Oak Leaves & Acorns: An Autumn Design
Pamela HainingNovember has a particular quality that sets it apart from the rest of autumn. It's not the dramatic, golden peak of October anymore. Instead, November offers something quieter, more contemplative. The light is different now, the mornings are properly cold, and the evenings draw in earlier - it feels like we've been catapulted into winter overnight.
We're lucky to have a lovely old oak tree right on our doorstep - one of those trees you walk under every single day without necessarily thinking about it. School runs, errands, the daily rhythms of life that take us past familiar landmarks until they become almost invisible.
But this autumn, I've been watching as the leaves gradually shifted from summer's luscious green to the first hints of bronze, then through to the deeper golds and browns.
There's something particularly fitting about working with oak as a subject. These trees are woven into British identity in ways both obvious and subtle. The oak leaf is the symbol of the National Trust - you see it on road signs across the country, marking heritage sites and protected landscapes. It appears in architecture, literature, folklore, and even pub names.
Oak represents endurance and strength, which makes sense when you consider these trees can live for centuries. There are oaks in Britain over a thousand years old, these massive trees holding memories of generations. It's a tree that feels both monumental and everyday, which is exactly the kind of subject I'm drawn to. The overlooked beauty hiding in plain sight.

Working on this design through October and into November, I've been thinking about transitions in general. How they're rarely as smooth or straightforward as we'd like them to be. How some phases feel harder than others, and that's not failure - it's just reality.
The oak tree doesn't fight its seasonal transition. It doesn't try to keep its leaves green longer or resist the shortening days. It follows the rhythm it's designed for, trusting the process even when it means letting go and pulling back.
Here's to November, to oak trees, and to finding grace in the quieter moments of seasonal change.