Christmas Pop-Ups
Caramel – 48 Elizabeth Street, Home & Gift collection, SW1W 9PA
Another Pantry grocery store – 11 November – 1 December, 38 Earlham Street, Seven Dials
Chinti & Parker – 336 King’s Road until?
Sewyoursoul – 12 November – 24 December, The Brunswick Centre, Bernard Street, London
Maria De La Orden Studio – 17 – 19 November, 11am – 6pm, with @daphine at 14 Powis Mews, W11 1JN
Olivia Morris at Anthropologie, King’s Road, 17th November – 27th November
Sharland – 21 November – 10 December at Edward Bulmer Natural Paint Showroom, rattan furniture and tableware collection including Wednesday late night shopping and mulled wine 3-7pm on Wednesday 23rd November
Seraphina – 21st November for 3 weeks at 340 Kings Road,
Amuse La Bouche and Tada & Toy – 23 – 26 November. 10am – 6pm, 341 Portobello Road, W10 5SA
Yinka Ilori’s Pop up – 30 november – 3 January 2023, 9 Club Row, E1 6JX, tableware, textiles, stationery, umbrellas, water bottles, t-shirts, games
Minka Jewells at With Nothing Underneath, 47 Elizabeth Street, SW1W 9PP
Folie Chambre – 2 – 4 December at Host of Leyton, E10 6JP, tickets @thisishost 10% off normal retail prices, unseen collection of vintage, a brand new Mad by Folie range, art by @frankiethorp and @tutluckstudio lemons by @sarahrobertsfa and cushions
Best Stockings and Stocking Fillers
Embroidery and Needlepoint
Sunday Best 13th November
Wreath-making courses, kits and the best to buy
Five things you won’t want to miss this week
Selena Gomez: My Mind and Me on Apple TV
Marple Book
Making Modernism
Party Fashion
Luxury Gifts Under £150
Sunday Best 6 November
Hannah Shuckburgh
1) the book is based on a true story that happened to your husband. What prompted you to write a book about it?
I found that children (my own and those of all my friends) were all captivated by the idea you could “discover” a new variety of apple and then get to name it. After my husband’s apple discovery I was fielding texts from friends saying little Bobby or Jimmy *desperately* wanted to know what my husband was going to name it. And so it made me think: this is a children’s story. So I wrote one, reimagining Archie as a seven year old boy. Initially it was for my own children’s amusement, who were 6 and 7 at the time, but then I got a publisher and now it’s a book…
2) How did your collaboration with Octavia MacKenzie come about for the drawings?
We had met once at a mutual friend’s house and I had instantly liked her, and had followed her on Instagram. I’d had my manuscript accepted by a publisher, Little Toller, on condition we could find a suitable illustrator. I was scrolling through Instagram and saw one of Occy’s beautiful reverse glass paintings of an owl swooping across a twilit sky and it felt like a scene straight from my story. I messaged her to ask if she’d be interested in illustrated my story, and she immediately said yes!
3) What are your favourite childhood books and your kids’ favourite books?
There is a particular type of children’s book from my own childhood that I wanted to emulate in Archie’s Apple. I love the gentle domestic life in books by Shirley Hughes or Helen Oxenbury – messy kitchen tables and ordinary days of childhood, but also the funny villains of Roald Dahl, and the humour of John Burningham. The books I loved as a child – Apple Pigs, Achilles the Donkey, Moving Molly, Where the Wild Things Are, Shaker Lane – are the ones I read to my own children. But now my boys are 8 and 9 they mostly read books about footballers.
4) You live on the border of Wiltshire and Dorset – please can you tell us your favourite shopping/visiting spots around there?
Sol Bakery, an Argentinian roadside cafe on the A303. @solbakeryandcafe
Montes & Clark, wonderful handmade and colourful homeware. @montesandclark
Compton Marbling, marbled papers and diaries from England’s oldest marbling studio. @comptonmarbling
Folde bookshop in Shaftesbury for the best nature writing, art and gifts. @foldedorset
5) What’s your favourite apple?!
A Christmas Pippin. We have a tree in our garden. They’re very late fruiting so you can still have apples on the branches on Christmas Day.
6) Can you tell us more about your publishers, Little Toller Books in Dorset?
They are an independent publisher based in Beaminster, Dorset, and are best known for publishing books on nature. This is their first picture book; mine and Octavia’s too, a first for all of us.
7) Are you working on another book?
Occy and I have started thinking about an idea. We’ve adored working together and would love to do another picture book.
8) What are your favourite books you’ve read this year?
I always inhale any new Anne Tyler, and so I loved her latest, French Braid. I was late to On Chapel Sands by Laura Cumming, but found it unforgettable. I really enjoyed The Cost of Living by Deborah Levy, and have just bought her latest, Things I Don’t Want to Know. A friend at my book club recommended The Dry Heart by Natalia Ginzburg, which is devastating and brilliant, and I have been foisting it on everyone I know.
9) How do you relax/use your downtime?
Like the little boy in my book, we live in a cottage by a wood, and I spend as much time as I can walking there with my whippet, Bertha, a gripping true-crime podcast in my headphones (I was hooked by The Teachers Pet). I spend a lot of time by the side of a football pitch watching my children play matches for Wincanton Under 9s and Gillingham Under 10s. I also love rootling in Shaftesbury charity shops – they’re the best in the world.
10) What are you looking forward to in 2023?
My son is a keen artist and we’re going to go to Amsterdam next spring to see the Vermeer show at the Rijkmuseum.