December Book Club: Bernardine Evaristo’s Booker Prize winner

Whatever your feelings about the Booker Prize being jointly awarded to two books this year, we are very glad that it shone a light on Bernardine Evaristo’s wonderful novel Girl, Woman, Other. This exuberant novel tells the interconnected stories of a group of black British women. Each of the 12 women has a chapter to herself but their stories also overlap. As has been commented in the Guardian “For many readers, it’s not a familiar world – this is a Britain less often depicted in fiction. But that certainly doesn’t mean it’s not a world that is possible, and worth celebrating.” We are delighted to have three copies of the hardback book to give away via the form below, and do read along with us – we’ll be reviewing the book in our newsletter on January 2nd 2020 to discuss it.

 

Christmas Baking Classes

It’s Christmas baking season and there’s no better way to hone your figgy pudding prowess than at these festive baking classes for children and adults:

Create a pièce montée out of mini éclairs at Maître Choux, Chelsea

For a touch of Parisian noel, whisk children to Maître Choux this December where, under the guidance of experts they will learn to create a towering Christmas tree of mini eclairs, choux buns, sugar snowflakes and edible glitter. Everyone gets their own personalised pièce montée to take home.

Weekends from 7 December – 22 December, 9am-1pm (£48). Suitable for ages 5+, children must be accompanied by adults. eventbrite.co.uk

Festive Baking at Bread Ahead

Bread Ahead, Credit: Louise Long

Master bakers of Borough Market since 2013, Bread Ahead are now hallowed preachers of artisan baking across the city. Welcoming beginners and seasoned bakers alike, their seasonal workshops include Festive German Baking, Victorian Christmas (featuring a decadent prune and walnut bread), Mince Pie workshops and panetonne making. Do book ahead as some classes are now sold out and there are limited dates available.

Various festive classes run Wednesdays – Sundays throughout December in Soho, Borough Market, Chelsea, Wembley, from £90 breadahead.com/courses

A masterclass in decorating festive cakes at Leith’s

Leith’s remains the unabashed queen of culinary education with a stella alumni and over 40 years of world-class teaching. Don’t dally in securing your place on a limited-edition festive class from celebrated guest tutors – from the likes of Angela Malik, Jo Pratt, and GBBO finalist Steven-Carter Bailey.

Friday 6th December, 10am – 4pm, £220, White City leiths.com

Festive French Vegan Patisserie at Made In Hackney

Made in Hackney, credit Christian Sinibaldi

If your Christmas is more holly & ivy than stuffed turkey, look no further than Clarisse Flon’s vegan French patisserie masterclass. The full day class from the plant-based community cooking school Made In Hackney will encompass a show-stopping Pear and Chocolate Genoise Yule log, sablé Christmas biscuits and chocolate and caramel shard decorations, with essential pastry and piping skills. What’s more, every class at Made in Hackney helps to fund their programme of free cooking & nutrition courses to vulnerable and low-income community groups.

Saturday 14th December, 10am – 5.30pm, £160, Stoke Newington madeinhackney.org

Christmas Biscuits and Icing at the Dusty Knuckle Bakery School of Baking

Hackney’s beloved Dusty Knuckle bakery is now a cookery school, run by their very own bakers in their very own kitchen. Join them for this special festive biscuit decorating workshop where you’ll make spiced biscuits and then learn all about royal icing, piping and flood icing as you decorate. Featuring a DK dinner and mulled wine to boot.

Tuesday 10th, Wednesday 11th & Thursday 12th of December, 6pm-9pm, £81.44, Dalston eventbrite.co.uk

Christmas Baking from around the world at The Cookery School, Little Portland Street

Keen to strike out from traditional British fayre, then join the Baking Around the World class at London’s sustainable Cookery School, Little Portland Street – where British gingerbread is the company of a French bûche de Noël, Austrian kipferl and German stollen, brightening up your yuletide toolbox for years to come.

Sunday 8th December, 10am – 4pm (£230), Oxford Circus cookeryschool.co.uk

 Chocolate Yule logs at Rainham Hall

Rainham Hall – credit National Trust / James Dobson

Soak up the atmosphere of Rainham Hall’s beautiful Georgian setting and explore the crisp midwinter gardens. Then warm up inside with a Christmas Yule Log workshop. The affordable, two-hour class is run by resident National Trust bakers, welcoming families for a hands-on, informal baking-decorating masterclass into this most timeless Christmas centrepiece.

Saturday 21 December; 11:30am – 1.30pm, £20, Rainham nationaltrust.org.uk

Christmas Sweet Treats at Mahé Cookery School

For a fairytale midwinter escape out of London, hurry along to the new Mahé cookery school from Michelin chef Paul Ainsworth, in the heart of Padstow’s buzzing foodie community. Classes are capped at five students, promising hands-on tuition from John, peppered with an array of seasonal nourishment throughout the day, from the kitchen of his adjoining No. 6 restaurant. Sign-up for John’s three-day Christmas Sweet Treats course, and you will never need to return to the bakery aisle again.

12th – 14th December & 19th – 21st December; 10am – 4pm, £250, Padstow paul-ainsworth.co.uk

And if you can’t face donning a pinny?

Violet Bakery, credit Louise Long

‘Tis the season to visit a proper bakery. Our favourite sweet treats in London include Flor’s flakey mince puff pies, Oree’s fruity Kouglof bundt cake, Violet Cake’s traditional molasses Christmas cake and the magnificent Luminary Bakery’s pear, caramel and gingerbread cake with each purchase supporting their work with some of the city’s most vulnerable women.

Christmas Gift Guide: Kids by Little Spree

As mother to twins, Tabitha and Marlow, and writer of the brilliant blog Little SpreeSarah Clark knows both what kids really want and what (stylish) mothers would like to give for Christmas.  We asked her to spill the beans…

Olli and Ella Dollhouse, £65 from Anthropologie

Market Stand, £140 from Liberty London
Betsy print Helmet, £45 from Liberty London
Blue cuckoo clock, £62 from Trouva
Maileg Mouse Holiday set, £51.50 from Liberty London
Olli Ella Strolley, £89 from Anthropologie
Garage, £92.95 from All Mama’s Children
Jellycat Inky Octopus, £36 from Jellycat
Numero 74 Grey Teepee, £144 from Smallable
Play Kitchen, £125 from Liberty London

Locket’s, a zippy new wine bar in St James’s

St James’s is one of our favourite places to be at this time of year with its handsome arcades dressed up in their Christmassy glad rags, garlands wrapped round the Ritz and winking windows at Fortnum’s. It feels perfect timing for the arrival of Locket’s, a zippy new wine bar and restaurant from the Wiltons Group. In this postcode there couldn’t be a more wonderfully old school story than that of how Locket’s came to be. Its arrival is thanks to Locket Hambro, the great-granddaughter of Olaf Hambro who bought London’s second oldest restaurant, Wiltons over 275 years ago, and whose family has run it ever since along with Franco’s a few doors down. Restaurants have long been in the blood, but with this new venture Locket has quite literally turned the corner away from traditional Jermyn Street to the Brutalist Smithson Plaza – formerly The Economist HQ – just around the block. Rather than cigars and three-piece-suits the vibe here is informal and quietly glamorous, with fab 70’s decor including a cork and copper bar, orange resin tables and a swirly marble floor. You could almost be in Milan were it not for the views from the floor-to-ceilings windows that look directly out onto the art galleries of Bury Street. We went for lunch and shared open Skagen sandwiches, pastrami and pickles on rye and rainbow salads from the counter-top. There are three hot options too, of which the melt-in-the-mouth celeriac puree with ox cheek excels. Come the evening when Locket’s turns from cafe to wine bar, things ramp up a little with sharing small plates like raw beef, salted egg yolk and truffle or burrata with roasted butternut squash. The menu is short but very well put together, with contemporary ingredients and a light touch that’s not so easy to find in the area – it is also good value with most plates around £7. Open all day from 7.30am-11pm it’s just the sort of place for a pit stop, whether for a morning coffee and a croissant, an early evening glass of Locket’s own champagne and giant green olives, or for a longer meal with very good wine. Old world charm brought bang up to date: we’re longing to go back.

November Book Review: Rhik Samadder’s remarkable memoir

Rhik Samadder has written a remarkable book. What a lavishly talented writer he is, packing more hilarity and insight into a few sentences than many authors manage in an entire book. Those who are familiar with his journalism, and particularly his Guardian column reviewing kitchen gadgets, will know he has a talent for turning base metal into gold. We mistakenly assumed this was a fluke, a happy accident, that he should be so entertaining about such an unpromising subject. The reason that his piece on a device for cooking eggs went viral, however is that he is an astonishingly original writer, no matter what the topic. And we should all be grateful that he has now turned his attention to the serious matter of mental health.

It doesn’t seem quite right that a book so moving should also be so funny at the same time but this is the case with his memoir I Never Said I Loved You. Discussing it in evangelical tones with a similarly memoir-obsessed friend, she pointed out how rare it is for someone to write about their own life with the detachment to make it amusing, but also the closeness to make it affecting.

He describes how, on his 30th birthday in a sex hotel in Bangkok with his mother (you really will have to read it to get your head round this) he finally asked her about her family but because he didn’t like talking, he had a tendency to do it in bursts and go “on conversational raids”, conjuring up images of him in a burglar’s outfit, asking about his grandmother’s history of mental illness.

Throughout the book, he includes letters written to significant people in his life, beginning with his late father. Later, he says “My father and I didn’t talk, and that’s a familiar story. What is this gift men pass on to each other?” He raises serious questions about the semi-dysfunctional relationships between men but there is also a great deal of affection in his portrait of his father, not least the image of him on a cross trainer at the gym wearing a Panama hat, “the most Indiana Jones thing that has ever happened in Lewisham.”

Samadder also manages somehow, impossibly, to write a genuinely tender letter to a woman he has a one night stand with, demonstrating a concern for her far beyond the night they spend together.

He writes about the ways in which memory tries to bypass trauma and how he has attempted to address this in his own life. Whilst he may mock himself as a “cut-price Camus L’etranger”, his pain is heart-breaking and – as he quietly reflects –“if you carry no safety within you, then you are never really safe.”

He also writes about his adventures with the opposite sex with self-deprecating wit “Not to brag, but I’d lost my virginity to a girl who afterwards realised she was a lesbian, and wanted nothing more to do with men for the rest of her natural life.”

It can feel indecent, laughing so much whilst reading a memoir about depression but humour is Samadder’s Trojan horse and the means by which he smuggles in a genuinely hopeful message which many readers should find resonant. It is his eye for the absurd which saves him and which makes the book such a joy. Buy it for the men in your life for Christmas, like we plan to do, but make sure you also read it yourself – for the sheer life-enhancing pleasure of it.

What did you think? Leave your comments below, and find our December Book Club here.

December Sample Sales

Who: Stephen Webster
What: Prices start from £100 for fine jewellery, RSVP here
When: VIP access for ALB readers: 4 December: midday – 8pm; general access: 5 December: 11am – 8pm; 6 – 7 December: 11am – 7pm
Where: Arlettie, 13-14 Margaret Street, W1W 8RN

Who: Jacardi
What: Winter childrenswear & accessories clearance sale, prices start from £3
When: 5 December: 10am – 7pm
Where: Chelsea Old Town Hall, King’s Road, SW3 5EE

Who: Olivia von Halle
What: Up to 75% off all womens nightwear and loungewear
When: 5 December: 8am – 7pm
Where: Brown Hart Gardens, The Pavilion, W1K 6TD

Who: Sergio Rossi
What: Big discounts on all womens shoes and boots; RSVP here
When: 5 December: 11am – 8pm; 6-7 December: 11am – 7pm
Where: Arlettie, 13-14 Margaret Street, W1W 8RN

Who: Preen
What: Up to 80% off womenswear, £2 entry fee, RSVP here
When: VIP access: 6 December: midday – 1pm; General access: 6 December: 1pm – 8pm
Where: Showcase, 12 Regent Street, SW1Y 4PE

Who: Sophie Conran
What: Big discounts on all homeware & ceramics
When: 6 December: 9am – 5pm & 7 December: 10am – 2pm
Where: Sophie Conran, 2 Munden Street, W14 0RH

Who: Cassina
What: Big discounts at the Italian Furniture brands first ever London sample sale; RSVP here
When: 7 – 15 December: Mon – Sat: 10am – 6pm & Sun: midday – 5pm
Where: 31 Thurloe Place, SW7 2HQ

Who: Self-Portrait 
What: Up to 80% off womenswear & accessories, £2 entry, RSVP here
When: VIP access: 11 December; TK General access: 12 December: 8am – 8pm; 13 December: 8am – 7pm
Where: Showcase, 12 Regent Street, St. James’s, London, SW1Y 4PE

Who: Anya Hindmarch
What: Up to 75% off all accessories and womenswear
When: 12 December: 9.30am – 8pm; 13 December: 9.30am – 7pm; 14 December: 11am – 6pm & 15 December: 11am – 5pm
Where: The BOX Pop-Up, 9 Mercer Street, WC2H 9QJ

Who: Kate Spade
What: Up to 70% off womenswear & accessories, £2 entry fee, RSVP here
When: VIP access: 15 December: 9am – midday; General access: 15 December: 1pm – 7pm; 16 December: 8am – 8pm; 17 December: 8am – 7pm & 18 December: 8am – 2pm
Where: Showcase, 12 Regent Street, SW1Y 4PE

Christmas Gift Guide: Presents under £25

Bird Tamer Tumbler Glass, £22 from Polly Fern

Karin Hossack soap dish, £22 from Host Home

Mercury-glass candlestick holders, £20 for the pair at Alice Naylor-Leyland

Canary yellow rose tumbler, £24 from Petra Palumbo

Mouthblown Syrian champagne flute, £13.25 from CutterBrooks

Edible Flowers seed gift box, £18 from Petersham Nurseries

 

Vintage gold nutcrackers, £22 from Daylesford

3 pack of cookie cutters, £6.99 at H&M

Linda McCartney Polaroids, £25 from Amazon

Dyptique 34 Boulevard Saint Germain Soap, £22 from John Lewis

Coffee Cup, £25 from Feldspar

Liberty Faber Poetry 2020 Diary, £14.99 from Liberty London

Christian Lacroix Pen Pot, £24 from Liberty London

 

 

Lovely things to wear to a Christmas Party

Party season is here! Shimmy into the finest fabrics for the festive season:

Lamé

Loeffler Randall penny bow-detailed mules, £345 at net-a-porter.com

Falconetti ruffled dress, £1595 by The Vampires Wife

Loeffler Randall leopard-print satin and lamé hair scrunchies, £35 at net-a-porter.com

Pearl skirt in silver lamé, £350 at Shrimps

SEQUIN

Sequin and satin jacket, £420 at Maje

Daisy two stripe backless maxi-dress, £395 at RIXO

Striped sequinned midi-dress, £380 at Self Portrait

VELVET

Velvet dust coat with glittery inserts, £860 at Forte Forte

Marzoline x The Grace Tales velvet scrunchie, €34 at Marzoline

Silk velvet blazer £170 and trousers £140 at Jigsaw

Lights Out halter neck dress, £390 at Alexa Chung

Velvet jersey drape dress, £79 at Arket

LUREX

Elsa ruffle skirt, £228 at Free People

Metallic appliqué jumpsuit, £69.99 at Mango

Black lurex stripy merino sweater, £236 at Chinti & Parker

SATIN

Wide leg satin trousers in berry, £90 at Boden

Satin wrap midi-skirt, £280 at Harmur

Metallic satin side knot dress, £65 from & Other Stories

LACE

Victorian top, £118 at Free People

Ecru lace top with crew neck, £138.50 at The Kooples

Maureen shirt, £90 at Sezane

 

 

 

Three Interiors & Fashion Fairs not to miss

Three more wonderful Christmas sales not to miss this December:
Things we Love Pop Up Sale
Curated by ex-Editor-at-Large of Vogue, Fiona Golfar (of The Guineapig Podcast) and stylist Jayne Pickering, two of the most well connected women in London, this Pop Up Sale is going to be great, not least because it will be the first chance to try on the fabulous boots by Sweet Hearts of the Rodeo, amongst many other hand picked stalls.
Where: 119b Portland Road, W11 4LN
When: 1 – 2 December, 11am – 6pm (not 7pm as it states in the invitation above)
Matilda Goad’s Christmas Sale
We love Matilda Goad‘s scallop-edged planters, and now she’s cleverly made them filled with soy wax so that you can use them as candles during the winter before planting them up with flowers in the spring. Find clever new pieces like these, as well as her shiny Christmas baubles and signature stock at her sale on 9 December. Held at 7 Saints restaurant in Notting Hill, there will also be quite a few one-off sourced pieces.
Where: 7 All Saints Road, Notting Hill
When: 9 December, open ’til late
The Selvedge Winter Fair
Cult textile magazine, Selvedge are having a Christmas fair. Careful curation of over 50 merchants and makers promises one-of-a-kind textile treasures, including handmade quilts, sustainable fashion and vintage fabrics and threads. Exhibitors include Sarah Campbell from Collier Campbell, Madder & Cutch who will have their sustainably-dyed fabrics and Su Mason with vintage monogrammed French linen sheets, women’s workwear from WW2 and Biba originals. Held at a beautiful house in Bloomsbury.
Where: Mary Ward House, 5-7 Tavistock Place, WC1H 9SN
When: 7 December, 11am – 5pm
Tickets: £10 here

An Immersive storytelling of The Polar Express

Storystock are at the Bush theatre just in time for the Christmas holidays with a magical storytelling event for children. Come dressed in your pyjamas and get swept away by Christmas songs and a storytelling show that brings to life Chris van Allsburg’s Polar Express. Hear all about wolves and white-tailed rabbits, candies with nougat centres as white as snow, hot cocoa as thick and rich as melted chocolate bars, and join a little boy for a journey to the North Pole on Christmas Eve. There will also be the chance to meet Father Christmas himself in his special reading room where he will read letters from all the children. Book ahead.

Interiors Gift Guide by edit58

We asked interiors expert Lisa Mehydene, founder of edit58 what she has on her Christmas wish list…

I love receiving interiors items for Christmas, as it’s always so nice to wander past things in your home throughout the year and be reminded of the special person/people that gifted them to you. Interiors items also have longevity, staying with you for years to come – so they really are the perfect present. Here are the items I would love to find under the tree on Christmas morning (I hope Father Christmas/my loved ones are reading).

Rebecca Edelman’s Pedestal Bow vase, £255 from The Shop Floor Project

My love of a bow runs deep, and even led me to create two bow based collections for edit58 (a ceramic line with Kana London and a cushion collection with Alex Gore Browne). So, of course, I simply adore this beautiful Pedestal Bow vase by Rebecca Edelmann; its simplicity, white textured lustre glaze, double handles. Swoon….

 

Guirlandes et Festons Dinner Book by Antoinette Poisson, £39 at The Hambledon

I love to entertain and I’m mildy obsessed by all things Antoinette Poisson, so this large notebook, inspired by the French reception books of yesteryear, would make the perfect gift – allowing me to record dinner party guests, the decoration of the table and the details of the menu. Such a lovely momento of times shared with family/friends and a lovely thing to look back on/pass on to my children.

Clemence scalloped candlestick holders, £7 and a bundle of 20 mini candles, £8 at Rowan and Wren

Candles are a must for any Christmas table and beyond, and these candleholders are simply the sweetest. They will add a lovely rustic, vintage vibe. Such a great little gift along with a bundle of mini candles to use with them.

Near & Far, Interiors I Love By Lisa Fine, £50 at Vondome Press

Interiors books are a constant source of inspiration for me and not a weekend goes by that I’m not curled up on the sofa with an interiors tome and a cuppa.I must fess up that I already own this particular title, but it’s so good I wanted to share. A must add to your Xmas wish list….

Wide striped tablecloth in antique rose, £175 at Pentreath & Hall 

I’ve been dressing my table with gingham for a while now, so it’s time I switched things up and had a different tablecloth option. This striped number would be the perfect addition. Love the antique rose and cream palette and the wide stripe.

Liberty patchwork quilt, £280 by Projktityyny

I’m so thrilled to be a part of the current Floribunda collection in Liberty – a secret selection of homewares created by 12 makers using archive Liberty prints. I absolutely adore every single item in the collection, but top of my list is a Liberty patchwork quilt by Projektityyny. Such a heirloom piece.

Hungarian bottle lamps, £125 at Re-found Objects, and Matilda Goad’s scalloped shade, £125 at Liberty

I really love these Hungarian bottle lamps. There’s something so lovely about the recycled nature of the wire that the glass is wrapped in. Whilst I love the African print shade that accompanies it, I think I would add my Matilda Goad scallop shade to it instead, and use the patterned shade elsewhere in my home.

Sabre Bamboo Cutlery set, £70 at Alice Naylor-Leyland

I constantly miss out on vintage bamboo cutlery that I find (I’m always outbid!), so I think the time has come to ask for a brand spanking new set. The perfect addition to a tablescape, whatever the season, and I’ll build the collection up over time.

Rustic tray, £19.99 at Zara Home 

I love this little rustic tray from Zara Home, it doesn’t look like its from Zara and it would add a lovely bit of texture to my kitchen. Maybe I’m showing my age, but I much prefer their homewares to their fashion nowadays.

edit58 x Lisa Hardy handpainted enamel jugs, £85 at edit58

Obviously, I couldn’t compile a Christmas wish list without including something special from edit58! Our edit58 x Lisa Hardy handpainted enamel jugs are the perfect gift and have a myriad of uses; a vase, a water jug, a decorative item…….the choice is yours. But I love that each is completely unique and a functional ‘artwork’ for your home.

Sweethearts of the Rodeo

Way back when, we used to work in the Fashion Department of Vogue with Charlotte Pilcher and Vanessa Gillingham.  As Fashion Editors, they were always extremely stylish in a classic but definitely non-trad way.  They dressed individually, taking elements of the current fashion whilst making them all their very own.  When they left, Vanessa became Fashion Director at Glamour for 10 years and both were consultants for top fashion and accessories brands whilst also working with celebrity clients. After spending some years searching for the perfect boots, they decided to set up a company and design them themselves.  Called Sweethearts of the Rodeotheir mission was to make boots that were understated, insouciant and timeless, made out of the finest leather in Tuscany, handcrafted by skilled Italian craftsmen. You can judge the results for yourselves but we think you’ll agree that whilst they might be an investment, these are boots to love and wear for life.

How did you come up with the idea for Sweethearts of the Rodeo?

CP: I have always been a shoe and boot lover. After 18 years at Vogue and being a creative consultant, I had a deep-seated urge to create the kind of boots that I wanted to buy but couldn’t find all in one place. I felt that there was a gap in the market for boots of uncompromising quality and design integrity. Boots that aren’t one hit wonders but for women of style, not women of fashion. Boots that are inspired by the way men buy their shoes: to love for a lifetime and become your timeless classics, boots for the connoisseur with a sprinkling of rock’n’roll. 

Why did you choose Vanessa as your partner?

Vanessa and I worked together at Vogue in the Fashion department and have been long standing friends. We shared a vision, boot addiction, and are mothers collectively to 5 boys! We knew we would enjoy working together, learning and doing everything together with this start up. It has been a wonderful ride and rewarding journey so far. With a lot of funny stories …   

What has been the most surprising part of the business so far? 

Getting the boots made from beginning to end, and not just talking about it but actually realising it, is totally another thing. If you thought about quite how difficult it would be to do, you’d never start!  Of course, both of us being fundamentally creatives, image makers, and stylists, the conceptual, design and image making parts of the process have been perhaps the easiest.  Grappling with others such as building an e-comm website, learning about logistics, tax etc has proved in many ways the most satisfying as we’ve been out of our comfort zones but learning a massive amount.  Ultimately, it’s been incredibly fulfilling to achieve our original vision.  The most uplifting moment was when the very first pair of boots sold on the first day the site went live – a pair of liquid gold Grams (below)! And one customer, a day later buying two pairs of Quakers in different colours, they loved them so much. 

And the most difficult? 

Working out how to use an excel spread sheet!  And the very first shipment coming from the factory in Italy: the lorry had its tarpaulin side slashed when the driver was on his sleep break.  Thankfully nothing was stolen, I suspect they were looking for fags, booze and trainers. We were horrified!

Which are your favourite places in London for eating and drinking?

CP: Endo I nearly had to sell a kidney for the experience, but it was totally worth it. My husband booked it for a birthday treat.  It describes itself as ‘Sushi in the clouds, where the sea meets the sky and it’s the newly opened 16 seat restaurant designed by Kengo Kuma, at the top of the redeveloped BBC television centre in White City.  The Rotunda is the realisation of a lifelong dream for Endo, a third generation Japanese sushi master, who had watched the masterful cutting techniques of his grandfather, who also instilled the passion and values of his cuisine. He uses only ethically sourced fish from independent fishermen, with whom Endo himself has built personal relationships with over the years in Scotland, Cornwall and France. It is the most wonderful experience of theatre meets taste bud treat.

The Havelock pub.  A short walk for those Sundays when I can’t be bothered to cook lunch.

Dehesa in Soho for tapas.  Always good and quick.  

VG: The River Café, because the staff feel very handpicked, always remember you, and are the most professional and friendly of any restaurant. It never disappoints with delicious fresh fish, and ingredients and it is the one place I always have three courses!.  That and drinking a delicious glass of red wine in my new home with all of my boys, in front of the fire.

Who are your 3 top IG accounts that you follow?

CP:@twistedknits2014 it is the Instagram of my late friend Jessica Berens, who always had a unique sense of black humour and thankfully it is still up, so we can still enjoy her fabulous take on life.

@duroolowu as a designer and curator his Instagram is a great gallery of art, fashion, music, jewellery, and all the good stuff.

@policedoghogan my husband’s Americana band, which is for discerning lovers of folk and country. 

@hamishbowles my great friend, so I can keep up with where the hell he is in the world and try not to be too envious as I see one beautiful location after another.

VG: @henitalks award winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history. 

@8hollandstreet for great interiors curated by Tobias Vernon, who has fabulous taste, and his shop still a little known secret in Kensington.

Which 3 fashion shops (including online) do you most buy from?

CP: Sacai, for being masters of their craft, subverting traditional designs and materials with radical experimentation, mixing up traditional fabrics in an interesting way without making you look like a street style blogger.

Holland and Holland, as I love what Stella Tenant and Isabella Cawdor are doing with the brand.  Traditional English country wear injected with their much-needed contemporary sensibility.

Preen by Thornton Bregazzi, as I love Justin and Thea’s effortlessly modern, deconstructed London cool, dresses, soft suits, oversized tailoring and prints.

VG: “I haven’t been into a shop for 3 months as have had no time what with launching the brand and renovating my house, so it’s all about interiors for me at the moment, but when I do indulge, it is MATCHESFASHION, Dover Street Market and Uniqlo.

What items are on your Xmas wishlist?

CP: Frederic Malle Iris Poudre scent (below), Santa Maria terracotta pomegranate room fragrance and more Jubilee Celebration roses from David Austin.

VG: A Duro Olowu dress, a new Visprung superking bed, and of course a pair of our boots!” I heard a great quote from a friends grandmother…”Never skimp on beds or boots, if you’re not in one, you’re in the other” 

Sweethearts of the Rodeo champions longevity over quick one-season fashion fixes – which items in your wardrobe have you worn the most?

CP: Celine (I think Phoebe Philo first collection for Celine 2009) sleeveless trench coat,/dress, which I wear in Winter and Summer, and still love.  Scanlon and Theodore low crotch jeans. A beautiful black and white herringbone thick cashmere coat from Egg, given to me some Christmas’s ago by my husband. 

VG: J Crew cashmere v neck sweaters, which never pill, and bobble and the moths don’t like, and vintage finds from over the years that never date.

You haven’t changed a bit – please tell us your beauty secrets! 

CP: Try to drink water, and I know I should drink more, I am a virgin in terms of injections, fillers, botox, knives etc, (maybe too late now) but I use Sensai bronzing gel (incredibly light) which is so much better than ageing foundation, however light and non-cakey, they say it is. Charlotte Tilbury, her ‘wonderglow’ facial primer cream, Nars, ‘orgasm’ Illuminator cream, Chanel lipsticks and a sucker for a lipgloss! 

VG: I take day and night Lumity supplements, use Environ skincare, I don’t smoke, and I love having Yvonne Martin facials.   

 

If you want to try on the boots in person, don’t miss Sweethearts of the Rodeo at the Pop Up Sale curated by Fiona Golfer and Jayne Pickering.  Held from 11am – 6pm on Sunday 1st and Monday 2nd December at 119b Portland Road, W11 4LN.

It’s goodbye for now…

The team at A Little Bird are taking a break to recharge and make some exciting changes behind-the-scenes. We look forward to seeing you again soon.

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