which was carved by Michelangelo on the bricks of Palazzo Vecchio. Graffiti, genius-style. There are many stories about how he came to carve it. My favourite one is that he was accosted by a lunatic/bore as he crossed the Piazza della Signoria on his way to work every single day, and that one day he finally snapped. As the man went on and on, he carved his likeness in the stone.

L’Importuno

Michelangelo-Man

I leave you with my favourite memory of Florence: a signboard outside one of the food shops:

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A week of dysfunctional systems. I was going to write a post about the artisans I met in Florence but my idiot computer resolutely refuses to load the images. If any of you are feeling you need to help my pitiful state, a new laptop would be great. Ta very much. This fits in well with my idiot body which has been turning against me for the last couple of weeks. So, instead of the uplifting and edifying world of handmade, artisanal products, I will treat you to a glimpse of the frankly insane and ridiculously frivolous  world of high-end design. I receive lots of missives from companies making bespoke products and catering to the 0.001%; tiles at £5000 per sq m, yawn, handwoven Pratesi  2000 thread-count bedsheets at £600 a pop, so 2010.

Occasionally though, I receive emails which are so astounding, I have to pick my jaw off the floor. All the items featured in the images are suggested Christmas presents. I particularly love the Boca do Lobo safe that’s so expensive, presumably you need to keep it in another safe. I haven’t included the prices of these products because, really, why bother? I will tell you though that both the Van Cleef & Arpels pen and the 24K gold loo paper are roughly the same price: £780,000. Don’t you just love synchronicity. This is truly a perfect world.

Before you sneer at the purchasers, firstly let me be clear. All 0.001 percenters are heartily welcome at AlaraApothecary, and please buy at least one each of our products  and tell all your friends 🙂 It is so obvious that this is not what Christmas is all about, I don’t think I should have to mention it. I think most of us know that though, so just marvel at the beautiful workmanship of the people who have made these products (apart from the loo roll. Really, words fail me. Apparently you get a bottle of champagne thrown in with every purchase. Probably LIDL’s house Cuvée). And besides, that Mont Blanc pen is outrageously lovely. Someone has to keep the producers of gold bras and rhinestone-studded loo seats in business. 0.001 percenters everywhere, we at AlaraApothecary send you a big festive hug. To the rest of my people out there, please don’t forget the Homeless charities this winter.

( photos: Marte Omas pen; Toiletpaperman.com.au; Victoria’s Secret; Mont Blanc and Van Cleef & Arpels; Baron safe, Boca do Lobo)