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Archive for Lettice

Lettice is the Senior Editorial Producer, Information for www.visitlondon.com. Lettice is a Londoner and is passionate about her home city. Lettice loves exploring new places, seeing new things and being surprised by London every day. She also loves London's history, great theatre, shoe shopping, cake and pottering about on the river. An obsessive knitter, weaver, spinner and embroiderer, you'll usually find Lettice in hedonistic pursuit of the latest London craft adventure. Her current favourite places for inspirational arts & craft include exhibitions at the V&A and the Hayward Gallery and craft shopping at iKnit, Liberty and The Handweaver's Studio.

Photo of the Week: The Lord Mayor’s State Coach Returns to the Museum of London

Lord Mayor's state coach arrives at the Museum of London

This week’s photo is of the Lord Mayor’s impressive state coach being returned to the Museum of London after last weekend’s Lord Mayor’s Show. The coach is normally pulled by horses but required specially designed skates and plenty of manpower to manoeuvre it back into the museum.

The coach will be on display in the windows of the new modern galleries which open at the museum in spring 2010.

If you’ve seen anything shiny in London this week, snap it and add it to the Visit London Flickr pool and we could be featuring your photo!

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London’s Top 10 Independent Bookshops

Shopping for books in London is a perfect way to pass the time. Here are some of our favourite independent bookshops in London – they’re ideal for Christmas presents!

1. Foyles
Famous Foyles is a sprawling department store with books on every subject. There are four floors of books to choose from and a café to contemplate your books. You’ll even spot a few well chosen second-hand books nestling between the new ones to give you a comprehensive choice.

2. Grant & Cutler
Specialising in foreign language books (in more than 150 languages), Grant & Cutler is the place to go if you’re learning a new language or missing books in your first language. Grant & Cutler stock international classics for students, the latest blockbusters from around the world and any educational language material you might ever decide you need.

3. Daunt Books
Daunt Books in Marylebone High Street is a very satisfying place to buy books. The old-fashioned wood panelling and balconies seem to saturate the books with wisdom and gravitas. Daunt have a large selection of travel books and they sensibly place guidebooks, novels and travel diaries together by country.

4. My Back Pages
My Back Pages in Balham is stuffed with second-hand books. You can lose hours in this shop, get cramp from prolonged rummaging through boxes or unexpectedly clamber over some books and discover another customer sitting on the floor dreamily building a book castle of their potential purchases. If you leave My Back Pages without armfuls of books, you’re doing it wrong.

5. RD Franks
RD Franks stocks the most attractive books in town. Specialising in books and magazines about fashion and textiles, you’ll find imported and specialist glossy mags predicting cutting edge trends. RD Franks is worth a visit if you’re a stylish reader. Frustratingly, the shop is only open during office hours and not on Saturdays, so the majority of customers are students hanging about reading the magazines.

6. The London Review Bookshop
Visiting The London Review Bookshop will make you smarter. It’s the very antithesis of the bargain book selection in your local supermarket. Bookworms will be pleased to hear that the books at the London Review Bookshop appear to be chosen for their literary, imaginative and intellectual merit. And they serve cake.

7. The Riverside Bookshop
The Riverside Bookshops is tiny, but beautiful. There’s a good selection of the latest fiction, and a little bit of everything else. Florence Welch (of Florence and the Machine) recently said it was one of her favourite places in London to hang out. It’s also temptingly close to VL Towers and causes us much accidental lunchtime book buying.

8. The Persephone Bookshop
The Persephone Bookshop is a publishing house bookshop selling Persephone books. The books are exciting – re-prints of forgotten novels by female authors with vintage designs on the endpapers. So much love has gone into creating these books, it’s hard not to eulogise at great length about how comforting they are to curl up with. You’ll be back for more.

9. Quinto Bookshop
Quinto Bookshop is a traditional, second-hand bookshop on Charing Cross Road. The shop is packed with books on all subjects. Oddly, most of the fun seems to take place just outside Quinto’s front door. Bibliophiles have been known to queue up outside the shop after the monthly stock-take to get their hands on the incoming treasures, and we’ve spotted some fans of Zachary ‘Spock’ Quinto posing outside for Vulcan salute photos (and probably heading up the road for another photo session outside Koenig’s bookshop afterwards!)

10. Ripping Yarns
Remember your favourite childhood books that inspired your love of reading? Ripping Yarns specialises in collectable children’s books so you can have more adventures with the Famous Five. If you can’t remember the title or the author, you can describe the creatures and the story to the bookshop staff and they’ll probably be able to find it for you. Ripping Yarns also sell vintage annuals, children’s compendiums and comics.

Did we miss your favourite London bookshop? Tell us about it!

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Photo of the Week: Fireworks Over Putney

Fireworks over Putney by dodsworld

This week’s picture from the Visit London Flickr pool is by dodsworld and shows fireworks over Putney. Add your photos of autumn in London and we could be featuring you next!

If you love fireworks, you’ll be excited to hear that The Mayor has just announced that London will celebrate the new year with a big fireworks display at the London Eye. Find out more about New Year in London.

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a-Ha at The O2 in London

They say you shouldn’t meet your heroes, but should you go and see the bands you had posters of on your bedroom wall 20 years ago? If the band in question is a-Ha, the answer is yes!

From the Sun Always Shines On TV to the closing notes of Take On Me (via their latest hit single Foot of the Mountain), a-Ha’s gig at The O2 last night was worth waiting two decades for. The music still sounds fresh and exciting and, despite pushing 50(!), Morten, Mags and Pal still look as young and tasty as they did in that poster. No signs of ravaged rock star looks or excessive pie-eating retirement on this stage.

a-Ha plan to play a final worldwide tour in 2010 before splitting up, so you’ll have one last chance to see them in London next year. While you’re waiting for the details of the tour, we say go and indulge your 80s crushes, Smash Hits obsessions and dirty secrets.

Artists who defined the 80s embarking on London gigs in the near future include:

Loads of 80s stars are still touring, and you can even catch Belinda Carlisle in Hairspray.

A-Ha are the second band that I loved in the 80s and hadn’t seen live until this year (I saw The Shadows in September; I love you Bruce!) Now I’m on a mission to tick some more names off a slightly embarrassing list.

Who were your teen crushes, the bands and singers you never got to see when you were 13? And will you be going to see them live in London in 2010?

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Comics, Manga and Zines in London

Detail from the Comica Festival poster by Sarah McIntyreComics and manga are the next big thing in London! Here are some dates for your diary.

COMICA – The London International Comics Festival
The Comica Festival runs at the ICA from the 5-26 November and explores the world of comics, graphic novels and manga. Events include workshops, lectures, exhibitions and films.

We’re intrigued by the Uncle Hans-Peter Party, a live comic event where the audience are required to wear masks and collectively assume the persona of Uncle Hans-Peter – dress code smart casual; lederhosen optional.

Prices for Comica events vary, some are free. The Uncle Hans-Peter Party is on 17 November and costs £10.

Manga: Professor Munkata’s British Museum Adventure
Leading Japanese Manga artist Hoshino Yukinobu has created an exhibition featuring his manga character Professor Munakata having an adventure at the British Museum.

As usual, the museum are putting on a great free programme of events about the exhibition including gallery talks, lectures and family digital comic workshops. The exhibition is free and runs from 5 November – 3 January 2010.

30 Years of Viz at the Cartoon Museum
Viz, Britain’s adult comic celebrates its 30th birthday with an exhibition at The Cartoon Museum. Love it or hate it, this lewd, rude comic has scores of fans including Top Gear’s Jeremy Clarkson. If you’re looking for an offensive exhibition in London, don’t miss this one! 4 November – 24 January 2010.

Caped Crusader Exhibition at Orbital Comics
Orbital Comics is one of the best comic shops in London and they hold regular comic themed events. The Caped Crusader Exhibition (1 -13 December) will feature lots of postcards doodled and scribbled on by artists, performers, writers and musicians with links to the comic book and science fiction universe. If you’ve ever wondered what Brian Blessed, Russell Tovey, Doctor Who, James Earl Jones and Batman would doodle on a postcard, you’re about to find out. The postcards will be sold for charity.

The London Zine Symposium
The London Zine Symposium is a place for anyone interested in fanzines, small press, comics or radical writing to meet up, swap ideas, buy something new to read and attend workshops about zines. Yes, 3 May 2010 seems like ages away, but put it in your diary now and you won’t forget it.

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Photo of the Week: London Skyline from Vertigo 42

London and the Thames from Vertigo 42 by Sami Susiaho

This week’s photo is a view looking south over HMS Belfast, City Hall and Tower Bridge from Vertigo 42 by Sami Susiaho.

Have you taken any stunning pictures of London? Share them with us in the Visit London Flickr pool.

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Swissotel The Howard’s Chocolate St Paul’s Cathedral

A white chocolate St Pauls Cathedral

Swissotel The Howard London have created a tiny chocolate St Paul’s Cathedral for their luxurious London Landmark afternoon tea and we think it’s really cool. If you want to eat one of these and other famous London landmarks transformed into biscuit, book now!

(Sorry the photo is a little fuzzy, when I went back for more pictures, the cathedral had mysteriously relocated to a nice safe tummy.)

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Photo of the Week: The Thames Barrier

London's Thames Barrier by BisForBabb

This week’s picture is the Thames Barrier glinting in the sun by BisForBabb.

Seen anything shiney in London this week? Snap it and add your photos to the Visit London Flickr pool!

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Suburbia at the London Transport Museum

Gardening by underground by Stanislaus S Longley 1933The London Transport Museum’s latest exhibition Suburbia is bursting with gnomes.

Early in the 20th century, London’s population grew so much that public transport had to expand, enabling thousands of people to go and live in the suburbs and commute into Central London for work. The Suburbia exhibition is packed with previously unseen posters, Londoners stories and memorabilia celebrating public transport’s contribution to the London suburbs.

Areas formerly outside London became more like London villages and new stations were built. Stunning posters were commissioned for the tube encouraging Londoners to move to the suburbs – work all day in the city, then escape and spend your leisure time in a heavenly paradise like Edgware or Morden.

The exhibition celebrates the great suburban pastime of gardening (hence the gnomes) and includes video clips of entertaining fictional suburbanites like Reggie Perrin and Margo Leadbetter.

The history of commuting is brought bang up to date with suburban inspired pop songs and a loving tribute to the iPod, a necessity for every commuter who needs to drown out the inane blather of the vacuous twit on the mobile phone.

If you know London well, you’ll love searching through the old sepia photos looking for pics of your local high street when it contained a horse and cart instead of a kebab shop!

The Suburbia exhibition is great fun and captures the spirit of the suburbs. Afterwards you can go and play on the old trains. Bliss. The exhibition runs till 31 March 2010.

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Photo of the Week: London Restaurant Festival Cake

London Restaurant Festival Cake

The London Restaurant Festival launched on Wednesday evening with festival organiser Fay Maschler cutting this astonishing cake. Where would you even begin to start eating this*? If it makes you feel hungry, have a meal out this weekend with one of the festival’s special menu offers!

Seen anything special in London this week? Add your London photos to our Visit London Flickr pool and we could be featuring your pictures!

*perhaps just mosh your face into it.

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