31 July 2013

Aarhus Domkirke

Aarhus Domkirke, Denmark
One of my favourite buildings in the world is Aarhus Cathedral. Inside, it is beautifully light and airy with some very psychedelic pre-reformation frescoes (take a look at the mural of the snake-necked, peg leg guy below). It is dedicated to St. Clement, the sailors' saint and also has a model ship that was washed ashore after being commissioned by Peter the Great of Russia from the Dutch. Awesome.

The only down side about Aarhus Domkirke is that the bells are spectacularly noisy and always wake me up early when I stay in Aarhus. Serves me right for being hungover on the Sabbath, I guess...


29 July 2013

Cafe Drudenfuss

Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus

Last night we paid a visit to a great Aarhus bar and restaurant in the Latin quarter (ha - I've always loved that Aarhus has a Latin quarter) called Cafe Drudenfuss. I discovered it via a post on OhYouPrettyThings.dk, my go-to blog for Aarhus nostalgia and recommendations.

Drudenfuss offers brasserie food at cafe prices and their menu includes plenty of gentrified junk food (my favourite!) like gourmet hotdogs and Nordic doner kebabs.

I had a Moscow mule and the Nordic doner, which turned out to be a carved-out loaf of bread full of pulled pork and apple slices. Pretty tasty:


Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus

Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus

The restaurant also has a very Berlin/Danish look about it, with lots of Eames furniture, wine bottles in windows and random patches of old tiling. Because we are in Denmark, of course there are candles and low lights everywhere.

Cafe Drudenfuss will definitely be on my mood board when I next have somewhere to decorate.


Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus

Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus

Cafe Drudenfuss, Aarhus

28 July 2013

Outfitted in Aarhus

Outfit and Aarhus cathedral

Just hanging out by Aarhus cathedral showing off my new bag from And Other Stories. I highly recommend this shop if you are looking for a well made leather bag with nice zips etc and can't/won't spend ££££s on Mulberry/Miu Miu/whatever. The store and website are also incredibly original looking and if you're interested in retail and blogging and how they might intersect in future, this article from Susie Bubble is definitely worth a read.

New bag from And Other Stories

27 July 2013

In Rainbows - Olafur Eliasson at Aros

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

I thought my trip to Aarhus would mostly be about reminiscing with old friends and drinking, but today we also managed to take a trip to a rainbow. Well, Your Rainbow Panorama, the new permanent installation by Olafur Eliasson at Aros Museum in Aarhus. 

The 'rainbow' is a 150m walkway enclosesed in a spectrum of coloured glass on the roof of Aarhus' modern art museum, Aros. As it isn't ventilated very well, running around inside it can be quite a psychedelic experience. I was excited to see if our moods changed as we went round from rose-tinted to indigo....

OhYouPrettyThings.dk did a great post about it here. I would definitely recommend a visit.

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

Aros in Aarhus - Your rainbow panorama

24 July 2013

Around the house

Some recent views from visiting my parents' place. Yes, I come from a home where there are cut flowers everywhere. No, I haven't inherited the patience to do the same in my place. Potted basil from the supermarket is as ambitious as I get.

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21 July 2013

Sunday outfit and Pizza Lupa

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Shirt - COS, Necklace - COS,  Skirt  - American Apparel, Bag - House of Fraser (many years ago)

It is kind of difficult to dress for the weather at the moment. I have a ton of hot weather clothes that I rarely get to wear... but my clothes are PRECIOUS and I don't want to make them all hot and nasty.  Also my legs are somewhat hefty, much like this sculpture by Botero at Barcelona Airport. So all my short skirts don't look so clever at temperatures where it is physically impossible to wear tights.  Luckily, as I have grown older, I care less and less about trivial things like dignity and vanity and just assume things will be ok.

That means that when it is hot and I don't have to look respectable for work, I tend to dig out my collection of corduroy skater skirts from American Apparel.  I love these things so much.  They are short and cute but so stiff and structured that they flare right out over troublesome physical features (like hips).

The picture above was taken while on an unsuccessful hunt to find a place to watch Andy Murray win Wimbledon.  After following it on Twitter, we eventually decided to spend the rest of the evening at the amazing Leathermarket Park just off Bermondsey Street. It is full of HUGE roses and looks like the garden from Alice in Wonderland.  Observe:

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Leathermarket Gardens on Bermondsey Street
It is one of the best parks I know and so tucked away that it is never full, despite being literally 10 minutes from London Bridge Station. I actually worked on Bermondsey Street for about 9 months before exploring far enough in the side streets to realise that it was there.

Another Bermondsey Street hidden gem and recommendation is Pizza Lupa.
"But Pizza Lupa is a chain of artisan Pizzerias that have branches all over London!" I hear you say, "What kind of dud recommendation is that?!"

Well, what you may not know is that if you are near enough to the London Bridge one to make your way there in person and collect, any pizza/any size is £11.95.

That includes this 17" brute:


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A custom job from Pizza Lupa London Bridge

The pizza is delicious and authentic and the London Bridge branch is in a very urban decay arch of London Bridge. The guy who works there has an outrageous Italian accent reminiscent of this classic Sopranos scene:




Also, as if finding the right arch and getting a massive pizza for cheap isn't fun enough for you, you then have the exquisite pleasure of carrying a pizza box the size of a tabletop back down Bermondsey Street. That's a lot of opportunity to shove tourists off the pavement.

Voila, my two best Bermondsey Stret recommendations. You're welcome!

19 July 2013

Wedding style

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Not MY wedding. Duh.

Whew, it's hot in London.  I've actually started complaining about not being able to complain about the weather, which is a grouchy new low for me.  Weddings in weather like this are a bit of a bloody challenge, but as long as you aren't the bride or a guy, you always have a few options for keeping cool.

Like Susie Stone (the maker of amazing bespoke womenswear who has her workshop on Bermondsey Street, where I live) recently blogged, the best thing in weather like this is an airy cotton dress.  I was planning to wear a silk pencil dress to this wedding, but it would have been absolutely sweltering. This last minute sale buy from Hobbs saved the day. Nice, airy linen in an eye popping colour. Perfect. I also like that the girly 50s skirt is balanced by the slightly 80s buttoned up collar.  It stops it being too "It's 2007, let's do 50s revival!!!".

16 July 2013

Liz Jones - A very British role model?

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Liz Jones - Photo from Stylist.co.uk

I recently finished Liz Jones’ latest book, ‘Girl Least Likely To’, a memoir of her journalistic career, her eating disorder and some very unsatisfying relationships. Liz Jones has been a bit of a hate figure among some people for a career which, since stepping down as Editor of Marie Claire, seems to have been built on soul-baringly confessional columns and hilarious critiques of herself and sometimes others. This book is more of the same – great if, like me, you find damaged, dysfunctional but somehow awesome females fascinating (see also my obsession with Tracy Emin). 

I’ve read before that women can’t get over the guilt of passing themselves off as something they don’t think that they are, and have a tremendous urge to confess. This whole books feels like Jones feeling that she has to set the story straight and make sure everyone knows just how strange she is. Like most of us, I imagine that she feels she is strange and unacceptable in a strange and completely different way from everyone else. 

But in some ways, she is an everywoman. She says what you hope other Alpha Females and expensive looking 50 years old are thinking (‘the fear, the horror!’). She documents the self-sabotage and insecurity and random, confusing feeling about parents who are either dead or very elderly. She is a peculiarly British success story, never feeling worthy, ashamed of coming from suburbia, who made a success of herself by knocking herself down in public. 

I think most people will find some aspect of Jones’ insecurities will ring true and some may be shocked that anyone else feels that way. However, I wonder if Jones’ puritanical self-loathing would be taken as far by anyone within my generation. We tend to be a bit more tolerant of ourselves! 

Here are three things I learned from reading Liz Jones’ ‘Girl Least Likely To’, and some of my favourite quotes. 
  1. Work hard and be well informed. You would be surprised how much this will differentiate you. 
  2. Spending a lot of money on designer clothes leads to trouble down the line and ultimately doesn’t change anything. And everything will still have loose threads!
  3. Don’t hold back or hide because you don’t think you are good enough at the moment, but expect to be some day in the future. That day may never come. In fact you may be peaking right now; make the most of it! 


Favourite quotes:

“On the first day, I must have seemed to boss from hell. I was staggered that all the young women seemed so ill informed, and slow, and lazy. Coming from newspapers, where you get to your desk having vacuumed all the other papers and immediately log on and start typing I was unused to women sitting and chatting, sipping coffee. They never seemed to have read anything in the news, all wrapped up as they were, in their own safe worlds.” 

“I sit in Dior, looking prim, as an homage: as always I have gone too far, arrived too early, taken it all much too seriously.” 

“It was as though a switch had been turned in my head… From then on, I felt that flesh was bad and lazy. Flesh caused problems and mess and expense: bleeding and towels and boys and gunshot weddings and arguments and overdoses and tears. And it meant I wasn’t trying hard enough to be good.” 

“I knew then I could never be a proper journalist, talking to people who didn’t want to talk to me… I knew I was boring and 
had nothing to say.”

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Liz Jones - Photo from Stylist.co.uk
 

12 July 2013

Aarhus: Recommendation exchange

Aarhus
Beautiful Aarhus during my time there (Photo: Sarah Davis)

This time in less than two weeks I will be back in Aarhus; second largest town in Denmark, home of a thousand vintage shops and my university town for a year in the late noughties. 

I am so excited to be returning after three years away (I regularly visit Copenhagen but don't get to Aarhus as often) and though I will be spending a big chunk of my trip revisiting old haunts with my friends from university, I am very keen to sample the... ummm... more sophisticated side of Aarhus. I have been drooling over the awesome Aarhus style blog, Oh You Pretty Things, and I can't wait to see some of the new places that have spring up in my old stomping ground. 

That's why I have listed some of my all-time favourite places in this city below. If you have any to add, please do so in the comments and I will be your friend for life!

My recommendations:
  1. Coffee and cake at Cafe Smagløs
  2. The best second-hand clothing at Rosenkrantz
  3. Free beer (yes, really!) and cheesy music at Social Club
I definitely need to update my recommendations! What are yours?