Thom Filicia at Calico Corners

Designer and Emmy winner Thom Filicia will add a dash of wit and style to the new Calico Corners in Glen Mills, Pa., on Wednesday, with a personal appearance and book signing.

thom4Most viewers got to know Filicia as the dashing designer on the cult cable hit Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. Since then, he has been named to the Top 25 design list by Elle Decor and the Top 100 by House Beautiful. He also has written a book, American Beauty, which chronicles his love affair with a fixer-upper in New York’s Finger Lakes. (Tina Fey wrote the forward.)

Filicia, who also designs for Kravet fabrics, will be at the store at Glen Eagles Shopping Center on Route 202 from 6-8 p.m. Shoppers also will have the chance to win a mid-century settee or a gift certificate for $1,000.

Bling at the Biggs Museum

The Biggs Museum of American Art is poised to sparkle at a new event called Biggs Bling, featuring a silent auction of fine antique jewelry, estate jewelry and high-end costume jewelry provided by private donors and event sponsors.

22The fundraiser takes place on Saturday, Oct. 5, 6-9 p.m., at the museum on Federal Street in Dover. The event will feature a silent auction including an outstanding array of fine antique, period jewelry, estate jewelry and high-end costume jewelry provided by private donors and event sponsors.

Drinks and hors d’oeuvres? Of course, including a mashed potato bar. There will be entertainment by the musical ensemble Melomanie and guest performer Jennifer Margaret Barker, who will perform this season’s new works fusing important pieces from the 17th and 18th Centuries and today.

“We are excited to launch Biggs Bling, the first event of its kind in Kent County, which showcases the art of jewelry,” Linda Danko, the museum’s executive director, said in a statement. “Biggs Bling is a great opportunity for women to find that perfect something to add to their jewelry collection – and for men to begin their Christmas shopping – all while supporting the area’s premier museum.”

The event’s Diamond Sponsor is Sayers Jewelers and Gemologists in Smyrna, which is donating several pieces of fine jewelry to the silent auction. Funds raised directly support the Biggs. Tickets are $50 for members and $75 for non-members, available online or by calling (302) 674-2111. Or you can hatch a deal for $36 by buying tickets on DealChicken.

Prince Albert’s tour of the West

02-WFCAlbert-P.69.1154Prince Albert II of Monaco arrives in Cody, Wyoming, today, following in the boot steps of his great, great grandfather, Prince Albert I. The latest Albert is celebrating the 100-year anniversary of Albert I’s legendary hunting trip with William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody and to present the inaugural Camp Monaco Prize, a new scientific research grant supporting biodiversity studies in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

I just returned from a memorable trip to Cody and narrowly missed seeing the prince, thus sparing His Serene Highness a big howdy from all the folks in Philly, hometown of his mother, Princess Grace.

On this trip, Albert II is being hosted by the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, the best darn museum for all things representing the uniquely American West. It’s a wonderful place to explore the largest collection of firearms in the U.S., as well as Native American culture, natural history, art and the colorful life of Buffalo Bill, the most famous man in the world at the turn of the last century. (More on that in a future post.)

03-WFCAlbert_downtown_Cody-P.69.1577In 1913, Albert I was a pioneer of sorts, the first European head of state to visit the United States. He traveled to Wyoming by train, where he joined Buffalo Bill and a group of pals for a two-week game-hunting excursion into the Rocky Mountains near Yellowstone Park.

Three sponsoring institutions – the  Center of the West’s Draper Natural History Museum, the University of Wyoming’s Biodiversity Institute, and the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation-USA – joined together to select the winning proposal for the inaugural Camp Monaco Prize. The project focuses on finding new ways to monitor and safeguard migratory elk in Greater Yellowstone,  knowledge that could benefit other important conservation areas across the globe.

During his visit, Albert II will revisit the hunting camp Albert I and Buffalo Bill set up in 1913, near what is now Yellowstone National Park. He will plant trees, tour the beautiful park and wrap up his stay with a grand soiree on Sept. 21, the Buffalo Bill Center of the West’s annual Patrons Ball.

 

 

White wines from the Italian Alps

tiefenbrunnerweissburgunder_classicThe north of Italy is a wondrous place, with the effortless style and elegance of Italy blended with the impeccable precision and freshness of its Swiss and Austrian neighbors. My husband’s family hails from the Tyrolean region, where both Italian and German are widely spoken. (The Dallabridas, in fact, have cousins named Helmut and Werther, mingled with the Dinos and Daniellas.)

It’s a special place, drenched in sun, with spectacular views of the Dolomites and fertile soil, rich with minerals, that produces  youthfully fresh wines. I was introduced to one of my favorites, made in Trentino’s Alto Adige, here in the U.S.

Tiefenbrunner’s Pinot Blanco 2012 is clear, bright yellow in color, with apple  and floral aromas and a pleasing level of acidity. It has a pleasant, flinty finish that reflects its mountain roots.

Don’t think of it as a summer fresher. Enjoy this lovely white all year ’round. Pinot Blanco is the ideal accompaniment to grilled asparagus, with or without ravioli and butter. (MSRP: $17.99)

 

Grow your own with CityLash

citylash1Think of CityLash serum as Miracle-Gro for your lashes. You apply it to  the base of your lashes (upper lid only, please) and your lashes grow longer. They also don’t fall out as quickly.

CityLash uses potent Myristoyl Pentapeptide-17 as its main active ingredient. In clinical trials, it has been shown to stimulate an increase in lash line growth of at least 54 percent. Some testers experienced results of more than 70 percent.

It also won’t make your blue eyes brown, which is a troublesome side effect of some lash serums.

Brush on twice a day on clean, dry skin at the base of your upper lashes. Allow to dry for several minutes. Then apply makeup, if you wish. When testing the sample provided by CityLash, I found it convenient to apply in the morning and before bedtime.

You can get away with applying CityLash only once a day but it will take longer than the average 42 days to get results. You also can dab a little on thinning spots in your brows.

At the end of the day, you won’t toss your mascara. But you will enjoy lashes that are noticeably longer, thicker and less brittle.

CityLash isn’t tested on animals, and doesn’t contain prostaglandin or paraben, which can damage eyes and skin. But be careful not to get it in your eyes, because it will sting. (MSRP $79.99 for a tube that should last about two and a half months.)

 

Labor Day blowout at Lands’ End

There’s no rest for weary shoppers this Labor Day weekend.

Lands’ End is offering 35% off all new arrivals in its holiday weekend blowout. Yup, the fall fashions, including such seasonal must-haves as cable-knit sweaters and windbreakers.

083013_testThink pin-straight patterned denim pants for mom, classic, no-iron cotton shirts for dad and adorable choices for the little ones, including a leopard-print cardigan that will make little Isabella the envy of first grade.

The before-season sale also means you don’t have to wait until the end of fall to get a deal and have to settle for the colors nobody likes or discover your size is sold out.

Shipping? Not to worry. It’s on the house for orders of $50 or more, after the discount is applied.

If you shop at your favorite brick-and-mortar store you won’t have to wait for the postman. In-store merchandise is marked down 30% across the board.

 

 

 

 

Uncork Savino, a better idea for preserving wine

It’s the end of the evening and there’s still wine in the bottle.

hero-homeHey, it could happen!

So, how to ensure the wine you swooned over on Tuesday is still fit to drink on Friday?

Uncork Savino, an easy-to-use wine preservation system that empowers aficionados of the grape to indulge in their favorite wine without fear the rest of the bottle will turn into plonk.

Featured in Wine & Spirits Magazine, Savino was founded by Scott Taverna, an amateur wine enthusiast who was inspired when he opened his fridge and found a glass of fine wine sitting on the top shelf. His wife said she wanted to save it for later.

Manufactured in the U.S., Savino is the most popular wine-related Kickstarter project to date. It’s durable. It’s easy to use. It has a generous 750ml capacity and fits in most refrigerators. And you can clean it in the dishwasher.

MSRP: $59.95 or two for $99. You can buy it at www.savinowine.com and through premier wine retailers, including the Wine Enthusiast.

 

Nashville’s Belle Meade Plantation

Were I a fabulously wealthy gal in 1853, I’d point my parasol toward Belle Meade, the Greek Revival manse that was the centerpiece of a plantation and stud farm. (Or maybe I’d wait until 1883, when the first two bathrooms were installed on the spacious rear porches.)

UnknownThe mansion motto is: History, Horses, Hospitality. Belle Meade resonates with me because I come from horse folks. My father was a railbird with empty pockets before he figured out he could make more money racing thoroughbreds than betting on them.When Dad was picking up horses in claiming races, he focused on bloodlines, the mounts descended from champions. Belle Meade is the home of Bonnie Scotland, sire of sires, which counts among its descendants Sir Barton, which in 1913 won the first Triple Crown, Secretariat, 1973 Triple Crown winner, and every horse entered in the 2003 Kentucky Derby.

images-1In the grand foyer, there’s a portrait of the big bay stallion and his groom Bob Green, painted in 1875. Green, a former slave, was the highest paid worker on the farm due to his widely admired horse sense and led Grover Cleveland on a tour when the president visited in 1887. (Years later, William Howard Taft visited Belle Meade during his presidency, where the portliest of all U.S. presidents famously got stuck in the bath tub.)

With a wide veranda and six massive limestone columns made from stone quarried on the property, Belle Meade is an impressive house. (There are bullet holes in the columns, souvenirs from the Battle of Nashville in the Civil War, waged, in part on the expansive front lawn.)

The mansion is decorated in period style, changed to reflect upcoming holidays or events, perhaps a Victorian wedding. A few pieces of furniture are from the Harding family, who lived in the mansion until 1903. Guides wear costumes ranging from the requisite hoop skirts to an undertaker’s coal dark suit and stove top hat.

images-2But it isn’t too precious. There aren’t velvet ropes cordoning off rooms. Visitors can literally walk through history, peering at such mementos as inkwells made from the hooves of Iroquois, the Belle Meade great which was the first American-born horse to win the English Derby. No photography is permitted inside the house, but guests can snap away outdoors.

I last visited Belle Meade in 2009. Since then, a winery has been added to the property and guests are invited to a free tasting after their tours.

The grounds include simple gardens, a log cabin, reconstructed slave quarters and a small cemetery. Belle Meade is open seven days a week. Tickets are: $16 for adults; $14 for seniors 65 and older; $10 for students age 13-18; $8 for children age 6-12. Children 5 and younger are admitted free. There also is a special rate of $45 for families with up to six members.

 

The art of Habitat for Humanity

When it’s for a good cause, fine art is especially fine.

In Wilmington, the Office of Cultural Affairs is partnering with Habitat for Humanity of New Castle County for a special exhibit of original art at the Louis L. Redding City/County Building, located at 800 N. French St.

largeAn opening reception for The Annabelle Project — so named for founder Annabelle Kressman — will be held on Friday, Aug. 2, from 5:30 to 8 p.m. during Art on the Town, Wilmington’s monthly first Friday gallery tour.

I was blessed in meeting Annabelle and her husband Hank at First & Central Presbyterian Church in Wilmington, a warm and welcoming congregation committed to the city and its people.

It is natural that Annabelle is passionate about helping people to have beautiful homes because she has long helped women to dress and look their best in her business as a Doncaster fashion stylist.

The art exhibit is comprised of works traditionally for sale at the ReStore, a non-profit business that sells new and used home improvement and renovation supplies. Throughout August, patrons can buy art at Redding, with all proceeds benefitting Habitat.

“This is a wonderful opportunity to invest in original artwork at affordable prices while helping a great cause,” says Jeni Barton, Redding curator.

The Annabelle Project started in 2010, when Annabelle, a board member,  asked friends who were downsizing to donate art they could no longer enjoy to new Habitat homeowners.

Well, who can say no to Annabelle?

In the twinkling of an eye, beautiful pieces of art began arriving daily at Habitat’s administrative office. Habitat homeowners were delighted to have lovely pieces of art to display in their new homes.

The program also introduced many new people to Habitat’s work in New Castle County. The pieces that don’t find a place in Habitat homes are sent to Habitat’s ReStore and sold.

Great art, great cause — and a great start for Habitat families.

 

Sweet sugar scrubs from Metropolis

0We have been binge-watching Orange is the New Black, the Netflix series based on the memoir of a young New Yorker newly sent to prison for smuggling drug money years before.

So how does this naive, narcissistic chick from Brooklyn make friends in the big house? By making a medicinal body lotion for the crusty prison chef, that’s how. After all, what gal behind bars couldn’t use a little pampering?

In the outside world, you can find unique, homemade soaps, body washes and other goodies at Metropolis Soap Co., a boutique artesian bath and body product company founded by Megan Brame-Finkelstein, an entrepreneur based in Brooklyn’s cool Bay Ridge neighborhood. On her A-list of celebrity clients: Whoopi Goldberg, Zooey Deschanel, and Hilary Duff.

0-1The nice folks at Metropolis sent me some samples to test, including their Hibiscus and Ginger Exfoliating Sugar Scrub. (MSRP: $29.99 for a hefty 8.8-ounce tub.) Packed with hydroxy-acids, it is designed improve elasticity of the skin, as well as soothe your stressed out dermis. Like a cup of tea in mid-afternoon, the blend of ginger and orange perks up the senses.

I like to use the grapefruit and mint scrub to exfoliate my hands. It smells fresh and slightly citrusy and leaves my skin feeling soft and supple.

In Orange, the artisan inmate chews hot peppers and spits them into a cup to make a balm. Metropolis products are saliva-free. They also do not contain animal products, sulfates, parabens and synthetics.