Snapshots from Italy: Florence

May 3, 2012

Since we returned from Italy, I’ve been ranking Venice and Verona ahead of Florence. But looking at these photos again has me reconsidering!

We spent twice as much time in Florence than we did in Venice and Verona, and I think I would have preferred that extra day in Verona instead of Florence. Mostly because of the sheer number of tourists milling about. I found it a little difficult to get from A to B without tripping over someone.

This was the front “lawn” of the Palazzo Pitti. It was so funny to see everyone sprawled out on the concrete taking in the sunshine!

Our B&B was about four blocks from the Duomo and wherever you walked, you could see it peeking through the tall buildings. It was one of my favorite parts of Florence – the building is just so intricate and imposing.

See? The tourists are everywhere – and this was early in the morning!

On our last morning in Florence, we got in line early to go inside the Duomo. It was such a let down compared to the outside of the building. Although the floor was very fancy!

In Florence, we stayed in another pristine B&B. The building was very, very old. The ceilings in our room must have been 20 feet tall and they were beautiful old painted beams. The interior of the old building had been renovated and had a great mix of modern and ancient furnishings – think old Victorian dressing tables with lucite chairs. I think my sister found it a little echo-y, but wear ear plugs and slept like a baby!

And again, our host was so gracious and sent us off with lots of recommendations. Her recommendation for gelato was the best we had during our whole trip. She sent us to Grom, where Carolyn and I both had a cone with extra dark chocolate and salted caramel gelato. All day, the line was out the door!

We found Florence very easy to walk around – we walked from end to end several times – but the sidewalks are narrow and you have to share them with lots and lots of tourists. It was so nice to get away from crowds and walk along the deserted streets over by the Botanical Gardens.

Where we stayed:

B&B Gattopardo

Via dei Magazzini, Florence, Toscana 50122, Italy

 

New Blogroll: Crafty!

May 2, 2012
{Image from here}

As promised, I have a new list of ten blogs in the blogroll on the right side over there.

This new set of blogs has a theme – they’re all crafty! Whether it’s hardcore DIY, like installing tile and cabinets, or decorating for a party, they’re all crafty in some way.

Check them out!

A Fabulous Fete – Sweet and cheerful party ideas and crafts. I liked these ideas for using kraft paper to decorate!

A Subtle Revelry – Victoria shares tons of ideas for decorating and styling – last week was barbecue week! But this cut-glass lantern is my latest favorite. She scooted all over her neighborhood to take the photos with pretty backdrops.

Bower Power – This blog will make you giggle. Katie is beyond honest, which is nearly always hilarious. I went looking for a great post to start you off with and got stuck on yesterday’s. A beautiful and chic office makeover with my favorite color on the walls.

Creature Comforts – Miss Ez from Creature Comforts writes a beautiful blog with beautiful craft tutorials. Try some DIY peonies or homemade label stamps.

Hank and Hunt – DIY Cinco de Mayo garland. Need I say more?!

Little Green Notebook – Jenny is a seemingly unending resource for decorative but functional projects for your home. Her framing tips are clever and inexpensive!

Lovely Indeed – Chelsea does a great job of taking trends and putting her own spin on them. Try the Sharpie paint-penned cups and the driftwood hanger.

Oh So Beautiful Paper – All things beautiful and papery, obviously, but there’s also a great series on different types of printing. My favorite? Block printing.

Wit and Whistle – I’ve had Amanda’s dip-dyed t-shirt on my list for a while now!

Young House Love – Most of the projects John and Sherry accomplish are way above my pay grade, but there are lots of little tutorials to work with that don’t require power tools! They’re masters of spray painting to spruce up any old thing.

Dublin Travel Tip: Tourist Information Centre

May 1, 2012

Not the sexiest of posts, I’ll admit. But visiting the Tourist Information Centre in Dublin is one of my favorite travel tips. Here’s why:

The Building. The Tourist information office, only a block from Grafton Street, is set in an old church. You wouldn’t even think it was the tourist office!

The Brochures. If you’re visiting Dublin and you’re looking for a tour or a museum, this place has got the brochures – a whole wall of them. Oh, and it also has really friendly staff who will help you figure out what it is you want to do in this lovely place.

The Bathrooms. Clean, public bathrooms. They’re on the fourth floor, so you’ll work for them, but when in need!

{Incidentally, my other travel trip for today is: bring your umbrella. It’s been raining for days!}

It seems I’ve run out of reasons to love the Tourist Information Centre that begin with the letter B, but it’s also a great place to stock up on little souvenirs to take home with you. There are lots of kitschy places (there’s a somewhat tacky chain called O’Carroll’s that plays painful music at the loudest decibel and sells lots of leprechaun gear!) around Dublin to find souvenirs, but the Tourist Office has a lot of great options as well. If I was visiting, I’d let Michael look at the wall of brochures and decide our itinerary while I found cute souvenirs to bring home!

Dublin Tourist Information Office And finally, when you’ve planned your trip and booked your hop-on, hop-off tour (which I also recommend, by the way!), walk a block down the road for lunch at Avoca. Try their basement food hall for delicious salads and tarts, or their rooftop restaurant for a lingering cup of coffee and a sweet treat. On the floors in between? Even more pretty Irish sourvenirs to bring home with you!

Snapshots from Italy: Venice

April 30, 2012

I was a little apprehensive about visiting  Venice, because we’d heard from several people that Venice isn’t their favorite place in Italy. But once we arrived, the apprehension melted away in the bright sunshine. Venice was one of the most stunningly unique places I have ever seen.

I expected Venice to be a little like Amsterdam, where the canals are lined with streets for cars – not so. On the island of Venice, there are no cars. Zero. There are alleyways and sidewalks for walking, but there are no streets. Everything is done by boat – deliveries, ambulance, moving house. All done by boats, big and small.

Since we only had about 24 hours in Venice, we did a lot of walking and soaking in the sights, but we didn’t try to squash in museums or churches. Venice is also quite small, so our wandering took us around most of the island. And because we avoided tourist spots, we got to wander around places that weren’t packed with visitors. Thank goodness!

The best advice we got was to use the waterbus – their version of the metro! – and avoid the pricey gondolas. We got our gondola fix by taking the little shuttle gondola across the Grand Canal. You pay the gondola man 50 cents and pile in with all the locals, and the gondola takes you across the canal. Since there are only a few bridges where you can cross the canal, these gondola shuttles save you from having to walk to the nearest bridge. And in our case, they saved us from paying 90 euro to get on the gondola experience!

Venice, like most European cities, can be quite expensive. So we kept costs down by finding delicious take-away sandwiches and eating them at the edge of the canal.

My sister snapped my photo while we were waiting for the waterbus to arrive. Can you tell I was loving that sunshine?!

Logistics: 

We flew on Ryanair to Venice-Treviso airport and took the 45 minute shuttle bus (€7 each way) to the city. The shuttle drops you at the main train station in Venice. It’s beyond convenient. They even sell you the shuttle tickets on the plane!

Once there, we got a 24 hour waterbus pass, which was about 16 euro each. It allowed us to get to and from our B&B as well as take in all the sights. You can ride it all around the city, and the pass works for any waterbus route.

We stayed in a wonderful B&B in Venice called B&B Ai Bariteri. It was exceptionally clean and comfortable, the host and housekeeper were both incredibly friendly, and it was in a great location – right near Grand Canal and the Rialto Bridge. We found it at the very last minute, and it cost us a fraction of what we thought we were going to have to pay – only €100 for two for the night. Our room was on the top floor – 5 flights up! I think that would have been tougher in the heat of the summer, but since it was April, we just counted it as our exercise!

B&B Ai Bariteri
Calle di Mezzo 4966
30124 S. Marco
Venezia

Friday Finds

April 27, 2012

Happy Friday, friends! Are you happy it’s the start of the weekend? I sure am. I’m excited to curl up on the couch (rain predicted, yet again!) with my computer and edit photos from my trip to Italy. I might even make myself a strong espresso so it doesn’t feel so far away!

What did you all get up to this week? After my post about the KnowHow Shop yesterday, I got news that an eco-village in the middle of Ireland is thinking of doing something similar. Not right around the corner, but a great excuse for a field trip! How fun is it when you get great news from the magical world of Twitter!

While I’m dreaming of my great big DIY projects and editing lovely photos from my trip, here are a few great links to get you inspired.

I am so ready to do a large-scale free hand painting project. I just need some big, blank walls. This masterpiece is downright beautiful.

I love the power in these horse prints. Black and white are so moody.

Love rice krispie treats? Try this round up of cornflake treats!

Now here are the two big ones I’m planning to read and re-read with my coffee tomorrow morning.

Thought-provoking essay from the New York Times, called The Flight from Conversation. All about how we’re tricking ourselves into thinking technology enables meaningful interaction – and meanwhile, we’re missing real conversations.

And finally, this post by Holly over on the Decor8 blog is a great reminder about putting down the darn phone, and being truly present. Something I’ll be working on this over the weekend as well.

Enjoy the weekend!

My Life Needs a KnowHow Shop

April 26, 2012

Every morning, I hit the snooze button roughly seventeen times (This is no joke – this morning I snoozed for 50 minutes. It’s a wonder Mike doesn’t kill me.). Then I finally shut off that iPhone alarm and spend a few minutes peeking at my blog reader. It’s the little treat I use to get myself up and awake – slowly.

{Image from the lovely Heart of Light blog}

This morning, I happened upon this post about an Ikea hack involving a set of shelves and a custom bevelled walnut counter top. I loved it, but I made the grumbly face I usually make when I see something that looks like it will involve power tools and pick up trucks carrying slabs of wood and all those things I just don’t have here in Ireland.

Those exact things that I’d have if I lived within an hour’s drive of my parents’ barn. Big saws and clamps and drills.

I grumble because my ideas are bigger than my power tool supply here in Dublin.

But here’s the twist. That Ikea hack? Rachel and her husband don’t have those tools either. They just happen to live near the KnowHow Shop. The KnowHow Shop is a brilliant idea brewed up by three architecture graduates – a communal workspace and design center in California where you can buy day passes to use big power tools to make cool, big stuff.

{Image from a New York Times T Design Magazine article here.} 

I want a KnowHow Shop in Dublin. It would solve a whole bunch of my envious DIY grumbling.

 

Italy, According to my iPhone

April 25, 2012

Good morning! I’m back! Italy was amazing and I can’t wait to share lots of photos, info and tips with you. But while I settle back in and send my sister back to America today, I thought I’d leave you with Italy, according to my iPhone.

Venice:

We were so enthralled by Venice – which surprised us because a lot of people told us they weren’t so impressed. It probably helped that the weather was spectacular too!

Florence:

We found Florence a little overrun by tourists – much nicer in the early morning or evening so you could actually walk through the streets! But that Duomo. Man, he’s stunning.

Verona:

{This was our bill at dinner – calculated on a placemat and ripped out. It was a steal for the dinner we enjoyed!}

Lots more soon!

Friday Finds

April 20, 2012

By the time you read this, my sister and I will be well on our way to Italy! She arrived yesterday morning and we hopped on a plane very early this morning. We’re starting with one night in Venice, taking the train to Florence for two nights, then spending the last night in Verona. The forecast is for rain, but I’m hoping those forecast people have a change of heart.

I’ll be taking Monday off, but I’ll be back to share lots of fun travel photos with you on Tuesday. In the meantime, you can keep up with my travels on Instagram or Twitter – I’m @emilyholmes on both!

Now, a few little links for your weekend! Enjoy!

When I saw these hand-painted peonies yesterday, I nearly dropped everying and left work to go paint peonies. They’re the perfect shade of tangerine!

If I could only get Chex cereal in this country, this recipe for Cinnamon Churro Chex Mix would be on my horizon.

This might be a nursery, but I’d love to translate the style to a whole house!

One of these days, I have got to make better friends with my iPhone camera. These camera apps look awesome!

Travelling to Ireland with kids? Check out these great ideas for keeping them occupied. Think they’d let adults try too?

Blogs of Note

April 19, 2012

{Soothing image from here}

When I did my latest blog redesign back in January, I took away the lovely link page and instead made it a little sidebar list instead. It’s shorter, but that’s because I wanted to change it every once in a while.

In a week or so that little list will be changing to a new set of 10 blogs I love to read, so here’s your chance to take a peek at the current list!

In no particular order of importance, here’s the current list!

Design Mom – Gabrielle up and moved her whole family, including 6 kids (!), to Normandy for a year. I’ve loved reading about how they adjust to French culture. And their kids are all nearly fluent!

Enjoying the Small Things – To say this is a blog about having a baby with Down Syndrome doesn’t even come close. Amp it up with inspiration and heart and you’re maybe halfway there.

Lesley Graham – Faith, health, family, and a cute little Etsy shop.

Life as an Artistpreneur – Becca’s advice for artistpreneurs is spot on. My favorite from a post about narrowing your focus: “You’ve got to be ruthless and skilled. TARGETED. A bad ass narrow-eyed ninja of dream growing potential. Focus, friend, and snip snip snip.”

M.K.D. – A bird created for every day in 2012. It’s so fun to see what they’re going to come up with next!

Nat the Fat Rat – Natalie lives in NYC, wears fake eyelashes and bright, bright lipstick, and spends a lot of time strolling in heels. And there might be something about a quest for the perfect chocolate chip cookie. What’s not to love?!

Not Your Average Ordinary – I think the best way to describe Brandi’s blog is thoughtful. Sweet, thoughtful and smart.

Oh Happy Day! – Jordan (Gabrielle’s sister) moved her family to Paris for a year. Lots of style, lots of great DIY projects.

Oh Joy – I love Joy’s new series where she tries out lots of local restaurants – I’m inspired to do the same in Dublin!

Rockstar Diaries – I kind of love seeing so much of Washington, DC, and remembering my time there in college. I love imagining what it would be like to live there without having to endure the humidity!

The House that Lars Built – Brittany is an ex-pat who blogs from Copenhagen. She is, hands down, the DIY queen.

Any great blogs you’re reading lately? How about a suggestion for the new Lovely Links list?

Getting Ready for Visitors: Four Steps

April 18, 2012

I mentioned a few weeks ago that a professor from the college where Michael and I met is staying in our apartment while we’re in Maine this summer. I’m putting together a pack of information about our home and the surrounding area for him and his wife. And now I’m working on figuring out how to make space in our home so that he and his wife will be comfortable for the month.

Since our guests are staying for one month, here’s what we’re going to do to make space and get ready!

1. Make space for clothes

Clear out drawers and space in wardrobes by moving our clothes into bins and out to the shed or studio. I’m loving this part – it’s going to be such a great opportunity to weed out Michael’s multiplying cache of t-shirts!

2. Get rid of knick knacks

Box up the photos and knick knacks that sit on the dressers and bedside tables and store them in the studio.

3. Clean out the cupboards.

Are we the only ones with junk from years ago sitting in the back, taking up space? This is another great opportunity to clear out the junk. Oh, and a good opportunity to clean those cabinets!

4. Empty the fridge!

Michael jokes that it’s a family trait to collect condiments – my parents’ fridge is filled! I rarely eat jam, but I must have 5 different jars open in the fridge at any given time! And the same goes for most of the rest of the condiments – mustard, relish, barbecue sauce. We’ll use these visitors as a reason to pare down the stash! While we’re at it, we’ll probably empty out the freezer and defrost it as well! Who even knows what’s hiding in there!

Have you ever had someone stay in your house while you’re away? What are the things you do to get ready? I’d love your tips and advice!

Here’s a little more great advice I read last year on Apartment Therapy for planning a house swap. We’re not technically swapping (although we’ll be looking to do that next year!), but I figure the advice applies.

Image source