Wednesday, April 09, 2014

See our new Farmhouse Furniture



The Farmhouse Bench is made from 100 year old reclaimed barn wood. You can expect to see nail holes, cracks, saw marks, water marks, worm holes, sun spots, and dents as they are authentic and represent the natural characteristics of the raw materials we use in the construction process.



Barn Wood Farmhouse Bench


Barn Wood Trestle Bench


Salvaged Wood Door Trunk


Barn Wood Small Chest of Drawers


Farm Table with English Turned Leg


Barn Wood Two Door Server


Barn Wood Glass Front Cabinet


Barn Wood Jelly Cupboard

Orchard Table


Barn Wood Buffet



Round Oak Pedestal Dining Table


Farm Table with Shaker Turned Leg


Farm Table with Tapered Leg


Barn Wood Plate Rack Hutch

Barn Wood Three Door Server

Barn Wood Standard Chest of Drawers

Barn Wood Three Door Server with Glass Hutch Top


Each piece of furniture is hand crafted using 100 year old reclaimed barn wood and architectural salvage. Working with salvaged lumber is much like working with antique furniture; no two pieces are the same. Nail holes, saw marks, water marks, worm holes, sun spots and dents are all natural characteristics of the raw materials used in the construction and should not be viewed as defects. A multi-step, hand-finishing process produces authentic, distressed looking patina on your furniture.  Although color chips can be provided as a reasonable approximation, the end results typically do vary slightly from the samples.  The top surfaces of the furniture are not artificially aged with tools or paints.

All of our reclaimed barn wood products are made in the United States from domestic, reclaimed materials.  
  


Tuesday, April 01, 2014

Lavender Fields Will Come to Your House for Free Design Assistance!

Would you like a designer from 
Lavender Fields to come to your house? 
Now you can with our virtual design services. 
Our interior designers can work with you 
anywhere in the nation or the world! 
Yes anywhere! 




We can put together a bed or an entire room or your entire house! We know how difficult it can be to have so many choices and not know how to put it all together.  












We are not a big box store and you will never get an operator to answer the phone that has no idea about interior design.

We can make shopping online easy.






You will get a certified interior designer every time you call. Guaranteed! 
No need to purchase an 
entire room from a catalog 
page just because you are 
unsure how to decorate. 

We can make your room unique
Our services include: 
  • Selecting bedding to coordinate with your furniture.
  • Selecting furniture. 
  • Selecting lighting.
  • Selecting and customizing window treatments.
  • Paint selection to go along with your purchase.
  • Space planning and design.
  • Antique acquisition
  • Children's Rooms
  • Selecting Accents
Call us today to set up an appointment 




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Friday, March 28, 2014

Our New Shop is Opening Tomorrow!

We are so excited about our new store! Located in downtown Port Jefferson Village, New York. We are across from Ruvo Restaurant and around the corner from a great wine boutique called Vine to Wine! Oh the scents coming from Ruvo is making us hungry when we are setting up. Come by shop and visit, have lunch or dinner at Ruvo and stop by Vine to Wine for a tasting. We are pleased to announce that Thymely Designs will be offering products at our shop. Thymely Designs offers a unique selection of one of a kind, created and re-created vintage and antique furniture and gift offerings. New stock is coming in every day and we are excited to announce we will soon have clothing and jewelry! For now you can find Dash and Albert rugs, Pine Cone Hill bedding, Bella Notte Linens, Beth Quinn jewelry, Mangiacotti and Farmhouse Home Keeping Products, Vintage furniture, dried lavender, lavender sachets, French Soaps and so much more!




Photos of the shop coming soon!

Location and Hours:
The Shops at Lavender Fields
318 Wynn Lane
Port Jefferson, New York 11777

Spring Hours:
Monday 11-5
Tuesday and Wednesday closed until Memorial Day
Thursday 11-5
Friday 11-7
Saturday 11-7


Friday, March 14, 2014

Spotlight on Working Moms: Owner and Creator of Papaya Art - Anahata Katkin



More moms than ever are in the workforce. According to AmericanProgress.org, "women now make up half of all workers in the United States, with nearly 4 in 10 homes having a mom that is also a working mother." Being a full-time working mother can lead to feelings of guilt and stress because of divided attention between work and family. The key is to focus on a plan, get organized, and find the right balance between profession and parenthood. 

source: http://www.parents.com/

We interviewed Anahata Katkin, the founder, artist and owner of a successful business



What inspired you to start your business? 
My Mom, Gina and I started the business together with a goal of creating a more inspirational line of products that would reflect our aesthetic and effect others.  

What inspires your creativity?
I like the place where pretty and gritty meet.  Where flowers, faces and ink run together.  I’m inspired endlessly by plants, travel, textiles, folk arts, Asian influences and faces...always faces. I build artwork then I tend to overlay a character or mood that I feel emerges as I go.  I believe in working from impulse-to-impulse and not thinking too hard during the process.  I make artwork for myself and then take it from there.  Creativity is a sort of relationship, and you work on it throughout your life.  It’s an endless process and dialogue between yourself and the unknown.  And you get better at listening and honing in on that magic the more you pursue creativity itself.  It’s never easy, per say, but it’s always rewarding and keeps me coming back to the drawing board.

As a working  mom what tips and tricks can you give us on how to juggle it all?
I think it’s really important to not over think things.  Try not to formalize what you are doing.  If you are a writer, you have to write.  if you are a painter, you have to paint. Period. Whatever you are working towards as a mother and business person you just have to get down and dirty right in the middle of it all.  When my son was small he just wanted to be near me and play.  So I found using an art studio was a waste.  I needed to be near the kitchen and my son in the living room.  So I dragged my art materials to the center of the home for the past ten years.  I took over the dining table, the living room floor, you name it.  That way I didn’t have to create separate time for all of my demands.  Working in a studio felt weird and sectioned off from the rest of my family.  And I felt I could only go “in there” when he was sleeping or occupied, and so never used it.  We started shipping from our kitchen at first and I just had to make work a part of home life.  And let my little guy just bounce around underneath my feet.  I could make art while we watched movies, or helped him with homework from the same room.  I have friends who need a certain kind of peace to create art.  No one around, no distractions.  But to be productive and keep up with your life demands it’s worth getting over that.  I trained myself to just make art in the midst of it all.  There’s no other way to do enough of it, if you want to create at a professional pace.  That’s the best advice I have for moms.  Practice working on what you love and multi tasking.  Children are built to be part of that practice.  Most countries work and parent at the same time.  It’s part of our human history, and it’s ok to make it part of their job to help you juggle your time.  


How do you deal with days when you truly need to be in two places at once. When you need to be there for your children but yet your business has urgent issues to deal with?  
Ugh.  I still struggle with this.  It’s easier now that my son is a teenager.  He is more flexible and can be alone for bits of time.  But quality time is a harder thing to carve out.  I have started forcing him to be part of my rush.  If I need to run errands, I try and ask him to come with me, just so that we laugh, catch up and talk along the way.  At least having a teen, means finding sneakier ways of connecting, than when he was little.  I can’t snuggle him to death anymore, so I seek out moments in our day where we can overlap, even if it’s not exciting. It seems to really help.  And I have personally experienced burn out from overworking.  So I am now much more mindful and careful about taking time for myself.  Which inevitably means time for my son.  Going for walks, cooking, spending down time, and even routine help us stay close.  But I am always struggling with the balance just like any mom.


Since business is growing, do you feel you have more or less time at home?
When we where growing the business, I was always home.  And for smaller kiddos, that was perfect.  But with the major growth I have to travel, and work outside the house a great deal.  But that was a real life choice.  And it felt good after mothering from home for 8 years, it was a nice change to get back into the outside world more.  Now I enjoy both.  My home days are restorative and rewarding, and my days in our boutique or on the road are energizing.  I get to express more fully the spectrum of my personality.  And I think it's great for creative types to have things to bounce between.  I believe it makes it possible to do more.  I couldn't paint all day, everyday.  I would get fried and bored.  So when I max out in one division of our business, I bounce to another.  It keeps a constant flow.  Only now we have a lot of divisions, and bouncing is getting trickier and more advanced.  But a couple brainwave channels to work off of is a great idea for any business person.  It keeps the flow going and keeps you sane.

How do you turn off your business when you want to spend quality time with your children? 
Do you shut off your computer and phone?
I should!  We don’t do that enough. Being driven in my career has definitely taken a tole on parenting.  And we are working as a household to be more balanced.  Some times we do better than others depending what’s going on.  I also am lucky enough to have a great co-parenting relationship with my sons dad.  It’s the one luxury of split parenting is that you can better divide your work and personal time.  On the days I don’t have my son I can go overtime and get more done.  Then I switch gears when he’s home.  It wasn’t always this way, but we’ve developed a great system over the years.

If you had one wish for your business what would it be?
Of course a successful business, and we have that.  But a truly healthy business is our goal.  With lots of room for balance, true creativity and gratitude.  Quality of life is everything. And now that we have built some successful business models, and worked our butts off for many years, we are working on integrating more balance personally, as well as for our employees and creating a more holistic atmosphere.  Ideally maintaining those goals, while growing our business, that is my idea of true success.



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Friday, March 07, 2014

Interview with Hydrangea Home - our guest blogger



You can meet some amazing people through blogging. I stumbled across Dawn’s blog, Hydrangea Home when I was searching for some ideas for my party favors. I discovered Hydrangea Home and Dawn. I contacted Dawn and asked if she can make pretty paper cones that I found on her blog. She was happy to make them even though I was already on a tight deadline. 

Every detail was perfect from the embossed paper to the red roses which was the theme of the christening. Dawn added that special touch by hand delivering the favors. It is those touches, those details that can make a business successful. Make a business stand out.

We proudly Introduce this weeks guest blogger:

Hydrangea home is a small business on Long Island specializing in handmade home decor, art/photography, hand painted furniture and beautiful unique items for the home.

What made you get into Annie Sloan paint?
I painted furniture many years ago and was looking to get back into it but wanted to achieve old world finishes. I was researching milk paint when I came across the Annie Sloan line of paints which had been around for many years in Europe but was new to the US. I bought a couple of cans and I was hooked!


Dawn did an amazing job, refinishing my vintage furniture

What is your favorite Annie Sloan paint color? 
I don't know if I can choose one favorite! But I do love the French Linen - it was the exact color of the moldings and doors in the house we rented during our trip to France.  Her Duck Egg Blue, Provence, Versailles, Old White, Paris Grey and Graphite are also my standard favorites. They are so true to the colors found all over doors, trims and shutters in France. 

How is chalk paint different than milk paint?
I have not yet tried milk paint but I can tell you that it comes in a powder to be mixed with water and works beautifully as a paint/stain over unfinished wood. When painted over a previously finished piece of furniture, a natural chipping process can occur but is not as easily controlled as with chalk paint. I will give it a try one of these days! But for now I do love the finishes I can achieve with the chalk paint line. It's very easy to distress and create great patinas with Annie Sloan's paints and waxes.


Thank you Dawn, for helping with this past holiday handmade decor 

Would you ever consider teaching a class? You are so talented.
I have considered teaching but it's not in the immediate future unless I can create longer days!


Tell us a bit about your store and the wonderful items you make.
My online shop is filled with a little bit of everything I love. Our biggest sellers are our handmade wood boxes and trays which have distressed chalk paint finishes. They are a popular item for home and event decorating.  I also really enjoy creating vintage style signs with french typography. Some of my other passions are creating preserved floral arrangements, art and photography and due to my habit of collecting, I have become a supplier of some gorgeous ribbons as well. 


Your a working stay at home mom. How do you juggle it all?
That's a tough one that I've been working on for a long time (19 years)!  We are a family of six with a very busy color coded calendar. Now that the kids are getting older, they help out a bit more around the house. Cooking, cleaning, laundry, driving is shared by all. We manage to have healthy home made meals, and I get to make it to almost all of the kids' sporting and school events. However, that does mean working all kinds of crazy hours, early morning, late night and weekends. I am not really able to keep a set schedule due to all of the events but I wouldn't want it any other way. When you love what you do, it's not really work!