I can’t think of a more festive look than Dovima in this fringed Chanel. The fringe looks like strands of tinsel. The photograph was taken by Cecil Beaton in 1953, but I can see this dress at any contemporary fête.

I can’t think of a more festive look than Dovima in this fringed Chanel. The fringe looks like strands of tinsel. The photograph was taken by Cecil Beaton in 1953, but I can see this dress at any contemporary fête.

I’ve never spent Christmas somewhere warm, or traded a turkey dinner for fish tacos on the beach. But that’s what we’ll be doing this year, and I’m pretty stoked about it. We’re flying out on Christmas day, which is also a first, and landing just in time to catch the sunset. Since having children, traditions are something I think about a lot. As a child, there were so many traditions to look forward to at Christmastime, from carols at midnight, to my giant quilted stocking, to the champagne jelly my Mum used to make. England at Christmastime is magical, and my memories belong in a Hans Christian Anderson novel. I wonder sometimes what my children’s associations with the holiday will be? The Lindt calendar they receive from their grandmother every year? The Panetone they eat on Christmas morning? The fights they have over who gets to place which ornament on what bough? It’s nostalgia that prompts me to gather round the fireplace to send the children’s hand written letters to Father Christmas up the chimney. And while I know that they enjoy such old fashioned traditions, I know that they are as much for me as they are for them, a desire to connect with my own childhood. Children don’t care whether it’s turkey or tacos, a Balsam tree or a Palm tree. The magic of Christmas prevails regardless of such details. It’s in the anticipation. It’s in the imagination. It’s in that fleeting belief that maybe, just maybe, reindeers really do fly. So, I can sprinkle my sugar plum fairy dust with the stories I tell, the traditions I pass on, but the real magic, that’s something that children have within them. And that’s what we remember. And that’s what we hold on to.

I went to the AGO yesterday and saw a Picasso from the artist’s blue period. “There are about fifteen shades of blue in this painting,” I said to Jason. To say I love the colour blue is an understatement. But not all blues are made equal. I love a Prussian blue, and that glorious lapis colour that appeared on Egyptian tombs. I love the blue that appears on shutters in the Cyclades. And the moody, teal blue of Picasso’s famous self portrait. An exhibition of Picasso’s blue period is coming to Toronto in June 2020.

As a child, and teenager, I kept sketchbooks, dozens of them. I’d fill them with drawings and poems, and clippings from theatre or exhibitions I’d seen. I kept matchbooks in there, and cinema stubs and little love notes from my friends. I made collages from fashion magazines like Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar. And scribbled my name in every font you can imagine. When I came across the sketchbooks of British artist, Catherine Cullis this morning, I felt inspired to start keeping my own again. Hers are really lovely to look at, as is her work. Have a look around. Maybe we could all keep sketchbooks, instead of relying so much on our phones.

What a fabulous pair! I love this emerald green fabric –– the pleats are so chic and decadent. It sort of reminds me of lettuce ware, which is also on my wish list. Just imagine eating petit fours off lettuce plates with your derriere firmly planted in these emerald beauties.

I’ve lost my bathing suit. I’ve worn it to every swim for at least four years. That’s a lot of swims. It was navy blue with neon straps. My signature suit. Four people, including Alex the lifeguard, have asked me where my cozzie is. “You’re wearing a new suit, Athena.” It’s not a new suit, but it is new to the community pool. It doesn’t belong there. It belongs on a beach in Cap Ferrat. But no suit feels as good as my Speedo did. It was a second skin. With neon straps. So, now I am on the hunt for a replacement. Shopping for suits in December is a horrible bore. And I’ve learned the hard way that buying suits online is a mistake. I’m considering a red suit. For a change.

If colourful, madcap adornment is your thing, I suggest a scroll through the whimsical world of ceramic artist, Amy Rogers. Her ceramic beads, some intricately glazed, others bold and simple, remind me of the ethnic ones I beaded with as a kid. Except her designs are modern and fresh. Think bold evil eyes –– more surreal than spiritual –– and graphic chandelier earrings. Rogers is having a show at her studio this weekend, the info is on her website.

I’ve thought about my dream guest loo for years. Long time readers will have seen me share many a powder room idea here. Extravagant sinks, fancy wallpaper, gilded mirrors. It’s the room that’s most fun to choose decor for. I kind of love the salmon pink walls here, the marbling in the fabric below the sink, and those fabulous shell sconces.

I’ve not felt well this week, so I’ve not swum, or gone to the studio, or bought fresh flowers, or walked into the woods, or sung a song, or talked with strangers. I haven’t done much at all, actually, outside of writing and watching television and drinking ginger tea. I really do believe that sickness is the body (and mind’s) way of forcing us to slow down and take stock. It started last Thursday with a horrible neck pain that by morning had travelled into my back. “I had to make you uncomfortable otherwise you never would’ve moved.” Forced to break with our routines, shift gears, we are left to examine the reasons we got ill in the first place. So yes, while sickness demands a physical reprieve, it does ask something of the psyche. Which is the whole point. Address the list from the comfort of your sofa. By Monday afternoon, a chest infection had come on that stayed with me all week. Five days horizontal. Anyone who knows me knows that doing nothing is not my forte. “If you can fill the unforgiving minute with sixty seconds’ worth of distance run.” So, I wrote two-dozen Christmas cards and watched the Joan Didion documentary. Next week, I’ll be back to health, and swimming laps and making bowls and racing from one end of the city to the other with three kids and an armful of teacher’s gifts in tow. And what will I have gained from this break in regular programming? How will I have been moved? Sideways? Forward?

And because it’s December, and all the living things are coated in snow, here are some peonies, in my favourite shade. I saw peonies at my local flower shops last week, but resisted the urge. It felt wrong to fill the house with June flowers in December. Besides, it’s the amaryllis’ turn to shine.

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