Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Nashville & Prince's Hot Chicken

Inspired by the SFA Potlicker Film Festival in Chattanooga last weekend, I celebrated the best of chicken with friends in Nashville today. 

Bring your own water and tissues...

Monday, July 19, 2010

Map Obsession


I have been obsessed by maps recently. Perhaps I am searching for something?

Princeton Architectural Press has found another little treasure (map) with Kris Harzinski and the Hand Drawn Map Association
 
 
To be published in October of this year, tell us what you are searching for in the comments section below for a chance to win a copy of this a beautiful little collection. 
 
Comments will be stringently judged on the 2nd of August, 2010 at 12 noon (central) by our biased team of amateur storytellers here at Alabama Chanin; winner will be chosen by random criteria but creativity and sass are welcome.
 
Be sure to sign in or to leave us a way to get in touch with you!
 
Pre-order your copy here:
 
And get lost here: Hand Drawn Map Association
 

 

Friday, July 2, 2010

Morning Walk


I have missed having a camera handy in my pocket these last months since my point-and-shoot was hijacked in the studio.  

Last week I broke down and bought this Canon PowerShot. Little did I know that I was going to have to fight Maggie to keep it in my pocket. 

Here is her document of our morning walk. You can tell that she is already obsessed with nail polish, shoes, things on the side of the road and flowers - a girl after my own heart. 


 

 

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Apalachicola Bound


Apalachicola bound through the Longleaf Forest and holding my breath to see our Gulf…

How to brace oneself for the image?
 
 
 
Monday, June 14, 2010

Learning from Vernacular


I love the juxtaposition of images, architecture, and landscape in this exhibition by Deidi von Schaewen.

Visible only by train,  the images make me long for a travel via rail today.
 

Monday, May 10, 2010

Back Road Vernacular


We made a road trip yesterday – for Mother’s Day – into the Florida Panhandle.

Backroads all the way, the drive was like traveling through page after page of John Margolies Roadside America.  If you ever get the chance to ride Route 29 - down through Alabama and into Florida; be sure to go.
 
READMADES: American Roadside Artifacts by Jeff Brouws awaits you.
 
"Back Road Vernacular" is a beautiful way to start the week…
 
Also check out:
 
 
 
 

 

Monday, May 3, 2010

Monday Morning


It was planned today that I would post for Kaffe Fassett’s Blog Tour. I have been carrying Kaffe Fassett’s Simple Shapes Spectacular Quilts around with me for the last few weeks. And I have been thinking about Kaffe, about the book, taking in the photos, thinking about how cleverly the geometries work together and about how Kaffe draws inspiration so flawlessly from nature and then shares it so easily. 

Saturday at Textile Fabrics, I looked at bolts of his fabrics, spoke with the (amazingly knowledgeable) staff about the fabrics and pondered what I wanted to write about Kaffe and his full body of work while outside it rained and rained and rained. 

Yesterday morning, it was still raining and I sat and wanted to write about Kaffe but could only think about all the folks in Nashville who were not as lucky in that moment. 

While I thought yesterday morning that my car – sitting in the front parking lot of Textile Fabrics – was 5 foot underwater. Now, I know that my car is safe and dry - as was I. But there are so many people in Nashville who are not safe and have, in fact, lost so much…

So, I think that Kaffe – with his respect and love for nature – would appreciate that I postpone my real blog post about his book until later in the week and dedicate this day to the lovely folks of Nashville who need all of our good wishes for the next days as they begin to pick up the pieces that water has displaced. 

I am home now but my thoughts are for my friends in Nashville. Traci will be hanging her flooded quilt-tops out on the line this morning.  I think that perhaps it will look a bit like the photograph of Kaffe's quilts above. 

May the sun shine on Nashville today.

 

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Where The Wild Things Are


Butch had a vision of a structure after watching Where The Wild Things Are and Zach has spent the last weeks bringing it to life. 

I love the stark geometry against the trees and water. 
 
It is a shame that they are going to burn it in the end. I told Butch this morning that I would like to re-build it this summer and host a dinner right there in the middle.
 
Beautiful…
 
Come join us at the Doo-Nanny this weekend for films, sewing, books and a little bit of the wild…
 

 

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Doo-Nanny 2010

Get out and join us for the
14th Annual Doo-Nanny
@ The Museum of Wonder in Seale, Alabama:
 
Starting with the Possum Trot Auction Parade on Friday the 26th of March, 2010 at 5:30 pm
 
And going through Sunday Afternoon the 28th of March at 5:30 pm
 
Music + Art
 
Alabama Studio Style Book Signing
Alabama Chanin
Trunk Show, Sewing Workshop & More
 
Film – Food – Fun - Fire
Rain or Shine
 
The Museum of Wonder
41 Poorhouse Road
Seale, Alabama 36875
 
**Photo thanks to Robbie Gay @ THOUGHTBARN:  http://www.thoughtbarn.com/DOONANNY.html

 


 

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Weekend

 
True to my post on Monday (below), I am taking off early this week for a little family road trip...

 Have a great weekend.
 
Happy trails - until Monday again.

 

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Marfa, Austin & El Cosmico

Looking forward to organizing a Marfa (and Austin) One Day Workshop with the infamously cool Liz Lambert:
 
 
Will work on those dates this week…
 
Plan your road trip to El Cosmico
 
(*Disclaimer – some of you will remember that Butch has been working on the site as well, so, it also has a special place in my heart.)
 
Be blown away by Refueled
 
And in the meantime, join us in Portland or for one of our upcoming dates.
 

 

Monday, January 11, 2010

Farm-to-Table

Okay – before I start – I have to say – JOIN THE SOUTHERN FOODWAYS ALLIANCE… good?
 
I made it through the snow and ice in Arctic temperatures to Walland, Tennessee. My trip to Blackberry Farm might be one of the most extraordinary trips I have ever taken – anywhere. I know that is saying a lot BUT the warm, gracious hospitality that you experience from the time you drive in the gate is exquisite. Add to Blackberry the wit, education and pure joy of the Southern Foodways Alliance and you have – hands down – one of the best events in the world.
 
I could fill this entire page but have to just highlight a few morsels of the weekend:
 
Blackberry Farm – I had the luxury of sitting next to Sam and Mary Celeste Beall on Thursday night and was struck at their deep knowledge of this farm and understanding of the ultimate Farm-to-Table experience. 
 
The Blackberry Farm Cookbook – on the inside flap - says it best: “In the foothills, you don’t eat to eat, you eat to talk, to remember, and to imagine what you will eat tomorrow.” The book is lush with photographs of the estate, the kitchens, the gardens and luscious Farm-to-Table recipes. 
 
While talking about the upcoming weekend, Sam and I spoke about the biscuit making classes (see below) and he asked me, “Butter or Lard?” This was just about the best question I have ever been asked over a five course dinner – with wine parings. You just have to love a man who understands the true essence of good bread. I laughed and replied, “Butter.”
 
 
Friday morning, the Blackberry Farm Chef Team of Josh Feathers, Adam Cooke and Joseph Lenn offered a Cast Iron Skillet demonstration – which I unfortunately missed –
but came home with the following recipe by Chef Josh Feathers which I am going to make and then bake in my cast-iron:
 
Buttermilk Mashed Potatoes
**Courtesy of Taste of the South notepad so generously supplied for all our cooking and tasting notes!
 
3 pounds red bliss potatoes
6 ounces butter
10 ounces buttermilk
half & half – as needed
Kosher salt – to taste
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
 
Simmer potatoes until tender. Strain and dry in 300 degree oven for 15 minutes.
 
Run potatoes through a food mill with medium die to mash.
Stir in remaining, heated ingredients. Taste for seasoning.
 
Note: Those of you who are new to cast iron, NEVER wash your pan with soapy water. Clean your skillet first with a handful of kosher salt then rinse in warm to hot water and dry thoroughly. I learned this from Angie Mosier while working on Alabama Studio Style.
 

Saturday morning were the afore mentioned biscuit making classes which featured a lard based recipe. Those of you who have been here for awhile know that I pride myself as a world-class biscuit maker (in fact, I got my nickname “Alabama” by making biscuits – Alabama Bread in Venezuela) and my favorite recipe can be found in Alabama Stitch Book; however, I am definitely going to try this lard recipe very soon. 
 
Try it yourself and let me know what you think:
 
Buttermilk Biscuits
**Courtesy of Taste of the South notepad so generously supplied for all our cooking and tasting notes!
 
In a large bowl, combine:
 
1 1/4 pounds White Lily flour
1 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/4 teaspoon salt
 
Cut in until mixture is crumbly:
 
2 ounces shortening
2 ounces lard
 
Make a well in the center and pour in:
 
2 cups buttermilk
 
Gently mix buttermilk in, until mixture is loose and bubbly. Pour out onto very well floured table and pat into a square, about 1 – 1 1/2” thick. Spread down the center:
 
4 ounces very soft butter
 
Fold over one third of dough on each side and pat gently. Fold over one third of top and bottom and pat dough into a square, about 1 – 1 1/2" thick. Cut with well-floured ring mold about 2” in diameter. Place on papered sheet pan. Brush tops with melted butter and bake at 375F for 8 minutes, turn and continue baking until tops are very well browned and biscuit is firm. Brush with butter after removing from oven.
 
I am going to start keeping buttermilk in my refrigerator.
 
I opted out of cooking and went straight for the beer tasting with Lazy Magnolia from Mississippi. I LOVE their Indian Summer brew – served, of course, in Reidl stemware. Delicious. Planning my visit to Mississippi now.
 
There were too many highlights of the weekend to mention all but a great treat was listening to Danny Meyers speak on Friday evening. Danny was named the unelected emperor of New York City over the weekend by the WSJ. I had never read his book Setting the Table but devoured it last night and have added it to my reading list of business books this morning. Hospitality – in every sense of the word - is truly at the core of every exceptional business.
 
Saturday night was featured the Gala Dinner to Benefit the Southern Foodways Alliance and the Fellowship of Southern Farmers, Artisans and Chefs – which already features a stellar array of genius.  The dinner featured guest chefs:  Edward lee, Joe Truex, Ashley Christensen, John Shields and Karen Urie Shields along with wines from Turley Cellars.
 
Ashley Christensen made a Rabbit Sausage with collards which might be one of the best things I have ever eaten in my life.
 
This year’s inductee to the Fellowship of Southern Farmers, Artisans and Chefs was Julian (and Sissy) Van Winkle. As you can imagine, Old Rip Van Winkle flowed.
 
I could go on and on… and on…but the best thing to do is to join the Southern Foodways Alliance today & start to save for your trip to Taste of the South - 2011 @ Blackberry Farm
 
Thanks again to John T. Edge, Angie Mosier, all the SFA team, everyone at Blackberry Farm and, especially, Rathead Riley… looking forward to seeing you all again very, very soon!



 

 

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Recipes, Gravy & Blackberry Farm


Forgive me for taking a vacation just after the holidays; BUT, I am headed out today for my first vacation - on my own - in 10 years (snow permitting)… very excited & for good reason:

 
 
Alabama Chanin donated one of our Textile Stories Quilts to the auction benefiting the Southern Foodways Alliance at Blackberry Farm this weekend. 
 
The quilt – shown above – is called Aunt Mag’s Chicken Recipe - a story from my favorite great-aunt about her secret recipe for fried chicken that she served only for her quilting circles.
 
Our entire series of quilts was inspired by the Oral History program  - a series of inspiring recipes, stories and films that are made, collected and cataloged by the Southern Foodways Alliance. 
 
 
Thank you to John T. Edge, Angie Mosier, Mary Beth Lasseter, Amy Evans, Joe York and a million more who make the SFA Oral History possible.
 
If you are not already a member of the Southern Foodways Alliance, join today - if for no other reason than to receive your printed copy of Gravy.
 
Back next week rested and with recipes and stories for the next decade…
Natalie

 

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Mind Over Matter



After a bit of reflection this week, I am able to answer a question that has evaded me for a decade:
What inspired you to start this work?

I was inspired and taken by the beautiful decay of an archipelago  and how everything was used - everything. 
 
It inspired me to begin collecting scraps of paper, taking photographs, finding discarded stories and trying to build them back together – a technique I used with t-shirts (and my life) once I arrived and settled in New York.
 
I never really moved back to Vienna.


 

Monday, December 28, 2009

Fish Soup

In 1999, at the tail end of the last decade, I chose to leave my life in Vienna, Austria, to spend what I deemed a “sabbatical” on an island off the northern coast of Venezuela called Los Roques.  How I got there is a story for another day. What had drawn me there was a woman - Nelly - and “El Canto de la Ballena.”  Little did I know that my entire life was about to change. 
 
I credit the beginnings of the work I have done the last ten years with a few months spent on that island. It was a time when hurricanes and storms wreaked havoc and destruction to the coast of Venezuela. I was on this tiny island – due north – as the weather passed through for weeks on end. 
 
I wrote this story in February of 2000 when I had landed in cold New York but still had the stories of Los Roques fresh on my mind… I hope that my translation of Nelly’s words from the original Spanish do her justice.

 

Fish Soup

The point of the whole thing is food,” she said. “Good food. Real good food. A lot of people have forgotten,” she continued. “Three meals a day, sit down, take your time and eat warm food that is prepared with good ingredients and love. That’s the key,” she stresses, “love. It’s the way it’s washed, it’s the way it’s cut, it is the way one touches and it is the way one thinks as one touches. That,” she said, “is food and food is love.”
--Nelly Camargo, December 1999, Los Roques
 
Nelly made fish soup that day. I remember that is was one of those first days when the waves began to crash onto the porch. I don’t remember exactly when it happened, but I know that by that day, the beach was already gone ,taken by the hurricane. And, I definitely remember that it seemed on that day like the waves were coming back for the porch Soon after this day, we made sandbags because shortly after, the house next door fell into the sea.
 
The soup took hours. As the weather had been acting up again, everyone had the feeling of being wet and cold. Saying nothing, Nelly just went into the kitchen and started to work. In went the fish, the heads, the bones and just about everything else that could be found in the kitchen and on the island.
 
I guess that everyone who passed Nelly’s house that day could smell what was going on. So the soup cooked and the word spread, “Nelly is up to something.” And before I knew it, we were five people in the kitchen. Everyone was washing and cutting and chopping and rolling and laughing and talking. I know that I had never seen anything like it before that day. Music blared from the stereo and some were even dancing in the tiny, warm space.
 
In Nelly’s kitchen there is a window which looks down the hall and out to the sea. When you stand there and see the wooden spoons and the open window and the green-green sea in the background, you cannot help but stand still for a moment and breathe deeply. But that day, no one even looked to the window until about one in the afternoon, when the first faces began to appear. 
 
The islanders were greeted with a big, warm smile and the question, “Are you hungry?” We went on that day to feed what seemed to be the whole island. Many faces and stories and laughter passed through my life that day. Nelly asked everyone, “Have you met Alabama?”
 
The feast went on into the night and here are a few of the recipes that were made. The fish soup was the best I have ever tasted in my life but it remains Nelly’s secret. All I can remember is to put in everything you can find (plus coriander – the “spice of life”) and to do it with lots of love and laughter.
 
Fish in the Pan
 
Crush 5 cloves of garlic and salt in mortar.
Add juice of two limes and a splash of soy sauce
Pour over fish fillets and let stand for awhile.
Cook the fish on hot skillet with  the marinade.
 
Zucchini Carpaccio
 
Grate zucchini with skins into thin rounds.
Lay flat on a big plate.
Cover with juice of lime, salt, pepper and a little vinegar.
Finish by grating parmesan cheese to cover.
Serve.
 
Red Cabbage
 
Cut cabbage into very thin strips. (The cutting is very important!)
Crush garlic and salt in mortar; add roasted sesame seeds and crush a little bit more.
Add vinegar, a little sugar, a little sesame oil and more roasted sesame seeds.
Pour over cut cabbage and serve.
 
Nelly’s Arepa
 
Mix salt (about one-half teaspoon) and warm water (about three cups) in a big bowl with a tablespoon of oil. To this mixture, add ”P.A.N” or Arepa Flour until dough is of a consistency to roll in your hand. Shape into 1/2” thick rounds and fry in hot oil. Cook until brown. When they are finished, you have to “thump” them. If they are really done, they make a kind of hollow sound.
 
This is just the basic recipe. You may choose to add white cheese, sesame seeds or just about anything you want to add.
 
 
Nelly moved El Canto de la Ballena in January of 2000, just after the storms had stopped. The new building is a bit further from the beach and behind the fishing pier. 
 
I left Los Roques a few weeks after the Y2K panic was over and our world continued to spin; however, I don’t think that we would really have noticed any computer meltdown on that island. I have not laid eyes on Nelly since that time and have not spoken to her for much too long. I hope that she remembers me and will be proud when I say that the seeds for my work with the former Project Alabama and now Alabama Chanin were watered in her kitchen. 



 

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Natural Goes National

Natural Wine Bar

Amy sent over a great link this morning: Natural Goes National

All of the websites offer fantastic wine lists, stories and reviews. 
 
**Photo from the Terroir Natural Wine Bar & Merchant in San Francisco


 

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

The Longleaf

Back from the wilds of southern Alabama and the Panhandle of Florida… The trip was too short – as always. Although the weather was not so great, the beaches are white as snow, the Apalachicola River soothing and the shrimp melt in your mouth. There is something about watching rain from a screened veranda that makes me sing.
 
BUT this trip, my memory and thought are for the longleaf. Driving through the Apalachicola National Forest you get a small inkling of how these majestic giants must have stood in beautiful splendor before the true rape of the south when approximately 140,000 square miles of virgin forests were slaughtered.
 
Butch believes that the young growth trees we were driving through are about 50 years old but the longleaf begins to reach its splendor at about 200 – 300 years and can live for 500+ years. There are 191 species of plants associated with the old-growth longleaf and approximately 122 of them are endangered.
 
My favorite magazine of the moment, Garden and Gun, did a great story about Richard Porcher and his love for the trees. 
 
And Ecology of a Cracker Childhood by Janisse Ray is just about as good as it gets.
 
Her love and understanding for the longleaf takes my breath away:
 
“I drink old-growth forest in like water. This is the homeland that built us. Here I walk shoulder to shoulder with history – my history. I am in the presence of something ancient and venerable, perhaps of time itself, its unhurried passing marked by immensity and stolidity, each year purged by fire, cinched by a ring. Here mortality’s roving hands grapple with air. I can see my place as human in a natural order more grand, whole, and functional than I’ve ever witnessed, and I am humbled, not frightened by it. It is as if a round table springs up in the cathedral of pines and God graciously pulls out a chair for me, and I no longer have to worry about what happens to souls.”
 
*Photo by Andrew Kornylak for Garden & Gun
Friday, April 3, 2009

Michaela Murphy


Traveling today & that means catching up on my "Moth." 

I love this story from Michaela Murphy.  While sitting in an airport, you got to love people watching people watching people:

Eye Spy

& visit The Moth website for more:  www.themoth.org

Stories Under The Stars

Monday, March 16, 2009

2 or 3 Things I Know


 

One of my favorite places to visit:

 
 
Photo: Kim Hoeltermand
Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Alabama Chanin Pop-up Store @ LiteBOX Gallery

12 March 2009

Alabama Chanin Opening @ LiteBOX Gallery
2825 Second Avenue South
Birmingham, Alabama

5:30 – 8:30 pm
For more information, contact:  klwoehle@aol.com
 
 
12 March 2009 - 25 April 2009
Alabama Chanin Pop-up Store @ LiteBOX Gallery
2825 Second Avenue South
Birmingham, Alabama

For appointment, contact:  klwoehle@aol.com

 

Monday, March 2, 2009

Doo-Nanny 2009


Plan your road trip for the 13th Annual Doo-Nanny in the beautiful Woods of Wonder @ Seale, Alabama.

We are looking forward to seeing friends and family from the world over. 
 
Watch Les Blank’s “Love In,” dance to Mad Tea Party + more, Folk Art, Alabama Chanin Sample Sale, Barbeque, The Museum of Wonder, Possum Trot Auction, and a walk in the woods…
 
March 27 – 29
41 Poorhouse Road
Seale, Alabama


 

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

International Quilt Study Center

I have been traveling so much that it has been difficult to keep up with all of the inspiring people, places and things that have crossed my path these last months. I am looking forward to slowing down for the holidays to process.

In Lincoln, Nebraska, I had the opportunity to tour the incredible International Quilt Study Center where the most fantastic, pristine, beautiful quilts find a home and are perfectly archived for future generations.

Visit their site to explore their magnificent collection or to make your own quilt design

Monday, October 20, 2008

South Africa – Day Two

I find myself thinking and speaking more and more about business models and today I have seen two outstanding examples.

This morning, we had the opportunity to visit CIDA. This visit was an inspiring look at how one person can become a community and a community, in turn, a nation.
By empowering students, the foundation is providing a method for lifting individuals out of poverty while investing them with the tools to provide for their own communities. This short video says it all:







Our afternoon was filled with the overflowing love of the African Children’s Feeding Scheme. This organization feeds over 21,000 children each day over multiple locations while providing crucial education in health, farming and economic development for parents and caregivers (along with small farming plots.)
 

One lunch provides each child with 80% of his or her daily requirement for vitamins and protein. When we asked the sister her greatest need, her immediate response was to “feed more children.”

As a reminder, this curtain hanging in a kitchen window reads “No More Hunger.”

 

After a beautiful lunch, accompanied by Soweto song and dance,


 
we had the opportunity to visit the Shwe Shwe Poppis cooperative.


 
Shwe-Shwe Poppis are hand-made in Soweto as a fund raising and economic empowerment arm of the Feeding Scheme. Each of the dolls is one child’s drawing come to life. What a beautiful circular chain: child to drawing, drawing to doll, doll to empowerment, empowerment to caregiver, caregiver to child - in complete and unbroken cycle.

The paper insert that comes with one small doll reads:

“Hello, my name is KHUTHA

This Shwe Shwe is based on my drawing. I live in Soweto, South Africa and buddy is my best game. Chicken is my best lunch. My favorite color is green and I also love lions.”
 
 
More tomorrow...
 
 
 
 
Monday, October 20, 2008

The Colors of South Africa

Blue skies, rolling lands, rich fabrics and faces, recycling – using what you have available to the best advantage. Ingenious.
 
Colorful. Respectful and full of joy…

 


These beautiful photographs from Shack Chic by Craig Fraser and a lovely collection of books by Quivertree Publications from a collection of South African artists, foodies and designers.
 
 
 
Sunday, October 19, 2008

South Africa - Day One

From New York, I took the long flight with South African Airlines to Johannesburg… landing yesterday to a beautiful thunderstorm, delicious food and a smiling warm faces and friends.

It is impossible to write about all of the beautiful people and places we encountered today from lunch with “Mama” to the gift of a walk through the corners of Soweto.

The highlight of the day was the Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum which I would rank as one of the most beautiful pieces of architecture and exhibition design I have seen anywhere in the world. The saga of a horrific story told with humanity, humility and passion stirred me deeply.

I copied this quote from a small glass nook where you can look over the vastness of Soweto and imagine - if for just a moment - what courage it took to change a nation:

First victim…

A bullet burnt
Into soft dark flesh

A child fell

Liquid life
Rushed out
To stain the earth

He was the first victim

And now
Let grieving the willows
Mark the spot
Let nature raise a monument
Of flowers and trees
Lest we forget the foul and the wicked
deed…



From Don Mattera, 1976, Azanian Love Song
Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Tuesday, October 14th, 12:36 pm

Leaving Alabama, on the way to Lincoln, Nebraska and en route to Memphis...
 
I love red and blue.

 


& am looking forward to a tour of the International Quilt Study Center & Museum

Wednesday, October 15, 2008, I will be at the University of Nebraska:

Love Your Thread: Local Communities and Sustainability in the Global Marketplace
 
& Alabama Stitch Book signing
 

 

5 – 7 p.m. at Nebraska Union

Thursday on to New York City…
 
Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Marfa, TX

Butch has been in Marfa the last few weeks working on Liz Lambert’s El Cosmico with Jack Sanders and crew. I love this photograph which shows how something so simple can be so beautiful.

See more photos from Jesse Hartman here: El Cosmico in Process

 
Saturday, September 6, 2008

International Design Seminar – Folk Futures

I am very excited to be included in this seminar and looking forward to visiting Stavanger and seeing The World of Folk exhibition:

International Design Seminar – Folk Futures With: Li Edelkoort, Tord Boontje, Natalie Chanin, Dick van Hoff, Hella Jongerius, Peter Marigold, Mike Meiré, Fernando & Humberto Campana.

As part of this summer’s A World of Folk exhibition, Folk Futures will discuss the future of unique design in a day-long symposium featuring presentations by distinguished international designers: Tord Boontje, Natalie Chanin, Dick van Hoff, Hella Jongerius, Peter Marigold, Mike Meiré and the Campanas brothers.

The seminar will examine how craft and design will provide an important and continued stimulus in this new century and analyze the implications of commercial production on uniquely made objects. Exhibition curator and trend forecaster, Li Edelkoort, will introduce a dynamic line-up of speakers, illustrating the importance of telling stories through the creative process and previewing how craft and technology will merge in symbiosis in the coming years.

The Alabama-born designer Natalie Chanin will explain how soul can be ingrained into a product through the handmade, while Dick van Hoff will talk about the challenges facing industrial production when maintaining craftsmanship principles. London-based Peter Marigold will discuss how chance and performance can influence the design of a product and Hella Jongerius will be interviewed by Li Edelkoort in an interesting conversation about the integration of local folklores in contemporary design. German art director Mike Meiré will discuss local food and its integration into the design field. Tord Boontje will revisit his journey through decoration and embellishment while joining Fernando and Humberto Campana to also describe their recent collaborations with artisans in Africa and South America.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Apalachicola, Florida


From St. EOM’s birthday party, we are on to Apalachicola for swimming, oysters, and Tupelo Honey with friend and storyteller Frank Venable.

Maggie keeps saying over and over again, “Mommy, going beach, Mommy, going beach.”

Don’t miss Working the Miles by Joe York, a tribute to the men and women of 13 Mile Oyster Company, honoring Tommy Ward who like his father before him, has served as a guardian of the Apalachicola Bay.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Happy Birthday America and St. EOM

Happy Birthday America and St. EOM or better known as "Vacation Part 2":

Angie swears that she is making a cake for the competition and I am seriously considering Snake Calling... see you there!

Buena Vista, GA – Independence Day this year will bring a special day of celebration to Pasaquan, the famous visionary art site located near Buena Vista. July 4th, 2008 will mark our nation’s 232nd birthday as well as the 100th birthday of the man who created Pasaquan -- Eddie Owens Martin -- who called himself St. EOM.

Eddie Martin was born in Marion County, “at the stroke of midnight on July the 4th” in 1908. After living in New York City for many decades, Martin returned to his rural Georgia home and began building what would become one of the most remarkable and colorful environmental art sites ever created. Since his death in 1986, the unique site has been managed and maintained by the non-profit Pasaquan Preservation Society.

Events of the Day


In celebration of the 100th anniversary of St. EOM’s birth, The Pasaquan Preservation Society has planned a relaxed schedule of interesting and fun outdoor events, suitable for adults and children alike. The festivities will begin at noon with picnicking and music on the cool shaded lawn that lies beneath Pasaquan’s stately pecan trees. Visitors are welcome to bring their picnic baskets, coolers and lawn chairs, or they may take advantage of the pizza, cold watermelons, cooling soft drinks, and other festive food and drink that will be on sale at Pasaquan that day.

Following lunch, a series of laid-back afternoon contests will be offered for the enjoyment and entertainment of all who attend. Included among the planned Pasaquan-related activities will be a snake-calling contest, a Pasaquan costume parade and competition, and a St. EOM birthday cake contest. In addition, there’ll be several surprise activities.

St. EOM, Man of Mysteries


During Eddie Martin’s tenure at Pasaquan, a number of myths arose regarding his supposed possession of supernatural powers. One such widely held belief was that he somehow developed voice control over a cadre of rattlesnakes, which, according to the storytellers, served as his personal protectors at Pasaquan. Anyone, according to the tale, who expressed bad will toward St. EOM was quickly rebuffed by a dozen or more emerging serpents.

Snake Calling Contest


In recognition of the trained snake yarn, visitors to Pasaquan on July 4th will be invited to compete in making whatever sounds they think will appeal to snakes that may be within earshot. A panel of judges will select the winning caller based on originality, tone, rhythm, and volume. However any caller who actually charms a snake into personally appearing during the competition will immediately be declared the winner by default and crowned the Superior Snake-calling Champion of Pasaquan, 2008. Any contestant who attempts to unfairly sway the competition by deviously calling his or her own trained snake will be disqualified from the contest and banished from the Land of Pasaquan forever.

Pasaquan Costume Parade and Competition


All who visit Pasaquan on July 4th are encouraged to appropriately dress in Pasaquan inspired apparel. For visual hints on the many remarkable forms and patterns of Pasaquoyan regalia, contestants should refer to the photographs of St. EOM at the Pasaquan web site: http://www.pasaquan.com. Costumed visitors may enter the Pasaquan costume contest and vie for a number of coveted awards that will be generously dispensed by the Pasaquan Society's board of directors. Prizes for the best costumes will be awarded based on audience reaction.


St. EOM Birthday Cake Contest


Lastly, in celebration of St. EOM’s 100th birthday, visitors are invited to prepare and bring decorated St. EOM birthday cakes to Pasaquan on July 4th. Cakes entered into competition will be displayed, judged, and then shared with fellow celebrants at the festive event. Cakes will be judged based on the qualities of form, color, creativity, and taste. Intriguing and coveted Pasaquan-related prizes will be awarded to winners in three Pasaquan-inspired cake categories: Most Visionary Cake, Most Fortune-nate Cake, and Most Past, Present, and Future Cake.

Schedule of the day


11:00-1:00 picnicking, watermelon eating, music, and tours
1:00-1:30 St. EOM Birthday Cake Contest
1:30-2:00 Pasaquan Costume Parade and Competition
2:00-3:00 Snake Calling Contest

Finding Pasaquan


Pasaquan is located approximately 3.5 miles from the Buena Vista courthouse square. Admission for adults and children over five years of age is $5.00 a person. Children five and under are admitted free. On July 4th, the gates to Pasaquan will open at 10:00 a.m. and close at 4:00 p.m. Pasaquan will also be open for general tours on Saturday, July 5t and on the first Saturday of each month thereafter through November. For directions on how to get there and for much more information on the history of Pasaquan go to http://www.pasaquan.com.
Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Vacation Part 1

This week we are off to the house in Seale and to the woods and Museum of Wonder. Mostly, we will play in the garden, swing, walk, run in the creek, sit on the porch and look at the trees…

But, Seale is home to many a folk artist including John Henry Toney, Buddy Snipes and Butch, of course.

The Friday night auction at the Possum Trot in Seale is not to be missed. Goodies abound.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Vacation Week

Maggie, Butch and I are going to take a few rare days to vacation during “America’s Birthday” and on our way to “Atlanta in July”.

Style.com did a wonderful story on “Staycations” that includes our very own Florence, Alabama.

A reminder for us all to appreciate what we have in our own backyard... enjoy!

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Edna Lewis Revisited

This week, I will be adding posts from our Alabama Chanin Treats section to the Alabama Studio Style Blog in our effort to streamline and consolidate:


I recently asked my friend Angie Mosier about brining chicken & her reply was that ”everything you need to know about brining chicken can be found in The Gift of Southern Cooking by Edna Lewis and Scott Peacock.”


I learned from Anige that you cannot write about the southern table without paying homage to the great Edna Lewis.


Her cookbooks remain coveted kitchen tools today:

The Edna Lewis Cookbook - Out of Print

The Taste of Country Cooking

In Pursuit of Flavor

Get a small taste of the woman she was by traveling to visit Scott and all the wonderful folks at The Watershed for fried chicken on Tuesday nights:

http://www.watershedrestaurant.com/reviews2006.htm




 

 
Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Plan Your Trip


Thanks to everyone who joined us for our annual Alabama Chanin picnic. It was a great year – if a little windy. From our post at Style.com this morning:

Fashionistas, storytellers, artists, musicians, food enthusiasts, and many others got together for two days of eating, design, shopping, and general revelry this past Saturday and Sunday. The occasion was the sixth annual Alabama Chanin Picnic and the Alabama Studio Weekend. Those who made the road trip to the town of Florence in northern Alabama were treated to the opening of the Alabama Chanin Studio store; fried chicken and oysters at Pickett Place; and soul food, barbecue, and dessert at the annual picnic on the banks of the Tennessee River. Additional events included tours of Frank Lloyd Wright's Rosenbaum Home, the music and stories of the Muscle Shoals Sound and the Swampers, and tales of Native American heritage at the Wicahpi Wall and Healing Circle. Each story led to another story, to more laughter and good times. The weekend events culminated with dinner, celebrating the best of all things Southern on the grounds of the Helen Keller birthplace, followed by moonshine, dessert, and the music of Nashville's Joshua Black Wilkins at GAS Studio in Tuscumbia. Plan your trip for next year.

http://www.style.com/trends/blogs/style_file/2008/04/picnicking-with.html


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