So much nicer than having a real deer’s head on your wall!


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We’ve just added a beautiful 100% silk chiffon scarf to the shop. The print features a biro pen illustration of a stag surrounded by a border of pansies. Floaty soft and a spectrum of dust and slate– it matches with everything!
Get it in the shop now- limited stock!
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3 Petits Points Magazine is a French online zine chronicling the exact strands of illustration, music and design that strike a chord with me. Their photographic collaborations are a refreshing combination of wistful nostalgia and mixed media and have been passed on like hot potatoes throughout the tumblr world.
I had the pleasure of doing an interview with the lovely Isabelle Laydier, the brains behind 3 Petit Points. Unfortunately my French vocab peaked at sandwich fillings in high school so I cannot read the article, but I certainly get a kick out of seeing my ramblings translated into the most romantic language in the world!
Merci Isabelle! x
How adorable is this Socket Deer by Nendo?


Handy for holding your electric stuff while it's charging!
Check out more cool stuff on the Nendo site… x
Spotted this piece on Book of Deer on The Upcoming. Great site for current affairs and pop culture!
I’ve recently discovered Viennese children’s literature illustrator Lisbeth Zwerger. She is renowned for her soft, magical style reminiscent of 19th century English illustrators. Lisbeth was born in Vienna in 1954 where she attended the College of Applied Art. She has interpreted an array of classical texts, folk and fairy tales and won many awards including the prestigious Hans Christian Anderson Medal for illustration in 1990.
The constants in her individualistic style are a minimalist setting, limited colour palette, characters viewed from a middle distance and a pointed use of negative space. I personally adore the dreamy mood she creates in her subtle use of watercolour and tone. Her compositions and lines are so beautiful, that they are works of art in their own right.
Here are some pages from Hans Christian Anderson’s Thumbeline, published in 1988.
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I found this lovely quote from Lisbeth’s interview taken from German weekly magazine Börsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels. When asked what her dream of happiness was, Lisbeth said:
‘Wouldn’t it be nice… to have a lot of time, to be able to hug loved ones again who are no longer with us, to be able to fly, to understand the language of animals, to have picure books sell better, watercolor paper that’s stable, if the summer were longer…’
I wish I could live in Lisbeth’s imagination! x
PONY ANARCHY; An online magazine about creative folk, for creative folk.
