results for 100% Pass Quiz Nutanix - NCS-Core Newest New Dumps Ppt 🐣 Open 「 www.pdfvce.com 」 enter ➤ NCS-Core ⮘ and obtain a free download 👦NCS-Core Reliable Test Question

Atlanta Food & Wine Festival: The Tasting Tests

Scenes from a must-visit stop during the festival weekend
Filed Under > Travel

Atlanta Food & Wine Festival, Waiting on MarthaATL Food & WineAFWF16, Waiting on MarthaBlueberry buttermilk bitesTito's at Atlanta Food & Wine FestivalATL Food & Wine Festival Peach sliders at Atlanta Food & Wine FestivalWaiting on Martha's Atlanta Food & Wine Festival recapGeorgia peaches at The Tasting Tents 2016-06-16_0011 2016-06-16_0009 Wine at the tasting tents, Waiting on Martha

The Tasting Tents are what comes to mind for many when they think of Atlanta Food & Wine Festival.  You know, the big white tents and mouth-watering samples of food and wine for days. Like every year, I knew this was something that could not be missed, and I relished the off-duty time spent with the team in the Tasting Tents on Friday night. 

This year, the Tasting Tents called Atlanta Botanical Garden home; which I couldn’t have been more thrilled about.  The beautiful expanse was the perfect location for the crowds to visit and eat/drink to their hearts’ content…it was really a wonder why the tents hadn’t been located there in previous years!  The flow of the tents was really well done; spread out just enough to not feel claustrophobic or like you were walking for miles between booths and culinary “trails.” I don’t know about you, but the Tasting Tents have the ability to overwhelm me (I don’t really enjoy crowds), but that was not the case at all this year. 

With over a hundred talented vendors set up at the Tasting Tents, it’s easy to get overwhelmed.  As you walk in, you think “where to even begin?!” But as a seasoned Tasting Tents attendee, I knew the ones I absolutely had to visit (Revolution Donuts‘ infamous peach sliders—warm donuts sliced in half with fresh Georgia peaches—are always on the top of my list, and I of course gravitate to any and all wineries). But the Tasting Tents are also a time for exhibitors to unveil new, unexpected twists to their usual cuisine (Fox Bros took a breather from their popular smoked meats and barbecued only seafood this year, proving their never-ending ability to impress), as well as a time for new talent to be discovered…I was so impressed to stumble upon wineries from as far as New Zealand and South Africa in attendance. 

Did you make it to the Tasting Tents this year?  I’d love to know what your favorites were!  And of course if you’re reading this and your mouth is watering (mine is), do make a point to attend next year. You’ll leave with happy hearts and full bellies, I promise.  Truly, MKR

SHOP THE STORY / CLICK LEFT & RIGHT ARROWS TO EXPLORE

 

 

Photography, Kathryn McCrary for Waiting on Martha 

Creating A Cozy Space with Serena & Lily

Switching up my favorite little nook with the help of an amazing rattan daybed
Filed Under > Get The Look

Styling a daybed, Waiting On Martha Styling a daybed, Waiting On Martha rattan daybed styling, Waiting On Martha Styling a daybed, Waiting On Martha rattan daybed styling, Waiting On Martha

I’ve always been a fan of the daybed, and as of late daybeds are showing up everywhere in the home.  Outdoor space, add a daybed.  Nursery, add a daybed. Breakfast nook, add a daybed.  Plus they’re chicer than ever.  Take for example this Avalon rattan daybed from Serena and Lily.  When I first spied it I knew I had to find a space for it.  That space turned out to be my sitting room in my bedroom.

Let’s pause right here to discuss something for perspectives sake.  When you read the sentence above you probably thought, if I have a sitting room in my bedroom then my home must be quite spacious.  Not exactly.  My home is great, but it’s not a McMansion by any stretch of the imagination. For some reason when they built our home they added a sitting room to the master making it larger than our family room and dining room combined.  However, because we don’t have a basement and only a family room, I was committed to making the sitting area an actual space that was used and not just a pretty room to look at. 

Since my husband and his abnormally large television took over the family room, I naturally retreated to our bedroom.  Which was fine by me because the bedroom is, and always has been, my favorite room in every home I’ve ever lived in. I know most sleep experts would warn against it, but there’s nothing I look forward to more than cozying up in my bed with a stack of magazines, a great glass of wine, and the apple tv fired up and ready. It’s like that Drake song; “I only love my bed and my momma.” Preach Drake, preach.

Anyway, I’ve gotten off track, back to the Avalon rattan daybed.  Before the daybed entered our life I had a whole sitting area set up with two very large chairs, a coffee table and ottomans.  That worked, but over the years how I’ve used the space has changed.  Before I really only used it to watch a movie.  Now I was craving a new space I could spend my morning quiet time, work, and watch a movie when the mood hit.  And the daybed was the perfect way to make this new vision become a reality.

The chairs and coffee table went bye-bye, and the whole room shifted.  I put the Avalon rattan daybed against the wall and loaded it down with my favorite gingham sheet set and quilt from Serena and Lily plus a few throws, and a good amount of pillows. This created the perfect, and most cozy spot, to spend quiet time in the morning and movie time at night.  Because there wasn’t room for a coffee table I added an end table that can easily move around to where it’s needed most.  And lastly, I brought a small white desk up and placed it opposite the daybed. By positioning the furniture like this I maintained the square shape which helps it feel like a separate space rather than just an extension of the bedroom.

I’ve been living with this new set up for a few weeks now and I’m loving it.  And I’m not the only one, you can see that Addison has really taken to the daybed as well! Truly, MKR

Photography, Rustic White Interiors | This post was in collaboration with Serena & Lily.  A brand I love and adore.  Opinions are 100% my own.

Ben's Garden

Filed Under > Noted By

A few months ago I was scouting out new products for the Boutique (my favorite pastime), and I came across these decoupage “necessity trays” from Ben’s Garden.  I was immediately smitten with the gorgeous decoupage quotes, and then I heard Ben’s story.  I was floored, and I knew (A.) I had to have his line in Waiting On Martha and (B.) Ben’s story was something I had to share with whomever would listen.

I hope you love the trays as much as I love carrying them, and his story goes a little something like this…

{1983}     Born in Setauket, N.Y. on Long Island.

{1987}     Ben started his first garden.

{1988}     Known to always have a gardener’s trowel or paintbrush in hand.

{1989}     Ben decoupaged his mother’s cocktail table.  She was pretty impressed.

{1992}     Ben started “Ben’s Garden” selling decoupage & notecards.  (For all you non-mathmetical types Ben was 9).

{1994}     Mails Smith & Hawken and New York Botanical Garden a catalog, gets orders from both.  Orders pour in.  Ben puts his friends to work in his parent’s carriage house.

{1995}     Ben had to change the “Please call 24/7, we’re waiting,” in his catalog, because his mom was not happy answering the phone.

{2000} A.P. English High School teacher conferenced his parents. Pages were missing from his textbooks. (He was making paperweights with the quotes.)
{2000} Publishes first issue of Ben’s Garden Quarterly.
{2001} Met with C.Z. Guest, a famous socialite, to ask her to write for his magazine. While eating tiny sandwiches and watching her son practice polo, Ben talks about talking up polo as a sport. She laughs and agrees to write for his magazine.
{2002} Graduates High School.
{2002} Running Ben’s Garden at home in Setauket was driving his parent’s and neighbor’s nuts.
{2003} Has a personal meeting with head buyer at Anthropologie, get’s an order.
They end up buying all of Ben’s designs within 6 months.
{2003} Becomes a Master Gardener through Cornell University.  Wholesale clients grow to include: ABC Carpet & Home, Dean & DeLuca, Kate’s Paperie.
Ben begins regularly exhibiting at national trade shows in Atlanta, San Francisco and New York City.
{2004} Ben turns 20, and moves to Oyster Bay and opens his first store & studio.
{2006} Ben’s découpage featured in InStyle Magazine. Business booms.
{2006} Starts writing quarterly magazine column From Ben’s Garden for @Home Magazine. Ben’s A.P. English High School teacher is impressed.
{2007} Opens second Ben’s Garden store in Huntington, N.Y. on Long Island at 3850 Sq. Ft.
{2008} Ben’s Garden Studio in Oyster Bay expands into the space next door, to meet increased wholesale demand. Turns out customers like great handcrafted things made in the U.S.A.
Copyright © Welcome by Waiting on Martha  /
Back to Top