Saturday 30 October 2010

Dual nationality quilling!

In the traditional English village where I live, we are lucky to have a cosy French-style cafe where I sell a few quilled cards and often enjoy a relaxing lunch or coffee. (I would love to include a link for Le Petit Cafe, but they're too busy serving delicious snacks and cakes to have created a web site yet!)

Anyway, they wanted me to make a few quilled Christmas cards to add to my regular basket, and I've designed a few which feature photographs of the village combined with a greeting in French: 'Joyeux Noel' (which means 'Merry Christmas').

It may seem strange to mix French words with such a typically English scene, but that really sums up what the cafe is all about, and the customers really seem to like my cards! Here's the first design I made, with a photo of our frozen village pond in last winter's snow, complemented by a quilled snowflake.

9 comments:

  1. As much as I hate snow, it's a very pretty scene and of course the snowflake is perfect.

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  2. That is so pretty and your village looks beautiful (and cold!). Christmas here in Australia certainly doesn't involve snow and that just looks so traditionally Christmassy! Combining the nationalities is s a great idea.

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  3. Ooh, so pretty! I love the stylized snowflake and the photo is beautiful.

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  4. Lovely scene for Christmas and a simply beautiful card

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  5. Thanks everyone! I'm not a great fan of snow myself, but I must admit that our village did look lovely after the heavy falls we had last winter. Still, having taken a lot of 'snow scene' shots for posterity, I'm rather hoping that we don't have a repeat performance this year!

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  6. What a great card Philippa. I love the design of the snowflake. Its funny because I did not think anything of you mixing an english scene with french words because I am so used to that in Canada. What I was amazed at was the amount of snow you get...it's not just Canadians who live in a deep freeze.

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  7. Thanks Cheryl. I had forgotten about English and French appearing side by side in Canada - of course, it must be quite an everyday thing for you! We don't normally get this much snow, I'm glad to say (sometimes none at all) but it really was exceptional last winter.

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  8. Beautiful card Philippa, Look the photograph and the snowflake ,white on white looks great.

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  9. Thank you, Suganthi. I'm always surprised by how effective 'white on white' can be!

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