Image from Southern LivingDid you know you can buy camellias, and other trees, from the Arbor Day Foundation and have them shipped right to you?
Image from Southern Living
Image of Sam Spiegel's New Year's Eve Party via All Posters.
Champagne cocktails, enough said. Need a little libation inspiration?Source: divinepartyconcepts.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: greenweddingshoes.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: marthastewart.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: marthastewart.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: divinepartyconcepts.com via Ann on Pinterest
The Biltmore Gym, better in person. And a wood rowing machine just like I remember my uncle having. sourceSource: habituallychic.blogspot.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: habituallychic.blogspot.com via Ann on Pinterest
I have an on again, off again relationship with yoga. Our latest stint together was Bikram, daily however presently we're on a break; it was just suffocating. I've practiced in a lot of studios but my favorite is a little hatha outside. When we lived on the ocean, I practiced in the morning on the beach before the neighbors were up to see me and giggle. I didn't mind that place so much!Source: alifesdesign.blogspot.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: google.com via Karen Beth on Pinterest




Yes, even her freezer is organized. I know.






Images from All Posters.com
"Weir’s portrayal of St. Nicholas was inspired in part by the descriptions of a fellow Knickerbocker, Washington Irving, the celebrated author of “Rip Van Winkle” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” Irving’s A History of New York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty, published on St. Nicholas Day, December 6, 1809, was replete with charming digressions. Among them was a set piece on the saint, portraying him as an elfin, antic figure, his appearance drawn from the ranks of the Dutch bourgeoisie. Smoking a clay pipe and “laying his finger beside his nose,” Irving wrote, St. Nicholas soars over trees in a flying wagon “wherein he brings his yearly presents to children.” Irving also advanced the notion that the saint descended into chimneys to bestow his treats."
And the gorgeous after:
Images belong to Aesthetic Oiseau




These are images are scanned by me from the book and are credited to Elizabeth Hilliard, 2001. Apologies for the lack of scan quality...





Source: habituallychic.blogspot.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: habituallychic.blogspot.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: conspicuousstyle.com via Ann on Pinterest
Source: conspicuousstyle.com via Ann on Pinterest
I know, you are probably thinking, "what design-minded person does not know of her?!" Well, I first learned of her work in the early 90's. From my mother. Who liked her clothes. That's right, I knew of her as a clothes designer, first.
While her fashion firm was short-lived, her tastes are timeless. I've been watching her work for a long time and I love her classic sensibilities. Here is a little tour of her own pad via my favorite section of the New York Social Diary.









Image from NYSD, Models of the World