5.31.2011

on my mind.....

This DIY Chandelier by Jenny from Pearl Street Interiors. WOW.

My upcoming Miami holiday at the Sagamore Hotel (Florida, see ya in less than 5 days!)

How I can’t wait to finish Bossypants while on this vacation (8749387 laugh-out-louds and counting).

(How I'm missing) my beautiful sister (hey to you too, Megs!) who is spending the summer with my fabulous uncles in Province Town, helping them open their just as fabulous market, 141 Bradford. That's her in the office!

....and how this is the solution to almost everything.
xx, kate

5.27.2011


ALL WE CAN DO IS KEEP BREATHING.

massimo vitali






....….just because it’s that kind of day!  So here ya have it: 2 of my favorite things: no1. beautiful, generous, rays of sunlight, and no2. Massimo Vitali’s beachscapes. Are you in love, too?

Happy Memorial Day weekend, everyone.  What are you guys doing?  I’ll be going to Connecticut to visit my family (and my favorite veteran, my grandfather!) – this girl needs a break from the big city.  But urban trials and tribulations aside, something tells me that no matter where I am living (with the exception of say Australia + maybe Russia?), I will always try to best to make it home for this glorious three-day weekend, and sentimental + important holiday.  As Memorial Day weekend marks the pseudo beginning of summer for half of the world, there has always been something very significant about kicking off the season with a fresh start in the town I have always called home – and with the people who make it just that.  So yeah, I’m really looking forward to it.  

Have an awesome, indulgent, lazy weekend, friends!  I hope it’s whatever it needs to be.  ♥ 

attitude memo







































oh em gee....say it ain't so. The weekend is actually almost here!  Woot woot! This week has been, well, the best of times and the worst of times (ok, that's a little dramatic) - so much to look forward to and so many good things going on, but for some reason my attitude keeps flopping back and forth between an all-around elated state of mind, and one of minor discontent.  Discontent, hmm. But for what? (I meaaaan only partially in response to Oprah's farewell week, see: next post, and well, I'll spare you some of my other speculations.) I've just been so.....hot and cold. But nonetheless, when I'm in the threshold of a dipping into a low of this bipolar behavior, this comes to mind: 

"The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life. Attitude to me is more important than facts. It is more important than the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than success, than what other people think, say or do. It is more important than appearance, gift, or skill. It will make or break a company...a church...a home. The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change our past... The only thing we can do is play on the string we have, and that is our attitude.  I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it. And so it is with you... we are in charge of our attitudes." 
- charles r. swindoll

I'll be the first to admit, this isn't always easy. But what other option do we have? 

{image found here}

5.24.2011

holy chic











































heart sunnies: check.  perfect yellow airy blouse: check. original short shorts: check. green woven clutch: check.

confidence: check. coolness: ok, you get it.....
{image gathered here}

the (completely charming) simple life

(









What more could one ever ask for?  Oh, and while I have you here: is that not the most charming, perfect bathroom you've ever seen? ahhh (sounds of frustration) -- remind me again why I live in New York and not the Danish country side? Photography by Stuart McIntyre, and Henriette Willerup and Anton Greiffenberg are the lucky, stylish owners of Vila Else, located on a nature reserve in Denmark.
{spotted here}

5.20.2011

"she lit up our lives"



As you all know, today is May 20th  2011.  What many of you probably don’t know is that my grandmother would have been 78 today—and since it seems you, my lovely friends, have some interest in this blog, ergo me (thx!), you should know that this is the woman who has had the biggest impact on my life as I know it.  My grandmother.  Diane Luke Getman, “Diney.” 

May 25th will mark the 8 year anniversary of her death, which still pains me in a completely natural way – it’s the kind of pain you learn to accept because like all loses, we eventually must.  Sometimes I just miss her so freaking much it makes me upset and sick to my stomach.  But most of the time I just miss her because I wish she was still able to experience this world with me and my mom and her children.  I wish I could hear her signature “hi honey” when she answered the phone, and I wish I could ask her more questions.  I wish I could hold her beautiful hand again.  I think about how she’d be so tickled pink that I work at the D&D Building, and how she would love to pick out fabrics here (I think she’s be especially drawn to Lee Jofa).  I think about how I’d love for her to visit me in the “big city,” because after all, the magical experiences I had visiting New York with my grandparents and sister so many times as a child are a large part of why I moved here.   I wish she could be around to be a mother a while longer for my own mom.  There are so many things “I wish.”  And that’s ok, all of these things only bring a smile to my face when I think about all of the hypothetical situations, places and sweet moments she would enjoy – to me, besides the ways in which she remains a light in all of our hearts, this is how she is still very much alive. 

Diney was born in Troy, New York 78 years ago.  She died in Middletown, Connecticut with my Mom, my uncle Chris and my uncle Shawn in the room by her side.  She was a mother to 4 boys and 2 girls (though their eldest, RT, died when he was just a baby).  She was a wonderful wife to her equally wonderful husband for 47 years.  She was the daughter of Robert Ashley Luke and Elizabeth Brennan Luke, and sister to Robert Luke.  She graduated from The College of St. Rose in Albany, NY and became a practicing nurse.  She had 8 grandchildren (my cousin Brennan was born a year after she passed) and countless acquaintances and friends. While she and my grandfather traveled extensively, they have called Old Lyme, CT home for the past 30 years (but like most grandparents livin’ the good life, they spent winters in Florida for as long as I can remember).

My grandmother had the most vibrant laugh and speaking voice, a beautiful sound that if I focus enough, I can still hear ringing in my ears. A devout Christian, it was like pretty darned important that we were at church every Sunday – as I kid, I only really liked going to church because I could lean on Diney when we’d have to stand for a long time, and also because we use to both hold the missal when we sang.  I would look up at this tall, distinguished woman standing next to me, and always felt so proud that she was signing the loudest.  She always smelled like Shalimar perfume and like the flowers she kept in her garden.  I would love when her red lipstick would stay stamped on my cheek, and nothing felt better than crawling into bed with Diney as a child when Poppy would wake up early.  Being the oldest grandchild, and well, being me, (showoff), I would also love to please Diney.  Her approval and the pride she took in me was the greatest gift I could ever ask for.  She loved Christmas, loved going to our family’s lake house in Brantingham New York, having her toe nails painted pink and her elegant fingers a soft neutral.  She loved touring my sister and I around her garden every single summer (oh!!, the lambs’ ears, petunias and bleeding hearts!) but most of all enjoyed all of our family get togethers (of which there were and are many).  She called us “sweetie” and “lovie,” and while sleeping over their house, Megs and I weren’t allowed to have breakfast until our beds were made (we also had to wait to eat our post-chuch donoughts until our hands had been washed…..germs, ya know).    No one rocked a white Cadillac better than Diane, and no one looked better in (or spent more at) Talbots.  She always baked a lemon jello cake for my birthday (my favorite) and I’ll never forget the last time we spoke when she was admitted to hospice and told my sister and I that she “loved us more than we’d ever know.”  She was my grandmother, my godmother, my confirmation sponsor and the woman whose footsteps I will always be trying to follow. 

And this is just how I knew her.  Imagine the cumulative memories, moments and sentiments about Diane Ashley Luke Getman.  As her headstone says, “she lit up our lives.”

I think of you every day Diney.  Looking back at this morning, when I woke up and hadn’t realized that it was May 20th yet, something told me that I should wear your gold knot earrings today (I try not to wear them too often because I don’t ever want to lose them).  It wasn’t until I glanced down at my phone on the subway that I realized today was your birthday.  I brought my hand up to my ears, kept them there for a minute and just smiled  


(I’m kicking myself that I don’t have A. a scanner, or B. all of my/our AMAZING pictures of Diney -- some ridiculously vintage pics where my grandparents are dressed to the nines, beauty shots of Diney alone, etc. I’m workin’ from facebook here, people. Oh well, you get the jest.  She was really that beautiful.

5.18.2011

and this is where you can find me










































omg, drooling. I am genuinely upset that I don’t have an outdoor (or much indoor) space to assemble this dreamy hammock in. (and just one of the many reasons I love etsy...I spotted one remarkably similar here).
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