One of my two favorite {nieve} places in Mexico City – Neveria Roxy has kept the same feel in its interiors since they first opened their doors in 1946. Growing from one location to four across the years, you gotta love Roxy’s retro style.











Tag Archives: interior design
Mexican Nieve Shop Keeps it {Retro}
Graphic Nostalgia in {Cielito Querido}
The story of how I ended up working on this post is pretty peculiar.
I was paying the bill after having lunch with a friend, emptying my wallet of useless receipts I usually just dump in there. I saw one that grabbed my attention because it wasn’t mine. How it ended up there, I have absolutely no idea, but I took my phone and Googled the name of the place just in case I was somehow confused. No, in fact, I had never been to that “Cielito Querido Café”, but I thought the design of the website and how it portrayed the place were so cool that I told my friend, “We’re going for coffee there – now.”
Cielito Querido Café has several locations, including one I had actually already seen but hadn’t really paid much attention to, in Parque Duraznos. We went to one with a lot more character -definitely because of its location – in the Colonia Condesa, a popular hipster/bohemian area in Mexico City, home to great bars and restaurants.


Cielito Querido Café is inspired in Mexican “history and the symbolism and the graphic design of the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th” in a playful, colorful, poetic way. The creators of Cielito Querido Café, Esrawe and Ignacio Cadena considered every single element in the Cafe – tiled floors, decals on the glass walls, graphic material including cups, menus, packaging and the products sold such as notebooks, cups and bags – to generate a retro modern space with a warm Latin feel. The beautiful typography and graphics in a brown-white-pink-baby blue color palette create a timeless, somewhat nostalgic space.







You can find a wide variety of references to pop culture at the Cielito Querido Cafe. The place itself is a reference to the traditional, popular Mexican song “Cielito Lindo.” Hot beverages are sold in cups reading (these are translations): “here we say small, not tall”, “it’s not grande, it’s medium” and “you don’t call it venti, you call it large” mocking their competitor, Starbucks. Plates are sold with phrases such as {pan nuestro de cada dia}, “our daily bread” and {pan comido}, a Mexican expression used to say something is “very easy”.
The place offers a wide variety of coffee, tea, hot chocolate, fruit smoothies and {aguas frescas} with a strong Mexican influence. Among the favorites are the {horchata} and the hot chocolate with {chile}. You will also find {pan dulce} and a variety of sweets and pastries – all of them with a Latin flavor.







Breakfast Bar {Love}
I love breakfast bars. They are not only cool design-wise, but they create great additional space for stuff like baking or setting up a buffet, plus they make for great social interaction. When you are the one cooking and spending a lot of time in the kitchen, it rocks to have company while you’re working away. Say you invite a friend over for dinner, but you still have some prepping up to do – it’s nice for her to be able to sit with you and have a nice chat, instead of having her stay in the living room. Or, your children can sit on the breakfast bar and do their homework while you finish up dinner. Or, you can invite your friends over and make sushi or pizza together right on the breakfast bar. Or better yet, your husband can cook you dinner and you can have a nice glass of wine right there while he pampers you. Now, how does that sound?




{ images found via various sources on pinterest }
{I’m Loving} Bistro Style Chalkboards
{ our kitchen }
Chalkboards in kitchens and restaurants are super trendy now. I love them! They are great decorative elements – they add a creative touch to any space, kids can have fun in the kitchen while you are cooking, and you can use them for menus, to-do lists, schedules, and so on. We initially bought chalkboard paint for our kitchen which is awesome because you can basically create your own chalkboard anywhere! However, that didn’t really fit our place because of the way it’s laid out, so we decided to go for these modular chalkboards from Pottery Barn.
Here are some other kitchens and restaurants with cool chalkboards I really like:
{ chalkboards in restaurants }
CLOCKWISE starting from top left:
- Miracle of Science, Boston
- Joey’s Seafood Grill, Wisconsin
- 5 Napkin Burger, New York
- Westside Tavern, Los Angeles
{ chalkboards in kitchens }














