Sweet Dreams for a Little Girl’s Bedroom

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There is the sweetest, most adorable little girl living in the town of Weston that wanted a more grown up bedroom. Her mom, an equally stylish and kind woman enlisted me to help pull in some finishing touches. The words that come to mind to describe this room soft and feminine and not too “girly”, fresh, clean and current.

 

1st. Finishing Touch

 

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A linen covered drum ceiling pendant with a small crystal ball finial

2nd. Finishing Touch

 

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A Belgian linen roman shade with a soft pale pink border to cover the window

3rd. Finishing Touch

 

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White lacquer carved bookshelves for the reading corner

4th. Finishing Touch

 

 

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Silk Trim with small Glass Pendants

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Revamped Lampshades

 

 

A Focus on Design Element

The lampshades were refreshed back at the studio; take a look at how they came together!

 

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On their way to the installation!

The room is close to complete. Stay tuned for a beautiful linen upholstered bed and some more wall décor!

Your closet’s working overtime…

Posted on January 6th, 2011, in Color, Decorating, Fashion, Interior Design, Textiles

“Fashion is not something that exist in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening”

-Coco Chanel 

 

What are you wearing today? You can use your closet as a useful resource when designing your home. The colors that make you feel good are most likely the one’s you will feel satisfied living in.

I thought it would be fun to do an exercise in selecting colors to live in based on people’s wardrobes. So I started with mine and took a look in my closet. Some of my favorite pieces were reminiscent of the colors and patterns I had chosen for our home.

 

Color Study 1: Take out bed for example


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Monochromatic with Texture

The color palette of our bed at the moment is beige and white. Beige linen headboard with polished nickel nail heads, a hand embroidered coverlet called a tenangos, a Mongolian lamb throw pillow and white cotton bedding with a beige hemstitch. Simple, calm and very restful to sleep in. The interest is in the textures like the nickel nail heads on the headboard and the throw pillow.

 Look at these outfits

 

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While not beige and white, this outfit illustrates the monochromatic textured look. The colors here consist of lots of navy and white and taupe making the palatte really simple with 3 colors. Layering patterns in the same color way gives an outfit texture. I mixed in the carved bone earrings to complement the polka dots on the dress shirt and to add texture like the nickel nail heads do for the bedroom.

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Again, simple in color but rich in texture, this outfit is a mixture of white and ivory. The silk white top is a nice complement to cashmere. Imagine in a home some silk throw pillows on a sofa with a cashmere blanket thrown over the arm.

It is safe to say that my husband Peter was not thinking about monochromatic colors when he put on his corduroys but I realized that his outfit selection illustrates this concept! Chocolate Brown sweater and boots and lots of navy.

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Look in your closet

If you like to layer textures like mohair, silk, corduroy or cashmere which have minimal color variations, that may be a clue that you would like to live in a space that is monochromatic in color but has textures throughout.

Closet Study 2: Take a look at our living room

 

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Prints and color

Another part of me loves color especially blues, greens, shades of reds, mustard yellows, blacks, browns, pinks…the list goes on. And I love prints that incorporate all these colors. When designing a space, I often start with a great print. In this living room I used these throw pillows, which as luck would have it went great with this botanical print I had hung, and the porcelain green lamps.

In my closet, I have a lot of printed blouses. I love layering them with solid cardigans, jeans and a great piece of jewelry.

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Do you have printed tops that you like to throw on? Do you like to wear outfits where the print is the main focus or maybe you are like me and prefer a small dose of a print? In the next room you do, incorporate a print somewhere onto a throw pillow, or a small bench. It will brighten up your room wonderfully.

Moving into a home or reinventing the one you have is one of the most exciting as well as daunting activities. Oh, all the choices! One of the best ways to stay in control of your plans is come up with a color and pattern palate. Look in your wardrobe for clues.

Stay tuned to the Design Lab for upcoming closet studies from other fashionable ladies in Boston!

Is it a Do or a Don’t?

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Use of geometry. Circa 1950’s.

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Use of geometry. Dining room designed by Sherrill Canet. Circa 2009

Hot or not?

In or Out?

Do or Don’t?

Is that too 80’s?

 

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A couple weeks back, I was reading a blog which I am always amused by and check in with daily. The posting was about products and design concepts that the blogger was so over with! Garden stools, Moroccan poufs, industrial looking coffee tables to name a few were all put on the reject list. I laughed in amusement thinking only a couple weeks before I had installed a living room with the most fabulous red Moroccan pouf and a stellar industrial coffee table cart.

Was this living room so “out” then?

The weeks following, I kept discovering editorial concerning some product or design concept that was so over…There was an article in the Wall Street Journal stating that wallpaper is so yesterday. The writer was critiquing brightly colored floral motifs, grasscloth, and geometric patterns plastered to the wall. Instead embracing new idea… high lacquer walls! (Which are equally gorgeous).

I get that trends make the design world go round. Pick up Vogue or Elle in the fall and they are saying purple is the new “it” color. Chances are by spring, purple will be so yesterday and orange will be what you have to have in your wardrobe. Despite the fact that it keeps our checking accounts busy, there is value in trend following, it keeps fashion and interior designers on their toes and continually inspired to create things that the consumer will identify with.

But can we pause for a minute? Moroccan Poufs have been around since the 15th century, chevron patterns can be seen in the oldest temples in India. These things which are so “out” are always historically relevant in my book.

What bothered me most about the blog posting is that design was being looked at with a critical eye instead of an open mind. Shouldn’t a good designer/decorator look at even what might be considered a hideous color or texture and find a use and place for it? Shouldn’t a good interior designer create a design scheme for a room and not be too concerned if something is in or out?

If a Moroccan pouf in a brilliant yellow will be the perfect nesting spot next to a fireplace and complement the design perfectly, then it should not be pushed aside because someone might think it’s passé. If a Chevron pattern carpet, which are very much “in” right now, is going to make that floor just scream with zest, shouldn’t we forget about the fact that it is being manufactured everywhere and use it for the design integrity of the space?

Why not all keep open minds and purchase and live with what we really love. Our interiors will look all the better for it. In the end, don’t you want your room that reflects you not this season’s “it” color? Our days are so valuable and I know all of us value time spent relaxing in our home’s as a top priority.

Make those spaces be a place you love. Go with what you believe, go with timeless design. Believe that you can create the house you want to live in…

Some “hot or not” items over the centuries…perhaps they are passé, I prefer to think of them all as classic…

Chevron Pattern

St. Micheal’s and All Angels in Stewkley, Buckinghamshire is one of the least altered of the 6000 Norman Churches in England dating as far back as the 11th and 12th centuries!

Miles Redd Interior

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Nick Olsen’s DYI Chevron pattern carpet, I am seriously looking at my sisal carpet in my bedroom envisioning this!

Wallcoverings

Originating in Germany, Northern Italy and the Netherlands at the end of the 15th century, wallpaper was made one sheet at a time following the highest standards of graphic printmaking. Wallpaper became to be mass produced in the mid 19th century.

 

I have always loved the graphic quality of this Mary McDonald Breakfast nook.

Moroccan and Kano Poufs

Kano, a city in Northern Nigeria has long been known for it’s leatherwork. Poufs, made of tanned goatskin were made here and sent abroad from about 15th century!

Greek Key

Whoever first thought and put to paper this classic design was brilliant. It holds it’s own in any interior.

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