Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Preview Brunch for Historic Yellow Springs

It rained like the dickens on Friday night! My husband and I were holding court late night in the upper barn moving around furniture and scrambling to get everything set up for the Sunday Brunch Garden Party Preview benefitting Historic Yellow Springs and the Yellow Springs Art Show. Have you ever been in a tin roofed barn in a major rain storm? You know the sound of raindrops on a tin roof can be kind of calming. I still have memories of being a teenager tucked under the eaves in my bedroom on the 3rd floor of our farmhouse with the rain falling softly on the tin roof...very peaceful. This was nothing like that! It was raining so hard and the wind was blowing the rain in every direction causing it to enter into the barn in places that I did not know existed. We scrambled around, sheets of plastic in hand to cover everything we had painstakingly set up.

By morning, the clouds were clearing, the sun was making an appearance and aside from being a little chilly (okay very cold by April's standards with frost warnings) it was setting up to be a beautiful day. 
Why am I talking about the weather you ask? Because I am am a Murphy and Mrs. Murphy/ Veno was hosting an OUTDOOR garden party on Sunday. If I was holding an outdoor party and it had not rained in forty days than the probability of rain on that day would be pretty high.  I had been watching the weather like a hawk and I really wanted a beautiful Spring day to accompany this special event. Looking good so far! Sunday morning arrives and it was dark when I reentered the barn after my cat nap.  I was dressed in seven layers for it was mighty cold but as the day unfurled one layer, and then another and then another were peeled off.  The sun was shining beautifully and the sky was as blue as blue could be with a couple of wispy clouds wafting by to add a little bit of softness. Perfect day for a lovely group of people to come out to support a special place!
(Dodged you this time Murph!)

I set up the bar with old crates, barrels and chests.

Add some wine glasses and tumblers and we were almost all set.

Add some Bloody Mary's, Mimosas and a cute bartender and we ARE all set!
(Thanks honey!)

Hire a tremendously talented cater, Loraine from Loraine Houston Catering in Chester Springs who concocted some delicious morsels...

Chilled Roasted Beet and Orange Soup
Arugula and Creamy Lemon Chicken Salad

Quiona with Grilled Vegetables, Cilantro and Queso Fresco

Top it off with a dessert table loaded with Rosemary Shortbread and Kahlua and Berry Oreos,

a mismatched assortment of china cups and saucers for coffee and tea...(I told you I had a fettish for dishes!)

and you will have a foodie like me thinking she died and went to heaven!
Everything I used to style the party are items that we have available in the barn plus a couple of my own goodies like the teacups from my house. I like to show people how they can use the merchandise that we have for sale. 


Add the people...and I really did feel like I had died and had gone to heaven!



It was wonderful to meet the guests who all were connected by a common bond,  sustaining such a historic place as Yellow Springs Village.
It was a wonderful day, both inside the barn ...

and out!










We hope that you can join us in the barn this weekend for our upcoming sale where a portion of all proceeds will be donated to both Historic Yellow Springs and ECHOES. I will fill you in on what ECHOES does later this week.
Until next time...
Meg




























Thursday, April 18, 2013

Spring Barn Sale & Art Show - FEATURED Artist Brad Earl

Brad Earl

Acrylics & Oils


We are thrilled to highlight some of Brad Earl's Art at the upcoming Spring show! Brad is an architect as well as an artist. His love of architecture is evident in his pastels where his art seems to celebrate buildings such as old wooden coasters, theater facades and iconic places as well as landscapes and cloudscapes.





We are pleased to have Brad join us at Willowbrook Farm for the show!

The Barn will be open as follows:

Friday - 12 - 5 pm
Saturday - 9 - 5 pm
Sunday - 9 - 4 pm 

 For preview photos and updated information follow us on facebook at:


For more information about the Historic Yellow Springs Art Show please click the following link:


Sunday, April 14, 2013

Willowbrook Farm's Connection to Yellow Springs

Have any of you seen the cult classic, The Blob?  It was filmed in the late 1950's in a town near us called Phoenixville. In fact, the Colonial Theatre, site of the famous scene where people ran out of the theatre helter skelter being chased by a gluttonous Blob, still holds an Annual Blob Festival every summer. I have never experienced the festivities but our house has quite a connection to that movie which starred a very young and handsome Steve Mc Queen. 


The  Blob's producer was a man by the name of Irvin Shortress "Shorty" Yeaworth Jr. who lived at Willowbrook Farm in the 1970's and 80's where he entertained a number of celebrities. (Keith Richards being one of them who was, let's say "drying out" in an upstairs 3rd floor bedroom for a lengthy period of time. ) Shorty, as he was affectionately known, moved here from the Village of Yellow Springs, which is about a 15 minutes drive away. Shorty headquartered Good News Productions, Shorty's film studio in the village which created over four hundred films between the years 1952 and 1974.


Here is a painting that was done for Shorty that is now housed in the Historic Yellow Springs Offices. It depicts the property and names the structures and what they were used for. The Village of Yellow Springs has an incredibly interesting history which spans nearly 300 years. In the 18th Century it was a fashionable spa village that attracted visitors for its healing waters.  George Washington commissioned a hospital to be built in the village during the American Revolution which became the first Military Hospital in North America. It reverted back to a spa town again in the early 19th Century.

From 1868-1912 the Chester Springs Soldiers' Orphan School for children of Civil War Soldiers operated in the Village. The village was then purchased by the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and from 1916-1952, it served as the Academy's Fine Arts Country Day School. Shorty purchased the village in 1952 and lived there with his family, film crew, parents and other employees for over 20 years. It was a communal living experience and from here he produced films that spread the "Good News" of his Christian faith. He produced other films as well, his most well known, being The Blob.

I had known about the connection of the Village of Yellow Springs to Shorty Yeaworth and Willowbrook Farm. When looking for an organization to benefit during our upcoming Spring Sale and Show for Life's Patina, it was this connection that made me approach the Yellow Springs Art Show. The Art Show is a well known show in our area that shows the artwork of over 175 juried artists. During my history tour through the village, a large farmhouse table caught my eye. As I commented on it, I took a better look and realized that it was exactly the same as a farmhouse table that we found in the barn upon moving into Willowbrook Farm! I learned that the table had been used in the Dining Hall during the tenure of the Orphan's School in the village! 


Farm Table housed in the Village of Yellow Springs (in much better condition than mine)


When we found this table in the barn, the legs were experiencing some wood rot and a corner had been broken off. My husband asked if we should bring it to the burn pile and I, who have trouble throwing a plastic baggie out, replied, "Over my dead body!" I had a carpenter cut off the very bottom of the legs and he patched in a replacement piece of wood in the corner. The table has since been moved in and out of my house to be used at Christmas, onto the lawn to house a buffet for Graduation parties ( much to the chagrin of my hubby and boys who have to help move the heavy bugger) and it remains a fixed staple in the center of our barn during the Barn Sales. I LOVE that table and I love it even more, now that I know that it must have been brought by Shorty from the village to be used in the same fashion when he lived here at Willowbrook Farm. 


Oh my gosh! I just found another personal connection...when reading this poster again for the Art Show at Yellow Springs, I realized that this years' show is the 40th Anniversary. When we purchased Willowbrook, it happened to be the Vassar Show House (the oldest designer's showhouse in the country) and it was the 40th Anniversary of the Showhouse. I also happened to be celebrating my, ahmmmm....40th Birthday and tickets to the show house were my BD present from a dear friend. Needless to say, that is one big coincidence...or is it??? 

There you have it! Willowbrooks' connection to the Village of Yellow Springs, Shorty Yeaworth, a table and now an Art Show.  We are forging that connection even further by partnering with the Yellow Springs Art Show for the upcoming Spring Barn Sale on April 26-28th. We will be donating a portion of our proceeds from the Barn Sale to the Art Show and Historic Yellow Springs. Two of the Yellow Springs artists will be showing their work here as well as other local artists. Come out to partake in benefitting Yellow Springs, to celebrate art and to see THE TABLE standing at attention (albeit a little lower than usual) in the center of the barn!

To find out more information about Historic Yellow Springs and the Yellow Springs Art Show, check out the following site:
www.yellowsprings.org

Hope to see you next weekend!
Meg



Thursday, April 11, 2013

Spring Barn Sale & Art Show - FEATURED Artist - Helena van Emmerik-Finn

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Helena van Emmerik – Finn

Pastel Artist


Each one of our Barn Sales and Shows has a theme. I am wild for themes and our upcoming Spring Sale is no different, which is entitled Artisans and Their Works. Along with our unique selection of furniture, home decor objects and gifts will be an impressive showing of art in a variety of mediums. A portion of the proceeds from the Spring Sale will benefit both the Yellow Springs Art Show and ECHOES. Both of which I will feature in subsequent blogs. Below you will find a Brief Bio and some samples of work from Pastel Artist Helena van Emmerik-Finn who we are delighted to have join us in the Barn! 

  

    Helena’s family emigrated from Holland a few weeks before she was born and settled in upper Bucks County. She attended the Philadelphia College of Art where she studied graphic design, photography and film-making. After college, Helena traveled extensively, including back-packing and youth-hostelling through Europe, North Africa and India. She now lives in Buckingham, Bucks County with her husband, Bob.

   She enjoys the medium of pastel because it gives her the freedom to work with strong colors in a spontaneous, intuitive style, and with the immediacy of a bold, impressionist application. Her landscapes range from local scenes to depictions of her many travels.

Lemon Cafe - Pompeii

Still Life with Delft

Venetian Balcony


Visit Helena's website at www.hvefinn.com for a list galleries showing her work and upcoming shows.  We are thrilled to have her join us at Willowbrook farm for the show!

The Barn will be open as follows:

Friday - 12 - 5 pm
Saturday - 9 - 5 pm
Sunday - 9 - 4 pm 

 For preview photos and updated information follow us on facebook at:


For more information about the Historic Yellow Springs Art Show please click the following link:



Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Pickin' in Maryland and Virginia!


We scored one piece the first day :(
 Looks like we might not have needed the U Haul!




Pay dirt on day two... only about two feet left in the trailer! Back of the Suburban filled as well!



Trailer partially unloaded...how many days away is it until the Spring Sale???????


Lots of early mornings and late nights will be spent in here for the next couple of weeks!



The challenge is half the fun!


Check back here often as we show our progress or come visit in person now that you have seen the "Before" or the "underbelly" of the sale as I like to call it!

April 26-28th
Meg


Saturday, April 6, 2013

Easter Tablescapes "hopping" with ideas

Problem is...the ideas kept hopping off my intended post due to technical difficulties. So....
better late than never! Here are some of my ideas for our Easter table. You can use some of the ideas and be wonderfully prepared...
for next year!

Here are four different interpretations of a table you could set at home for your Easter celebration. All of them incorporate dishes I have collected over the years, various objects found around the house, and fresh flowers...my favorite!

SPRING TIME IN PARIS


Using my favorite color blue!



China teacups make great vases!


My sister gave me these adorable salt and pepper servers. Aren't they cute?

PASTELS


I love pastels in the Spring! 



Pink, blue, pale green and yellow with a touch of purple...love it!


Found these vintage boxes and they are a favorite.


Everything looks special under a glass cloche.

KID'S TABLE


This table was assembled with some of the goodies the kids have been given over the years.


Remember these sets from the 60's?


Found these cute colorful boxes in the Dollar Section at Target. They made great packaging containers for our M and M Pretzel treats!


These sugar Easter eggs I picked up after Easter one year, a couple of years back at a huge discount and they are still beautiful. (I would not eat them...that might be a bad thing.)

BUNNIES IN THE GARDEN


I have amassed quit a collection of Easter decorations over my 26 years of marriage and raising our family. This exercise actually helped me to purge and keep only the special ones, the ones who stir the memories of past Easters.



Now that Easter has passed, it looks like Spring is finally showing a little bit of herself to us. As it unfurls in all its glory, may we take some time to stop and admire its beauty. Go ahead...use the good china and the silver that you got from your wedding and have only used a handful of times. Set a beautiful table when there is no one over for company.
Celebrate! Warmer days are a coming!
Meg