Two Fab Irish Videos

March 26, 2013

Last week, in the span of about ten minutes, I happened upon both of these great videos about Dublin. The first is about how the Pratt family came to buy the Avoca Mill and build the Avoca brand that’s now iconic in Ireland. The second is about the Dublin street art scene. The contrast of the two videos makes me smile – I love that I happened upon one sweet and one edgy video from such talented people while procrastinating and hanging around on Twitter!

Screen shot 2013-03-22 at 13.06.50

See the Avoca video here.

Screen shot 2013-03-22 at 13.07.39 See the street art video here.  (I loved this illustration above – from the video!)

Friday Finds

March 22, 2013
live and love {A little Dublin street wisdom from the only day I can remember seeing some blue sky!}

Happy Friday, friends! Did you have a nice week? I spent half the week trying to remember what day it was – Monday holidays really screw up your sense of time. I’m currently staying dry and warm inside at my desk – it’s a monsoon outside! I know I shouldn’t be surprised, but when it pours down buckets of rain (and some sleet, hail and howling wind) for days, it’s just hard to believe it’s still going!

I’m hoping the weather clears up so I can finally leave the house again, and for a few visitors who are arriving this weekend from sunny Colorado. Did you know Colorado gets 300 days of sunshine a year? I wouldn’t mind a little of that!

This weekend, we have a little welcoming to do, for those said visitors, and a little resting. Michael and I both started new workout routines (and he’s doing this annoying detox where he only eats protein and vegetables), so we’re moving slowly at the moment. I think a few coffees while sitting in the sunshine would do us a world of good. Fingers crossed the weather forecast is absolutely and totally wrong!

What are you all up to this weekend? Any fun plans? Here are a few links to enjoy your Friday afternoon. See you Monday!

I loved this online and print magazine about fathers, found via Design Crush.

A few travel tips for exploring any city – even your own!

Grilled fontina and basil blackberry sandwiches. Yum.

Easter egg decorating ideas from Design*Sponge – including copper leaf!

Or how about some super cute Easter egg terrariums from the House That Lars Built?

My friend Sarah started a blog about sustainable fashion and it’s such a good read!

There are still spots open in my upcoming craft classes here in Dublin – shoot me an email for more details!

Notice anything different there at the top of the blog? A new photo of yours truly – it was time to commit to being brunette even here online! Huge thanks to my friend Brandi for being the fastest and savviest blog-fixer on the planet. She’s going to be making a few more changes you’ll see over the next few weeks. It’s a little blog spring cleaning!

Have a happy weekend!

Emily Westbrooks

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Home Office / Tips, Tricks and Resources

March 21, 2013

home office tips

For this edition of our little mini series, Home Office, I thought I’d share my top tips, tricks and resources I’m currently relying on as I work from home. I alluded to a few of these in my previous Home Office posts on challenges and routines, but I thought I’d elaborate a little and then I’d love to hear your suggestions as well!

Organization

A few weeks ago, I was having coffee with my Styled in Ireland partner in crime, Julie, and we got to chatting about how we keep our ducks in a row. She was surprised to hear I rely only on Google Calendar and my trusty spiral bound notebook. No other apps or programmes, just my online calendar and my notebook of lists. That said, within my Google Calendar, I have at least five different calendars, color coded by company or project – it helps me keep track of interviews I have schedule for Marriage Snapshots, as well as to keep track of when my work has been published in other places. And it’s where I create my editorial calendar for From China Village. I love that I can capture ideas for posts, but then move them around depending on where I think they’ll fit.

I also use Gmail to keep my inbox organized. I have an enormous fear of deleting emails, so if I think I might ever need an email again, I file it away in a folder. What I love about Gmail is you can search for nearly anything instead of going back into those folders. I typically remember the general gist of the email or half of a person’s name, so having a strong search function within my inbox is incredibly helpful.

Keeping Me Company

When I first started working from home, Michael would walk in the door and get bombarded with questions about his day, who he saw, what he did. I think I was a little starved for human interaction! Now one of my tricks is to click on a podcast or radio programme during the day. It seems to keep Michael from getting accosted when he walks in the door! When I’m writing, I usually click on Monocle Radio. The music is peppy and the features are really interesting. Plus, I think the British accents make me feel like I should be on my best behavior – which keeps me productive! If I’m doing something like a craft project or even brainstorming for a new idea, I turn on a podcast. I am hooked on Design*Sponge’s After the Jump, and the Dinner Party Download. In fact, if you talk to me for more than 5 minutes, I will probably recommend the Dinner Party Download. It is hilarious and current and feels like a treat.

Wellness and Productivity

You know what my best trick for working from home has been? I sit on a big exercise ball instead of a chair. I usually have a tough time sitting still for more than a few hours, but sitting on an exercise ball is an entirely different experience – it doesn’t allow you to hunch, your butt doesn’t get tired of sitting, and it’s working your core the whole time.

My last tip has probably increased my productivity more than anything else: turn off social media. I tend to be the kind of person who has 15 tabs open in my browser all the time – including Facebook and Twitter. And I’m also the kind of person who can’t ignore those little numbers next to the tab title – Twitter (56 new tweets). Ugh. Even though I may not read any of those 56 tweets, I somehow feel compelled to click into the tab and make that annoying number go away. I’ve found that I cannot leave notifications alone, and I was spending so much time getting sucked back into Facebook and Twitter and Pinterest by just having those tabs open. So they are open no longer. Unless I’m posting something or responding to an urgent notification (which ding dings at me on my iPhone), I don’t open any social media tabs during the day.

So those are my simple little tips that make working from home a little easier. What are your go-to apps, programmes, tips and tricks?

 

One Day in Dublin: Northside Edition

March 20, 2013

one day in dublin banner 5

We are back with a long overdue One Day in Dublin post today, taking you through the great shops, cafes and places to visit on the North Side of Dublin.

We’ll start with a little geography lesson for those who don’t know Dublin as intimately as others. Dublin is divided into the north side and the south side by the River Liffey (not the Liffey River). Way back in history, the English lived on the south side and the Irish were kept to the north side. Now the Irish are everywhere, of course, on both sides of the Liffey, but there are still some differences. For instance, the accents on either side of the Liffey can be quite different, and in some parts the loyalties are still quite strong. The North side sometimes gets a bad rap for being a tougher than the South side. Historically, that has probably been the case, but based on what I know of the city today, I just think it has a different flavor – a little sassier, not quite as manicured, and there is absolutely tons to do, enjoy and explore.

I should also probably give the disclaimer that my husband and I live on the North side. His family has lived there since they moved to Dublin 30 years ago, and when we moved here nearly 5 years ago, Michael informed me we would always live on the North side. He’s very loyal to his side of the tracks! But even though we live on the North side, our time in the city centre is often spent on the South side. So this Day in Dublin was a great reminder of what the North side has to offer!

paris bakery counter

Now, no One Day in Dublin can start without coffee, tea and treats. We need proper fuel for all that exploring! My usual partners in crime, my friend Naomi and my sister-in-law Angie, joined me for the day and we decided to try the Paris Bakery on Moore Street. It was packed, but we found ourselves a nice table at the back of the cafe that looked straight into the kitchen.

paris bakery baguette tower I loved their Jenga-like stack of baguettes!

paris bakery making And we got such a kick out of watching the pretty pastries being made. The kitchen actually stretches for ages – it’s huge! We had delicious buttery croissants and fruity financiers. It felt very authentically French!

paris bakery pastries Properly caffeinated, we headed up the street. It was freezing, rainy and windy. We’ve had such good luck with weather for our One Day in Dublin trips, so this was a slightly different experience. We did a lot more fast walking – no moseying, girls!

parnell street On our way up the hill, we stopped into the Garden of Remembrance, which honors the lives lost in the fight for Irish freedom.

garden of remembrance wall The garden is sunken below street level and the pools are tiled in green and blue mosaics.

garden of remembrance Right outside the Garden of Remembrance is one of my favorite Dublin museums – the Hugh Lane Gallery. They remain one of my favorites, despite the fact that they do not let me take photographs inside. So, here you have the entryway and the garden patio, which looked lovely and jungly even in the freezing cold!  We’re planning to go back one Sunday for one of their noontime jazz concerts for a sunny afternoon on that patio!

hugh lane After checking out the Francis Bacon studio, which has been relocated in its entirety to a box inside the Hugh Lane, we walked back down the hill and stopped into Chapters bookstore.

chapters I picked up 4 books for 10 euro from their awesome discount section! They also have an entire enormous second floor filled with used books – including a few whole bookcases full of old Penguin titles. We also learned we could leave our books at the information counter and pick them up later – we were thrilled we didn’t have to lug them around in the rain!

capel street Next, we strolled all the way down Capel Street (pronounced like you’d say cape, with an l at the end). Capel Street is one of my favorites in Dublin – it’s not as wide as most of the shopping streets in Dublin, and the buildings are narrow and painted fun colors. We weren’t quite hungry yet, but Musashi is supposed to do delicious sushi. And J. McNeill’s is a pub and music store all in one – and often has live music playing! Capel Street actually has quite a few music stores, if that’s your thing.

street corner Any wall space that’s vacant is usually taken up with posters for shows, gigs or protests. I love the look of those layered posters. Perhaps some design inspiration?

scooters On the day we were out, there was an antique scooter parade rallying by in aid of a local hospice. It filled the air with that smell that only comes from scooters and reminded me of our time in the south of Spain. Michael lived on a hill and had a scooter that was so old it would only make it up the hill if he got a very long running start. When I rode with him, I always had to hop off at the bottom of the hill and walk the rest of the way up!

nothing happens until you We came upon this utility box that had been painted in beautiful bright colors. So far as we can tell, an artist and the Dublin City Council got together and decided to try sprucing up some otherwise dull utility boxes. How fun would it be to have more artwork like this around the city?!

make it happen By that point, all we were going to make happen was getting warm and cosy. So we tried out the Black Sheep, a gastropub that specializes in craft beers and delicious food. It also has a good stack of board games in the corner. We browsed a few boxes (my sister-in-law Angie loves her some board games), and returned a few weeks later with a whole gaggle of friends to play this new favorite, 30 Seconds. It’s like a cross between Taboo and Catch Phrase, but the coolest part is that it’s Irish! A lot of the questions are international, but a good few of the clues are Irish. We decided it should be required playing in order to get your citizenship!

black sheep We very much enjoyed the Black Sheep, although we were so hungry we munched our late afternoon lunch (sandwich + soup + chunky chips for only €10)  before I could snap up any proof. In addition to craft beer, they also serve yummy coffee in a pretty cosy atmosphere – and it wasn’t too crowded, even for a Saturday afternoon!

We had grand plans of exploring a little more, but our cold hands got the better of us. So we’re going to divide the North side into another bit of exploring along the quays (pronounced keys!), and even unite it with the South side and explore that side of the Liffey as well!

Returning to Vietnam, Forty-one Years Later

March 19, 2013

mackenzie

{Image by Cal Mackenzie}

Last night as I was getting ready for bed, I clicked into a story shared on Facebook by Colby College, where Michael and I went to school. It was a story my dad had mentioned he was working on (he’s the managing editor of the college alumni magazine), but I hadn’t seen the finished piece yet. I read the words several times over, even reading parts out loud to Michael, tears rolling down my cheeks.

The piece is a beautiful essay written by Cal Mackenzie, the professor who inspired me to go into government. I had the pleasure and the privilege of working as his research assistant for two years, and I still joke that I wouldn’t mind spending another few years fact-finding in the basement of the library for another one of his books. I learned so much during that time.

Cal has been a professor at Colby for more than thirty years, but in 1969 he was drafted and served in Vietnam. This past year, he and his wife, Sally, both received Fulbright scholarships to go back to Vietnam. For Colby magazine, he wrote an essay about the experience of returning, sharing feelings I’ve wondered about but wasn’t bold enough to ask. Cal also shared some of the incredible photos he took while he was there. Here are a few excerpts from his essay, which you can read in full here.

The bus ride on Sept. 4, 1969, is spectacularly clear in my mind. Earlier that morning about a dozen of us – all draftees – had been inducted into the Army, and we were on our way to Ft. Dix for basic training.

What did you talk about with a stranger on the way to war? In those days, you talked about how you ended up on that bus.

All the conversations were about failure to avoid the draft. Couldn’t find a physician to certify an “injury.” Couldn’t get a draft-deferred job. Didn’t have any political connections to get into the National Guard. Failed a course and lost a student deferment.

Not then, nor in any of the time I spent in the Army or in Vietnam, did I meet a single person who had gone to war because he believed in the administration’s policy or because he felt the Viet Cong were a genuine threat to American freedom. Maybe such people existed and simply escaped my acquaintance. In the rare moments when we tried to put a noble face on what we were doing, we spoke of “fighting for our country.” Politicians might say those words with a straight face; the grunts couldn’t.

***

I left Vietnam, but Vietnam never left me. As the years passed, the hope grew that I might find a way to return. In 2011 I applied to be a Fulbright professor in VIetnam. On my application, I wrote:

Forty years ago, I was drafted into a war I did not support and sent to fight an enemy I did not hate. Yet, in the midst of the agonies of war, I came to develop a deep affection for the ingenuity and endurance of the Vietnamese people and for the powerful beauty of their country. Those feelings have never dimmed. I would like to return now, unarmed and unashamed, on a more positive mission: to help the people of Vietnam in every way my skills and experience will permit. I look forward to this, not as a guilt trip, but as the most important opportunity I will ever have to right the balance sheet of my life.

Finally, this is an excerpt from his last letter home before he returned to America in 1971 (to a one-year-old son he had never met):

I had hoped to be young forever, to live in the brightness of unstinting optimism, to know that things would always work out. But now I’m afraid that I’ll leave my youth behind me here. You cannot watch all these young men slowly losing their sanity and not knowing it. You cannot see the same stumbling, inept mistakes made over and over again by fools. You cannot smell the smell and see the dark sights of death without losing a very valuable part of your youth in the process. … I will come home and I will be older in so many ways, and you will sense that.

War, as something more than the abstract, is something we so rarely talk about, especially with people who actually fought. It’s hard to imagine what the extent of the fear and loneliness and homesickness was like for hundreds of thousands of men and boys – men and boys who, for the most part, returned to normal life and rarely speak about that time in their lives. An essay like this is such a powerful and heart-breaking reminder of the strength and stoicism that so often goes unseen.

You can see more of Cal’s photos from Vietnam here and read the full essay from Colby magazine here.

Friday Finds

March 15, 2013

nothing happens until you

Happy Friday, friends! Did you have a nice week? Dublin was still really chilly this week, but we did have a few days of bright sunshine that made all the difference. Although as I’m typing this, the sunshine has quickly disappeared and it’s bucketing down hailstones. Such is the Irish weather!

This week was filled with a bunch of interviews for a freelance piece I’m writing about Dublin for a German home magazine. I get to ask a bunch of creative folks their recommendations for visitors coming to Dublin, and of course now I have a whole new list of spots I can’t believe I’ve never tried!

Next week, I have a brand new One Day in Dublin post I can’t wait to share with you, along with a new Home Office post on tips, tricks, and resources for working from home, as well as a new Creative Lives podcast! I hope you have a wonderful weekend and enjoy St. Patrick’s Day!

Now, some links.

A beautiful poem about letting go of the stuff in our lives – in the least preachy way possible.

The daily routines of writers.

Heard of New York’s High Line park? Meet the Low Line.

A campaign to name one of Dublin’s thirteen (!) bridges after a woman.

The photographers behind famous photos.

Loved these DIY gold foil tumblers.

A little inspiration for those who aren’t sure yet what they’re meant to be when they grow up.

And if you subscribe to the Design*Sponge newsletter, you might see a familiar face in this week’s email!

Quickie DIY / St. Patrick’s Day Vases

March 13, 2013

paddys day vases 4

I have a really difficult time throwing away or recycling anything that looks like it might ever be useful for a craft project. Jars, tins, canisters, really anything that falls into that category is bound to end up in my studio instead of the trash can. This project is perfect for putting that stash to use – which is, in turn, helpful for justifying the stash in the first place! Come to think of it, this project is also really helpful for putting to use my stash of paper scraps and ribbon bits. I suppose you could really call this DIY a recycling project!

paddys day vase tiny

 

You can find the (incredibly simple) instructions over on the UmbaBox blog today.

Fun fact – those shamrocks came straight out of my front garden! They’re all over the place here!

Me, Elsewhere: Design*Sponge Dublin City Guide

March 13, 2013

dublincityguide

 

The Design*Sponge Dublin City guide I wrote a few years ago desperately needed an update. It’s amazing how many things have changed here in the last couple of years – lots of great new places to explore if you come to visit or if you’re a local doing a little exploring. So I did an update! You can find it here.

You know what was the toughest part? Narrowing it down. The guide could have easily been three times the size, what with all the awesomeness around Dublin. But I’ll just have to keep feeding you those bits here on From China Village!

Creative Lives Podcast / Tom Rowley of StoryMap

March 12, 2013

This week’s Creative Lives podcast features Tom Rowley, one of the founders of Storymap, the lovely map of Dublin that’s filled with stories told by Dubliners. Tom and I chat about how he and Andy Flaherty came to start Storymap two years ago. He also shares a few of his favorite stories from the map, as well as challenges they’ve encountered along the way.

Creative Lives is now on iTunes, but it might take a day or so for this episode to get there! I’m still working out the kinks with this podcasting business – it’s so fun but involves a surprising amount of technology-tweaking!

Missed the first Creative Lives episode? Check it out here!