DESIGN NOTES: The word Everyday was given a capital letter and moved above the word FOOD. (It had previously been superimposed over the word.) The photograph of Martha in the top corner is gone. The colour band at the top was expanded to fill the entire top portion of the magazine, which looks much bolder. The phrase "A Martha Stewart magazine" below the title has been replaced with "From the kitchens of Martha Stewart Living," which was actually the original tag line.
12.22.2011
Everyday Food: New Year, New Look
The January/February 2012 issue of Everyday Food arrived in my mailbox today and I immediately noticed the redesigned cover. I love it! It is much simpler, more refined, more captivating and certainly more modern: a wonderful design. Below is the new cover with some design notes.
12.21.2011
Christmas Wishes Coming True
As I write this, my friend David Bondarchuck is speaking with Martha Stewart. He is feeling the energy and buzz of excitement as he awaits his moment on set with her for a live taping of her show. For David, today is a dream come true.
David has made so many of his dreams of come true, which touches me so deeply, because he was once homeless. At the age of 16, David found himself living on the streets of Denver, Colorado. He spent countless hours in the library poring over lifestyle and decorating books where he discovered his true passion: food and entertaining. Martha's books were especially inspiring to him. It wasn't easy, but he was determined to make something of himself.
Today, David is the proprietor of his own catering company called Scratch Catering. His most recent accomplishment is helping to decorate the White House for Christmas, one of only a handful of volunteers chosen out of of thousands of applicants from around the country. This achievement led to local press and an interview on NPR, which was heard by one of Martha's producers. When David mentioned in the interview how much of a role model Martha has been to him over the years and how inspired he has been by her career and her ventures in business, the producer wasted no time in contacting him to be a guest on Martha's show.
David's appearance on Martha is today. He will be making bottle-brush Christmas trees.
Be sure to watch!
David was one of the first readers of Martha Moments, which is how I met him. He has been a great supporter of my blog and I always love hearing from him. He told me all about his adventures at the White House recently. I really wanted to share his story. Below, David explains his duties as lead decorator for the Red Room at the White House and he shared some of his personal photos.
I have been trying to be a volunteer decorator for the past 3 years. Since I was 16 and saw Martha at the White House with then first lady Hillary Clinton I have always wanted to go. So when I started catering I started sending in pictures of my creations, tablescapes, and events to the White House for consideration and review.
David has made so many of his dreams of come true, which touches me so deeply, because he was once homeless. At the age of 16, David found himself living on the streets of Denver, Colorado. He spent countless hours in the library poring over lifestyle and decorating books where he discovered his true passion: food and entertaining. Martha's books were especially inspiring to him. It wasn't easy, but he was determined to make something of himself.
Today, David is the proprietor of his own catering company called Scratch Catering. His most recent accomplishment is helping to decorate the White House for Christmas, one of only a handful of volunteers chosen out of of thousands of applicants from around the country. This achievement led to local press and an interview on NPR, which was heard by one of Martha's producers. When David mentioned in the interview how much of a role model Martha has been to him over the years and how inspired he has been by her career and her ventures in business, the producer wasted no time in contacting him to be a guest on Martha's show.
David's appearance on Martha is today. He will be making bottle-brush Christmas trees.
Be sure to watch!
David was one of the first readers of Martha Moments, which is how I met him. He has been a great supporter of my blog and I always love hearing from him. He told me all about his adventures at the White House recently. I really wanted to share his story. Below, David explains his duties as lead decorator for the Red Room at the White House and he shared some of his personal photos.
I have been trying to be a volunteer decorator for the past 3 years. Since I was 16 and saw Martha at the White House with then first lady Hillary Clinton I have always wanted to go. So when I started catering I started sending in pictures of my creations, tablescapes, and events to the White House for consideration and review.
As I had said it's been 3 years and I have never heard or received a response until September of this year, when I was finally accepted. I was so excited!
I flew out to DC from Denver on our Thanksgiving Day. That evening there was a White House decorator briefing at a DC hotel. As it turns out there were only a 100 or so people chosen out of the whole country and all whom applied, to help create the first lady’s vision of “Give, Share, Shine” this year. At the briefing I was assigned Lead decorator of the Red Room in the White House. I was also paired with 5 other volunteers to help me transform the space.
On that following Friday and Saturday all of us volunteers were taken to a warehouse 40 minutes outside of downtown DC. This warehouse is the Presidential Record Warehouse. Everything in it was/ is used in the white house at some point. Imagine a building the size of a Costco, but inside was home depot meets hobby lobby. There were chandeliers hanging above in storage, old ones, americana and colonial styles. They are switched out of rooms at the white house by the White House electricians as needed for cleaning or decor.
In this warehouse we handmade ornaments and decorations for the White House display for different rooms. Ironically a lot of the ides for ornaments and decor were right from the pages of Martha Stewart Living. We made “Pine-Cone Frames” using photos of service men and women. we made styrofoam balls wrapped in fabric strips. I mean, we were all like elves for two full days! Then Saturday night we loaded the trucks. Every room was marked and inventoried by box and then loaded in room order.
On Sunday it was our first day in the White House. That morning we got a White House tour, and then there was a mini press conference for the cameras.
Then it was on to work! Again I was assigned Lead decorator in the red room. The red room walls are all red of course but they're not painted, or wall papered. They are in fact covered by stretched silk canvass. It was so beautiful! I had heard that the year previous the designer had used red everything in the red room and it was overkill. So this year I choose to use gold tones. I used 5 varieties of gold and amber browns. I also used gold sprayed leaves and salal (lemon leaves) in the trees and built them up like floral arrangements. I also did the same on the mantel.
There were two full trees in the red room and of course the mantel to decorate. My team was amazing and we were done with the red room by the next morning. Then with nothing to do I helped out in other rooms until I was asked to do the green room as well. The other designer had been re-assigned and they loved what i did in the red room so they asked if i would also work on the green room. I completed the mantel in that room using boxwood and glittered pinecones, clear glass balls, clusters of small various shades of greens mini glass balls and eucalyptus twigs.
In all I was in the White House for 4 whole days and worked on almost everything! It was amazing fun. I even met a woman working downstairs who had once been one of Martha's gardeners from Turkey Hill!
The entire experience was so amazing at the White House. But I must say that I am just as excited to be headed to see Martha as i was to go to the White House. It's all just a dream come true.
12.18.2011
Martha Stewart Living: 2011 In Review
Here we are
again, pushing towards the end of another year. And here I am, again,
surrounded by 12 new issues of Martha Stewart Living magazine, pushing my
bookshelves to the limit. Below is my annual review for 2011. I know a lot of
you enjoy reading this review so I try to make it as insightful as possible. This
time I am going to tackle it a little differently. I will highlight the best in a few categories: best issue, best cover and best photo spread.
Because
they were able to snag my interest beyond a casual glance for the first time in
the history of my love affair with Martha Stewart Living, I give each of the
summer issues a gold star. That’s right. They are ALL tied for first. I simply couldn’t
pick one.
For the best issue of the year I base my
decision on these criteria: the originality of the content, the beauty of the
presentation (photography) and the vitality with which the magazine celebrates
the season in question.
First,
though, let’s look at some of the changes that took place at the magazine in
2011.
NEW EDITOR:
PILAR GUZMAN
Like many
of you, I was surprised by the departure of Vanessa Holden as editor-in-chief
after only a year in the role. (Vanessa is now the chief creative director at
West Elm, a furniture and lifestyle store.) Replacing her at Martha Stewart Living, beginning with the
June issue, was Pilar Guzmán, who was the founding editor-in-chief of Cookie magazine, a publication that
revitalized the parenting category in print magazines. She was also a senior
editor at Real Simple and was the
executive editor at One magazine, an
architecture publication. She is also the founder of the momfilter blog,
described by Pilar as a “lifestyle playground for families.”
So far I
have enjoyed Pilar’s contributions to the magazine. They are not blatantly
obvious, but they are visible. Here are some of the changes I've noticed since her arrival.
a) What’s For Dinner was moved up to the center of the magazine, beginning with the August issue.
(Pilar said in an interview that she was obsessed with those detachable recipe
cards when she was a student in college and she is clearly making sure they are
well represented.)
b) The introduction of new column categories,
such as Traditions.
c) The replacement of the To Make and
Give column on the last page with a monthly essay from a freelance
contributor, which I find very refreshing. It's nice to end your read on a human note: insights, thoughts and reflections. It reminds me a bit of Martha's Remembering column.
The most significant change brought by Pilar,
however, is the consistent recurrence of themes like children, family and
togetherness. Pilar’s editorial (and personal) interest in family and children
has been apparent in many issues of the magazine since she took the helm,
particularly visible through an increase in the number of photographs that
depict children and families in the various stories, but also through content:
crafts for children, memory-keeping, etc.
THE MARTHA
MOMENT COLUMN (JANUARY – AUGUST)
Last
Christmas I received a very kind email from Vanessa Holden, who was then the
editor in chief of the magazine, wishing me a Merry Christmas and thanking me
for being such a big supporter of the Martha Stewart brand. Several days later
I received my January, 2011, issue of Martha Stewart Living in the mail and was delighted –
perhaps a little flattered – to see a column at the front of the magazine
called “Martha Moment.”
I have
absolutely no confirmation that this blog inspired the column, but I like to
think it did at least play a subconscious role in its naming. In it, Martha
would share a moment in her world through one of her photographs (tomatoes from
her garden, a snowy scene on the farm, her pets, her peonies) accompanied by a
brief description written by Martha. It was a nice little page and I looked
forward to it every month. Seeing the world through Martha’s lens is always a
treat. The column was cut in the September issue, however, but it was nice
while it lasted.
Martha's Calendar was replaced in January, 2011, with Martha's Month. It was a mixture of the calendar with gentle reminders, various tips and techniques. Many readers were not pleased with the layout and a year later the grid-calendar format is back.
The table of contents pages also received a facelift in 2011. I like the simplicity and airiness of the new layout.
DOUBLE
COVERS
As in
previous years, there were several issues of Martha Stewart Living that were released
with double covers in 2011. Below is a gallery.
The April
issue had a special beauty feature at the back of the magazine, introduced by a
separate back-front cover. The section and the cover were printed upside down
to distinguish the content, which was mostly just glorified advertising for
cosmetics.
March had two covers. The one on the right had very limited distribution on newsstands.
October also had two covers. The editors asked readers to vote on their favourite. The one on the left won out, arriving on newsstands and to subscribers. The cover on the right was released but only in certain parts of the United States. If you find either of these two alternate covers for March or October, consider yourself a skillful treasure hunter!
In November the editors released two variations on the same cover. The cover on the left was sent to subscribers. The cover on the right was available on newsstands.
SPECIAL
ISSUES: EVERYDAY FOOD, HALLOWEEN, HOLIDAY
For the
first time ever, Everyday Food published a special issue in a full-size format,
with content based on summer foods. It is a gorgeous issue with incredible
photography. Martha Stewart Living published two special issues: a Halloween
publication and a Holiday issue. Both of these are more or less ‘best of’
issues with previously-published content, balanced with some new content. Still
worth collecting.
SIMPLY THE BEST
Okay,
folks, here we go. It’s time to pick the best issue of the year!
This year,
for the first time since writing this annual roundup, it was the summer issues
that most impressed me. I have stated before that I generally am not as fond of
the summer issues of Martha Stewart Living. Perhaps it has something to do with
lifestyle: I’m out a lot more in the summer and don’t spend a lot of time with
magazines of any kind. The fall issues, with their emphasis on décor, baking,
holidays and crafts are usually more engaging for me. This year, though, I found
myself repeatedly drawn to all of the summer issues: June, July and August. Each
of them excited me.
The summer
issues succeeded in every way:
a) The content was fresh and fun with
an overflow of incredible new recipes that put the season’s produce to work
with maximum effect. (I downloaded more recipes from the summer issues than any
other issue this year.)
b) There was a seamless and perfect
blend of each of the lifestyle categories in each of the summer issues: food,
crafts, gardening, decorating.
c) There was lots of originality and
creativity in these issues: the editors had clearly pushed the boundaries and
were thinking outside the box in every single category.
d) The photography was stunning with so
much colour and vitality, particularly because of the use of people in so many
of the editorial spreads: people eating, people playing, people enjoying the
season. It was inspiring.
Below are
some of the summer highlights.
The issues
I felt most uninspired by were the spring issues. I was most disappointed by
March, the annual gardening issue. It was too earnest, in my opinion, with too
much emphasis on vegetables. The Vegetable Garden Primer article was too
complex to absorb: too many words, charts, diagrams, lists and boxes. The
layout was obstructive to its purpose. The eye simply didn’t know where to go,
so the pages were swiftly turned.
Kids and families figured heavily in the summer issues. It was nice to see.
A really inspired story on Fourth of July decorating in the July issue.
New American All-Stars: American summer classics reinvented and reimagined.
A brilliant idea: turning a potting bench into a summer grilling station.
Bandana crafts that stretched well beyond the expected.
Tips on how to summerize your home outdoors.
I loved this in-depth article about Great Camp Sagamore in upstate New York in the July issue.
Delicious summer pies in the June issue use the best in seasonal produce.
A collection of sour cream glasses from the August issue: bright and sunny.
SPRING
NEEDED SOME UMPH
The article Natural Beauty was also a let-down since it devoted six editorial pages to
the promotion of beauty products. One of the reasons I read Martha Stewart
Living and avoid Real Simple is to limit my exposure to advertising disguised
as content.
I did enjoy
the article on the community garden. Communities that garden together are
happier and healthier, which is an important element to promote. I also liked
the Southern Comfort article about the Kentucky garden of Dede McGehee. Overall,
though, the March issue did not inspire me. As a result, it gets stamped as my
least favourite issue of the year.
BEST COVER OF THE YEAR:
BEST COVER OF THE YEAR:
I love this cover of the September issue! I think it is modern with an interesting composition.
BEST PHOTO
SPREAD: CHOCOLATE IN THE FEBRUARY ISSUE
There are
so many extraordinary photographs that fill the pages of Martha Stewart Living,
month after month: award-winning, inspiring imagery that captures the
imagination and pulls you deeper into the stories. They are often the triggers
of my curiosity and lure me in to learn more. The best photo spread this year,
though, has to be the photos of chocolate confections from the February issue,
from the article Chocolate, Hot & Cold. Nigel Cox was the photographer. I
have him to blame for feeding my eternal obsession with chocolate. The photos capture
its luxurious decadence perfectly.
I hope you enjoyed this year's review! What are your thoughts on the year that was at Martha Stewart Living magazine? Any standout favourites? Anything you felt needed improvement?
12.16.2011
Don't Forget: Martha Stewart Calendars
These haven't been promoted much, but they are well worth looking for, especially as gifts for the Martha fan on your list: Martha's series of 2012 wall and diary calendars. Most of them are available on Amazon but I've also seen them in a few stores. The calendars are made by teNeues, a German printing firm. I have a few of them (for my archives, you see) and I can tell you that they are very high quality: thick, semi-gloss paper, beautiful photographs printed in full colour in approximately one square foot of page space. Each month is printed in six languages (including English, French and Spanish) giving them global appeal. They've each got little bonus goodies, too. See the gallery below for more details.
12.12.2011
Remembering: Martha Stewart Everyday Ornaments
My friend Kenn, a fellow Martha collector and aficionado of the Martha Stewart brand, gave me this collection of Martha Stewart Everyday postcards several years ago: duplicates from his personal collection. They were part of a promotional package for the 2002 Martha Stewart Everyday Holiday line at Kmart. I keep them safe in plastic sleeves in an album I have devoted to such Martha Stewart material. I thought it would fun to look back at some of these treasures. What strikes me, immediately, is how thoughtfully the collection is designed; the shapes and colours are beautiful, borrowing from vintage and antique styles in sophisticated, modern hues. These collections are no longer available.
Winter Blossoms Venetian Glass Ornaments. The Winter Blossoms collection conjured up the romance of the Victorian Christmas. This assortment contained glass ball ornaments in beautiful holiday pastels and iridescent Venetian glass. There were also floral motifs evoking handmade silk ornaments in poinsettia shapes.
Woodland Holiday Glass Ornaments and Ribbon Ornament Hangers. The Woodland Holiday collection calls to mind the beauty of a winter forest. Garlands featuring acorn designs, birds nest ornaments and wreaths decorated with nuts and pinecones were highlights from this charmingly woodsy collection.
Classic Christmas Ornaments and Fancy Beaded Garland. The Classic Christmas collection was inspired by the traditions of Christmases past. Ornaments came in nostalgic styles and patterns in this collection, rich with shades of traditional red and green.
Golden Luster Glass Novelty Ornament, Beaded Garland and Sheer Ribbon Garland. The Golden Luster collection celebrated the richness and warmth of the holidays with a variety of glass ornaments in shades of gold. Apple, pear and grape-cluster ornaments were also availalble.
First Snowfall Ornaments, Beaded Garland, Tree Skirt and Gift Wrap. The First Snowfall collection was all about the wonder of the newly fallen snow. Cozy knit stockings and snowflake ornaments captured the beauty of a snowy Christmas in a cool, crystalline palette of silver, blue and white.
Christmas Favorites Ornaments and Beaded Garland. The Christmas Favorites collection was based on Martha's own beloved collectibles and some of her favorite holiday colors. Porcelain and glass teapot and teacup novelty ornaments conjured up a cozy feeling. Unique glass ball ornaments came in distinctively "Martha" colors, such as her signature green.
Gumdrops and Candy Canes Ornaments, Tree Skirt, Gift Wrap, Stockings and Flannel Sheets. The Gumdrops and Candy Canes collection definitely had the kids in mind. The fanciful assortment was dedicated to the whimsy and wonder of children this time of year. Decorated felt stockings and shatter-proof ornaments made this collection durable and festive.
A close-up of one of the gumdrop ornaments. Many of the items in the Gumdrops and Candy Canes collection were translated from popular craft projects from the pages of Martha Stewart Living and Martha Stewart Kids magazines.
An assortment of wreaths from the various collections mentioned above.
Some of the lighted holiday ornaments from the various collections, including snowmen lights, large pearl lights and poinsettia pearl lights. A tip from Martha: "On average, use 100 lights for each foot of tree. For a six-foot tree, you'll need about 600 lights. Use additional strands if you have a fuller tree or if you prefer lots of illumination."
A gathering of some of the glass ball ornaments from the various collections, mentioned above.
Labels:
collecting,
holidays,
merchandise,
remembering
12.11.2011
A Warm Winter Arrangement
On the steps of the church up the street from me there are some lovely outdoor arrangements in place, giving the large stone building some touches of holiday warmth for Christmas. The design of the arrangements is simple and practical, but visually stunning. The arrangements were created by Sheridan Nurseries, a garden center that has been operating in Toronto since 1911.
This is one of several heavy iron urns around the church filled with gorgeous greenery: cedar boughs and magnolia branches, interspersed with large amber ornaments. The effect is rich, rustic and warm. (Click to enlarge.)
The magnolia branches, with their two-tone leaves and stiff formation, bring texture, depth, shadow and form to the arrangement. The cedar boughs add softness with their cascading placement at the bottom of the arrangement and the ornaments bring a festive sparkle. The colour choice is perfect.
It was the amber-coloured orbs that first caught my eye from a distance, sparkling radiantly in the sun.
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