Introducing Tides and Times

A magazine for those who believe home is a feeling.

There’s something about this season of life that has me craving a slower rhythm.

Quieter mornings.
More meaningful work.
Less noise, more intention.

Out of that desire, Tides and Times was born.

This little magazine began as an idea that wouldn’t leave me alone; a longing to create something that felt like the magazines many of us grew up with. The ones we waited for each month, folded corners on, and returned to again and again. Not because they were trendy, but because they made us feel something.

I created Tides and Times as a gentle space.
A place where home is not about perfection or performance, but about memory, comfort, and meaning.

Inside its pages you’ll find reflections on thoughtful living, inspiration for creating a collected home, and stories that celebrate the everyday beauty around us. It’s designed to be enjoyed slowly; with a cup of tea, a quiet hour, and no pressure to rush through.

This first issue is especially close to my heart. It represents a shift I’ve been feeling both personally and professionally, a return to what I love most about decorating and about home. Not the big, loud transformations, but the subtle layers that make a space feel truly lived in and loved.

My hope is that Tides and Times grows into a shared space. In this issues, I invited two local creatives to contribute. We have a beautiful photo essay by outdoor enthusiast and coastal loving photographer, John Batten. We also have a fabulous coastal winter inspired drink for those of you who love to entertain by my friend and Lighthouse Collective member, Stephanie Miller-Vincent of SMillerVision who is a badass and turning corporate culture on its head with her employee retention and workplace culture strategies.

In upcoming seasonal issues, I plan to invite other creatives; writers, artists, designers, and makers; to contribute their own perspectives on home and thoughtful seaside living. There is so much beauty in how differently we all define sanctuary.

For now, I’m simply happy to share it with you.

If you take a read, I would genuinely love to know what resonates. What pages made you pause? What felt familiar? What would you like to see more of? Your feedback helps shape where this goes next.

Thank you for being here, for valuing home the way you do, and for allowing me to share this new creation with you.

This is just the beginning.

Next
Next

The Highland Cape