Friday Five

Been doin’ a lot of reading lately…Here are my five new favorite blogs!

5. Bham Built

Image

Join Bham writer and photographer Jessica Wyrick as she blogs about restoring an old Victorian home in the Woodlawn neighborhood of Birmingham, Alabama. http://bhambuilt.com/

4. The Broken Plow Blog

Image

Married couple in Southern Indiana blog about their adventures living on a small farm. Their site has beautiful photography and they give great gardening and canning tips. http://www.brokenplowblog.com/

3. What I Wore

what i wore

image via What I Wore

Fresh personal style blog by Jessica Quirk, former fashion designer turned blogger. She incorporates a wonderful mix of vintage, new, bargain buys, and diy fashion and accessories in her posts. PS she lives in Bloomington- found her blog via A.Z. Vintage– on of my favorite shops downtown.

2. Salted & Styled

phickles

image via Salted & Styled

Each week the blog features one food item and it’s muse. I came across the blog because they featured fellow Athenian Angie Tillman of Phickles Pickles. I love her! Beautiful styling and photography; I especially love the floral design posts. http://www.saltedandstyled.com/

 

1. Beauty Everyday

Image
images via beauty everyday

Blog created by three Athens, GA artists that documents southern beauty, textures, seasonal southern food, and regional architecture. I’ve followed this one for a while but now that I’m a southern expat, I find I check it more often to get my Southern fix. P.S. Beauty Everyday just came out with a book too- stunning. http://beautyeveryday.com/

Friday Five #13

We’re almost moved in and I’m ready to explore corn country! Here are my top five things to see or do in Indiana.

5. Mrs. Wick’s Pies Shop and Restaurant

pies

image via Trip Advisor

I’ve been reading that the Sugar Cream Pie is the one to get. Not sure what it is exactly but sounds pretty delicious.

4. Indiana Balloon Festival

balloon fest

image via tripadvisor

3. Apple Picking

apple picking

image via moderndomesticdiva.com

I’m a sucker for pick-your-own farms.

2. Tour Columbus, Indiana

columbus, indiana

image via npr

columbus, indiana

image via npr

henry moore

image via npr

“Columbus, Ind., looks like any other small town, with its small shops and restaurants. But what sets this town apart is its architecture. The Modernist buildings — mostly geometric and made of glass and steel — are not immediately visible, interspersed as they are with old, 19th-century, gingerbread-like structures; but more than 60 public buildings in Columbus have been built by a veritable who’s who of modern masters — I.M. Pei, Eero and Eliel Saarinen, Cesar Pelli, Richard Meier, Harry Weese, Robert Venturi and James Polshek, to name a few.” – NPR Article

1. Shipshewana Flea Market

shipshewana

image via Fred and Wilma’s Adventures

The Largest Flea Market in the Midwest. Need I say more?

Happy Friday y’all!

Friday Five #10

It’s National Ice Cream Month people so here are a few of my favorite scoops.

Image

5. Working Cow– Florida

Image

Fav Flavor-Cappucino kahlua. Cappa Kahlua with sweet chocolate chips, and a chocolate swirl blended into our natural coffee flavored ice cream….Oh Yea

4. King of Pops– Atlanta/Athens, Georgia

king of pops

via Bon Appetit

Not technically ice cream but DELICIOUS! Chocolate Sea Salt and Coconut Lemongrass are my late night vices.

3. Honeysuckle Gelato– Atlanta, Georgia

honeysuckle gelato

All of their flavors are incredible but the Mango-Peach blew my mind.

2. Hand Spun Milkshake- from an old school soda fountain

milkshake

During our summer vacation, my grandmother loved to treat us to a milk shake from the old soda fountain Gilcrist in Mountain Brook Village. Chocolate of course.

1. High Road Craft Ice Cream

ImageI first discovered High Road at Heirloom Cafe in Athens, Georgia. I saw them again at Food Blog South in January…yes it was freezing outside but sample cups of Aztec Chocolate and Vanilla Fleur de Sel seemed like a necessity at the time. To my surprise and delight they were featured at the first Southern C Summit event on Jekyll Island at the oceanside beach luncheon. I have loved every flavor I’ve tried from them and can’t wait to see what flavors they create next! Fav High Road Flavor so far- Sweet Pea and Mint Sorbet. So unbelievably refreshing, sweet, and herbal- makes the perfect ending to a summer meal.

Friday Five #9

The strawberry scones I made yesterday got me thinking about bakeries…here are my current top five in the South!

5. Savages Bakery– Homewood, Alabama

savages bakery

Image via Savages Bakery

Good ole fashion bakery and deli in downtown Homewood, Alabama. This made by hand, family owned establishment has been a community staple since 1939.  I grew up going to Savages as a child and ate many a smiley face sugar cookie.

4. Sucre– New Orleans, Louisiana

sucre

image via Sucre

Bakery, chocolate shop, ice cream parlor….Sucre has it all.  If you are shopping on Magazine Street, it is the perfect pit stop for a caffeine and sugar buzz!

3. Mammy’s Cupboard– Natchez, Mississippi

mammys cupboard

Not your traditional bakery but a lunch spot that makes their own bread and desserts so I figured it counts.  They have the most insane lemon “mile-high” meringue pie! They also have homemade blueberry lemonade- it is so yum.

2. Ike and Jane– Athens, Georgia

ike and jane

Image via Ike and Jane

The. Best. Donuts. Actually everything they make is freaking delicious. Thank goodness I don’t live down the street from here.

1. Continental Bakery– Birmingham, Alabama

Continental Bakery

Image via Continental Bakery

Just looking at this photo makes me giddy. This place is my all time favorite- A little slice of France in Alabama.  This bakery is a great place to stop in for a quick breakfast or lunch with friends or solo.  If you’re wanting a more substantial meal- head next door to their cafe Chez Lou Lou!

Friday Five #3

emsontheroad

5. Telfair Museum

Telfair Museum

image via Telfair Museums

Since opening its doors to the public in 1880s, the museum has grown from a renovated family mansion into a distinguished cultural institution boasting three architecturally-significant buildings and a permanent collection of approximately 4,000 works of art from America and Europe, dating primarily from the 18th-21st centuries. Located in Savannah’s historic district, the museum consists of the Telfair Academy and the Owens-Thomas House two circa 1820 National Historic Landmark buildings and the contemporary Jepson Center. It is the oldest public art museum in the Southeast.  I’m dying to see the The Art of Seating: 200 Years of American Design.

4. Georgia Museum of Art

GMOA

image via Athens: Life Unleashed

The Georgia Museum of Art opened in 1948 and is the official state museum of art. The museum offers programming for patrons of all ages and free admission to the public for all exhibitions. The museum strives, most of all, to fulfill the legacy of its founder, Alfred Heber Holbrook, and provide art for everyone, removing barriers to accessibility and seeking to foster an open, educational and inspiring environment for students, scholars and the general public. I love the modern building it is housed in now…it makes for an interesting change given the majority of classical style architecture throughout UGA’s campus.

I always enjoy their permenant collection, especially the decorative arts. I’m looking forward to seeing the William H. Johnson exhibit this spring.

William H Johnson

image via GMOA

3. National Gallery of Art

National Gallery of Art

image via Visiting D.C.

Some people might not consider D.C. in the South but technically it is South of the Mason Dixon… I visited Washington D.C. in fifth grade and being the nerdy child I was (and still am), dragged my family to every possible museum I could.  The National Gallery exposed me many artists I had never seen in person…Rothko, Oldenburg, Calder, Lichenstein, Warhol, Matisse and many others.  I remember feeling confused yet ultimately intrigued by the what I saw. In retrospect, my visit to the National Gallery inspired me to seek out/study art.

2. Birmingham Museum of Art

Birmingham Museum of Art

image via Destination Nexus

The Birmingham Museum of Art (BMA) will always be one of my favorites.  I grew up going here when visiting family in Bham and spent countless hours here while in my art history program at Birmingham Southern College.  Their collection of American Art is fabulous, with the portrait of Lady Helen Vincent, Viscountess d’Abernon by John Singer Sargent being one of my favorites.

Birmingham Museum of Art

image via BMA

In 2012, the BMA organized an incredible exhibit entitled The Look of Love: Eye Miniatures from the Skier Collection.  It was the first major exhibition of lover’s eye jewelry.  I was lucky to catch the exhibit while on view at the Georgia Museum of Art.  Stunning.

Look of Love

image via BMA

Here is a little backstory about the lover’s eye jewelry…

Exquisite in craftsmanship, unique in detail, and few in number, lover’s eye miniatures are small-scale portraits of individual eyes set into various forms of jewelry from late 18th- and early 19th-century England. Featuring an impressive 98 pieces, the collection is considered to be the largest of its kind, with only 1,000 lover’s eye miniatures thought to be in existence worldwide. Part of a trend that began with Britain’s Prince of Wales (later George IV), clandestine lovers exchanged these customized tokens depicting one another’s eyes, as such a feature might only be recognized by persons of the most intimate familiarity. Thus, behind the skilled artistry with which each of these tiny portraits was painted, lie the enchanting stories of secret romance and love lost, which inspired the creation of this popular, albeit short-lived fashion.
1. High Museum of Art

High Museum

image via ARTBERKSHIRES

It should come as no surprise that the High Museum is at the top of the list. With an incredible calendar of exhibits throughout the year and an impressive permanent collection, I love visiting The High.  I can’t wait to visit this spring to see Friday & Diego: Passion, Politics, and Painting and Gogo: Nature Transformed.

Frida &Diego

image via High Museum

 

 Happy Friday y’all!

Friday Five #2

Spring is finally beginning to bloom…just in time for Easter.

Friday Five: Favorite Blooms in the South

5. Southern Magnolia

Magnolia

image via American Grove

4. Hydrangea

hydrangeas

image via Southern Living

3. Azalea

Azaleas

image via The Southern C

2. Garden Rose

Garden Rose

image via Better Homes and Gardens

1. Gardenia

Gardenia

image via Southern Living

Have a great weekend!