It’s curtains for us

By Jayne, 11th July 2010, 10:33 pm

I love updating the décor of the Bowery. It makes me happy and I know our customers appreciate it. This week we have new curtain poles and curtains to put up. I will be able to put the poles up tomorrow and pin the new curtains to length but I’ll have to take them back home to sew and make the matching cushions with the surplus fabric. I know I have the ability to make a basic cover with a zip no problem but one with Oxford type edges? Zip free? Hmmm. I’ll obviously Google for guidance.

Photos to follow.

Settee covers and a smile

By Jayne, 11th July 2010, 10:29 pm

Our settee and chairs are looking decidedly shabby. Purchasing a new suite is out of the question as funds are tight. Welcome to the world of settee covers. We realised quite quickly that there doesn’t to be much competition other that Plumbs in this market so we phoned them and took the plunge and waited for the hard sell.

What happened next is just weird. The guy that came round to measure up had us in fits of laughter from the start and it couldn’t have been a better experience. I was totally suprised at how casual it all was and it was no problem for him to help us choose for our taste and budget.

We have to wait for them to be made and he’ll be back to fit them soon. We went for piped decoration in a luxury cotton blend with all the extra cushions and it came to about £750 which we thought was a great deal. It sounds a lot but another company who offered a copy service with no piping or extra cushions were quoting around £1000 – no fittng just postal delivery.

Plumbs is simply massive – they buy all their fabric in bulk and everything is automated in a gigantic factory so the costs of materials is kept very low. The service is great and I would recommend them to anyone thinking of new covers as opposed to new settees. They look amazing and it keeps your old settees out of landfill for a few more years!

I hope to post before and after pics as soon as the covers arrive :)

Our fabulous swallows in summer

By Jayne, 11th July 2010, 10:03 pm

“Swallows are small birds with dark glossy blue backs, red throats, pale under parts and long distinctive tail streamers. They are extremely agile in flight and spend most of their time on the wing. They are widespread breeding birds in the Northern Hemisphere, migrating south in winter. Recent declines due to loss of habitat quality in both their breeding and wintering grounds mean they are an Amber List species.” RSPB

We have two swallows nests happily nesting in the archway between our house and the neighbours. It is a moment of pure joy to see them arrive in the spring and very sad to see them go when it gets cold.
Swallows are fierce protectors of their nests and I have seen them on numerous occasions swooping down at an unsuspecting cat in an agressive fashion (including my own cat). Every morning I can see them through the bathroom window as the perch on the telephone wire preening themselves in readiness for the day’s hunt of flying insects.

Here is a marvellous peom about swallows from just over the boder.

The Swallow
The swallow, bonny birdie, comes sharp twittering o’er the sea,
And gladly is her carol heard for the sunny days to be;
She shares not with us wintry glooms, but yet, no faithless thing,
She hunts the summer o’er the earth with wearied little wing.

The lambs like snow all nibbling go upon the ferny hills;
Light winds are in the leafy woods, and birds, and bubbling rills;
Then welcome, little swallow, by our morning lattice heard,
Because thou com’st when Nature bids bright days be thy reward!

Thine be sweet mornings with the bee that’s out for honey-dew;
And glowing be the noontide for the grass-hopper and you;
And mellow shine, o’er day’s decline, the sun to light thee home:
What can molest thy airy nest? sleep till the day-spring come!

The river blue that rushes through the valley hears thee sing,
And murmurs much beneath the touch of thy light-dipping wing.
The thunder-cloud, over us bowed, in deeper gloom is seen,
When quick reliev’d it glances to thy bosom’s silvery sheen.

The silent Power, that brought thee back with leading-strings of love
To haunts where first the summer sun fell on thee from above,
Shall bind thee more to come aye to the music of our leaves,
For here thy young, where thou hast sprung, shall glad thee in our eaves.

Thomas Aird 1802 – 1876

Thomas Aird

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