21 July 2007

Bluehill. New York








A-H-H-H-H! Bluehill at Stone Barns!!!! I cannot recommend this place heartily enough. It is just above New York City, along the Hudson River, just outside Tarrytown. Totally worth the drive out of the city. Some years back, Dan Barber, the chef at Bluehill Restaurant in the city cut a deal with David Rockefeller to turn his family estate into a working organic farm with a restaurant and educational center. and it is worth every penny of the tens of millions of dollars they spent in making it operable and beautiful. Its worth the trip just for the stonework, let alone the beautiful wood beams and wonderful lighting.

Then, there is the food. OMG!!!!! Elegant, imaginative, fresh, beautiful food! and a great wine list....


If you have been paying attention, you will remember this card was used to make the Virginia cabin, some posts back. I admitted in that posting, I believe, that I had borrowed the cardstock because it looked like stacked logs. Well, now you can see the *real* restaurants representation. I may have to make another one or two...I want to make the grouping of buildings around a stone courtyard which you walk through on the way from the valet parking point to the restaurant...you get a peek into several other structures...must go up there for one of the tours or classes....

c. 2004

Blowfish. San Francisco








Blowfish is [I guess it still "is"- I haven't been there in years...] a brash, 'happenin'' sushi place in San Francisco. Its decor is intended to be as*dangerous* as its name implies. I vaguely remember it as dark, with hot spots of lights, noisy maybe...but the noise may have been all visual...

The sushi was yummy. I don't know why we haven't gone back. Could be because there are always newer places to try in that oh-so-receptive city.

The shape of this tinybuilding is also trying to be *dangerous* and noisy. Sort of mysterious and dark inside-and-out. Maybe a sushi speakeasy.....I think this was the first unusual roofline i attempted. Somehow, a hip roof with gables just wasn't gonna say *dangerous*. This tinybuilding is about 1-1/2 inches tall.

c. 2002

03 July 2007

Star Provisions. Atlanta







Star Provisions is the sister to Bacchanalia. They share space in the same old factory-type building in a newly 'up-and-coming' area of Atlanta.

This is an example of a tinybuilding where, to make the style of building I was after, I used a foreign material in addition to the shop's business card. The roof is made from a corrugated cardboard heat-sleeve from Starbuck's.

It happens that I made this tinybuilding after a trip to the Gulf Coast and a tour of one of the new developments- Rosemary Beach. The architectural style of the buildings there is sort of Norman French, with a smidge of Spanish influence.....a little bit of everything to please everyone. Somehow, when I sat down to make this house, the card colors and the star motif reminded me of Rosemary Beach. Can't say exactly why...

So, I just *needed* a Spanish tile roof. Hence the corrugated cardboard... And, of course, with the gridded design of the card, I just *had* to center a window in each square....*had to*...

I like this tinybuilding, It is charming, just like its namesake. It is about 1-1/2 inches square.

c. 2001

Bacchanalia. Atlanta







If I remember correctly, this is one of my early tinybuildings. At least, I hope so, because it is rather boring. It does have some degree of dignity about it- mainly due to the design of the business card- but, it's a little too elemental.....

Bacchanalia is a very respected and successful 'upper class' restaurant now located in Atlanta's West Village area. Originally, it was about a block from our family home in Buckhead. James and I used to go there for very special celebrations. As it became so successful, they relocated to have more room, and to upgrade the environs. My kids and I have been to the new site a couple times.

More recently, the owners/chef have opened several other restaurants around Atlanta; and a specialty food shop adjacent to Bacchanalia. The shop- Star Provisions- is the source of the next tinybuilding.

c. 2000