Last Friday Angela and I decided to have a day out. It was typical Cornish weather - mizzly but warm - and I thought the perfect day to take the coast road between St. Ives and St. Just on the north Cornish coast. The mist was rolling off the hills and stoney outcrops, and the derelict engine houses loomed out of the whiteness, so atmospheric. Our first stop was Zennor, a tiny hamlet which has become famous for two reasons. During the war D.H.Lawrence and his German wife retreated here for peace and security. And have you heard of the legend of the Mermaid of Zennor?
Inside the ancient granite church dedicated to St. Senara is the 'Mermaid Chair', a simple wooden seat with the carving of a mermaid on one end, holding a mirror.
Legend has it that a local lad heard strange and beautiful singing whilst attending service in the church, and so intoxicated was he by this otherworldly voice that one day he followed the sound down to the cove and walked down underneath the waves, for it was a mermaid who lured him to his death.
From the church we walked down the track leading to the cove, passing this farmyard with its ancient granite posts.
Spiky gorse, moss and ivy, typical of the granite walls in this part of wild Cornwall
So bleak, no trees; but the landscape has a raw beauty all of its own
Then the cove, quite a precipitous drop, and no beach at high tide
Angela is a textile addict like myself, and since I had my camera with me I asked if I could take some pictures round her home.
This is one of her oil paintings, a work in progress. Aren't the colours beautiful? It is definitely an interior, but I love the way everything remains in soft focus.
On her living room floor, about six work baskets overflowing with fabric snippets, including a lot of gorgeous vintage Liberty Tana lawn.
Upstairs on the landing, a veritable cascade of vintage clothing that Angela wears on a regular basis
This skirt has the most divine print and colouring
On her bedroom wardrobe doors hang yet more delicious vintageness; some of the clothes she made for her daughter when she was small
A Liberty lawn summer dress, very faded at the top,
and a knitted cardi with little stitched flowers and this divine Julie Arkell brooch pinned to the hem!
A raspberry red velvet bias-cut evening dress with petals decorating the neckline
Oh so glamorous!
And this wee jacket that Angela made for her baby daughter,
such a pretty fabric and quilted with a contrasting pinky-red stitch.
Going down the stairs, which I have done many times before, only this time I spot the little shelf
with its little family of cuties! Just look at that darling velour elephant!
Thanks Angela, it's always a joy coming to your home x x x