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Elsie

Not just any vintage car

A Morris Minor

The radical new Morris Minor was unveiled at the 1948 British Motor Show, and was like a dose of adrenaline for a tired and jaded post war Britain. The Moggy’s journey was to become a long and respected one, as quintessentially British as a Victoria sponge, a village fete and moaning about the weather. And I loved them.

Softly coloured with their friendly curves, roomy interior and huge steering wheel, the Morris was the nostlgia I was drawn to from the start.

You either get it or you don’t!

Why do we love the classics? The simple, unadorned designs of vintage cars are in stark contrast to the modern, often complex, styling of contemporary vehicles. Vintage cars often feature elegant and classic styling, often with soft-top models. Classic cars create a feeling of nostlagia for a time when things were simpler, when time was slower and life less complicated.

Looking through family travels with Mopsie, my grandmother and inspiration

In 1990 on my 18th birthday, Marmalade the moggy became my first beloved car. After too many lessons to mention, I was gifted the freedom of the open road in a fabulous 1970 blue Morris 1000; which just also happened to be an ex police car with a zip in the roof.

I had previously coveted my neighbour’s Morris Traveller and various vintage cars I saw in the big garages of parent’s homes at 6th form parties. And now my neighbour and I were two moggies side by side in the street where I grew up, our joint adventures all still ahead. My trusty little Morris drove back and forth from Ashford and Canterbury to Edinburgh for years between Art college and my parent’s home, making good use of its souped up cop-car engine! And only sometimes making use of its vintage A.A badge ! Passengers even signed the visitors book while Bob Dylan, the Stones and Free crooned away on the tape player, courtesy of my favourite ever playlist. Thanks G! I loved Marmalade. She was cool before they were cool. She even had a giant flower on the boot and striped cushions inside. And she smelt delicious. 

She probably once looked like this!

Breaking down was unfortunately part of the fun of a classic car, and one memorable journey saw me towed back from Scotch corner with a busted crankshaft . The epic recovery ended with my vehicle plonked by a huge flatbed lorry round the corner from my flat, the day before a college trip to Paris. 

A week later, on my return, that fateful day in 1991, I received a phone call. The police Wanted me to me to check if my car was still where the recovery lorry had towed it to . Of course it was, I said. 

Only it wasn’t there. 

It was apparently under surveillance near an armed robbery in Carlisle. 

I had so many questions!!! 

I would be contacted I was told by the police , with an update soon. 

However, when the update arrived, it was to tell me that the car had been stolen again . From the police. -You couldn’t make it up!

Add to the mix that my late father had neglected to update the insurance premiums in time; and the result was a never to be seen again little blue morris minor. 

Since then, so many cars have come into my life, a free one ( albeit with mushrooms growing inside!) fancy, eight seater family cars, sporty ones, and latterly a lot of automatic cars , far easier to manoeuvre with dodgy joints. 

But in my heart, my moggy was always alive.  Classic car shows had me asking if I could smell the interior of the beautiful old morris with the tartan picnic blanket. If you know the smell, you’ll understand ! Old engine and leather and something unique . I knew one day I would drive one again . But all I had was the model of my original car that my father had made. 

Fast forward thirty four years. To a road in Devon. Next week, my knee surgery will mean no driving or jaunts for a while. So Allan took me for a drive to Bridport . I shall be the first to admit, it was getting boring in the car. The jelly babies and Radio Two weren’t holding my attention. I didn’t know where we were going or why. After an hour and a half driving I was anticipating having to be very polite in a dull museum, before being driven back home again . 

Finally, we pulled into a private drive and everything seemed to turn into a slow motion movie. 

There in the drive was a friendly man waving. And next to his pretty garden was a soft topped blue Morris Minor. 

I had no idea what was going on, just stood there looking dazed while introductions were made and I realised we were there to view the car. Then asking us to hop in, Peter took the wheel and drove us into Bridport, all the while accompanied by the familiar noises and smells of a moggy on the road. It was marvellous. When we stopped at West Bay, despite not having driven a manual in ten years! It was my turn. Tentatively starting out like the 17 year old It felt like I was again , we set off, Peter repeating gear change instructions (a lot!) while I am sure I would have seen (if I wasn’t concentrating so hard )- onlookers smiling at the wonderful little car I was driving!

Peter, graciously giving up the wheel

A heady mix of overwhelm, fear and thrill!

Next time, I’ll prepare my hair a little more! How wonderful to be behind the wheel of a Morris again after so long

After a lovely tour of the owner and his wife’s beautiful garden and wonderful kinetic sculptures; and over a cup of tea, an exciting plan was hatched. As Manuals were sourced and bits of car were twiddled with, it began to sink in that this was actually happening.

This wasn’t any colour of Moggy, it was soft blue, and the Devon seaside version of the car I had lost so long ago. Spotless and so pretty, with a soft top and oozing curb appeal. Allan had found the car I didn’t know how much I had been missing.

Today I found this hanging in the garage. It was on my wall in St Abbs for years. Keeping the dream alive and I’d stop noticing.

And these cards were in my stationary drawer and fell out of a book 

Soon, our new addition will be lined up on a seafront packed with a picnic where she belongs. I am naming her Elsie. Mopsie, my grandmother’s given name. I think she suits it perfectly. I hope Millie doesn’t mind being re-named. I’d like to think they are the same spirit.

I have been just too excited to eat today, the garage has been cleared and prepared. And now she is here. This will be just the motivation to get my knee exercises done! And plan our trundles around the Devon countryside.

Ok just one turn..

Yes!!

The only song we could have played

Even the teen was happy

Elsie seems right at home already

I have no words to say how overwhelmingly grateful and happy this has made me! Thank you dearest Allan and thank you to Peter for choosing us as her new parents! Thank you too to Peter for the new replica model. A cycle complete, and a package which made me cry!

Mopsie would have most certainly approved of the entire marvellous adventure xx

With love, Liz (and Elsie) at The Beach Hut)

xxxxx

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Dolls house

I just can’t help myself..

This is our new fireplace.

Oh ok then; it isn’t really…

If it’s not the actual walls of the house, there’s another special place that’s getting the treatment too


Although we could comfortably move into this Bloomsbury inspired living room, it might be a bit of a squash.

Because this is a dolls house…

A bookcase filled with books and me on the tv at last!

We all have a project or two by the armchair!!

Love this tiny blue and white tea set

Perfect for the French dresser, with a landscape mural on the kitchen wall

Sink and aga and abstract art!

Hand painted Monet table

Distressed painted chair

Just waiting for a guest or two to drop by.

The Bathroom contains the smallest accessories youve ever seen!

His and hers sink

And a rather spectacular toilet !

Even a dressing area.

Next for the paintbrush is this bedroom set

A dressing table for the coolest lady

Complete with enough perfume for any diva..

Looking forward to seeing how the rest of her room and the other bedrooms evolve.

While we wait, there’s always the basement garden to potter in

As with all gardens, this one is still in bud

A seat on the tiny white iron furniture.

Plants and trees and grassy areas framed by a Rousseau inspired backdrop.

The outside of the house will be finished later. Plus the attic room and bedrooms. There is still plenty of detail to add and that is a lot of daylight hours! A half finished tree will still be there on a rainy day!


.

And until the Autumn, it will be real plants that are tended to. The painted ones can mostly wait while the sun is shining.

With love and all the wonderful details

Liz at the beach hut xx

Blog story posts

Paintbox

One of the most inspirational places I went to when I was at school was Charleston Farmhouse. Charleston Farmhouse is a 16th century property in East Sussex that was transformed by the artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant and their friends. Visiting the house and garden felt like stepping into something familiar and also new and exciting too.

Typical Bloomsbury Style painted border

As soon as they moved in, Bell and Grant began to paint every surface in the farmhouse, transforming it into a living, breathing work of art. Over the following decades, Charleston became a gathering point for some of the 20th century’s most radical artists, writers and thinkers known collectively as the Bloomsbury group. It is where they lived out their progressive social and artistic ideals.

What would our quirky home inspire? ..

There are touches of Bloomsbury inspiration all over our home. Not least in the hall archway, painted in recognizably chalky colours and patterns.


Blended with our Venetian Inspired Hallway

Of course, not everyone can be a fan..

‘Toys and books’ Italian style on the painted wooden door

A few clues as to what hides behind the door…

Although only for those of a certain size

With a big imagination

Before the sunshine became just too tempting to stay indoors any longer;

as many things as possible got a Spring makeover.

All under the watchful gaze of my trusty companion Mabel

Who approved the new mural by hers and Horace’s dog beds. And the new book at the side of the stairs.


Lastly for today, the upper corridor has had a makeover. A little alcove, home to various pets and bookcases until now, has been framed with a hand painted border, edging a blast of bright turquoise which makes the ‘escape to the chateau wallpaper pop!’

This is one of those little corners that could be overlooked but has come to life and now looks much bigger than it is.

And obviously, one’s treasures have to be put somewhere!

Have a wonderful Easter

Love Liz at the Beach Hut xx

Blog story posts, Uncategorized

Marathon

I have a friend who is the same age as me, and she is training for a marathon. Last weekend she won her age group category in a long distance race, regaling its arduous last miles, as myself and my choir buddies listened in awe. 

As I recalled my own school sprinting triumphs and then looked down at my trusty walking sticks; I joked that many of us were living vicariously through our fit friend. There were lots of genuine nods of agreement.

I can’t walk without support, and even then I am in pain most of the time. Another round of Surgery is scheduled this year but it is a fact that arthritis will always be my companion. 

For me it is essential to rest every day, and I probably rattle with the medication I take to keep my pain manageable and my immune system functioning . 

However, I’m also weirdly ok with my lot most of the time. This might not have been the life I planned; but it is my own unique life. And how we perceive what we find on our plate is a choice, as is what to try to change, if we can.

Sometimes life simply stops us in our tracks and our control is gone. The limitations we thought we had were minor compared to a looming new life obstacle.

I have another friend who has been extremely poorly and in hospital for over a year. At times it has felt to him a hopeless situation which would never improve. The strength to sustain good mental health when you and your body are failing to function is terrible and terrifying. It is my belief that his unwillingness to let the bstrds win, and his fight for Scottish independence and his passion has kept his spirit alive and hopefully will prove to the powers that be that he is worth caring for in his own home.  

A positive attitude isn’t always easy. Especially when you don’t hold all the cards. But what I do know is that comparing ourselves to someone else is a dangerous habit . In my own work , as soon as I feel the pressure of having to keep up with the Art world or paint in a certain way or be marketable, I lose my focus. It isn’t enjoyable. I make bad art. The flow simply goes.

When I am still, when I am listening to my inner voice and my own thoughts  and heart I make my Art. I am in my own world and it doesn’t matter who sees it. When I try and be someone else, I take wrong turnings.

This voice is essential listening. Our intuition gets us through the darkest times and tells us to be kind to our authentic selves. This might not always be easy. The world invades our consciousness every time we pick up a mobile. There are so many options and reasons to feel like a failure. Why bother? Sometimes the more we learn, the less we feel we know.

I’ve done enough running to last a lifetime

Trust in my instincts has got me through the worst of times in my life, having a stubborn kernel of inner strength which kind of knew which way to go, even if it didn’t make sense. Thirteen years ago I walked away from a 13 room house with my tiny child and a carrier bag. It wasn’t safe for us. 

Without family I had no choice but to keep the faith in my own ability as a mum to get on with it. I couldn’t waste energy envying those big houses and big lives because despite having had all that myself; those material things and the good health of the young is never assured. I put my superwoman pants on. I fed my Art after she was in bed.  

Nobody knows what anyone else’s life is really like behind their door. We imagine that being a faster, healthier, richer, better- at painting water colours, -thinner, more recognised -online version of ourselves will make us fuller and more complete.

Only. We’ve only truly got right now. And the cards we hold in our hand.

The freedom to choose each tiny step is worth more than a thousand possessions. Our vitality isn’t limited to our mobility level and no matter how long it takes, we can get to our own finish line. One step at a time.

From that carrier bag grew a future, which evolved and changed, gathering friendships, possessions, home decor, oodles of creativity, various animals and a partner. (as well as r.a !)

Focusing on the positive and having a bit of crazy mix of patience and spontaneity has gets us all through life. Below is a little write up of our local Art group in the paper.

 

Recognition is important and wonderful. Celebrating success and sharing Artwork with the world. However, personal success isn’t simply who knows about you when you’re gone, or whether you’ve gone viral: success is how we see who we are right now, recognition of our own hard climbed mountain,s and the steps we have taken towards truly and bravely being free.

Picture by Julie

We are now properly home, seeing the rewards of our labours and filling it with good people. If you had told me how many steps Id have had to take to get here; would I have even begun?!!!

My health hasn’t been so great this year. Something I try to ignore, but am forced to admit defeat to occasionally. My strategy appears to be run as fast as I can, doing all I can in case tomorrow won’t let me. And on those days, when the world carries on running, and I’m on the blocks still; I can still see that none of this existed a year ago.

Walking alone was never going to work for me. I like to create environments that spark joy. To inspire others we must let go of who we think we should be and set our own pace. Letting go of what isn’t working for us and our bodies any more. I am inspired by every single one of my friends and the creativity that blooms in the Art and craft groups. One of the reasons they are so magical, is that each participant holds each other up to the light without blocking it. Everyone gets to shine.

Be proud of how you move along. Slow and steady wins the race. But the view is what we came for xxx

Have a wonderful day

Love liz at the Beach Hut xx

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Wintering

A friend told me she was feeling guilty. She wasn’t her usual upbeat self. Her mojo was gone. She picked up her phone, and put it back down again. Where were her words?

Not just me then!

Do you ever feel like you’re battling on with the traffic on life’s motorway, overtaking disasters, avoiding cliffs, racing to each destination, without allowing yourself to take a break on a b road? Or even admit how some of the drivers around you make your journey even harder; whizzing past the obvious signs to get off the highway because everybody is just going too fast, missing all the interesting places on the way?

Winter has always taken me by surprise . There I am pottering about in a new term , enjoying a ‘warm- fuzzy- apple- in- the- satchel- glow’ of a September morning, another birthday and enjoying the fruits of several trips to the garden centre… when, wham! – its nearly Christmas and I can’t get my hips to co-operate.

Six months has gone past in the blink of an eye . Life has gone on around us, but there were also big changes to contend with this year, and unexpected loss. Life events and consequences threw us off track but we had to keep driving.

Months have passed since my last post. on here. During that time, I lost my brother very suddenly , and supported my family with mental health and changes. Time has moved so fast but also seemed to come to a halt at times. Sometimes real life felt it would be just around the corner…

Memory Garden for David

When those you love struggle. And keep struggling, it’s your struggle too. 

When our bodies let us down,  and winter starts to bite, creative and emotional fuel can become scarce. It can feel as if we hold the world together with our minds, feeding those under our rooves with not just hot food but patience and constant prayers.

It can be so easy to become isolated. For me, a real life social network beats aimlessly scrolling anytime ! Looking back over the last months; from time spent with family, lots and lots of singing, including the Edinburgh festival with Rock choir, concerts with choir 86, a new cosy craft club at the house and our ever expanding Art group in Highweek (also still exhibiting online every week with our Coldingham Art friends on the Seasparkle gallery, ) we have been fortunate to spend time with fantastic people. Thankyou! You are the best therapy !

My new years resolution is to stop apologising . Which translates as giving myself the credit I would naturally give others. Like you I am my harshest critic . If I struggle with a task I can usually do with ease, and haven’t accomplished for a while, I send myself spiralling into self destruction. And guilt.

In January’s enforced wintering, when my choices to be outside in the cold are limited, I vow to find permission to deviate. To carve out a warm and calm space to paint and heal, to find my words and let my thoughts trundle on once more.

Reflecting on how much has changed in our studio and Art classes, how our home and garden has continued to evolve with painted furniture, craft groups and interior and outside projects, it feels exciting to sit back and plan for future projects.

Instead of asking why that stack of paintings aren’t finished, why not appreciate all that already is ? And how the ripples of inspiration are growing from each original seed.

Every season’s colour, pattern and essence has a corresponding rhythm. A rhythm in us too. Even at half capacity. Even when we think or bodies have let us down, they are simply gathering themselves. Tenacity and drive get us through the shadows. We just need a little reminder sometimes.

My friends

With all my heart I hope you are well . I hope whoever you are wintering with is kind. If you are alone, then even more importantly, be a fabulous companion. I hope you have a few good plans in place for this next year, and that right now you are not in pain, and you are warm. Every year I forget how unwell I feel in the first two months. How the very thought of leaving our home feels scary and at times, insurmountable. How the smallest task some days can be exhausting. How spring feels so so far away, and I am at the mercy of a good weather forecast and a good night’s sleep.

Even warriors get tired. Fairies flail. Seasons affect our disorders. We feel 100% human despite our superhuman efforts. We need recovery, hibernation, tea, pyjamas. Pain killers.  Without the support of my friends at events or in classes, or at home, life would be a very different challenge. Be honest with people. You might find that you bring just as much to their table.

Easier said than done .

We hold up the world ! We fire fight and wrestle dragons, we ignore disease and illness. We are last on our own lists. 

We are women. ( Or men ) Or parents, sons or daughters or teachers or carers. There isn’t time for illness and we must keep producing things to prove we exist. And keep smiling at the same time. 

I resent being the sick version of me. But I am coming to know her. She balances her days differently, but as long as she doesn’t give up, there is merit in her smaller actions, purpose in her consistent creations and patience in her unforgiving bones. She’s pacing herself because soon there will be a sunny day. Somehow the laundry gets done, people eat, presents are found, hugs are given. Not least to those who are slightly more furry in their ways. Constant companions and quite handy for napping with.

Perhaps your engine has been running on empty, but quietly you still move forward; fuelled by the desire to motivate someone struggling, as well as to keep building the big picture that drives you. I know what it feels like to crave calm. And time in the bath without interruption, a day without pain, a night without worry.

Even if you feel unseen, believe that your accomplishments lie in the consistency of your quiet love and kindness, to yourself as much as to those you love.

Every brush stroke is part of the picture.

While we imagine what our lives looks like, in reality, it’s busy doing it’s own thing, swayed by mostly things we can’t control. We aren’t who we imagine people see. We are the habits and patterns we adopt. The things we say, the way we love, the conversations we do or don’t have. Nothing is a given, so we must keep hope alive. embracing not only the new year but who we might become within it. including making scared time for nurturing, pyjama days. We have new shoots to grow, and must be prepared to cut right back on all the outside clatter occasionally , enabling us to flourish even further. 

Because it is only when we pause, that we truly see our best accomplishments.

Happy New Year

All my love, Liz at The Beach Hut xxx

Art, Blog story posts, Uncategorized

Let’s paint

Oops !

A week has just disappeared in a determined burst of creative energy .

and time slipped away in a rainbow

Where was my p.a for all those important decisions?!!

Oh well, best put the best foot forward then …

A new knee might be imminent. And it occurred to me, bending might be tricky, and so numerous painting jobs just had to be done…

From dawn ’til dusk, brushes dipped and swirled and layered their marks.

Repainting shabby corners and battered edges, bumped by puppies and boots; upcycling new treasures found in the recycling shop.

A few gaps for sleeping and eating and cooking for big painty days, big projects and big appetites

Awesome Allan did a fabulous job building our new bookcase, making use of an awkward, half landing corner, which I finished in Farrow and Ball’s smoking room green.

Soon after, and not to be outdone, the bannisters got a freshen -up

As did the kitchen, which as you will all understand was a soup of greasy- teenagery-dog and life back splashes, even after just a year.

And to a little detail… An archway in the hall, printed with diamond chalk paint in musky pink and almost black, accented with a smidge of gold. A little bit Tudory but modern too.

For any younger visitors, a newly painted throne, Bloomsbury style. Acrylic and chalk paint , a touch of gold

Now we need someone that can fit…

Upstairs in the shower room, the mirror has taken on a new design. The theme – men’s vintage pyjamas !

Back to the other bathroom and back to Bloomsbury. A little mirrored cabinet, hand painted in shades of soft grey blues and natural tones.

On the landing, an archway between two sections of corridor, using wood paint and acrylic

And a repaint of the treads and woodwork on the stairs

Which have thankfully withstood a thousand paws and claws

An old lamp upcycled with chalk paint, gold leaf, decoupage papers and marabou

While ornaments shuffled about for their next act,

everyone else stood to attention

Tasks are completed. For today. Everything is shiny once more. I’d like to say I’ll put my brushes away, but you know me….

Let’s get real !!!

Art, Blog story posts, Shop, Teaching and workshops

the beach hut

There was a girl who dreamed of a Beach Hut studio, in a warm place near the sea. Somewhere to teach and write, to plan and create, somewhere to turn ideas into inventions and dreams into magic.

there were lots of beach huts….

But life kept interrupting…

Over the last few months, after many years of creating Art Beach huts in various home locations, this longed for dream has finally come to fruition in our lovely garden here near Newton Abbot, Devon. I am now hoping that perhaps this year, we might finally get to discover parts of Devon outside the recycling centre and d.i.y stores!  

Despite life’s curveballs there has always been teaching, and always been Art.

These hands were never clean

As an Artist, I have painted, drawn, sewn, taught and made things all my life  After a sell out degree show from Edinburgh college of Art, I set up my first Art and Crafts business, Curious Creatures, and exhibited widely in galleries and trade fairs. Returning to university to gain a post graduate in teaching. I became an Art teacher in Secondary schools for 20 years,  and in addition co-ordinated many community groups, organised exhibitions, props for theatre design, taught mental health in Art programmes and supported clients one to one: teaching thousands of individuals from ages 4 to 104. It has been and is, an incredible joy to work with others. It is true to say art was part of every day.

But, just when things begin to grow and evolve, our bodies, our closest ones, or a universal disease, can trip us up on our yellow brick road.

In times of adversity, it has been vital for me to show my daughter that there is always something you can do to stay positive. When the impact of losing my marriage, stepsons and home and being supported by Women’s aid left me with no space, and a three year old, I wrote and made cards, textiles and bags, planning paintings I finished when I created a new home for us. When arthritis impacted on my teaching career, I switched from teaching in schools, to more community based projects, spending more time on my own writing and drawing, finally finishing pieces I’d only got to begin as exemplars for thousands of children! What had begun before I skittered creatively in my marital ivory tower, afraid to make mess; rebloomed into art- into crafts and written work online.

During Covid, when planned exhibitions were closed, and meeting classes was outlawed, I began a collection of Artwork , usually a themed series of subjects. Each painting began as an idea to share with my Art groups on whatsapp, as an exemplar, which everyone joined in with. This has carried on through to the physical classes since lockdown.

A fantastic dialogue began between the Artists at home, some of whom were housebound or unwell. A mini gallery was uploaded every week of completed pieces. Theses galleries are still ongoing, with two Art groups showing their work both in Coldingham, Scotland and Highweek, Devon.  You can see these and all our work on;

Sea Sparkle – Art and Adventures by the Sea

Cards and prints of my originals were created over time of all the new Artwork, building up a vast collection of printed products. Initially these were sold at craft fairs and in a few galleries, but after months of very patient building a website from scratch, it is a pleasure to announce we now have an online shop, selling our vast range of cards and prints.

Between all this, a huge house move took place, merging two homes, a bunch of daft animals and an epic journey from our homes in the Scottish Borders, all the way down to the warmth of Devon; in the hope of a creative, slightly less cruelly painful climate for arthritic joints.

Nothing worthwhile is ever easy. There were inevitable and then ridiculous delays, we stayed in tiny cramped chalets with too many pets, while the house we fell in love with kept looking further from our grip. Snail mail kept us sane and a semblance of normality was upheld with a rigid Art routine once more, with ongoing Art themes and galleries.  We got to be tourists in our temporary town,  but were so desperate to be residents in a place we called home. I missed the friends I’d yet to meet as well as those we’d left behind.

Finally moving into our home was wonderful and overwhelming ! Was this really ours? I think we had grown so used to waiting , it was difficult to just be. But the house and garden needed a lot of t.l.c. and over the next few months, a rainbow of paint and wallpaper, decoupage and planting transformed each corner of the house, and garden; as well as the not so exciting building work and practical jobs. The ground revealed it’s secrets throughout each season. A year has now passed and we now have more of a sense of the house and how she works.

And all these months, my Artwork and business has been a little bit on the back burner, whilst we created our home and recently bought a new puppy into the house! Boxes of prints and cards have littered the spare room and been tripped over endlessly.

On arrival, my studio in the garden, was created in a big old shed, next to the garage. Potentially, this was a wonderful room and great for making a mess. Art materials, books, projects for classes- this was the ideal space to get organised. However, the damp wasn’t so good for Artwork, and several paintings have been lost to mould. The reeves are home to nesting birds and the floors to spiders.  

So, last Autumn, superhero Allan began the monumental task of building and putting together my new studio. Like a giant Ikea flatpack with a million pieces, he laboured for weeks hammering and sawing, endlessly having to contact the suppliers with product problems.  

With a little help from Pete!

While juggling the house chores, a not very straightforward teenager, a playful and leaking puppy, and still attempting to stay creative: whilst not getting paint on the carpet ! I have to admit to gazing wistfully at the project slowly being built, and probably grinding my teeth more than usual.

But time does pass, things do change, puppies get less leaky, and exciting things happen like the channels being dug for the electricity in the studio. And a floor being put in, and a decking being made. I was finally able to get my garden paints out and colour the outside walls and box things up inside the house.  

And slowly, a building started taking shape.

I painted furniture discovered in the local recycling centre

Until it actually became real.

One day, after the building had belonged to builders, the laps of Gods and their tools, it belonged to me. Chairs and storage were delivered, the walls and dusty furniture began to be transformed. Days and days spent working on layers of paint inside and outside the new space creating it’s character and mood.

Before the huge task began to organise all the stock and where it might fit!.

Into a calm and spacious cool studio

There is a wonderful sense of achievement stepping inside this room. Not only have we created a warm, dry space which is calm and welcoming, and somewhere to see what all that has been achieved; but it is also a testimony to patience and faith. Thankyou to Allan for his boundless commitment to the build, and his time and energy in making this happen.  

Our first guests popped in to celebrate on our newly painted chairs!

Hope to see you for a visit soon too!

All our prints and cards are available directly from the shop

( email lizatthebeachhut@yahoo.co.uk to plan a visit )

or shop online

lizatthebeachhut.shop | online art print store (lizatthebeachhutshop.com)

Just bring the sunshine with you !

With love and continued gratitude,

Liz at the Beach Hut xxx

Blog story posts, Uncategorized

Come dine

Autumn is coming and we crave a space to read and think and dream

Only…….. That might take a little lateral thinking! In a dining room which has been a storage corridor since we moved in.

Although not everything in the house is ancient,

We had feeling that there was a pretty nice slate floor under the years of carpet goo and dirt.

Our lovely tiler Tom worked his way through several types of solvent, patiently scraping, pouring and scouring

Eventually using a solution of very hot water and steam to bring out the patina of the stone. These old quarry tiles are a beautifully random jigsaw puzzle and form the oldest floor in the house.

And finally, our neighbour helped bring some furniture in enabling our garage to start to breathe a sigh of relief!

Some pleasures are so simple!

Oh bowls how I’ve missed you!

It felt amazing to finally see the space as a room at last, with no boxes to trip over

What was once an old kitchen or maybe an entrance hall suddenly started to look like a dining room.

Initially furniture needed to settle, to see how the room would be used. It was felt that the amount of dark furniture overwhelmed the space and two huge leather reading chairs, unfortunately didn’t quite fit in the nook.

Old and new Autumn colours and Textures

Although in the evening, dark spaces can be cosy and warm, we needed more light in the room.

Permission to paint!

Some lighter furniture bounces the light in the space now.

Our little Book nook

The oldest books have found their ideal bookshelves .

Now, just to find a moment to read them all … ❤️