Bathroom Art

Yes, we decorate our bathroom with art. I am referring to our downstairs bathroom, which is used frequently by everyone who lives here and everyone who visits here. The bathroom is a tiny room with a sink and a toilet. There is a window for streaming light and a blank wall for hanging art. The whole room is about 6 x 7 feet. I love that our bathrooms are all small. Small means cozy. Small means less to clean. Small means spare and functional, but it can also mean joyful and comforting.

We added a gallery rail to the open wall and hung a few of my photographs (still life scenes of a front porch and some cut figs) and a few thrifted oil paintings as well. I love to use vintage photos for decorating, too. I recalled an interesting one from the collection of childhood pictures I have squirreled away—one that might fit in color and theme.

This is a photograph of me in March 1961, sitting on the toilet, in what is clearly an attempt at potty-training. In this picture, I would have been only 11 months old, very early for potty training by today’s recommendations. I am holding a huge wad of toilet paper and looking bewildered. On the floor, I see something that at first, I thought was a hotdog, but on closer inspection, I think it’s the tube that holds the toilet paper roll in the holder. As any one-year old would tell you if they could, pulling all of the toilet paper off the roll is incredibly fun.

My original photo is about 3.5 inches square. Not particularly well composed. Faded to magenta over time. I scanned the picture at a high resolution and set about trying to restore the picture in small ways (not wanting to take away the subtle vintage aspects but still wanting to clear away dust and scratches, maybe tone down the purple cast, and sharpen the image a bit). I gave it my best shot, aiming to warm the magenta tones so the photo would better coordinate with the existing art on the wall. The results were pretty good. Then on a whim, I researched Photoshop’s latest features and found, under Neutral Filters, a Photo Restoration filter. And just like that—a remarkable improvement, though maybe a little too improved for my taste. I’m still playing around with the picture to get the look I want, but mostly I’m just delighted that my parents had a camera and used it so much during the first year or so my life.

Done For The Season

Done for the Season, November 2025

I almost didn’t take this picture. It was my husband who convinced me to give it a try. All I could see was more bright, high-contrast lighting, which can be tricky when it comes to taking pictures. And all I could think was, more pumpkins, really? But I was so happy to feel the sun on my face, to feel the cool autumn breeze, to walk across the uneven ground of the field one more time that I relented, and took the picture anyway. One last view of this season to give thanks for.

With Enthusiasm

Most of the photographs I take are just snap shots of my everyday life. 
They are not great works of art, or important in any way. 
But I take each one with the enthusiasm of a beginner. Never really knowing what I am doing. And somehow, I’m okay with that.

01. Fountain with Christmas greenery and berries. Grelen Market, Somerset.

02. Vintage painting.Twice Is Nice, Charlottesville.

Work-of-Art

It’s the most natural thing in the world. Art helps us understand ourselves as human beings and makes our lives on this planet better.

I love to mix-and-match art. I sometimes have a theme, but I’m never strict in its interpretation. I buy art, mostly from thrift shops, and hang it alongside my photographs. I love to collect art across categories, materials, periods and cultures—always with the idea of creating a conversation between the pieces that feels organic and intimate. I believe that an object's value is not necessarily dictated by its price. I’ve passed on expensive pieces of “real” art in favor of fun and funky pieces that speak to my heart. Art that I fall in love with is coming home with me!