June Review: the sweetest grown-up book in the world

It can be quite easy at the moment to feel like we live in dystopian times which is why this month we were in the mood for fiction that is anything but. Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, our June choice, has been described by the novelist Tracy Chevalier as “irresistible, a perfect mix of wistfulness and joy, substance and froth.” As much as we like a fizzy escapist novel, it is the grit that really makes all the charm of Miss Pettigrew so pleasurable. We were intrigued to learn that the book’s author Winifred Watson had to wrangle with her original publisher Metheun to get it published in the first place: she had made her name writing steamy rustic romances (of the kind mocked in Stella Gibbons’ Cold Comfort Farm) and they were not at all sure about this adventure with a nightclub hostess that was more cocaine and comedy than passionate romance in a rural setting.

The titular heroine Miss Pettigrew is a down on her luck governess, a spinster of 40 in 1938 who needs a job if she is to avoid the workhouse. The reality of this possible fate is movingly touched upon and Miss Pettigrew’s desperation provides an engine both for the plot and our engagement. She is mistakenly dispatched to the home of Delysia La Fosse, a gorgeous nightclub singer (winningly played by Amy Adams in the film) who has several gentleman callers to juggle in the course of the morning and Miss Pettigrew proves the ideal foil to help her.

The action of the novel unfolds over a single day (a typical chapter heading is 6.21pm – 7.25 p.m.) and this compression adds something to the urgency with which one reads about Miss Pettigrew’s transformation. It is a Cinderella story but if you feel you are too old for fairytales, don’t fear: there is no Prince Charming here, both Miss La Fosse and Miss Pettigrew earn their own living and their dynamic is a tribute to sisterhood above all else.

Miss Pettigrew begins the book as a voyeur: when she enters Miss La Fosse’s glamorous home, she thinks “This was the kind of room in which one did things and strange events occurred and amazing creatures, like her momentary inquisitor, lived vivid, exciting, hazardous lives.” She gapes at Miss La Fosse, dressed in her gorgeous negligee of silk and lace as the singer tries to decide between her three beaus: theatrical impresario Phil, nightclub owner Nick or the quick-tempered Michael – but the real drama is the platonic love affair unfolding between the two women. Miss Pettigrew is transformed by seeing herself through Miss La Fosse’s eyes. The latter says “I knew it. The minute I laid eyes on you, I knew you were the kind of person to be relied on” which is news to Miss Pettigrew because she has always felt anything but.

There is a sour note in the novel and that is when Miss Pettigrew says of Michael, “there is something of the Jew about him”. This is an incredibly jarring moment in this otherwise lovely novel and serves as reminder, if nothing else, that it was published in 1938 when Germany was not the only European country where antisemitism was rife. Miss Pettigrew does not feel like an anti-Semitic novel not least because Miss Pettigrew herself falls in love with a corset salesman called Joe Bloomfield (it’s even possible that Watson is sending up racial prejudice by making Miss Pettigrew express anti-Jewish sentiments whilst falling in love with a Jewish man). It’s there nonetheless, and should be noted.

But what an intriguing book this is and how revealing it is about women’s lives in 1930s London, for all its surface delight. It is the perfect book to give someone who needs cheering up, or simply wants to be transported for a couple of hours.

What did you think? Leave your comments below and let us know…

Ice Cream Tea at the Bluebird Café

The perfect end-of-term treat might just be a visit to the outdoor terrace at the Bluebird Café in White City for an ice cream tea. LA’s Halo Top Creamery is in residence for the whole of July and they’ve worked with the Bluebird to invent all sorts of mad deliciousness like the Gateau Opera Birthday Cake, a sprinkled cake layered with a vanilla sponge and birthday cake flavoured ice cream, the Cinnamon Roll Royale, an ice cream treat lined with candied apples, piped into a ginger snap cylinder and topped with burnt meringue and the Candy Bar Macaron, an ice cream sandwich filled with Candy Bar ice cream. The frozen afternoon tea is available Thursday to Saturday 3-4pm. Book ahead. 

Summer Holiday Reads

Wondering what to read this summer? Our team share their top picks:

Alex Peake-Tomkinson gets to grip with legal matters with the memoir, Under the Wig by William Clegg QC

Ideal holiday reading is obviously dependent on what kind of holiday you like to have. Whatever the answer is to that question (mine: quiet days somewhere hot with delicious dinners and good bars) most of us probably want to take the time to read outside of our comfort zone. This might mean reading a book at all if you don’t usually have the time but in my case, it means reading outside of my usual areas of interest. For that reason, I would recommend Under the Wig by William Clegg QC. If you don’t read much non fiction, memoirs are a brilliant way in. The very best are as well-crafted as novels: Sathnam Sanghera’s memoir of growing up with a schizophrenic father and sister, The Boy with the Topknot, is the perfect case in point. William Clegg QC is not a writer (and the elegance of his pithy prose can be attributed to a ghostwriter) but he is possibly Britain’s foremost QC and has the most fascinating tales to tell. From the client who answered to the name Mr F***wit in court, to defending war criminals and a woman and daughter accused of murdering their husband/father even though there was no actual evidence he wasn’t alive, it is all here. He has also worked on some notorious murder trials, including Jill Dando’s and Rachel Nickell’s and writes clear-eyed accounts of the legal processes rather than crimes (a boon if you are as squeamish as I am) and is passionate about Legal Aid. The book is a reminder of how thrilling and murky the law is but it’s also a cracking read. You will tear through it on holiday. £8.99 at Amazon

Annie Reid recommends Late in the Day by Tessa Hadley

I’ve been reading a lot lately, but above all I’d recommend Tessa Hadley’s Late in the Day. This is the story of tangled relationships revealed after the death of one of the central characters. Hadley uses her words sparingly, never overplaying a scene or idea. Love, loss, grief, art, beauty – all in equal measure in this tiny precise novel. £8.99 at Amazon

Louise Long returns to her summer favourite, Helena Attlee’s The Land Where Lemons Grow

Although it’s not a new book, summer calls for a return to The Land Where Lemons Grow. Join Helena Attlee on her enchanting quest for the Italian citrus – from the lemon groves of Lombardy to the fragrant gardens of the Medici, the marmalade makers of San Giuliano to the prized bergamots of Calabria. Part curious horticultural-travelogue, part ravishing cultural history, perhaps what makes Atlee’s tale summer’s most refreshing read are the sprinkling of tempting, citrus-filled recipes: zesty ricotta cake and insalata di cedro to name a few. A timeless ode to the lemon. £9.99 at Amazon

Alix Gibson reads Piers Torday’s The Last Wild with her family

The Last Wild is the first in Torday’s award-winning trilogy and it’s a book for the whole family. My son, 8, devoured it, as did my husband and I. Torday’s books are brilliantly layered and accessible for all ages – as well as a galloping storyline, the book has some very modern, relevant themes: animals are on the point of extinction and their habitat and nature are threatened. There are some funny moments too, which punctuate the pathos; the over-eager wolf-cub, the militaristic cockroach, the half-witted pigeon. It’s a magical read.

This is what Arthur Gibson (8) had to say: ‘The Last Wild is a brilliant book of fantasy and adventure. It’s all about a brave, trustworthy and reliable boy named Kester Jaynes and his friends – thousands of animals and a determined girl called Polly. A disease is destroying nature and the countryside, which drives thousands of people into the city of big buildings and houses. The book starts off with Kester living in a horrible building called Spectrum Hall, full of troubled children. These children bully Kester because he is not able to talk. Is this the reason Kester is here, or not? With every turn of the page, I felt excited. I think anyone who reads The Last Wild will want to read the other two books in the series immediately. I can’t wait to read them this summer!’ £6.99 at Amazon

Torday’s most recent title is a contribution to Return to Wonderland, a re-imagining of Carroll’s wonderland through the eyes of the original characters. Amongst a host of other authors, Torday takes on the Cheshire Cat and how he got his smile. The hardback is available to buy now, ahead of Alice day on July 4th. £10.99 at Amazon

Daisy Allsup devoured Daisy Jones and the Six by Taylor Jenkins Read

Daisy Jones and the Six had so much hype – including being snapped up by Reese Witherspoon for an Amazon mini-series – that there was fear it might not live up to expectations. However, a few pages in I was completely hooked on Daisy. The story charts the climb to success and subsequent splintering of a fictional 1970’s rock band (it could easily be Fleetwood Mac) whose hit albums keep coming despite ever more tangly love triangles and frantic drug-taking. The Hollywood setting nearly steals the show with wild pool parties at Daisy’s Chateau Marmont ‘cottage’, gigs on the Sunset Strip and record cover shoots in the desert. Then there’s the music that keeps the whole narrative thumping; you’ll find yourself searching for the songs on spotify only to remember they’re made up. Written as an oral history the book reads like a script which takes a bit of getting used to, but I rather liked that given that I read it by a pool and was dipping in and out frequently. Daisy Jones and The Six definitely verges on the cheesy, but go with it. My book of the summer so far. £9.47 at Amazon

Kate Hassard is escaping dismal headlines in favour of Postive News magazine

Can’t stand one more Brexit-related front page? Turn to Positive News, the magazine that focusses on progress and positive solutions. There’s a feature on the photographer who, instead of shooting models and celebrities turns her lens on people aged 100 and over, and the story of the Swedish community who have done their bit for climate change by swapping planes for train travel. Informative and inspiring, the beautiful print issue comes out four times a year (Jan, April, July, Oct) or you can subscribe online – download the digital version to an iPad before a flight. Subscriptions £30 per year positive.news

Francesca Martin has these titles on her to-read list

I’m in the midst of reading Period Power by Maisie Hill about harnessing our female hormones.  It’s a riveting, brilliant book but not quite what I had in mind for a holiday read so instead on a recent visit to Daunt’s I picked up the following: Transcription by Kate Atkinson about a young woman working for MI5 during the second world war.  I have also subsequently ordered Case Historiesthe first of her Jackson Brodie private investigator novels which have got rave reviews and I’m looking forward to getting stuck into the series. The Heavens by Sandra Newman, a story of love and time travel which moves between NY in 2000 and London in 1893, looks like the perfect book to get lost in and finally, The Parisian by debut author Isabella Hammad is about the life of a young Palestinian man living under the British Mandate over 100 years ago.  To be honest, I was sold by the quote from Zadie Smith which reads: ‘A sublime reading experience: delicate, restrained, surpassingly intelligent, uncommonly poised and truly beautiful’.  I can’t wait.

Our favourite floating restaurant on board a barge

Having lived in Amsterdam and kept a tiny boat on our nearest canal, I’ll always have a soft spot for being on the water. A summer evening bobbing along and drinking in the city is a very happy one. The closest thing to that experience you’ll find in London has to be with London Shell Co. the charming floating restaurant that’s run by brother and sister duo, Harry and Leah Lobek.

Step aboard their jolly barge, the Prince Regent and you’ll be taken on a tour of London’s waterways from Paddington Basin through Little Venice and up Regents Canal to London Zoo and Camden Lock. Discover a side of London’s you’ve never experienced before as you meander past houseboats, snoop at the private gardens that roll right down to the water, and all the while enjoy a set seafood feast. The 5-course cruising menu changes daily according to the catch, but might include angel hair fries and oysters, and Cornish Cod with new potatoes, pea & broad bean haché – emphasis is on sustainable, British fish. Equal thought goes into the drinks menu too; there’s a small but well-formed selection of cocktails, short aperitifs, English fizz and a decent wine list.

New this summer, London Shell Co have opened a second boat, The Grand Duchess. Rather than setting sail, she’ll be permanently moored on the Grand Union Canal in Paddington Central for lunch and dinner. Ideal for groups, book the Captain’s Table for up to 8 people and you’ll get prime position at the bow of the boat.

 

Summer Accessories Edit

Cult Gaia straw hat, £48 (reduced from £95) from Net-A-Porter

Ilda Espadrilles, £85 from Sezane

Floral beaded hair slide, £85 from Simone Rocha at MatchesFashion

Striped lined bucket bag, £207 from Sensi Studio at Goop

Bead and shell bracelet, £51 (reduced from £86) from MatchesFashion

Orchid embellished raffia slides, £165 (reduced from £330) from Zimmermann at Net-A-Porter

Woven tie belt, £11.86 (reduced from £16.95) from Gap

Pearl twist knot hairband, £10 (reduced from £17) from AndOtherStories

Noir heart-shaped sunglasses, £215 from MiuMiu at MatchesFashion

 

 

Beaded headband, £55 from J.Crew

Leaf drop earrings, £101 (reduced from £145) from Isabel Marant at MatchesFashion

 

Goldentime embellished flats, £192 from Zimmermann at The Outnet

Starfish Constellation long necklace, £285 from Alex Monroe

Boardwalk Boater Hat, £35 (reduced from £58) from Anthropologie

 

Lizzie Loves Healthy

Lizzie King – aka Lizzie Loves Healthy – is a mother, wife, cook (graduate of Leith’s School of Cookery), a trained Nutritional Health Coach, influencer (for food, health tips and family life hacks) and best-selling author.   She sat down recently and talked to us about Florence, food relationships and Ladbroke Grove.

What does healthy mean to you?

The problem is with the word, which is pretty annoying at best. The meaning for me boils down to feeling good and strong, in body and mind.

How would you describe your relationship with food?

Unrequited love. With that I mean I love food and have always built my days, my holidays and most things around making sure it’s going to be really good. My Dad used to sit down for lunch with a huge plate, heaving with incredible food my Mum had made for him, and say through mouthfuls “what’s for supper?” Nothing made my Mum more incandescent, but I think this is where the seed was planted. I see food as a joy and pleasure and we are so privileged to be able to choose from the best restaurants, ingredients, food writers and recipe ideas these days, in London.

Who/what has inspired your cooking style?

Almost everywhere I go fires up my senses and inspires me; from fresh produce in a market to incredible restaurants, to great friends throwing together lunches for hordes. Cherry picking tastes and flavours and then working out in my head how I’d like to combine them, is the process I think.

Do you have a mantra?

“Must remember to meditate!” 

No, I don’t really, but I like to think that I put all my energy into everything I’m doing. I hate the thought of not knowing what could’ve been.

Where would you like to be in 10 years?

Without a 10-year plan! We mull over moving countries or moving out of London and then stay within a 1-mile radius of where we’ve been for 20 years. So, all bets are off, but one day I hope we’ll have our own home and a garden, and I’ll be running my business from it.

What is your favourite view?

The endless line of green hills hitting the sharp blue sky from my family’s place in the middle of nowhere in Tuscany; not a whisper of humans to be heard and no trace of a road or a house on the horizon. It’s a magical place, and I’ve never found anywhere like it.

Your ultimate meal: where, with whom and what?

It would be with my husband and I’d have to include my 9-year-old daughter as she gets so much joy out of eating well. Somewhere decadent and beautiful like Harry’s Bar in Florence, for bellinis and crostini, then to the Osteria nearby for Lobster Ravioli and maybe a slow roast lamb, finished with a dark flourless chocolate cake. But otherwise The River Café for their pasta of the day and the Chocolate Nemesis to end.

Which bit of kitchen kit couldn’t you live without? 

My Vitamix blender, which I’ve had for 15 years.  We use it more than once a day. Magimix might come in equal. 

Any tips for looking stylish in the kitchen?

Don’t bother with aprons – I never understand them. All you need is something tied around your waist or a drying up cloth over your shoulder. I’ve never been that fussed about my kitchen get-up, but I’m pretty sure I look like I’m enjoying it. A flapping, stressed, scowling cook is never a good look.

Where in London do you live? What drew you here?

We’ve lived in an area within a half mile of Ladbroke Grove for nearly 20 years. My husband drew me here when I started dating him in 2000. We bought our first flat together on the Portobello Road opposite an amazing record shop called Honest Johns, and above a Thai restaurant that would lay our takeaway out in our sitting room. It’s a brilliant, buzzing, unique and beautiful part of London that I adore. 

@Lizzieloveshealthy

www.lizzieloveshealthy.com

Buy the book Healthy Family Food by Lizzie King 

School’s Out for Summer

Place your uniform firmly at the back of the cupboard, it’s time to get dressed for the holidays with these fun pieces (none of which come from the high street):

Shorts and Dungarees:

1. Parrot embroidered jumpsuit £79 at Mini Rodini
2. Bobo Choses dungarees £53.20 at Smallable
3. AO76 is a brilliant brand for cool T shirts and shorts for both boys and girls. Embroidered parrot shorts £42.40 at Smallable

Tops & Tees

1. Hundred Pieces Bohème Floral Blouse Ink £37.20 at Smallable
2. Lisbon muslin shirt, 89 euros at Club Cinq
3. Surfer stripe organic cotton vests, £9.20 at Tootsa
4. Different Together sweatshirt 46.95 EUR at Molo

Jump in:

1. Dexter shorts £38 and swimming T shirts £38 at Beanie and Bear
2. Lotte tank bikini £35 at Heidi Klein
3. One-piece £38 at Petit Bateau
4. Reversible blue/coral bikini £38 at Sunuva
5. Dolce & Gabbana inspired swimsuit £132 at Far Fetch
6. Tropical flowers 96 euros at MC2 Saint Barth
7. Nalvaro on the Beach 49 euros at Molo

Summer Dresses:

1.Colchik boilerdress 102 euros at Colchik
2. Beach House skirt £31.50 at Fresh Dinosaurs
3. Elias & Grace have curated the best collection of cool dresses this season. Pictured here is Little Creative Factory check dress £85 at Elias & Grace
4. Yellow Submarine denim dress, £77 at Stella McCartney Kids

Hot Foot It 

Tangerine Espadrilles £27 at Heidi Klein
The brilliant Bensimon tennis shoes from £21 at Sarenza
The original Spanish summer sandal. Minorquines Avarca Sirena €60 at Minorquines
Mustard sandals. Fully leather and waterproof from £40 at Salt-Water
Arizona sandals £35 at Birkenstock

Cindy Sherman at the National Portrait Gallery

Cindy Sherman is renowned for dressing up in different guises. Even so, it’s somewhat astonishing that one woman can so convincingly assume the appearance of all sorts of people, from a cigarette-smoking vamp to an aristocratic lady to a Hitchcock heroine to a circus clown. At the first major UK retrospective of the artist, the National Gallery displays works that span her life from the 1970’s to the present day. The exhibition begins with A Cindy Book – a childhood scrapbook made when Sherman was 8 or 9 and in which she pasted photos of herself and wrote ‘that’s me’ in pencil beneath each one. A fascination in changing appearances was already nascent. The show continues and every frame contains Sherman as model. We’re looking at a series of images all of one woman, yet in a way we aren’t.

Untitled #602 by Cindy Sherman, 2019. Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York

An obsession with her own image – perhaps like a modern-day selfie you might ask? Well no, not quite because these photographs aren’t about personal branding or even about Cindy Sherman herself. Her real identity is left at the door. Wigs, make up, fashion, prosthetics, styling; these are the tools Sherman uses to fabricate different identities, to assume new roles, to invent new people with new stories. These then, are portraits of made-up characters.

The dazzling spectrum of photographs on display is wide-ranging and at times playful – in the historical portraits room for example. Here she’s seen as an aristocratic lady next to an 1856 oil painting of Madame Moitessier by Ingres. If Sherman can assume this appearance for a photograph, what’s to say that Madame Moitessier wasn’t in some way a fabrication too?

Untitled #204 by Cindy Sherman, 1989. Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York
Madame Moitessier by Jean-Dominique-Ingres, 1856. The National Gallery, London Bought 1936. Copyright: The National Gallery, London

Other works are more provocative. Her love-hate relationship with fashion – she both loves clothes and feels disgusted by them too – is evident in her magazine shoots where she dons Comme des Garcons and Jean Paul Gaultier but wears deranged, neurotic and fraught facial expressions, exposing the illusion of fashion whilst subverting what we think of when we think of haute couture. Also on display is the complete  Cover Girls series in which Sherman appears as Jerry Hall.

Untitled #122 by Cindy Sherman, 1983. Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York
Cover Girl (Vogue) by Cindy Sherman, 1976 / 2011. Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York.

There are sinister overtones throughout – from the early Rear Window-inspired film stills, past the sci-fi (Game of Thrones?) Fairy Tales series and into the final room which revolves around masks. The idea of the sad clown comes into play – there’s the classic disjunction between appearance and reality, and she reveals the more sinister character lurking behind the facade of children’s entertainer.

Untitled #413 by Cindy Sherman, 2003. Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York

One of our favourite rooms in the show is the mock-up of her New York studio. There are shelves of prosthetics, wigs, sunglasses and drawers full of costumes. There are stacks of books and mood boards cover the walls – ripped pages from magazines, postcards and polaroid photos. It’s like something you might find on a teenage bedroom wall, something we might associate with a young person working out their identity. It’s a glimpse into the workings of the artist’s mind.

Cindy Sherman’s photographs are weird, strange and often uncomfortable to look at. They’re provocative too, prompting the viewer to ask – who is this woman? What kind of life does she lead? In an instagram age where we’re more obsessed than ever with appearance this is an exhibition that asks all the relevant questions about image and identity and delves into the grey space between what’s real and what’s artificial. Enthralling and powerful, we can’t stop thinking about it.

Pre-public booking for the new Tom Stoppard play, Leopoldstadt, directed by Patrick Marber

Tickets go on sale for the new Tom Stoppard Play, Leopoldstadt, directed by Patrick Marber tomorrow at 9am but if you sign up to the Sonia Friedman subscriber list you can book your tickets right now. A sweeping tale set in Vienna from 1900s onwards, the play traces the successes and difficulties faced by a Jewish family through the generations whilst living in Europe.  Produced by Sonia Friedman, the play opens from 25 January 2020 and will most likely be one of the highlights of the year.  Book now!

Circolo Popolare

We are huge fans of Gloria, the buzzy Italian trattoria in Shoreditch. Hot on its heels is sister restaurant, Circolo that promises to transport you from Fitzrovia straight to the sunny Sicilian coast. It’s the place to go in a noisy group – the big tables seat up to 12 and you can dine on Sfoglia Norma with Salsiccia Bites (a giant silk handkerchief to share, pasta alla Norma-style) and metre-long pizzas with creamy burrata from Puglia. Book a table outside on their terrace for a holiday without leaving London. Circolo opens tomorrow, 28 June 2019, watch out for our review soon.

Tried and tested: the best fake tans

We’ve been trying an array of different fake tans recently and weeded out the good from the bad (and the ugly!) Here are our top picks:

Tax-Luxe: The Gradual, £22 from Liberty

This is a gradual tan lotion (it says illuminating but we didn’t notice that part!) that you use as a body hydrator from Tan-Luxe, a range of self-tanning products that we really like.  It didn’t stain our sheets (you need to wait 10 minutes after applying before you get into bed) and even after one application, gave us a very natural looking glow.  We wanted to try their oil but we were advised that it would be too dark for our skin (fair skin with blonde hair) and even just two applications of this cream would give more than enough tan.  It was easy to put on, light and not greasy despite being hydrating and has a lovely floral smell.  Definitely one to use all year round and great for self-tan beginners too.  We tried it on our face (a dab mixed in with our usual face oil) but we would recommend using a few drops of the Tan-Luxe Illuminating Face Drops (£24 from Liberty) which is specifically for the face.

Amanda Harrington’s The Body Set, £85 from Amandaharrington.com

Harrington has been the go-to tanner for many a celebrity and has just launched her at-home range. The three-step kit has a primer, self-tanner and a special buffing brush to help you get her signature contoured look.  It isn’t for the short of time – it took us half an hour to prime, put the tan on with the plastic mitts and then buff with the brush (and then wait 10 minutes for it to try).  However, the colour it produced (there are three options offered and we went for the lightest – there is a good questionnaire on the site to help you choose) was deep and extremely natural, probably the closest to our natural tan colour we have ever seen.  It lasted about 3-4 days and then just faded gradually.  Best of all, the brush means that you really do avoid any tell-tale marks.  And if you like the sound of Amanda Harrington but would rather get the professionals to help you first, then head over to Harvey Nichols where from 21 June – 4 July, you can get a complimentary face tan with the Amanda Harrington London 3 Step Method.

Sisley Self-tanning hydrating Body Care, £77.40 from John Lewis (includes current offer of 10% discount)

This is an oldie but a goldie and the only fake tan that our dermatologist recommends (along with the Sisley face self-tan too). It isn’t cheap but it lasts for ages and gives a great colour. The cream itself isn’t too thick which makes it easy to apply and doesn’t have a heavy smell – we’ve found to be almost fool proof.

James Read Coconut Water Body Tan Mist, £25 

This is definitely the lightest of any of the fake tans that we tried.  It gave a gradual, light colour and would be good if you were very fair or keeping a tan going when you’ve returned from holiday.  The mist is a clever way to get to hard to reach areas – you simply spray and then buff in with your hands or a mitt.   We’ve personally visited James Read at his tanning salon in Fitzrovia where he tans the likes of Rosie Huntingdon Whiteley and Ellie Goulding.  Like Amanda Harrington, his experience and direct contact with clients gives him a great hands-on knowledge about self-tans that he has translated into his own line of products, many of which are often extremely innovative. His latest launch, for example, is the Sleep Mask Face Retinol which combines skincare (with the use of products such as hyaluronic acid) with a gradual tan.

Vita Liberata 2-3 Week Tan Mousse, £37.50 at Goop

We were really interested to try this ‘clean’ self-tan mousse from Vita Liberata.  It gave us an incredibly natural tan that yes, after a week, is still a great colour.  It goes on smoothly and dries quickly (we would definitely advise using a mitt) and has no smell at all.  It is organic and doesn’t contain triclosan, GMOs, fragrance, or alchohol.  For it to last 2-3 weeks, though, the directions say you should apply it 3 times in 24 hours but we found that even just with two applications, it gave a good lasting colour.

The Mamahood Pop Up

We’re fans of The Mamahood, an online platform packed full of interesting creative business run by mothers. Visit their pop up shop on Northcote Road and find lots of established independent labels (Faune, Mel Porter, Happy Self Journal – also stocked at Liberty) as well as some exciting breakthrough brands (Binibamba, Cissy Wears and You are Small) that you can otherwise only see online. There’s toys, childrens fashion, jewellery, homewares, gifts and more – but don’t delay, the Mamahood pop up shop won’t be back until Christmas.

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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