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Mother’s Day in Unison

Fact: a staggering 2/3 of those celebrating Mother’s Day will gift Mom with a flower or plant, spending $2.3 billion dollars on stems for mom.

Of course, we have nothing against flowers. (In fact, we love them – and we love helping you decorate your home with them.) But in case you’re looking to step away from the majority and get a bit more creative with your mommy plans this year, we’ve got some inspiration for you.

Turns out, some of the folks on our very own Unison team have great traditions and stories from Mother’s Days passed. Check it out and steal for yourself:

Alicia Rosauer, Owner / Designer

Most every year, we have a Mother’s Day brunch with the grandparents included. Then, later in the day, we take the kids to the Chicago Botanic Garden. It’s always at its peak with flowers and trees bursting out, and the kids love the fountains the best!

Alicia Pushes a Stroller through at the Chicago Botanic Garden Poppies in Bloom at the Chicago Botanic GardenPlaying by the Fountain at the Chicago Botanic Garden

Erin Madden, Customer & Sales Manager

I have been lucky to celebrate Mother’s Day with my mom and my mother-in-law every year. We always have brunch with my mom, and it’s a great way to start the day. We switch off making brunch at my parents’ house or going out to eat. Mom’s pick!

From there, we head to my in-laws for dinner and do it all over again. My husband and his 5 brothers are in charge of the menu, so we (my mother-in-law and 5 sisters-in-law) get to sit back and relax…for a moment.

Daisy Hoeft, Marketing Manager

We celebrate Mother’s Day differently every year. This Sunday, my family is so excited to be headed to the United Center for game 4 of the Chicago Bulls vs. Cleveland Cavaliers semifinal series! #SeeRed!

Chicago Bulls at the United Center

Mia Oetter, Store Manager

Every Mother’s Day, my boys Colin & Phoenix and their father take me out for brunch and shower me with gifts ranging from homemade artwork to care packages. My favorite tradition is when the boys pick out cards and add their own personal sense of humor to it. One of my favorite gifts were these letter pressed “stop talking” cards to hand out to my kids when I needed some quiet time. The boys found the gift to be perfect and hilarious, I found it to be quite useful 😉

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Caitlin Ragan, Marketing Coordinator

Well, I’ll speak frankly: my family has never celebrated Mother’s Day the same way every year. For about 6 or 7 years now, my sister and I haven’t lived near my mom – so it’s been a lot of heartfelt cards, Skype calls from vastly different time zones, and flowers sent to her office.

So though we haven’t established a true Mother’s Day tradition, I can say that my sister and I have never had a better friend than my mom, and we celebrate that every day with calls, silly texts, and even a private mother-daughter blog to document our favorite conversations together. So cheers to my mum. She’s very loved!

A Mom & Her Daughters

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Ceviche Celebration: A Recipe for Cinco de Mayo

We love that Americans have embraced Cinco de Mayo as a celebration of Mexican culture and heritage.  After all, there’s a lot to love about the vibrant hues, foods, and fun of our sister to the south.

This year, to get ourselves in the mood, we whipped up a batch of Ceviche Estilo Sinaloa from Mexico: The Cookbook. This version of the old world South American dish hails from the Sinaloa region, also known as the “breadbasket of Mexico” due to its widespread agricultural production.

But with or without the carbs, this little number is worth your time & effort. Simple to make and fresh on the palette, it’s sure to be a crow pleaser, no matter your crew.

Ceviche Estilo Sinaloa

– 1 1/2 pound / 700 g red snapper fillets, skinned and diced
– juice of 8 limes
– 2 tomatoes, seeded and finely chopped
– 3/4 white onion, finely chopped
– 1 large cucumber, seeded and finely chopped
– 3 pickled jalapeño chiles, membranes and seeds removed and finely chopped
– 3 tablespoons finely chopped cilantro (coriander)
– sea salt and pepper
– extra virgin olive oil, for drizzling
– tostadas, to serve
– 1 avocado, peeled, pitted, and sliced, to serve

Put the fish into a bowl, add the lime juice, and let marinate in the refrigerator for about 3 hours or until the flesh changes color without losing its texture. Drain off the liquid.

Combine the tomatoes, onion, cucumber, and chiles in another bowl and season with salt and pepper. Gently fold in the cilantro (coriander) and fish and drizzle with olive oil. Taste and adjust the seasoning, if necessary.

Serve on tostadas covered with sliced avocados.

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Ceviche served in our Biobu Low Bowl and Mini Bowls with extras
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Mexico: The Cookbook
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The People in Our Neighborhood: Eli-Wyn

Nestled in a tree-studded design enclave just west of downtown Chicago, the bricked loft district that houses our design studio and corporate offices is also home to a host of other creative talents that infuse our world with inspiration, innovation, and integrity every day.

In the coming weeks, we’ll talk with some of our neighboring artists, designers, and other creators about what they do and why they do it.

An-Eli-Wyn-Sofa

First up: Eli-Wyn, a family-owned upholstery business that brings a personalized touch to everything they do. And the list is lengthy: re-upholstery, custom furniture, window treatments, fabric sales, and pickups and deliveries.

We at Unison can happily vouch for the quality of their work; over the years, we’ve become such fans that we’ve begun working with Eli Wyn to produce some of our ottomans, poufs, and piped pillows.

Recently, we caught up with Molly Quinlan, who runs the shop with her husband, John.

Molly-Quinlan-of-Eli-Wyn

Here’s what we talked about:

Unison: Eli-Wyn offers such an array of services. How did your business evolve?

Molly: My husband, John, had a retail store for many years, and he used Eli Wyn upholstery at the time. So when the owner retired and offered us the business in 1996, I took over and dove into the reupholstery business. At the time, I was a designer at a commercial furniture dealership in Chicago, and ready for a change.

Eli-Wyn offers upholstery services as well as custom furniture. We make everything from headboards to sectionals, ottomans, and pillows. We also make custom window treatments.

We moved to the Fulton area about 6 years ago, and we welcome customers to come and select from hundreds of fabric samples that we have in our showroom.

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Unison: That sounds like a unique model – kind of a hybrid between an upholstery shop and a design studio. Do you feel this makes you different from others in your field?

Molly: Yes, the full-service aspect is unique. John brings deep retail experience from running his own store for over 10 years, I bring the design background, and we have a gentleman on staff who, upon request, will go out to customers’ homes to help them take measurements, select fabrics, etc. We love to work with both designers and end users, and our full-service approach allows for that.

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It’s also nice that we have a library up front to service customers and designers who want to select fabrics. And the custom furniture side is unique as well.

Unison: And can you tell us about the vibe in the design district of Chicago where you (and we) are located?

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Molly: This area has been wonderful. We have met many different artisans who share a collaborative approach to their work: there’s Unison, and also a refinishing company, custom cabinetry makers, and a graphic printing company that we have had the chance to work closely with.

It’s been great to be able to utilize the knowledge from the various crafts. It is definitely a  unique area to work in.

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Photography credit, John Sturdy

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Holy Holidays, Batman! Recipes for Celebration.

With Spring, we welcome the beloved festivities of Passover and Easter. Do these religious holidays feel refreshing because of their profound historical and spiritual significance? Or because of the budding of warmer weather, the familiar pastel palettes, and the fact that they’re happily less commercially exploited than their December counterparts?

No matter. What’s important is that Passover and Easter represent important reasons to celebrate. To gather family, tap into traditions, and enjoy the beauty of simple pleasures.

Allow us offer some sweet tastes & tidbits for the occasions:

An Andalusian Passover Dish

Dare to be great? Try the Santiago Cake recipe from Spanish chef Ferran AdriĂ ’s wonderful cookbook, The Family Meal. With this recipe, AdriĂ  – who is widely considered one of the best chefs in the world – has modernized an original Andalusian Passover dish named for a cathedral to which pilgrims travel: tarta de Santiago de Compostela. Translation: delicious.

The Family Meal 1

To reflect your clean taste alongside this tasty dessert, serve the sugar-dusted squares on crisp Circa White Platters, with a mix of striking blue napkins in a Nippon, Harvest, or Tiles pattern.

Blue Napkin with Gold Utensils

 

Santiago Cake

– 3 extra large eggs, at room temperature
– 3/4 cup (170 g) granulated sugar
– 2 and 1/2 cups (250 g) ground almonds
– 1 pinch ground cinnamon
– zest of 1/2 lemon
– confectioners’ sugar

Preheat oven to 350 F (180 C). Grease the bottom and sides on a 9″ x 13″ (minimum) or 12″ x 20″ (maximum) rectangular pan with butter. Add the flour and tap it around the pan. Tip out the excess. Line the bottom of the pan with parchment paper.

Break the eggs into a bowl and add the sugar. Using a free-standing mixer with wire attachement or an electric hand whisk, beat until thick and foamy, about 5 minutes.

Mix in the ground almonds (almond meall) and the cinnamon.

Finely grate the lemon zest and stir into the dry ingredients.

Gently add the ground almond mixture to the egg and sugar mixture. Fold in carefully with a spatula to retain as much air as possible. Immediately stop mixing when the batter is smooth. Do not overmix.

Pour the batter into the prepared pan. The cake batter should be about ⅝-inch deep.

Bake in the oven for 17 minutes, or until evenly risen, golden, and shrinking away from the sides of the pan. Remove from the oven and let cool in the pan.

Remove the cake from the pan by lifting the parchment paper. Cut into portions with a knife or a cookie cutter / mold.

Sprinkle confectioners’ sugar over the top using a fine-mesh strainer before serving.

From The Family Meal

A Cake for the Easter Bunny

What fluffy little egg-toting rabbit wouldn’t love his Easter festivities to include a cake made of carrots? It seems the perfect sweet treat for the day. And the incomparable Rose Carrarini offers up the perfect carrot cake recipe in her make-us-want-to-move-to-Paris cookbook, Breakfast, Lunch, Tea.

Breakfast Lunch Tea Cookbook Side

The perfect backdrop for sweet-veggie decadence? A Tiles Mauve Tablecloth with a mix of same-hued napkins in a gingham or tiles pattern, plus our beloved Teema White Dinnerware.

Tiles-Easter-Table

Carrot Cake

– Unsalted butter, for greasing
– 4 eggs
– generous 1 cup superfine sugar
– 1 and 1/4 cups sunflower oil
– 9 medium carrots, finely grated
– 2 cups plain all-purpose flour, sifted
– 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
– 1 rounded teaspoon baking powder
– 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
– 1/2 teaspoon salt
– 1 and 1/2 cups finely chopped walnuts

For the icing

– generous 1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
– generous 1 cup cream cheese
– 1/2 teaspoon natural vanilla extract
– 1/2 – 3/4 cup confectioner’s sugar, depending on how sweet you like your icing

Preheat the oven to 350 F

Butter a 9-inch cake tin and line its base with parchment paper.

Beat the eggs and superfine sugar until they are light and fluffy but not too white and meringue-like.

Pour in the oil and beat for a few more minutes.

Fold in the carrots and then the flour with the cinnamon, baking powder, baking soda and salt.  Finally fold in the walnuts.

Pour the mixture into the prepared tin and bake for about 45 minutes or until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean.

Remove from the oven and cool the cake in the tin before taking it out.

To make the icing, beat the butter with the cream cheese for a few minutes till the mixture is smooth.

Add the vanilla extract and confectioner’s sugar.

When the cake is cold, ice the top with the icing – it can be as smooth or rough as you like.

From Breakfast, Lunch, Tea

A Satisfying Seder Finale

Toward the end of Passover Seder, many families dig into a welcome helping of macaroons – delicious, flour-free treats that are as fun as they are easy to make. Enter Ginette Mathiot’s time-honored bible of traditional French home cooking, I Know How to Cook – and, more specifically, the recipe for delectable almond macaroons found therein.

I Know How to Cook Cookbook

Once you’ve mastered the macaroons, serve them up on feast-worthy Harvest Table Linens. And pour your many glasses of Seder wine in Lempi Blown Glasses.

Bon appétit!

Harvest Napkin in Wood Napkin Ring

Almond Macaroons

– Butter, for greasing
2 and 3/4 cups ground almond
– 3 egg whites
– 2 and 1/2 cups superfine sugar

Preheat oven to 300°F and line a baking sheet with buttered parchment paper. Put the almonds in a bowl and mix in the egg whites a little at a time. Stir in the sugar and mix well.

Form the dough into slightly flattened balls and place on the prepared baking sheet. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until lightly browned.

From I Know How to Cook

Sweeten up the Sweetest Day

Easter is a day of sweeter-than-anything scenes: pastel-tinted egg hunts among fresh-blooming Easter lilies, toddling little girls donning frilly church dresses, and sugary treats galore.

On this sweetest of days, what could be more appropriate than coconut cake? It’s fresh, festive, and sure to disappear with much less elegance than it arrives when you serve it up from a Tier Cake Stand with Eve Brushed Gold Flatware.

Coconute Cake on Tier Cake Stand

Prefer more cocoa with your coconut? Try Casey Barber’s Coconut Cherry Suzy Q’s, deliciously featured on Design Sponge. And for extra ooh’s and ahh’s (and savings), present it all with our cheerful Gingham Kitchen Linens in any shade.

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Coffee @Unison

We are proud to offer this beautifully designed and thoughtfully considered new manual coffeemaker by local artist, designer, and professor Craighton Berman at our Chicago store.

Please join us on Sunday for this very special event, Coffee @Unison, featuring a demonstration, tasting, and the chance to bring one home with you.

Manual Coffee Maker

Sunday, March 8th, from 12 – 2 pm

Unison
1911 W Division St
Chicago

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Q&A with Designer Pat Kim

Pat Kim is a designer / maker based out of Brooklyn, with a knack for creating fun, thoughtful, and timeless objects – which is just one reason that we at Unison love to collaborate with him.

Soap on a Rope

To celebrate a few of his latest additions to the collection, we took some time to ask Pat a few questions about his philosophy and inspiration as a designer. His answers inspired us, so we thought we’d share them with all of you:

Unison Home: How would you describe your overall design philosophy?

Pat Kim: My aim is to create functional, thoughtful objects with a balance. I try to instill a simplicity to my designs, with just the right amount of flourish. I believe the objects we make should be timeless but with a certain nowness. I try to make and design objects that are seen as personal, something you will care for and that will be long lasting.

UH: What inspires you most about designing pieces for the home?

PK: When I go about designing new pieces, I think about what I would want in my own home and use that as a jumping point. In that way, my collection is a really personal reflection of my personal tastes. I’m also inspired by antiques, especially antiques from around the world. They help me to realize what is lasting, the kind of objects people hold on to and pass on, and what these objects say about us.

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Citrus Shaped Soaps

UH: What inspired the soaps you’ve created, or what do you find particularly important or interesting about them?

PK: For the soaps, I was inspired to tackle the process of casting, which is so different from the woodwork I normally do.

Making Soaps

What really interested me about working with soap is the clarity and color of the soap, the way it plays with light. I think this is especially true with the Soap Fruits and Cones.

Soap Cones

For the Soap on Rope, I wanted to in modernize a nostalgic object that is visually striking to an oftentimes mundane space.

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Triangle Dinner Bell

UH: How about the Triangle Dinner Bell?

PK: The Triangle Dinner Bell is unique in that it is both a functional object as well as a piece of wall art. It is a symbol that, for me, represents togetherness, family, and friendship.

Triangle Dinner Bell

Zig Zag Trivet

UH: And the Zig Zag Trivet?

PK: The Zig Zag Trivet is an object that is a culmination of a long process of experimentation with form and the processes to achieve function. I think the combination of the zig zag form and material make a really great, simple trivet that does exactly what it needs to do and then some. Its form lends itself to being used as a serving platter, desktop organizer, display for small objects, planter stand, or whatever else comes to the imagination.

Zig Zag Walnut Trivet

UH: Anything else you would like to share about your experience as a designer or your feelings about interior design?

PK: The culmination of my experiences in woodwork, toy design, leatherwork, jewelry, etc. dictates my process, and I hope that shows in my work. Though I don’t strive to master any one skill/craft, I’m inspired by those who demonstrate mastery, whether it’s in cooking, smithing, printmaking, or hand lettering. I try to use what I’ve learned everyday and hone my skills with every new object I make.

Do you have some questions for Pat (or any of us)? Share them on Facebook, and we’ll be happy to answer!

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Bring (or Share) the Love this Valentine’s Day

Love it or loathe it, Valentine’s Day is right around the corner. And when it arrives, even the curmudgeon-iest of curmudgeons will inevitability find herself scrambling to the store for a little something festive. Maybe it’s a cute trinket for the friend you have a dinner-and-an-80’s-movie sweatpants date with every year on this holiday. Maybe it’s an okay-fine-you’re-sweet treat for that special someone of the moment. Or maybe it’s a little something red and rad for yours truly.

The fact is, V Day is a shopper’s holiday. But nobody likes a last-minute dash. So we’ve gathered a list of unique and memorable gift ideas for the occasion.  So from us to you, here’s a shopping experience that’s ever-so-much more fun than finding a table for 2 by the window.

Dots Red Runner & Napkins

Know someone suffering from the Valentine’s Day blues? Red is the remedy in this cheer-me-up recipe: 1 Dots Red Euro Runner, 1 set of Dots Red Napkins, 1 bottle red wine, season with hugs and laughter. This pattern is so bright and cheerful, it’s sure to bring smiles wherever it goes.

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Tiles Poppy Napkins

Whether or not you’ve found your perfect pairing this Valentine’s Day, you can bring home a set of napkins that pair perfectly with – well – most anything! Bold and fun in poppy, ultra-mod Tiles Napkins bring symmetry, depth, and geometric punch to your tabletop. And don’t forget the matching placemats and aprons!

Lily and Rose Applicata Candle Holders

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On this most romantic of holidays, what could be more appropriate than an alluring silhouette inspired by flower buds opening their lovely petals to catch the warm sun? With their streamlined profile, Lily + Rose Candle Holders from Applicata invite you to arrange a modern twist on the long-stem bouquet of red blooms.

Eve Cake Servers

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Have your red velvet cake, serve it, eat it, love it, and help yourself to seconds with these cake servers hand made in Portugal, and matching flatware.

Circa Platters

For the ultimate Valentine’s cupcake pyramid, Circa White Platters are made using a unique firing process that turns the porcelain hard and lustrous. Like a diamond (hint hint).

Festive Pillows & Bedding

Happiness is a colorful home! So why not bring the bright hues of Valentine’s home all year round with Float Pink Pillows, Harvest Poppy Pillows, or rockin’ red Sailor or Regatta Poppy Bedding?

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Holiday Traditions inUnison

It’s true that we’re all about modern around here. But this time of year, we’re suckers for tradition. In that spirit, we asked our team to share some of their favorite holiday traditions. And we loved what we heard. Listen in:

Kim Morski, Domestic Production Manager

A couple years ago, I designed a Monopoly board that was completely personalized for my family. (My parents’ version is Wardenburgopoly.) The game comes complete with family-specific properties and chance cards. Each Christmas, I make a complete board set for one of my relatives and their families.

Custom-Monopoly

Caitlin Ragan, Marketing Coordinator

I was born on Christmas, and when the nurses in the delivery room cleaned me up and handed me to my mom, they wrapped me first in a blanket and then put me in a Christmas stocking. My mom takes it out every year on Christmas/my birthday and tells the story.

Susie Harvey, Inventory & Production Manager

We have always been a dog family. So after we finish Christmas dinner and clear the table, we put all of the dogs in the dining chairs (easier said than done). The dogs each get their own plate with all of the trimmings. The mess is worth the hilarious memories.

Dog's Christmas dinner

Erin Madden, Customer & Sales Manager

Growing up, we would make apple Santas. You attach toothpicks to the apple to create his arms, legs, head, and hat with marshmallow. Cloves make Santa’s face and buttons, and red cranberries top of his hat and limbs. When we were little, we created masterpieces…some of which looked like Sputnik. Now, my kids are making them!

Apple Santas

Alicia Rosauer, Owner / Designer

Our big tradition is putting the ol’ star up on the tree. I always had that honor of balancing (with some help) on the ladder, and now our oldest does the same!

Daisy Hoeft, Marketing Manager

We are blessed with many homemade ornaments that belong to my husband, his mom, and his grandmother. Some are basic, but many are beautiful and clever. Our favorite one is the “angel” (a decorated toilet paper roll). I’m not sure why or how, but every year our tradition is to get the roll on top of the tree and then hilariously reenact the process.

Putting-the-Homemade-Angel-on-the-Tree