My name is Cynthia and I love interior design, architecture, antiques, all things vintage, all things British (a tried and true Anglophile), a love of things that are time worn and hold secrets of days gone by. I love animals and try to respect their place in our world. I enjoying talking about the most beautiful places in the world, some exotic, some in our own neck of the woods. I love family and friends, music and movies. And most importantly, I love talking about these things with a daily dose of humor because I love to laugh and we all deserve to. So come on...let's go for a stroll.

AND PLEASE CLICK ON THE ENTRY AND LEAVE ME A COMMENT - I can't talk to you if I don't know you were here, dearest dahling...

I'M A BREAST CANCER SURVIVOR !!


Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Help -- Annie...She Was So Much More Than "The Help"

Annie Sanders, 2008, age 99 years.  This is the only photograph I have of Annie


I recently saw the much talked about film, The Help. I must say that I enjoyed it immensely.  I'm thrilled to see it receiving recognition at this year's Oscars and am rooting for Viola Davis in particular for Best Actress.  If you haven't seen it already, I urge you to take a look.

One of the reasons that this film touched me so is because it reminds me of one of the most important people in my life and the lives of my family members, a dear sweet woman named Annie Sanders.  Annie was an African American woman who "worked" for my family from the late 1930's until the late 1980's.  I hesitate to use the term "work" because she was so much more than an employee.  Like the black women whose lives are the center of The Help, Annie was a Jacqueline of All Trades, responsible for the laundry, ironing, cleaning, and most importantly, responsible for helping in the raising of my mother, Anne and my uncle, Fred.  Unlike the Caucasian women of Jackson, Mississippi portrayed in The Help, my grandmother was employed full time early on at the Food Town grocery store on Westview Drive in Atlanta.  My grandfather was a Sargent in the U.S. Army and stationed at Fort McPherson on Lee Street.  Because my mother and father divorced when I was 6 years old, my mother and I lived with my grandparents and thus, I was around Annie throughout my childhood...listening to her and my grandmother argue about the best product for polishing wood floors, how to cook turnip greens and how much butter you should add to grits.  Later, when my grandmother had stopped working briefly to be at home with my mother and her brother, I remember how she and Annie always rested long enough to watch their "stories," The Edge of Night, As The World Turns, and The Guiding Light.  They later added The Young and the Restless to their list of afternoon must-see television (which is why they started working at sun up and didn't finish until sun down).  While watching The Help, Sissy Spacek's character makes the comment, "Shhh....I'm watching my story."  I had to immediately rewind and watch the scene all over again, as it brought back memories from 40 years ago...I haven't heard anyone call a daytime soap opera a "story" in a month of Sundays.  It made me smile.  I find this hard to fathom, but like the women who worked for the white families in The Help, Annie used the same glass, flatware and plate and bowl at every single meal.  I guess you could say that my grandmother was in some ways a product of the South where she was born, raised, lived and died.  In other ways, she was very progressive.  For instance, even though Annie only used certain flatware and dishes, she ate at the table with us at every meal.  Also, knowing that Annie had no husband, no children and did not possess a drivers license, she made sure that Annie had a way to cast her vote during the elections...once that is, she was allowed to vote.  My grandmother made sure that Annie always had someone drive her where she needed to go...not just to our house for work, but to church or the grocery store, whether it be my mother, my uncle, my grandfather or a family friend.  My mother shared with me the story of how, during the time that my grandmother was working at the grocery, Annie would hold my mother's hand and walk with her to the street car, where they would catch the trolley to Rich's Department Store in downtown Atlanta (as previously noted, Annie had no drivers license).  On their first outing alone together, the car operator told my mother that she could ride up front, but that Annie would have to ride in the back of the car.  My mother, being the spitfire that she was, not so politely told the operator, "that's Annie...she's my mammy and she can sit with me if she wants to."  He told my mother that maybe they should get off the car, which my mother proudly told him they would be happy to do.  Realizing that they wouldn't be able to go to Rich's, and upon Annie's insistence, my mother gave in, but not until she made sure she rode as far back as possible and that Annie rode as far up as possible, so that my mother could turn around in the seat and talk to her the entire way there and back again.

Annie worked with my family until she was 80 years old.  She and my grandmother continued to argue over cleaning products, cooking methods and anything else they could think of.  As the years went by, it didn't matter which glass Annie drank from, and I happily remember Annie eating at our table with us, not at another table in another room.  In her later years, she grew feeble and was unable to live alone.  With no immediate family, we were all that she had.  She sold her home and went to live in an elderly high rise apartment building in the West End of Atlanta.  My mother, my grandmother and I visited her often (my grandfather passed in 1988).  I used to love to go there, and I always admired her apartment, with its photos of John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. hanging proudly over her sofa, which was covered in the clear plastic slipcovers that she had used for as long as I could remember.  I got such a kick out of how she introduced us to the other elderly men and women who lived in the building, all of whom were also African American.  She always said, "These are my good white friends and I raised her," pointing at my mother.  I remember when, after she was well beyond her days of scrubbing floors on her hands and knees, beyond spanking my mother's bottom for giving the family dog her sandwich instead of eating it, beyond having to sit on the back of the bus, she would come to stay with my grandmother overnight.  By this time, I was married and living in a suburb of Atlanta and would stop by the high rise to pick her up on my way home from my job in downtown Atlanta.  The story was that she was going to help my grandmother do some things around the house, when actually, they missed one another and simply wanted to watch "Dallas" or their  "stories" together.  Years later, after my grandmother's passing, Annie continued to visit us, staying with my mother.  I think she knew how much we loved her...adored her...not for working for us, but for living among us and loving us.

My grandmother passed away in 1996.  At her funeral, I stood at the podeum in the chapel to read a tribute I had written to her.  As I stood there, I looked lovingly upon my family.  I remember Annie sitting next to my mother, holding my mother's hand and wiping her own eyes, nodding every time I made mention of things she knew to be true.  Annie died in 2009, not long after my mother passed.  Her only living relative, a second cousin, had lost our contact information and was unable to get in touch with us.  My step-father and I were distracted by my own mother's terminal illness and had not been to see her in the last three months.  Sadly, Annie had suffered from severe dementia and no longer recognized her visitors.  But she always recognized my mother and never failed to say "I raised you."  My mother would tear up and say "yes you did, Annie...you sure did."  My mother never left there without telling Annie that she loved her and she never left without first interrogating the nursing home staff about Annie's care and to make sure that Annie got the tapioca pudding and Sprite drinks my mother brought each week.  The last time we visited her, I was touched to see my daughter's class photo front and center on her night stand, and inscribed in Annie's handwriting on the back "sweet Sarah".  She did raise us.  All of us.

Like Abeline in The Help, Annie spent her life raising the children of a white family and like Abeline, she was loved and respected by the these children.  Unlike Abeline, this love and respect was felt toward her by my entire family.  I can only hope we did right by her.  I can only hope she knew how much she was loved and what her sacrifices meant to us.  She was a great woman...not because she took care of a white family from Atlanta, but because she lived a selfless life, full of dignity, grace, courage, and goodness.  I love you, Annie.

My grandmother is 3rd from right wearing eyeglasses -- love this photo - notice how everyone
is drinking and smoking -- what we didn't know back then

My uncle, Fred Nunn, 1949, age 14 years

My mother, Elizabeth Anne Nunn Poliquin, 1958, age 18 - notice that skunky blonde streak in her hair  - too funny

Another photograph of my mother Anne, 1958, age 18 years - I'm especially fond of this photograph -
I adore her dress and hat -- she was always compared to actress Natalie Wood -- but she was
most certainly her own woman

My grandmother, Elizabeth Griffith Ford, doing the standard "stand next to the car pose" that everyone did back in the day...next to the 1969 Chevrolet Corvair...which turned out to be a clunker of a car in this case

My mother, grandmother and uncle, Easter, 1960, one year before I was born.  One can certainly appreciate
the comparisons of my mother to Natalie Wood from the looks of her in this photograph -- she was stunning


Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Under the Weather -- But the Sun Will Shine Soon



Hello there friends.  Just a quick note to let you know that I've been under the weather a bit and have been overwhelmed with doctor's visits and trying to rest.  But I'm feeling a bit better an already have a blog in mind for this weekend. It is extra special to me -- one that involves someone near and dear to my heart.  After watching the film, "the Help" I felt it was only fitting to write my next feature.  So please look for my next blog -- it is heartfelt and I look forward to sharing it with all of you.

Love and hugs to you all,
Cynthia

Saturday, December 31, 2011

The Beauty of Paris



If you know me or follow my blog, you know that I am a tried and true Anglophile...my love of all things British, especially the homes and countryside of England, and the Queen of course, reach out for my soul like no other part of the world.  Second to that would be Italy..I have had the good fortune to have seen a lot of Italy, from Rome to Positano, from Venice to Naples, and I loved it all.  The Italian people make me feel alive...their appreciation for food, drink, family and life in general, is unsurpassed.  Seeing it with my own eyes was incredible.  But something that I haven't really experienced is Paris.  I adore French design, French furniture and decor, architecture, and of course the clothes.  But my only time in Paris was a missed flight back home...a connecting flight from Venice to Paris that was supposed to take my husband and I on to Atlanta.  We missed the connection by 10 minutes because the flight from Venice was late on takeoff.  I had a broken leg and was confined to a wheelchair because of the severity of the break and my dear sweet husband, God rest his soul, was trying to manage me, the wheelchair, the crutches, 6 pieces of luggage, and a very cherished antique music box I had purchased in Venice that I was guarding with my life. (The trip was booked and paid for before I took a tumble down the stairs outside our kitchen and suffered a compound fracture - with no trip insurance, we decided to make the trip anyway).  After learning that we had missed our flight, and after I proceeded to have a full blown nervous breakdown at the gate, we were given lousy instructions on how to get to the hotel where Air France would put us up for the evening, and left to our own devices.  The Chinese cab driver who took us there did not speak English, nor did he care.  We were dropped off at the top of a hill and from there everything went down that very hill, me in the wheelchair, the luggage and the crutches.  Tony managed to get his hands on the wheelchair before I slammed into the glass doors of the hotel, while I clung to the music box, as if it was my life savings LOL.  We finally got inside, checked in and got up to our room, which was about an 8x8 box with a bed, a television and an overhead light.  Keep in mind that checking in and getting me and all of our belongings up to the 4th floor in a tiny elevator was no small feat -- a good hour went by).   Of course, the only thing on our tiny television was a soccer game, which didn't matter to me but my TV addicted husband, who isn't a big soccer fan, wasn't happy.  I kindly reminded him that we were not in the US of A and that he needed to get over it.  We got over it alright.  We had to literally get over the bed to get to the bathroom, as there wasn't enough room around the end of the bed between the bed and the wall to walk to the bathroom! Once in the bathroom, we found one guest towel, no hand towel and no washcloths.  Tony turned to me and said, "We have enough Euro left to get a cab into the city, have dinner at a sidewalk cafe and pay for the cab ride back.  Do you want to try it?"  In my current state of frustration, I said "I want to come back here another time, when I can truly enjoy it and appreciate its beauty and what it has to offer, and not associate it with this room and the lack of towels." LOL.  So we stayed in, went to sleep, got up early and boarded our flight home.  This day is an example of how this trip went from the beginning to end.  A classic tale of "if anything can go wrong, it will."  I cannot tell you how many times I have been told "you should write a book about that trip...it would make the NY Times Bestseller List."  But in spite of it all, I saw Venice, I rode in a gondola at midnight through the canals, I sat in a water taxi through the Grand Canal, I saw Istanbul, and sat in my wheelchair at the top of a mountain and gazed at the Black Sea, where I was able to see one of the most beautiful views I have ever experienced... Istanbul as it spreads into Europe and Asia.  I rode through Istanbul with a cab driver named Oscar who knew its history and shared it with us.  I saw Dubrovnik, Croatia and sat in the sun in a courtyard and listened to minstrels play, watched children dance and saw couples kissing near the fountain.  I wouldn't trade it for anything.  Now if you asked my husband, who sadly died this past January, if he enjoyed himself, he would say "Yes I did, but I would never do a trip to Europe with her in a wheelchair again."   He loved to point out that he spent 13 days eating anything and everything he wanted and still managed to lose 3 pounds.  It certainly gave me a new appreciation for those who spend their lives in wheelchairs and manage to do all sorts of things that I found overwhelming.  More power to you amazing folks!

Enjoy



The Louvre Museum -- Spectacular

I thought the windows in my house were special because they were Pella...hmmm...gotta rethink that one

This same photograph hung over my daughter's bed for years


Any discussion of all things French is not complete without Versailles

Aerial view of Versailles

Paris really does have the most charming windows in all of the world

Dark splendor
The old and the new mix beautifully in Paris

A Parisian Apartment Courtesy of Harper's Bazaar

The quintessential Paris Apartment


Pink prettiness 

More wonderful windows - love the railing

There are so many incredible doors to incredible buildings in  Paris -- I loved this blue one

Beautiful in all of its decay

I love the curves and lines of French buildings



Wednesday, December 21, 2011

A Time To Share - Welcome Guest Blogger, Design Shuffle

It is the holidays, and Cynthia is tired! Just when I thought I wouldn't get a beautiful post together for you great readers out there, the girls at Design Shuffle reached out to me in the nick of time. So without further adieu, enjoy!

Hi, my name is Joanna, and I am a guest blogger for Design Shuffle, the go-to source for all things interior design. I spend my days writing about design topics and sharing inspired decorating ideas. What’s not to love about looking at beautiful images like those below all day? Thanks to A Love of the Past for letting me share!
We’ve been having a love affair lately with all things French. From pastel-hued macaroons on the table to gorgeous inspired rooms, the French know how to create a warm and inviting space with just a hint of formality. Take a look at the lovely French-inspired spaces we found in our travels around the web. Enjoy!
French Decor
An ornately carved upholstered headboard is the center of attention in this very French bedroom.
French Decor
Roses and stripes are the order of the day in this feminine room. The big stripe on the chaise gives it a flirty look.
French Decor
A canopied bed with upholstered headboard gives this bedroom design its stately appearance. Two identical bedside cabinets flank the bed and add to the room’s formal tone.
French Decor
This lovely bath is a decadent example of over-the-top luxury. A large soaking tub beckons us to take a dip. Here, overnight guests definitely get a taste of "oh, so French" style!
French Decor
Another example of luxury, this bath promises a spa-like bathing experience. Just imagine having this space all to yourself.
French Decor
A humble French farmhouse is full of bathroom design ideas and plays host to a casual bathroom with a cast iron tub and a natural stone vessel sink.
French Decor
This French provincial kitchen is as beautiful as it is welcoming. Small stools invite family and friends to take a seat while the cook works culinary magic. This room inspires many interior design ideas.
French Decor
A very French living space is as formal as it is lovely. The sensuous curves of the ornately carved furnishings play off the formality of the rest of the room. Images 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8

Would you style your home with French decor? Head on over to Design Shuffle where you'll learn more about various interior design styles and find great inspiration from Boston interior designers and more!

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Good Night, My Sweet

I expect Audrey Hepburn to be walking in any second now
In the past, I have blogged about some pretty fantastic rooms...living rooms, dining rooms, kitchens and baths, etc.  I am unsure if I have ever featured a bedroom blog, but considering I'm laid up in mine quite a bit due to an accident, I find myself pondering about things such as night lights, sheets, and if whether my bedroom gives me the warm fuzzies, which I am happy to say that it does.  I would hate to be forced into a complete redo at this point, considering my condition, so it is a very good thing that I find my bedroom to be a happy place.  I just have to overlook the dog toys, dog beds (which are seldom used for their original intention -- they are instead carried by the canines from room to room just for the heck of it), dog chewies, and of course two dog crates ...once you get past all of this, I think it's a very pretty room.  When my husband passed in January of this year, this room held some sad memories.... he spent so much time there in his last days when he wasn't feeling well.  After his passing, I got rid of all the pill bottles, the blood pressure machine and all the other reminders of the fact that a very sick man had spent so much time there.  I felt that it needed to become "my" bedroom, since I would no longer be sharing it with this wonderful person who had crossed to the other side.  I painted the walls (haha - more like my painter Daniel painted the walls) various shades of grey, painted the ceiling tray a lovely golden brown and got rid of all the red with the exception of a few accessories that were very beautiful or sentimental.  With gray and white quilts and lace bedding over a burlap bed skirt, I was very happy with the transformation.  While I was in the midst of this redo, I found myself looking at photographs of bedrooms featuring so many different styles.  Just like everything else I find myself drawn to, the common element is romance.  Whether new or old, European or American, muted or bright, I love things with a romantic twist.  The photographs I have gathered here feature bedrooms that I have fallen in love with, that give me the warm fuzzies.  There are many different design styles, but they all make me want to crawl into the bed with a great book, a glass of wine, my dogs (when they have finally grown tired of dragging things from one end of the bedroom to the other), and some great music...to just "be".

 Enjoy...



A crystal chandelier, a rock wall, the attic ceilings,
lavender bedding -- this is a great room
Courtesy of Little Emma English Home
This probably doesn't exactly qualify as a "bedroom" but I
had to include it -- there's what appears to be a mattress, pillows..
how incredible -- in Maldives


Rachel Ashwell, Supreme Goddess of all things Rumpled, Chipped and Beautiful, has
a new book out, "Shabby Chic Inspirations".  I wasn't crazy about her last book,
but bought it anyway because I must have them all.  I picked up this latest book recently
and I like it a lot.  I feel as though I should curtsy when I look at these pictures
she is still the Queen of what is truly "Shabby Chic" to me

I immediately thought of my daughter Sarah, when I saw this
photo from Ashwell's latest book.  Sarah's own bed looks much
like this one -- I describe it as "cloud like"

Yet another Ashwell masterpiece - again, from her new book

I've has this picture saved for ages - I just love the
simple, rusty iron bed and the utilitarian way the bed is made


It would seem that I am drawn to outdoor elements brought inside - crazy about this room


This just looks so inviting...I also sleep with 5 pillows
Courtesy of Simon Gray

This gorgeous room can be found in Scandinavia
in an old apartment - love all the brick inside

A round bed in what appears to be a very small room,
but with terrific lighting and great sheets...the size of
the room is of no importance

Gives new meaning to "A Room with a View"
A house in Madrid, Spain, Courtesy of Inspiring Interiors

This bedroom is located in a French manor house.  I was over the
top with this rock wall inside the bedroom.  So awesome.
Courtesy of Brabourne Farms

Some would call this floral pattern "frumpy or "grandmotherly"
It's from Colefax and Fowler and I think it's scrumptious. To
me, it works so beautiful because the floors are so
rustic, the walls faded and plain, the windows so tall.

h.
Muted colors, nothing on the walls...very simple, yet so elegant
Courtesy of Christina Fluegge


This is my interpretation of a perfect lake house bedroom
Courtesy of Allison Davidson

An olive green chaise lounge, French paneling...this is gorgeous
Courtesy of Axel Vervoodt via Trouvais


I have noted  the source of each photo when able

Monday, October 24, 2011

Sunday, October 23, 2011

A Love of the Past: You Are So Beautiful...to Me

A Love of the Past: You Are So Beautiful...to Me: One of film's sexiest couples, in one of film's sexiest films ever, "The Thomas Crown Affair" starring Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway ...

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