Sourdough - bread the natural way

Watch out for our upcoming bread making classes at our Muswell Hill showroom.

Be inspired, spending the day in a beautiful Tim Moss kitchen, learning the art of
making a range of sourdough breads;  including cultivating and maintaining
your 'mother', baking loaves in the showroom Aga that don't just look and smell
great, but have that particularly flavoursome taste that only sourdough can
impart. It takes a bit longer than bread made the more conventional way, but
once you've had it, it's difficult to go back.

For more information please call 020 8444 9911 or email helen.laing@timmoss.co.uk

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Our Logo

Happy New Year.

Lots of people ask us about out logo so here's the story of the moth

The design for our logo has had a long gestation period. It started when Tim was studying lute making in the mid eighties. Many of the instruments made today are based on instruments that have survived the ravages of time. Many luthiers branded there work with a small logo. One 16th century venetian maker was Magno Tieffenbrucker, who used his initials, TM, in a similar way to that of Albrecht Durer, a hundred years previously.

It appeared again in the works of Picasso, immortalised in a few paintings of his then muse Marie-Therese Walter with the same motif.

Tim has had this motif in mind for many years but always refrained from using it, being reluctant to plagiarise.

Walking along his hall at home one day he looked up and there it was, a Plume Moth resting on the wall, the interlaced TM glaring out at him. He then had a wood engraving of it made by Christopher Wormell and the rest is history.

Moth logo designed by Tim Moss. Wood engraving by Chris wormell

Moth logo designed by Tim Moss. Wood engraving by Chris wormell

Lovely Christmas presents

We are currently stocking some beautiful chopping boards from Hampson Woods (www.hampsonwoods.com) which would make fantastic Christmas presents. Made from London Plane trees they are all made by hand in a workshop in Hackney.

Plane trees often fall down in London and when they do Jonty Hampson and Sascha Gravenstein work closely with arborists to create beautiful things form these iconic giants.

Every board is unique, crafted and shaped patiently until the beauty of the wood truly sings. Each tree is ethically sourced and each board can be traced back to where the tree once stood.

Individually or set in a group the boards make an eye catching focal point in any kitchen and always start off a conversation.

Boards are priced from £35 - £125, please drop into our Muswell Hill showroom to have a look.

Hampton Woods chopping boards

Hampton Woods chopping boards

Small is Beautiful

Kitchens don't have to be large to be functional and beautiful. Earlier this year we installed a kitchen in Islington which, although was doubling in its original size, was still only approximately 7 square metres. 

In a small space it's important not to mix and match too many different finishes, colours or textures so we used a very limited neutral palette throughout the whole area choosing a pale colour scheme to ensure the kitchen remained as light and as spacious as possible.

This is a contemporary style kitchen with all cupboard carcassses, open shelves and vertical shelf dividers in oak veneered blockboard, base doors in a very pale Farrow and Ball blue and the wall cupboards with white edged frosted glass sliding doors. There is a strong minimalist look with clean lines, neat appliances and clever use of space.

The worktop is a thin Silestone White Platinum with a pencil round edge profile with a glass splash back panel painted in Farrow and Ball All White to match the walls.  All appliances are Miele with an Insinkerator, Quooker boiling hot water tap and Kohler stainless steel undermounted sinks.

The wet area was tucked away towards the back of the room leaving the front area free for the more sociable side of  kitchen.

A long bespoke shoe cupboard doubled up as a heater by the front door and was made in a style in-keeping with the kitchen units to bring unity and harmony to the scheme, evident from the moment you enter the house.

Below are some snaps.

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Image copyright Darren Chung

Our recent photoshoot

We've just completed a two day photo shoot of three of our recently installed kitchens with photographer Martin Black.

We arrived at each of the houses laden down with beautiful seasonal fruit and vegetables and fresh home made bread to furnish the shots. All three customers were extremely helpful and welcoming and delighted to have their new kitchens photographed. However, there is a big difference between photographing real kitchens and artificially created sets built for the perfect shot. On top of the obvious problems, such as being able to get the right angle to fit everything in the shot (and trying to get a pomegranate to stand upright), we were also dealing with rain and blustery winds. At one point I was outside clinging on to an umbrella while kneeling on the light stand to stop it being blown away and holding up drapes to cut out unwanted light.

Here are a few of the shots we took, with more coming to our website soon. We would like to thank Kate, Emma and Joanna very much indeed for hosting us so kindly.

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Blackheath Kitchen

“Tim Moss has designed something that is very special for me. I have a kitchen that I completely adore.”

We have recently installed a kitchen for Joanna Herald (www.heraldnicholson.co.uk) an award-winning garden designer based in Blackheath, London who has recently moved her kitchen from a dark basement onto the light filled ground floor of her beautiful early Victorian house. She was keen to get away from the ‘fitted kitchen’ look and had a clear vision of what she wanted to achieve. She wanted free-standing cupboards built up on legs, rather than sitting on the floor, to give a sense of space and informality and it was essential, that all appliances could be totally concealed, so that everything could be tidied away out of sight.

Together Joanna and Tim came up with a truly bespoke kitchen that has huge visual charm. “Everything Tim suggested was right,” explains Joanna recalling how they mulled over every detail of the kitchen including the proportions of each glazing bar. Through clever design and with gentle steering and guidance, Joanna’s brief was met. “I achieved everything I wanted, and more.” Tim came up with some enlightening ways of using the space and hiding unsightly but necessary features. For example by painting the ends of the furniture run black the middle section of lighter coloured cupboards is thrown into relief making it look free-standing.

The fridge freezer is pushed back into the wall so as not to jut out into the room. What looks like an elegant, tall, shallow cupboard surprises as it opens up onto a deep larder fridge, the single drawer dishwasher sits perfectly off the floor and the extractor is fitted discreetly underneath one of the glazed wall units.

All of these appliances are ingeniously concealed to prevent any unsightly aspects of modern day living spoiling the overall look of the kitchen. Joanna is thrilled, “Every time I enter my kitchen I think how much I love it.” She enjoyed choosing the accessories and the antique drop handles and wall-mounted tap add that little something extra that gives a feeling of quality and timelessness.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black

Image copyright Martin Black