Tuesday 14 January 2014

The Diamond Studio Daily 14/01/2014


The Legend of the Burns Supper

In 1801, on the fifth anniversary of the death of Robert Burns, nine men who knew him met for dinner in Burns Cottage in Alloway to celebrate his life and works. The Master of Ceremonies was a local minister a liberal theologian and an equally liberal host. Hamilton Paul and his guests shared Masonic brotherhood with Rabbie and Paul devised an evening which looked a bit like a lodge ceremonial, centred on a fine fat haggis; with recitation and singing of Burns's works and a toast (in verse) to the memory of their friend and hero.
It was such a jolly evening, all agreed to meet again the following January for a Birthday Dinner for the bard, little knowing that they had invented a global phenomenon that we know as the BURNS SUPPER which still broadly follows the Reverend's original plan.
Burns's popularity grew rapidly after his untimely death and the idea of meeting annually to share his poems and songs in the bonds of friendship caught the public imagination. Some Ayrshire merchants in Greenock followed with the first Burns Club Supper in January 1802 and the West coast towns with strong links to Rabbie reached out and joined in the new festival: Paisley, Irvine, Kilmarnock and Dumfries.
Typically, a dozen or more men sat down to dine - as often working men as the middle classes - sometimes in a bar Rab had frequented. But the real link was his poetry with its message of love, freedom and the essential value of humanity. Many early suppers were organised by Burns Clubs who exist today, but a big boost in participation came with the big literary Burns Suppers, the original organised by Sir Walter Scott in Edinburgh in 1815 with Hogg the Ettrick Shepherd giving the Immortal Memory.

Going Global

The first Supper outwith Scotland was at Oxford University in 1806 (hosted by a few Glasgow students) with London seeing its first Bard-day party in 1810. Wherever there were Scots merchants trading in the English county towns, festivals sprung up over the next twenty years.
The format was popular - whether as part of a wider club or an annual combination of party and poetry. In those days many Scots received a good education at home then packed off to foreign climes to seek a fortune (or at least build the empire) and the Burns Supper followed them. Army officers held Indias first supper as early as 1812; traders travelled about the same time to Canada and were Addressing the Haggis in a colder January wind than they'd remembered back home; merchants and ministers (and maybe even a few convicts) carried Burns's works to Australia with Festivals from 1823 and the first formal Burns Supper in 1844; while the poets own nephew helped found the city and Burns Club of Dunedin in New Zealand.
It would be wrong to see the Burns Supper as a purely imperial story. From the early publication of Rabbies works in Philadelphia, America had warmed to his talent and a philosophy which chimed with the new-born Columbia thus bringing the Burns Supper to a wider range of people than just the Diaspora. Similarly, in the twentieth century, Burns and his supper jumped the wall into the two communist superpowers as China and particularly Russia embraced a herald of the poetical red dawn. Even today, Russian Januaries abound with exuberant Burns Suppers! And in terms of cross cultural fertilisation, the modern invention of Gung Haggis Fat Choy combining the Scots and Chinese heritages of Vancouver would be a party that Burns would certainly smile at!

The Legacy of the Burns Supper

It is a unique legacy. No other poet is fĂȘted across the world on his birthday and it is spontaneous - no central body writes the rules, or organises the speakers, or sets the tone. Like Rabbie, the Burns Supper is totally open to all.
In 2009, the Homecoming year - his 250th anniversary - saw hundreds of Burns Suppers as an important part of the special celebration's programme so visitors and residents could join in the fun and festival which is the basis as the First Minister said: to honour Burns himself as well as those who keep his legacy alive in Scotland and across the world today.
So however you celebrate Burns Night, whether you host a grand banquet, or even just have a few friends around the kitchen table: take your haggis, relish his poems and, of course raise a generous toast to his genius and you're sharing in a gift that Scotland has given the whole world - which started simply with nine men in a cottage and now resounds throughout the globe!

A piece from our all new Scotland Collection available now.

Monday 13 January 2014

The Diamond Studio Daily 13/01/2014

This is one massive year for Scotland, The Commonwealth Games, EMA's and The Ryder Cup to name just a few are landing on our doorstep. So today just in time to kick off an amazing year we launch our Scotland Collection featuring its first five pieces inspired by Scotland, its wealth of heritage and the great Robert Burns. Everyday for the next two weeks we are going to bring you the best parts of Scotland finishing on the big day its self  The Burns Supper. So lets kick off with some best bits (in no particular order) of the brawest place on earth.


  1. Robert Burns.
  2. Tunnock’s Teacakes.
  3. The fact that after surveying people from all over the UK, the Scottish accent was regarded as by far the most trusted.
  4. Grand Theft Auto. We made that, we did. Ditto: Lemmings.
  5. Having the Gay Gordons hardwired into your physical subconscious as part of your education..
  6. Kelvingrove Museum.
  7. The ‘will I make the last train back to Edinburgh or not?’ Russian Roulette sensation of queuing for Pizza Crolla at 11.28pm.
  8. The Barrowland sign.
  9. That we come from a country that produced James Kelman, AL Kennedy, Irvine Welsh and Ali Smith, all world renowned, all completely different writers, in a relatively small period of time.
  10. Eating deep fried whitebait and chips on the harbour wall at Anstruther.
  11. Partick Thistle.
  12. The huge arch that carries Waterloo Place over Calton Road in Edinburgh.
  13. The pronunciation, versatility and myriad usage of ‘gallus’, ‘mince’ and ‘magic’ 
  14. The series of step locks at Fort Augustus: a feat of engineering with a view stretching across Loch Ness.
  15. Arthur’s Seat. An extinct volcano in the middle of a city. 
  16. Nardini's ice cream sundaes.
  17. Chips and cheese from the King’s CafĂ© after a loooong night in Sleazy’s. 
  18. The way old sandstone buildings look cut out against the sky on clear, sunny winter days..
  19. The classic Scottish/Indian curry. Especially from Mr Singhs in Glasgow.
  20. The beauty and engineering skill of the Forth Bridge. And that the paint job will never be finished.
  21. The fact that optimistic and cold-resistant children still swim in the sea at Portobello beach in February.
  22. That touring bands still love a Scottish audience better than any other. And we know they don’t just say that to all the girls.
  23. The sea. Always different, always the same.
  24. The first few days of the Edinburgh Festival. Before you remember that you hate flyer's and too-wacky street performers, it all seems kind of magical.
  25. That Scots having great sporting success in any field is still greeted with shock, then delight, then everyone claims to have known the sports person’s father. And they probably did.
  26. Salt’n’sauce/ salt’n’vinegar. Choose wisely.
  27. Hot toddies.
  28. Irn Bru and Tennent’s Lager adverts. Wee bits of genius.
  29. The Falkirk Wheel.
  30. Being welcomed abroad by all nations.
  31. ‘500 miles’ by The Proclaimers. 
  32. Glasgow School of Art hipster kids in Deirdre Barlow spectacles, rocking the skinny jeans way before Kate Moss.
  33. The BIG glitterball in the ABC. It’s the biggest in Europe apparently. Although we’re not exactly sure who measures these things mind you,
  34. Pringle knitwear (off the golf course only, mind).
  35. ‘Roamin’ in the Gloamin’’.
  36. The Fratellis
  37. Castle's 
  38. Being far away from home and suddenly becoming the ultimate Scottish ambassador as soon as anyone takes an interest in your accent.
  39. The Northern Lights 
  40. Never feeling lonely, even if you wanted to be.