Filling in the Blanks with Laura Olin

From annoying flatmates to secret crushes, there's always someone you'd like to say something to. In issue 32, we enlisted the help of Laura Olin's brilliant new book Form Letters to do the hard work for us. Out now, it's a book of blank letter templates that can be applied to almost every person and event. Laura - who is behind the cult Everything Changes newsletter and handled social media for Barack Obama's (and now Hillary Clinton's) presidential campaign - knows a thing or two about effective communication. 

We asked Laura to fill us in on a few of her communication secrets...

 

How did you come up with the idea for the Everything Changes newsletter? What did you want to achieve with it?  

I work in politics as a digital campaigner, so I've run a lot of email programs, written emails signed by the President (no, he doesn't write his own emails), etc. A few years ago I was thinking about all the cool things you can do with email that you can't really explore in politics because political email usually has the very focused goal of fundraising. So I thought a newsletter that changed every week would be a fun way to experiment with the form and give myself a creative outlet at the same time. The name comes from the Twitter profile of a friend of mine, Tim Carmody. He has a couple sentences in there that I've always loved: "Everything changes. Don't be afraid."

 

Tell us about some of the different themes. Which did you especially enjoy? 

I think my two favourites were what I called a "Thought Clock" - I asked people over the course of a few days, at different times of day, what they were thinking about right at that moment. Then I compiled everyone's answers into a 24-hour catalogue of thoughts for every hour of the day - Thought Clock! My other favourite is when I asked people how they've made, or are making, the decision whether or not to have kids. People sent in such thoughtful, amazing responses. 

I also have a lot of fondness for the week I did form letters, because that led to my book! One week, I thought it would be fun to apply the idea of filling in the blanks in a standard form letter to something you actually want to say to someone in your every day life - maybe helping people find the words to say awkward or hard things, and have a bit of fun with it.

Do you have a favourite letter in the book?

I think my favourite is the "To my dog"/"To my cat" spread.

Do you know of anyone who has used them yet?

A friend of mine actually used one to get one over on me on Twitter about a friendly argument we were having. That was humbling. 

 
 

Tell us about the RTW newsletter. We love the tagline of “For women who want a more equal world”!

Thank you! As I work in politics and I'm a woman, I have a lot of thoughts about the place of women in our society and how we can improve it. RTW is a little step toward getting people information that might help them make concrete positive steps toward gender equality in their own lives, and unite people for that cause.

How did you get the gig working on the Obama campaign?

Luck and timing. I happened to know the people who had the job of running the digital team of the 2012 campaign thrust upon them rather suddenly. I was a competent person they could call on and was in a good place to take that job - I was actually living in London at the time so it meant moving across the world to Chicago at short notice, but it was very worth it. 

Are there any moments that you are particularly proud of?

My favourite part of the campaign was actually not dissimlilar to what I regularly do on the newsletter - asking people what they think about stuff, then sharing their stories (with their consent of course). That bread-and-butter stuff was part of the heart of our digital campaign, I think - reminding the country of the real people around the country who had an enormous stake in that election and its outcome.

What are the main differences between the Obama campaign and the Hillary one?
The dynamics are so different because she's the first woman, and Trump is the first… Trump. After 10 years of working in politics, this year has just been unbelievably surreal to see. On any given day, something happens that we'd be talking about for a month in any regular campaign cycle. It's like the 2012 election was on earth and the 2016 election is on Mars.

Back on earth, what newsletters should we be subscribing to?
I really love Julia Carpenter's A Woman You Should Know, which introduces you to an amazing woman from history every day, and Carrie Frye's Black Cardigan, which is lovely and literary and doesn't have anything to do with politics at all. 

What do you think is the secret to getting people to pay attention to what you are trying to say?
Having something meaningful to say that no one's said before, or said in quite the way you're saying it.

Seeing as you used to live in London [Laura did her Masters at London School of Economics], do you have a secret about London that we may not know already? 
I'm sure Londoners know about this already, but whenever I have an American friend who's visiting, I tell them to go to Sir John Soane's Museum near Lincoln's Inn Fields - a preserved house of an odd and lovely man who lived there 100 years ago. It's like walking through someone's amazing, artistic, curious brain, highly recommended.

Thanks Laura! Form Letters: Fill-In-the-Blank Notes to Say Anything to Anyone by Laura Olin is published by Abrams Image. See more Form Letters in issue 32 of Oh Comely

Culture Monday

With the aim of brightening up your Monday, we bring you a selection of delightful cultural offerings for the week ahead. Diaries at the ready...

Art

- Bedlam: The Asylum and Beyond @ Wellcome Collection, London (15 September to 15 January 2017). Read our feature 'Putting Pen to Paper' in issue 32 of Oh Comely.

- Prints Charming @ Hamilton House, Bristol (14 to 19 September)

- Hurvin Anderson: Dub Versions @ NAE, Nottingham (until 18 September)

- Maria Lassing @ Tate Liverpool (until 18 September 2016)

- Metamorphosis @ Morley College, London (until 22 September), featuring Oh Comely contributor Eleni Kalorkoti

 

Film

Station to Station @ Hoxton Square Bar, London (12 September)

London Fashion Film Festival @ Courthouse Hotel, London (14 September)

 

Music

Sunflower Bean on tour @ Bristol, Brighton and London (13 to 15 September)

 

Books

In Pursuit of London @ Waterstones Piccadilly, London 

 

'Bedlam: The Asylum and Beyond' opens at Wellcome Collection on 15 September. Photo: Lara Watson

'Bedlam: The Asylum and Beyond' opens at Wellcome Collection on 15 September. Photo: Lara Watson

 

Events

Roald Dahl Day @ nationwide (13 September)

Estuary Festival @ Various venues, Essex (17 September to 2 October)

D.I.Y. Art Market @ Copeland Gallery, Peckham, London (17 September)

Open House, London (17 & 18 September)

 

Show us where you've been and tell us what we should include in next week's round-up via our Twitter or Instagram.

Recipe Friday: Blueberry Porridge

For the next three weeks, we have some grainy goodness from Alex Hely-Hutchinson of London's 26 Grains restaurant to share, and we're kicking off with this easy tasty porridge dish, served with seasonal blueberries. A great one to master as we head into autumn. Alex says, "When we opened the shop in June 2015, this blueberry porridge was one of the first on the menu and it was an instant hit. It’s a firm favourite when the berry season is underway. There is something so delicious when blueberries and maple come together. The sweet and sour berry and dark treacle syrup paired with creamy, salted oats makes this such a moreish breakfast."

 

Alex Hely-Hutchinson's blueberry porridge.

Alex Hely-Hutchinson's blueberry porridge.

Serves 2

For the porridge:

100g rolled oats, soaked in 250ml water for at least 30 minutes
250ml unsweetened almond milk
¼ teaspoon sea salt
 

For the blueberry compote:

250g blueberries
1 tablespoon maple syrup
Squeeze of lemon juice

To serve:

2 tablespoons mixed seeds, such as flaxseeds, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds
A few strawberries, sliced
2 tablespoons coconut flakes
2 tablespoons Almond Butter from a jar or homemade
2 tablespoons amaranth (optional)

First make the blueberry compote: place the blueberries, maple syrup and lemon juice into a small pan with 1 tablespoon of water and allow to come to the boil. Once bubbling, take it off the heat and set aside.

Place the porridge ingredients, including the water the oats have been soaked in, into a pan over a medium heat and cook for 3–4 minutes, stirring continuously, until the oats have come together.

Spoon into 2 bowls and add the toppings in this order: a tablespoon of blueberries in a line down the middle with a pool of juice around the edge, then the seeds, strawberry slices, coconut flakes, almond butter and amaranth, if using.

26 Grains by Alex Hely-Hutchinson is published by Square Peg at £20, and is out now.

26 Grains by Alex Hely-Hutchinson is published by Square Peg at £20, and is out now.

 

 

Illustrators we love: Hannah Sunny Whaler

One of our recent featured artists, Bristol-based Hannah Sunny Whaler, is a signwriter as well as a beautiful illustrator. "My work has pretty much entirely been centred around my signwriting since graduating," says Hannah. "These two sides of my work are equally as important as each other; one informs the other."

We asked her to share her first commission, favourite piece and her most personal work so we could get to know her better.

Hannah's work in progress

Hannah's work in progress

Hannah's finished piece.

Hannah's finished piece.

“My first illustration commission was a piece I got asked to create after my final show at Art College, aged 17. The lady who commissioned me had seen my work there, and wanted something in a similar style (but on paper rather than on a collection of old wooden planks and doors like my piece in the final show!).”

“Every year, the third year Illustrators at Falmouth Art College produce a book called Illustrated Quotes an Sayings to showcase their about-to-be graduates. As well as producing a piece for inside the book, you can submit a cover design too, simply illustrating a single number – ours was number 9. I chose to hand paint it on a plank of wood in a circus style, and my design won. It was such an honour to have my image represent such a talented bunch of illustrators! I'm very proud of this.”

“My most personal piece is probably my most recent exhibition: “Searching for Words”, which was on display for a week at Line Gallery in Stroud. It consisted of four panels, upon which I sign painted with a uniform but freehand set lettering style. All of the wording was taken from an intensive period of remote brain writing exercises where I just wrote as I thought, going from brain to page, linking phrases with rhythm, rhyme and colour. This was accompanied by a big wall painting introducing the show. It was very experimental and hugely personal, and felt rather exposing, like I was letting people read my mind.”

See more of Hannah's work in issue 32, and her sketchbooks and signs at hanasunny.co.uk.

Pact Coffee offer!

If you like coffee just as half as much as we do at Oh Comely, you're going to love this offer from Pact Coffee

We've teamed up with London-based coffee start-up Pact Coffee to offer Oh Comely readers a free filter coffee kit with next day delivery worth £10 when they sign up to Pact and order their first bag of incredible freshly roasted coffee. The V60 kit will include a Hario V60 and enough filters to make 100+ cups of coffee. You'll also receive a welcome booklet and brew guide and, of course, your 250g bag of fresh ground coffee. 

Pact Coffee delivers incredibly freshly roasted coffee by post. They ship their coffee within seven days of roasting - grinding it at the last moment to make it easy for people to drink fresher coffee everyday. Through their direct trade relationships with farmers, Pact pay a higher price than Fairtrade for better quality coffee, and encourage the farmers they work with to invest in coffee quality and their people.

So what are you waiting for? Just click here to take advantage of this great offer. 

Holiday souvenirs: The Tea Towel

illustration: Eleni Kalorkoti

illustration: Eleni Kalorkoti

In issue 32, we investigate holiday souvenirs in all their tacky glory. Here we bow down in front of the mighty tea towel.

Just because something is a pencil sharpener with I WENT APE AT BRISTOL ZOO printed on it doesn’t mean that it can’t also be a profound human gesture. A souvenir’s value is not the object itself but what it represents: a symbolic memento of an experience in your life, passed on to someone you care about. The British, naturally, embrace kitsch tat, but most cultures have their own version of the tradition. In the Philippines it is called pasulubong; the word translates, quite beautifully, as “something meant for you when you welcome me back”.

 

Tea towels

If someone knocked over the internet and austerity wiped out the country’s remaining libraries it would be possible to entirely reconstruct the sum of human knowledge through souvenir tea towels. From breeds of terrier to the rules of field hockey to German wild flowers to the cafes of Anglesey, there is nothing we know as a species that we haven’t put on a linen rectangle. We are bewitched, drawn to kitchenware that brightly imparts information: at this exact moment in a RSPB gift shop in Dungeness a retired couple are buying a tea towel that explains Balkan proverbs, another that depicts the 31 sea areas of the Shipping Forecast and a third that lists every person you’ve ever kissed.

 

What's your favourite holiday souvenir? Discover more pasulubong inspiration in issue 32 of Oh Comely, out now.

Culture Monday

Glen Coe, photograph by Simon Bray, from The Edges of These Isles 

Glen Coe, photograph by Simon Bray, from The Edges of These Isles 

We don't know about you, but Monday morning is when we're most in need of some inspiration. Hence our Culture Mondays - our weekly round up of interesting events happening around the UK. And that's where you come in - we love to hear where you've been, and if there's anything that really should be on our radar...

 

Art

- Thursday Lates: The Edges of These Isles @ The Whitworth, Manchester (8 September)

- Wvnder @ 5th Base Gallery, London (8 to 11 September)

Bjork Digital @ Somerset House, London (until 23 October)

The Brutalist Playground @ S1 Artspace, Sheffield (until 11 September)

Folklore, Magic and Mysteries: Modern Witchcraft and Folk Culture in Britain @ Preston Manor, Brighton (until 30 September) 

- Adventures in Space @ The Lighthouse, Glasgow (until 2 October)

 

Film

Architecture x Fashion x Film @ Regent Street Cinema, London (6 September)

- Labyrinth @ Belgrave Square, London (10 September)

 

Music

- Eleanor Friedberger, on tour @ Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool and Brighton (6 to 9 September)

Bestival @ Robin Hill Country Park, Isle of Wight (8 to 11 September)

- Multi-Story Chamber @ Bold Tendencies, Peckham, London (9 & 11 September)

On Blackheath @ Blackheath London (10 & 11 September)

 

Theatre

- Burning Doors @ Soho Theatre, London (until 24 September)

84 Charing Cross Road @ Cambridge Arts Theatre (until 17 September). Take a look at our What We're Reading blog post about the book that inspired the play. 

 

Books 

- London Overground with John Rogers and Iain Sinclair @ The Institute of Light, Hackney, London (7 September)

 

Events

In:Site Festival: A festival of graduate creativity @ Birmingham Cathedral Square, Birmingham (5 to 9 September)

Screen-printing workshop @ The Makery, Bath (8 September)

- Radical Essex: Essex Architecture Weekend (10 and 11 September)

- North East Open Studios @ North East Scotland (10 to 18 September)

 

Show us where you've been and tell us what we should include in next week's round-up via our Twitter or Instagram.

Illustrators we love: Kate Rowland

Kate Rowland, jewellery maker and sketcher of all things pop culture, space, geology and dinosaur, featured in our current issue. We wanted to know more about her work and asked her our favourite illustrator questions:

What was your first commissioned piece? 
Which is the piece you're most proud of? and
What's your most personal drawing to date?

"My first commission was to illustrate a flyer for a retro games console night in Hackney Picturehouse. It was really fun, and I got paid in cinema tickets as well as actual money."

"I'm probably most proud of my 'space achievement' series. They were part of a university project, and remind me of all the hard work, as well as immense amounts of fun! I might make these into real patches soon..."

"All my work is very personal, but I painted this after a trip to Dungeness with my sister. We'd wanted to visit for ages (it's the UK's only desert!) and it was as amazing and inspirational as we'd hoped. This is the film maker Derek Jarman's iconic house."

See Kate's work in issue 32, and browse her jewellery on her Etsy shop.

Women Who Changed the World: Sophie Scholl

Between June 1942 and February 1943, German student Sophie Scholl barely slept a wink. By moonlight, she sprayed anti-Nazi slogans onto walls and typed thousands of leaflets by hand, advising her countrymen on how best to practise active resistance against Hitler. By day, she ran courier missions across the country, stuffing secret messages into phone boxes, letterboxes and library books. Eventually executed for high treason, she fought for the enduring freedom of the human spirit, wherever and whenever it was threatened.

Activist Sophie Scholl, illustrated by Hannah Sunny Whaler for Oh Comely issue 32.

Activist Sophie Scholl, illustrated by Hannah Sunny Whaler for Oh Comely issue 32.

When a nationwide manhunt was launched to catch a traitor group “of considerable size and resources”, few could have predicted the truth about the culprits. The White Rose movement had nothing but pens for weapons, and fewer than 10 active members at any given time. All were students in their early 20s – a small circle of siblings, friends and lovers, with the exception of Sophie’s beloved philosophy lecturer, Kurt Huber. 

As a young woman, Sophie aroused little suspicion at checkpoints and was notoriously good at hiding the group’s tracks. However, in seizing every opportunity to spread their message further, she put herself in grave danger. During a routine leaflet drop at the University of Munich on 18 February 1943, she climbed to the top floor and spontaneously flung excess copies into the air, sending a cascade of paper down the atrium staircase. Caught in the act, she was immediately reported to the Gestapo. 

Sophie remained stoic in the courtroom, and serene even when walking to her death. On the night before her execution, she shared a dream with her cellmate. 

“It was a sunny day. I was carrying a child, in a long white dress, to be christened. Suddenly, a crevasse opened at my feet, gradually gaping wider and wider. I was able to put the child down safely before plunging into the abyss. The child is our idea. In spite of all obstacles, it will prevail.”

Her prophecy was correct. Though she received little credit until after the war, Sophie is now a national hero. Her actions represented the ‘other’ Germany – one of progressive thinking and poetry – during a time of barbarism and mass ignorance. 

Further reading: The White Rose: Munich 1942-1943 by Inge Scholl (Wesleyan University Press); Opposition and Resistance in Nazi Germany by Frank McDonough (Cambridge Perspectives in History). 

This feature originally appeared in Oh Comely issue 32.

Culture Monday

Rukhsana Merris. Photo: Lubna Anani

Rukhsana Merris. Photo: Lubna Anani

Summer may be drawing to a close (and boo hiss to that...) but there's still plenty happening before 'Back To School' time. Take time to enjoy this week's selection of cultural tips. Know of something great going on? Drop us a line to fill us in on your secret. 

 

Music

- Issue 32 star and blog interviewee Rukhsana Merrise @ Fusion Festival, Otterspool Promenade, Liverpool (4 September)

- End of the Road @ Larmer Tree Gardens, Dorset (2 to 4 September) - read our blog post about what we'll be up to. 

- Party on a boat before college/work with Daybreak @ Tower Millennium Pier, London

 

Art

- William Eggleston Portraits @ National Portrait Gallery, London (until 23 October 2016)

- Maria Lassing @ Tate Liverpool (until 18 September 2016)

- Reading As Art @ Bury Art Museum (26 August until 19 November)

 

Theatre

- The Deep Blue Sea Live, cinemas nationwide (from 1 September) 

 

Film

- Back to the Future Triology @ Prince Charles Cinema, London (29 August)

- Best in Show - dog-friendly screening @ Nomad Cinema, Queen's Park, London (3 September) 

 

Books

- An Evening with Irvine Welsh and Guests @ St. Mary in the Castle, Hastings (30 August)

- An Evening with Jessie Burton @ Waterstone's, Nottingham (31 August)

 

Events and classes

- ‘Musics’ with David Toop, Steve Beresford, and Thurston Moore @ Rough Trade East, London (31 August)

- Our Lives in Data @ Lates, Science Museum, South Kensington, London (31 August)

- Nourish Festival: Craft, Food, Music @ Bovey Tracey, Devon (3 September)

- A Late Summer's Early Evening Barbecue @ Phoenix Farm Gardens, Shepherd's Bush, London (3 September)

- Fiona de Wert's introduction to Leather Work course @ Westonbirt Arboretum, South Gloucestershire (book now for 6 and 17 September)

 

Show us where you've been and tell us what we should include in next week's round-up via our Twitter or Instagram.

Sunday Reading: Letters in Long White Clouds

words Francesca Turauskis photo Liz Seabrook

I was a mile high and chasing the sun across the Pacific when I finally pulled them from my hand-luggage: the ‘DO NOT OPEN UNTIL YOU ARE ON THE PLANE!!!!’ envelopes from the friends I was flying away from. 

In the space after school, there are always different possibilities. But for me there was only one. Though introduced to me by a fantasy film, visiting New Zealand was the real plan I’d obsessed over for a number of years. My passion sustained me as I turned assembling fast food sandwiches into an art in order to save for the trip. Five months later, I threw in the apron and boarded the flight.  

The letters were parting tokens from my social group: two old friends, like touchstones, from primary school, and a handful of classmates from my GCSE years. Some I considered my best friends, others were on the periphery, friends of friends. The type of girls who gave me earrings for Secret Santa when I didn’t have my ears pierced. I’d accepted their presence as penance for spending time with the ones I liked. Such is school. 

There were five letters in total. I found the one from my favourite friend first, the one who swapped books with me, who stuck up for me. The weight of her letter was more than the others, the ink feathering on the thin paper. The plane was dark, and the empty space next to me would allow me secret tears if I needed them. Inside the plain envelope, the paper was punched and lined, pulled from a work-book. It looked like an English essay rather than a letter of friendship. Like an afterthought. Her writing started as expected: I read the disbelief at such a journey, the promise of exciting times, and I allowed myself a little pride. She looked forward to hearing all about it, and I felt more than a hint of superiority that whatever stories she had to swap would not compare. She was confirming that I was doing something amazing, something other people would do, if only they were as brave as me.  

But as I continued to read, it became more personal. Words and phrases began to snag. There had been an ongoing skit that I was the weird one, the one that didn’t quite fit. I was Phoebe from ‘Friends’. Strange Spice. I didn’t mind. But the way my best friend had written this down, alongside phrases about being far away, it made me realise that perhaps this weirdness had been tolerated rather than accepted. “I know you are the ‘weird one’, but you have always been very loyal and nice…”  

The other letters were formed of the same mould – various repetitions of bravery, safe travels. There was kindness in the act of writing them, but they were generic repertoires of appropriate words. By the time I finished reading, I felt like some strange stray they had adopted. I was 18 years old, on my own, and very far away from everything I knew.  

Rather than cry, I felt relieved. I could unfurl now, like the koru, a symbol of a new beginning.  

Travel takes you far away from friends, and for me, returning home didn’t bring me back to them. We met up for a while, but eight years later, even Facebook can’t nudge us to wish each other happy birthday. I kept the letters as souvenirs of the sentiments, but whether they are a reminder of a loss or an escape, I can never quite decide.   

Find more life-changing messages in our Letters issue.

What we're reading: 84 Charing Cross Road

Among the varied picks for issue 32's reading recommendations is this gentle story by Helene Hanff. Oh Comely's features ed, Frances Ambler shares why it's stayed with her.

Oh Comely's What We're Reading recommendations, issue 32. Photo: Liz Seabrook.

Oh Comely's What We're Reading recommendations, issue 32. Photo: Liz Seabrook.

This book is one of the cornerstones of my lending library. Soothing and heartening, I recommend a reading every time you’re feeling disenchanted with life. I reckon it’s virtually impossible not to be charmed by this simple – but real-life – story of how, through their correspondence, a wise-cracking, forthright New Yorker manages to infiltrate the lives and hearts of the staff of a rather more formal and restrained English antiquarian bookshop. 

It begins with a letter in October 1949 from (Miss) Helene Hanff of East 95th Street, New York City to Messrs Marks & Co. at 84 Charing Cross Road, London, announcing that she is a “poor writer with an antiquarian taste in books”, and enclosing her literary list of “most pressing problems”. Through her subsequent missives, Helene – an anglophile with a taste for Donne, Austen and Chaucer – attempts to “puncture that proper British reserve” using some less-than-proper humour, coupled with some straight-talking and some pure American gumption. 

It works. By December, Helene is sending the shop food hampers, and ends up in
correspondence not only with the shop staff, but also with their wives, children and elderly neighbours. In finishing exactly 20 years from the first one, in October 1969, the letters span rationing, a Royal Coronation and Beatlemania. People’s lives shift too: children grow up, get married, become older and die. 84 Charing Cross Road is a gentle book about how magic can be created in the most everyday of lives, as well as being a love letter to the power of literature in bridging years, backgrounds, oceans. 

Helene’s intense love for the shop from afar bestows the address with a kind of enchantment. Her final letter instructs a friend visiting London to visit the shop and “kiss it for me”. On my own pilgrimage, I was disappointed to discover a McDonalds in the place where Marks & Co. once stood. This book is delightful enough to make you overlook that detail – read this book, and you’ll want to go and kiss it too. 

Words: Frances Ambler. Photo: Liz Seabrook. 

Read our other reviews for the books pictures in Oh Comely issue 32, out now.

Recipe Friday: Cornbread with Chipotle Butter

We like to find you some unusual treats to share with friends at the weekend and our pals at Caravan, London have suggested this slightly spicy American-inspired snack. 

Caravan's Cornbread and Chipotle Butter

Caravan's Cornbread and Chipotle Butter

Serves 4

For the cornbread:

400ml milk
3 eggs
60g melted butter
200g corn
½ bunch of spring onions (chopped)
1tsp baking powder
1tsp caster sugar
1tsp table salt
1 cup polenta
½ cup bread flour

Preheat oven to 200c.

Mix all wet ingredients including the corn and the spring onions in a large bowl.

Mix all the dry ingredients together in another bowl.

Combine the wet and dry ingredients and promptly pour into a paper-lined loaf tin and place immediately in the oven. Bake for 30mins. Cool for 5 minutes then turn out of the tin onto a cooling rack.

Once the loaf is cool, trim the ends and slice the loaf into 8 equal sized slices (2 slices each).

The cornbread is now ready for the next step.

For the chipotle butter:

250g soft butter
pinch salt
½tsp minced chipotle
juice of ½ a lime
¼ cup chopped coriander

Mix all ingredients together.

Serve while soft. The excess will keep in the fridge for up to 1 week.

Next steps

Heat a large pan with a dash of vegetable oil.

Carefully place the slices of cornbread in the pan and fry until golden brown.

Flip the slices and fry till brown on both sides, repeat process until all slices are cooked.

To Serve

Place the fried slices of corn bread on a plate and top with a generous dollop of chipotle butter.

Finally, garnish with some picked coriander leaves, a wedge of lime and some slice spring onions.

Thanks to Miles Kirby, Executive Head Chef and Co-founder of Caravan restaurants.

Join us at End of the Road Festival

Photo: Liz Seabrook

Photo: Liz Seabrook

Having groggily crawled out of your tent (still caked in glitter from Bat for Lashes the night before), found a nice cup of tea and bacon buttie, you find yourself feeling slightly astray. The bands haven’t started yet and your friends are yet to surface. You realise you're missing something: a magazine.

For a second year, we’ve hand-picked a selection of wonderful independent magazines to bring with us to End of the Road, taking place from 2 to 4 September in Dorset. Nestled in the woods on the festival grounds, you'll be able to come and stretch out with one or two to read and chat to us about mags.

We'll also have an activity happening at 1pm each day:

Friday 2 September: our lifestyle editor and photographer, Liz Seabrook will be running a portrait photography workshop. She'll run through the basics of how to compose a portrait and how to help your subject feel more comfortable, before sending you off with a special assignment around the festival ground. If you'd like to get involved, bring a camera! It can be digital, instant, analogue or a camera phone, anything that makes an image!

Saturday 3 September: Our friends at LWLies are joining us for the weekend, and will be bringing along a Movie and Music quiz. Their quizzes are known for being a little fiendish at times, so make sure you swot up ahead of schedule. 

Sunday 4 September: Ever thought of making your own magazine? We'll be talking about how to go about it, the importance of honing a niche and the problems that often crop up along the way. Bring questions in your well-thumbed reporters notebook, zines for show and tell and a healthy sense of curiosity.

Photo: Liz Seabrook

Photo: Liz Seabrook

We’ll also be running real life version of our regular Twitter feature, #onegoodthing, handing out little slices of gloriousness. We'll have pens and paper with us, so if you like, you can return the favour and tell us what little moment fills you to the brim with joy.

So come and find us, read a little, chat some and tell us something good; we can’t wait to meet you. 

Ps. Tickets are still on sale and the line-up is A.M.A.Z.I.N.G. Come and join in the fun!

More curious things: Letters

In issue 32, we highlighted a few of the products that caught our eyes while putting together our Letters-inspired issue. It’s always so hard to narrow down our selection that we’ve decided to share some more favourites with you.

You can rely on a Rob Ryan sentiment to bring a tear to the eye. Handy then that he’s also made a handkerchief. This beautiful two-colour screen-printed number reads, “Forever my dearest friend you shall always be” and is intended to be a gift between brides and bridesmaids. However, we reckon that your bestie will appreciate it at any time. Sniff.

‘Forever My Dearest Friend’ grey handkerchief, £35, Rob Ryan

Our Lifestyle Editor, Liz, picked out this pencil case, one of the delightful products available from Berylune, an independent store in Royal Leamington Spa. This leather case is worthy of the smartest and sharpest pencils, and even comes with four ready supplied. Meaning that you can always be quick on the draw.

Stay Sharp leather pencil pouch, £9.95, Berylune

Designer and maker Lucie Gonnord creates suede coin purses decorated with the initial of your choosing. They come in a variety of eye-catching colour combinations, each hand-cut and made to order in St Leonards on Sea, East Sussex. If you’re a much as a fan as we are, you’ll be pleased to hear she sells initialled bags and keyrings too.

Grey and Mustard suede coin purse, £18, English and French Confectioners

This colourful card features the wit of the brilliantly named - literally - Ashleigh Brilliant. He is known for his mastery of 17-word maximum epigrams and new company Oh Brilliant (see what they did there?) hopes to create some wider appreciation for his work. And yes, we really must have lunch together soon.

We must have courage… notecard, £2, Oh Brilliant

Who can resist a good pin? Certainly not us. So, unsurprisingly, we’re powerless in front of this pencil and envelope set. Made by City of Industry, it’s from one of our favourite stationery shops, Present & Correct, which not only supplies us with pins, notebooks and pens but also ‘essentials’ such as 1970s erasers, Russian Font Posters, and this adorable suitcase moneybox.  

Enamel stationery pin, £11, Present & Correct

 

We’re channelling our not-so-hidden librarian fantasies with this date stamp. No pesky fines to deal with here though. Along with the date, you can add sentiments such as ‘big day’, ‘best day ever’ and ‘on this date’, although we encourage you to use it alongside the lending card we've handily printed for you inside the cover of issue 32

Roller Date stamp by American Crafts, £5, Hobbycraft

See the rest of our product picks in our Letters-themed issue 32

Culture Monday

Universal Everything on Ron Arad's Curtain Call at The Roundhouse, London. Credit: David Levene. 

Universal Everything on Ron Arad's Curtain Call at The Roundhouse, London. Credit: David Levene. 

It's Monday, which means it's time for us to share our cultural tips for the week ahead (and things we reckon you're going to need to book for). We always love hearing what you've enjoyed, so do drop us a line and tell us! 

Music

- Curtain Call Live: London Contemporary Orchestra @ Roundhouse, London (25 August)

- The Weather Station, touring Bexhill-on-Sea, London, Sheffield, Farndale 

- Summer Sessions @ Mac, Birmingham (26 August)

Art

- Missoni Art Colour @ Fashion and Textile Museum, London (until 4 September)

- Martin Creed: What You Find @ Hauser and Wirth, Somerset (until 11 September)

- Superwoman: 'Work, Build and Don't Whine' @ GRAD, London (until 17 September)

Theatre

- Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour @ National Theatre, London (until September)

Film

- Robert Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures/The LT Leroy Story double bill @ Regent Street Cinema, London (22 August)

- Fragments: An Evening of Arthur Russell Films @ DIY Space for London, London (24 August)

Books

- Gladfest @ Gladstones Library, Hawarden, Flintshire (2 to 4 September)

Events

- Friday Late: Grow Your Own @ V&A Museum, South Kensington, London (26 August)

Lates @ Natural History Museum, South Kensington, London (26 August)

Show us where you've been and tell us what we should include in next week's round-up via our Twitter or Instagram.

Sunday Reading: Blood Sisters

Listening to the sound of a friendship changing gear.
words Letty Mchugh, photo Antoine Henault

Photo: Antoine Henault

Photo: Antoine Henault

“Nobody really knows the difference between pyjamas and clothes, out of context,” I hear the 2011-me tell my friend, Becca. “It’s just a conspiracy to make us buy more.” 

Listening to this, I see myself strutting the streets of Bath in jeans, clogs and a pink, brushed-cotton pyjama top, printed with cows in nightcaps. At the time I met the gaze of quizzical passers-by, smugly thinking, “Yes, this is the world’s most kick-ass shirt and you should be jealous.” With hindsight, I don’t think anyone was jealous. I’m sure everyone was thinking, “Why on earth is that girl wearing pyjamas?”

In May 2011, Becca and I both had deadlines looming for our creative writing degrees. As we weren’t getting any work done separately, Becca came round to mine so we could not get any work done together. I had just written essays on various conceptual artists for the art side of my course and was convinced that anything I did could be considered art, if documented in the right way. Four or five hours into what became the 26-hour spectacular ‘bed-in for deadlines’, I began recording everything we were saying. Nearly five years later, this is the first time I’ve listened to the tapes. 

What strikes me is how little work we actually do; we type for ten-minute stretches before talking for two hours. I convince Becca to join Twitter so she can tweet Noel Fielding her dream about ground beef. Becca outlines her idea that you should only leave a marriage if you can find a person your spouse would be truly happy with to replace you. We take an hourly selfie holding up signs telling our 34 followers how long we’ve been in my bed. We discover rainymood.com and spend an age listening, enraptured, to the artificial rain. If procrastination were a super power, we would have been the world’s best superheroes. 

The other thing that hits me is how I can hear our friendship evolving over the course of the tapes. I’d known Becca for over a year before ‘bed-in for deadlines’; we liked each other, hung out a lot. But in these recordings we change from pals into something more like comrades—blood brothers; blood sisters, I guess, though I can’t pinpoint the moment. Is it where I read Becca’s flash fiction that is still hands-down one of my favourite pieces of writing? Or where Becca forgives me for getting pus from the sore on my foot on the printout of that same piece of writing? It’s probably the latter.

I might start using that as a friendship test. “Hey,” I’ll say to new people I meet, “Theoretically, if I had a wound on my foot from an ill-advised pair of shoes, and I let goo from that wound trickle all over your writing portfolio would you: A, Be grossed out? Or B, Graciously offer to tell anyone who asks that the goo is from your ice lolly?” If they answer B, I’ll know that in five years’ time they’ll still be the kind of friend you can rely on to always text you back.

Find more stories of female friendship in our Sisters Issue

10 ideas for letters to write

Few surprises are as heartwarming as a handwritten envelope amongst your post. Hidden between junk mail, catalogues, bills, there it sits: slow, considered, sentimental. We often know exactly who it's from before prising the envelope open, recognising the curve of the 'a', the way the 'y' loops; invoking a memory from a childhood birthday card perhaps or a funny note left by an old housemate. They're a bit of a relic really to most. A treasure in today's quickfire-text talk. Carrying sentiments across distances, in no great hurry, just for you. To read at your leisure, and hold on to forever.

We think it's time we wrote more – what about you? Take one of these letter ideas as your cue for a trip to the postbox this weekend.

Photo: Lara Watson

Photo: Lara Watson

1. To the confidence boosters
Teachers, friends or colleagues, there are those special souls who know exactly what to say at the right time. They may not even know how important that conversation was to you. Tell them in a letter.

2. To distant relatives
If your family's separated over the country or over continents, drop a line. For kin feeling cut-off, even lonely, a letter is a wonderful gift. 

3. To your childhood penpal
You never know – their family may still be at the same address. Strike up the conversation again. Do you still like the same boyband? What's your favourite film? Have a little search for them online if they've likely moved on. Facebook stalking come good.

4. To the person who hurt you
If enough time has past and a bit of perspective would help you both, pen a gentle, kind note. Post, and move on. 

5. To your bestie
So you text every other day, no matter – there's always more to say to your soulmate. Fill the envelope with bits and pieces that remind you of them for a confetti-like smattering of extra love.

6. To your crush
Go on, say it. Love favours the brave. Avoid tongue-twisted real-time confessions and unveil your feelings exactly as you want to via the written word. Then savour the next meeting knowing you've said your piece.
If you've coupled up with your crush, leave them a note telling them they still make your insides go funny, somewhere they'll find it by accident – a sports bag, rucksack, lunch box...

7. To the youth
Littles love grown-up things. Address fancy correspondence to nieces, nephews, friend's kids. Give the next generation the letter-loving bug too.

8. To your hero
Fan mail can make it. Go through their book publishers or management agency, keep it cool and enjoy the rather wonderful wait, checking your mailbox for a response worthy of inclusion in a future edition of Letters of Note. Heroes don't have to be famous of course. If you've got a favourite blogger or inspiring person in your community, tell them so on paper.

9. To your local MP
Angry or proud, write with passion for what you believe in or have been affected by – bad and good – and encourage others to, too.

10. To a stranger
Write a general note of encouragement. Leave it on a bus seat, inside a library book or on a park bench. Feel good for the rest of the week.

You can always write to Oh Comely too, naturally. We feature our pick of the postbag each issue. You can reach us at: Oh Comely, 40 Bowling Green Lane, London, EC1R 0NE. Get more letter-writing ideas in issue 32, dedicated to type, mail and the creation of mighty words.

Recipe Friday: Gluten-free banana bread

We're all for eating whatever you like, but if you are sensitive to gluten, or fancy mixing the classic banana-rescue recipe up a bit, this one's just for you. This foodie twist comes from the kitchen of our fashion ed, Charlotte Melling. 

You'll need:

2 bananas
210g coconut oil
240g ground almonds
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp cinnamon
2 eggs
a pinch of salt
maple syrup (or other sweet drizzle like Agar, Honey or Syrup) 

Preheat your oven to 200C and line a square baking tray with greaseproof paper.

Peel the bananas and whizz in a blender with the eggs.

In a separate bowl mix all the dry ingredients. 

Over a low heat, gently melt the coconut oil before adding to the dry mix.

Combine both mixtures.

Bake for 20 minutes or so (depending on the thickness of your cake)

Once baked, prick some holes in the cake and pour over the maple syrup – as much or as little as you like. 

Bake in the oven for five more minutes.

Leave to cool, then cut up and serve.

This recipe originally appeared in our Bananarama round-up in Oh Comely issue 31, available to buy here.

Illustrators we love: Eleni Kalorkoti

Oh Comely illustrator and all-round excellent human being, Eleni Kalorkoti is a Scot in South London who loves drawing people and their clothes, sewing and chasing her pup around the park. We asked her to share three of her drawings: first piece commissioned; the work she's most proud of; and her most personal project.

"The first piece of illustration work I was paid to do was a series about dating for Attitude magazine, and I was so excited to get the job at the time and I am so embarrassed of my drawings now! So I'm not going to show them to you. But I will share the piece of college work that the art director hired me on the basis of (which is embarrassing enough all by itself)."

2 Eleni-NYT-Sunday-Review-Cover-final-4-web_750.jpg

"I'm pretty much astonished every time I manage to pull off an illustration job, especially if it's something that's going to be printed BIG. So I was happy that this picture for the cover of the New York Times Sunday Review turned out nice."

"I made a zine called Held, which was the result of a breakup and sadness and loneliness and all that horror. Ugh. I like how the pictures turned out though."

See more of Eleni's work in Oh Comely issue 32, and at her site, elenikalorkoti.com