Showing posts with label Vesaisentie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vesaisentie. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Stages of the Art of Annikki Part 2

In this blog entry I want to show you what Annikki did with house interiors.

Our small semi-detached house in Shawbury, Shrewsbury, Shropshire! 1967

My first lesson came when our first daughter was born in Shawbury, England. We had a small company semi-detached house with two bedrooms and a small study upstsirs with the living room, kitchen and dining room on the ground floor.

There was no central heating but we had a coal fireplace in the living room. We had a paraffin heater in the entrance hall and an electric bar heater in the dining toom. The upstairs was quite cold as the only the heat that permeated upstairs was available for us.. 

When Annikki was admitted to hospital for the birth of our first daughter, Susanna, I discussed with a couple of my colleagues and we all thought Annikki would be more comfortable if we moved the bedroom downstairs as the living room was always warm with a raging coal fire.. 

So three of us moved all the bedroom furniture of bed and cupboards down the narrow winding staircase down the living room and took all the living room furniture upstairs including the large television. A job well done by three people!

After 7 days I brought Annikki home from hospital.  I showed her our handiwork but she said absolutely nothing.

The next day I returned in the mornimg to my work and came home  at 5 in the evening.

I got a shock of  my life as this little lady had, by herself, reversed all the work we has done! 

I did not question her as this was her home, but it was my first experience of Finnish “sisu”.

I never again interfered in “her home” as the lesson was quite evident,

We moved to India in 1969 and we lived in a small flat in the city centre. Annikki was not happy.  


Three of our children in thded garden of our home in Madras.

I found a small independent house with a garden in the suburb of Madras. It was in the Defence Officer’s Colony at St. Thomas Mount.  This  house appeared on the market for rent. 

Annikki liked it and we took it on rent. It had just been constructed and the house had two bedrooms, a large study and a large living cum dining room room. Just ideal for the two of us and our two small children with a third one on the way. Annikki furnished it minimally and we lived there for a couple of years,

Then a good family friend told me that he had a property of about half and acre with a large two storey villa type house with three bedrooms, a large living room, a large dining room, an entrance toom, a pantry and an enormous kitchen, with  a verandah upstairs, a large. study room for the children, and a verandah at the entrance of the house. It also had a small covered car shed. The house also had a small outhouse for any live in home help.

 

Standing in the garden of our Velacheri villa in Madras. 

I took it immediately and Annikki got to work to furnish it.

She wanted a good living room set. Those on the market did not appeal to her. She designed her own to have it made. Rosewood and teak wood were expensive, 

I took her to a wood depot and she knew exactly what she wanted. 

White ceddar logs were lying there were really cheap as nobody could find use for it. Annikki got the logs sawn to exactly the sizes she wanted. Annikki then called a local carpenter and told him how she wanted the furniture to be made. No nails were used but using the wedge shaped locking design she designed all her furniture. 

The carpenter, an old man, was extremely good and made the three seater and a single seater sofa set. 

As MM Rubber was part of our family group, she got the foam cushions made to suit the correct size. They were just superb and became a talking point among our friends. 

All the other furniture was also designed by Annikki and they suited our needs.

They lasted the next 10 years we lived in India. When we left India we got the price almost three times it had cost us to make them.

Her choice of cushion covers, curtains and other furnishings  made use of the wonderful Indian textiles and the enormous range of colours and designs that were available.

The houses we occupied alway had her paintings to make them unique. Her creations as this one of handed painted fused light bulbs and aluminium foil was before the concept of recycling had even been thought of as an important international necessity!


She mastered the space concept be creating use for every square millimetre. Using even the exterior of a wall cupboard as valuable space.

She even recycled detergent boxes making them into file holders.

We also had a large collection of Indian antiques, but that is another storey which we will blog about later.

When we moved to Finland we had to leave most of the stuff behind but she brought whatever she thought were important for our new life in Finlsnd.

Our first home Finland was a small living cum dining room, an attic room  and another even smaller attic room with a  tiny kitchen. We were six, two adults and four children of ages 17, 26, 13 and 11. 












The photos above show how she used her skill as well as creating her own designs to make the home a place of sheer beauty.

Annikki was absolutely super in the way she organised that small 25 sq m space. There was adequate room for everyone.

Two children left for England within a year and the four of us were very comfortable for the next 9 years when our third daughter moved out. 

Then our son went to boarding school in Turku and we were just two and it was luxury.

When Annikki’s younger brother moved in, I decided we would move out. We found a lovely penthouse on Torikatu. Annikki did a masterful job setting up that home.

However, her father passed away and we had to move back to Annikki’s mother's home to look after her mother who had developed dementia. The house was remodelled by Annikki to suit  the situation. 

Annikki implemented many aspects making it suitable and an outstanding house to live in and look after her disabled mother. 

At the same time she did the house interior so beautifully that living there was like being in heaven. And I never saw her work as she was always doing something and I only saw it when she completed each task.

Her designs are worth talking anout.


She created an ordinary goldfish bowl into an art creation.

She took an ordinary fish tank and it became a piece of art.



The colours were self generated by sunlight coming through tghe window.

Her table top aquarium was a masterpiece as it became our cat’s tv. She would sit on it or lie on it to see the tasty gold fish swimming under the plastic cover.















She converted an outdoor flower stand into an unusual and excellent aquarium.

When her mother passed away in 2008, our daughter, Joanna, had moved  to England to study medicine. We moved into her house. Annikki worked wonders in that house but she was not happy in this borrowed home.

By good fortune we found a house on Sarkkatie. It was just right for her. 







The photos above show a small 
portion of her creativity. For instance, the antlers are not antlers but a branch from a tree fashioned as antlers!

We lived there for 10 years and it became the personal museum of Annikki. It showcased her interior design competence. Everything she did was artistic!

Unfortunately, my heart failure and amputation of my foot meant we had to move to an apartment as neither of us were able to maintain a large house and garden.

I am no interior designer and just tried to make everything practical for me as an invalid in a wheelchair to manage a apartment also and Annikki who had developed dementia.

I sadly miss Annikki’s special skills as an interior designer which I had thoroughly enjoyed throughout our married life! 

It is only now I discovered the enormous talent Annikki possessed as everything in our homes was always just perfect. 

She was prepared for every eventuality that everything was taken by me as granted. She was never stressed. 

Only now I realise how much she had worked to get the homes right for all of us.

I am not even close to being an interior design. 

What I have shown you here just a few examples of Annikki's capabilities. 

In my next blog of this series I will show you that beside interior design she was so competent as a garden designer. She created four of our gardens so beautifully that every single day I miss that skill of Annikki.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

The feeling of home

You have to wander around our home (except my office room) and you will understand how much of an artist, my dear wife, Annikki is.

Everything has a correct place. The detail is exquisite. It is so fine that one wonders how her brain works.

Yesterday, as I sat in the living room, not really watching anything on the TV, I glanced around the room. It was so beautiful.

I decided to record it on my digital camera. With the flash off, I could not capture the detail I wanted to. So I am giving below a series of shots taken with the flash (hence the light reflections) as I looked around just one room in our home.

It is like sitting in heaven!















Three diverse items of her personal art creations, the chalk sketch of the trees on an island with its reflection in the lake, the crayon drawing of the grazing zebras and the hand-stitched creation of the zebras bottoms which she made for my mother. The last item took over seven months to finish and it adorned my mother's living room till she died.

But there are many more handiworks from Annikki's collection on display here, too incricate for a non-artistic brain of mine to describe. Of course, our collection of art glass, crystal and really beautiful modern glass creations are also found at different locations, each complimenting the other.

Usually friends who walk into our house are stunned by the sheer grandeur, but they do not know that almost 95% of the stuff is from the Flea Markets around Oulu!

And this is just our living room.

I shall take you round other rooms in a day or two - except that Annikki must not catch me taking the photographs, as she would never allow me to put them up on the internet if even one detail is not exactly as she wants it!

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Something out of place?

A walk around the Vesaisentie garden last summer after it has been reinvented by Annikki will reveal this scene. It is truly beautiful and the devil is in the fine detail that Annikki has put into it.

I am sorry that it is being posted out of season.

This entry was actually made in summer, but for some reason, never got published.

The "Green Door" of Kampitie has become the "Silver Door" of Vesaisentie. It is an amazing piece as we look at it out of the kitchen window.

However, publishing it in the heart of winter, gives us something to look forward to!

 

 

 

 
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Looking forward to a great Spring to be followed by a wonderful Summer.