A pop of colour, bucket lists, Puglia: Nicky Haslam's snarky annual tea towel is back
Nicky Haslam is a shameless snob. After all, we’re talking about the interior designer who made his name with a column in this very newspaper called “How Common”. His takedowns during that time included, “Complaining about being ill” or “Going somewhere hot for Christmas”.
Now, each year his niche gripes are immortalised on his annual More Things Nicky Haslam Finds Common tea towel.
“I wrote in The Standard once a week about things that were irritating me, and, blow me down, last Christmas on Instagram there they were as a tea towel,” Haslam said in a 2020 New York Times interview on his now infamous tea towels. “Someone had printed them up, and they were selling like hot cakes.”
He took the idea and ran with it and this year's tea towel has just gone on sale. Among the things he disapproves of for 2023 are "bucket lists", "selling your business," "a pop of colour”, "Wales family in blue" and "podcasts."
It can be yours for £40 (£45 if you want it signed, £50 if you want it personalised); all you need to do is email info@nickyhaslamstudio.com to place an order. I for one can’t get past one thing: surely Haslam ought to find tea towels a bit naff? We got our answer when one commentator asked on his post, “What could be more common than this man selling tea towels.” To which Haslam clapbacked: “You reading them”.
Read on for some gems from his other tea towels...
2022
Upset that you’ll probably never get invited to The Met Ball, or be able to afford the £40,000 price tag for a seat, then don’t worry because Nicky Haslam decided it was over — at least in his books (or should we say tea towels). Also out: side plates, coriander, divorce, Bond Street, flavoured tonic water, binge watching, neck pillows and cockapoos. Here's the full list:
Porn
Hydrangeas
P.G Wodehouse
Online gambling
Book clubs
Vogue
Pigs in blankets
Wood burning stoves
Foundations
Ed Sheeran
Cushions on beds
Nostalgia
'and then it's half term'
Space travellers
Tormented topiary
Gilets
Candles at lunchtime
Craft gins
Blush wine
Twenty's Plenty
Sadly passed
Happy Place
Hauser and Wirth
Tote bags
Conversation instead of discussion
Having 'A rock'
See it, Say it, Sort it
Stanley Johnson
'Ladies' Day at Ascot
Carriages at...
'Let's unpack that'
2021
In 2021 the list took aim at exhausting phrases such as “How do you know each other” and “I hate having my photo taken”. Gents, put your Savile Row suits away. Why? Because Haslam told you to. Same goes for “Out of office” email replies. Other honourable mentions: Soho House, Nikki Beaches, Richard Osman, jiggling your knee, quality time and godchildren older than 21. Here's the full list:
Art
Side plates
Chilies
Baby showers
Butterfly stroke
'Gorgeous'
Being Teetotal
Awards ceremonies
Celebrity ambassadors
Books about Churchill
Instagrams of David Bowie
Two-bite canapés
Carver chairs
Signature dishes
'Juliet' balconies
Loud laughter
Wrinkled socks
Assouline
Frida Kahlo
'Have I taken your chair?'
Saying uz instead of us
Across the pond
Vegetables 'from our garden'
David Hockney exhibitions
Right-ho
Gilded country gates
2019
With perhaps one of the most iconic call outs in the list's four year history: "loving your parents", 2019's list was one of absolute nonsense (another thing that Haslam found common three years ago). Also common to Haslam in 2019: not eating carbs (fair), cappuccinos after 11am, pronouncing the 'e' in furore, most young royals, Oxfordshire, Richard Branson and Caribbean at Christmas.
Scented candles
Film stars
Celebrity chefs
Ibiza
Bottled water
Living statues
Polo
Personal trainers
Jet lag
Being ill
Glass fruit in a bowl
Relaxing
iPods and box sets
Coloured bath towels
Vodka tonic
Skiing in France
Airline pyjamas
Saying 'bye bye'
Expensive bikes
Jazz
Halloween
Organic food
Most young Royals
Dress codes
Cufflinks and shirt studs
Scottish accents
Speeches at weddings
James Bond
Gourmet canapés
Using dog walkers
Going to the gym
Minding about smoking
2018
The inaugural snobby list that started it all, with silly, almost surrealist suggestions like, "washing hands after the loo", having guests remove their shoes, tours of the house, central heating, self-pity, rinsing fruit and cash machines.
Initials on shorts
Being on time
Duty free
Signet rings
Conservatories
Knighthoods
Coloured wellingtons
Wine collecting
Feedback
'Bon appetit'
Sorbets
Art fairs
Farrow & Ball
Sailing
The Proms
Swans
'Love' on cushions
Scarves
Pronouncing the last 't' in 'trait'
Exclamation marks
Eating early
Henley Regatta
Palm trees
Woman's Hour