Pages

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Back from the Beach




We have just returned from a fabulous week at the beach. I'll be back to blogging this week after my much needed week of r & r.

Monday, June 6, 2011

House of the Week

In honor of summer - A Shutze beach house from the Archives.

Southwind



I noticed this house immediately from the beach, but had no idea that Philip Trammel Shutze was the architect. When my godmother gave us a driving tour of the island she told me this was "Aunt May's house" and that it was designed by Shutze. Of course I jumped out of the car and starting taking pictures. Later I got the whole story on the house, called Southwind, and the wonderful woman who lived there.




Southwind in 1938, photo by Gottscho-Schleisner

May Patterson Abreu (1891-1976)was from Atlanta. In the 1920's she worked at the interior design firm of Porter and Porter in Atlanta to help her family financially. She married James Goodrum in 1926. Sadly he only lived two years after they were married. May met Cuban born architect Francis Abreu at Sea Island and they were married in 1938. Francis Abreu designed many homes in Florida in his early years as an architect, but he is best known for his commercial and public buildings. He designed Eugene O'Neill's house on Sea Island. In Atlanta Francis and May lived in the Shutze designed house on W. Paces Ferry that was the Southern Center for International Studies, or the Peacock House.

Southwind was May's beach house - Shutze was the architect. May commissioned the house when she was still married to James Goodrum. Shutze used the stucco architecture of Bermuda as the design precedent for the beach cottage even though most of the architecture on the island was either designed by or inspired by Mizner and his Eclectic Spanish style. In American Classicist, Elizabeth Downling says of the project: "This new model employed the canted walls and peculiarly Bermuda-esqu stepped roof, which effectively break from Mizner's use of the Spanish precedent. For interior and exterior detailing, Shutze used a scallop shell motif to refer symbolically to the seaside location." (p173)



Southwind garden entrance, 1938


Garden entrance today










Southwind
The living room in 1938, you can see the shell motif at the cornice.

From the Abreu Charitable Trust website:

"After their marriage, they were active members of Atlanta society during the 1940s and 1950s and were staunch patrons of the arts. May enjoyed the opera, arts and the symphony, while Francis preferred golfing, hunting and fishing. However, while Francis may not have shared May's love for cultural events, he did attend events to be social. May and Francis lived on West Paces Ferry Road in the home that is now headquarters for the Southern Center for International Studies.

May was an active participant in many charities in Atlanta, supporting the Atlanta Humane Society and the American Red Cross, as well as individual citizens. After the Depression, May provided several people with financial assistance to help them get back on their feet. One day when walking down Peachtree Street in Atlanta, May saw one of these people look at her and cross the street to avoid repayment. At Christmas, she sent "paid in full" messages in her Christmas cards to all who had received money from her with the simple message, "Merry Christmas."

May established the Francis L. Abreu Charitable Trust in her will to honor her husband. Today, the Trust carries on the tradition of giving begun many years ago and continues to benefit the Atlanta area arts and cultural programs, education, health associations, human services, children and youth services."










The house is currently under renovation - which is great news for all of us who love historic buildings and good architecture. Shutze of course planned the gardens as well as the house. The garden is directly behind the house and one enters the house through the garden. There are several raised bed, walled planting areas with stone paths. At either end of the garden sit two guest houses.





One of the guest houses.


At the North end of the gardens and house is this building now being used to store garden tools.


View of the south side of the house.







What fun to find such architectural history at the beach!

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Save the Date - June 4 & 5, Atlanta Garden Tour


Annual GPPA Garden Tour 2011

an intimate tour of atlanta gardens

Presented by
The Board and Members of
The Georgia Perennial Plant Association

See beautiful gardens from Decatur to Druid Hills, Buckhead to Sandy Springs!

All Garden Open
Saturday, June 4 - 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday, June 5 - 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Rain or Shine

Ticket Cost: $20 (Tour is free with a 2011 GPPA Membership)

Click here for more info, maps and details.


Two gardens in my neighborhood are on the tour.





You can buy tickets in advance at the following locations:

Ashe-Simpson Garden Center
4961 Peachtree Ind. Blvd. ~ Chamblee
770-458-3224

Boxwoods Gardens & Gifts
100 East Andrews ~ Atlanta
404-233-3400

Garden*Hood
347 Boulevard SE ~ Atlanta
404-880-9848

Habersham Gardens
2067 Manchester St. ~ Atlanta
404-873-2484

Hastings Nature &Garden Center
3920 Peachtree Rd. ~ Atlanta
404-869-7447

Lush Life
146 East Andrews ~ Atlanta
404-841-9661


Tickets will also be available at each of the gardens so you can simply
come to any of the gardens on the days of the tour and purchase your tickets!

Monday, May 30, 2011

Saturday, May 28, 2011

GREEN!



This has been one of the longest days ever...but it was totally worth it! My family of five worked together to lay sod today (after hours of prep work and a leaking sprinkler fix too). We still have more work to do, but our yard is green again!!!

Let's hear it for instant gratification yard work. Sod is awesome. And so is my family!!! Thank you team Young.

Have a wonderful Memorial Day weekend everyone. If you want to be inspired on Memorial Day - go read this post.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Helen Durant Studio Sale May 27-29

Helen Durant Studio Sale
May 27-29
Fri 6-9pm
Sat and Sun 12-5pm

Whittier Mill Village
1966 Butler Way
Atlanta
404-375-6237

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Beautiful Fabric by Victoria Larson Textiles


Attention fabric lovers! Here's a new source for fun, vibrant, beautiful fabric. The line is by Victoria Larson. A little about her from her website:

Victoria Larson has been designing home accessories for private clients for several years and is proud to release her debut fabric line to the public. Larson trained as an Interior Designer at the Maryland Institute College of Art. The textile line you find on these pages is the culmination of Victoria's life-long passion for art and design and her love of fabric.

Designs usually begin life as a watercolor or block print. Then the design is printed on to an appropriate textile using eco-friendly, water-based inks. Victoria only selects natural and comfortable fabrics and all production is done in the United States.

The fabric designs follow Larson's basic philosophy that things should be beautiful but useable. Interiors should be beautiful and personal but not precious.



Garden Stool


School O Fish


Pods


Corinthian

All of the fabric is printed on heavy weight cotton or organic cotton sateen. It has a great hand and beautiful finish. For more information or to order samples and a price list (it is reasonable too!) visit her website by clicking here.