Monthly Archives: May 2008

Whim

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Filed under Look What I Found!

Today's Target Circular

Check out today’s Target ad.  Fashion designer Cynthia Rowley developed Whim, a collection of bold and bright outdoor Dining Ware based on her signature colors of blueberry, apple green and fuchsia.  Aptly named and at only $1.39 each, who cares if it is out of style in a few seasons? 

I am very conservative in taste—-what? not a word EVER used to describe me!–IN SERVING WARE AND DISHES.  I like plain white, so the beauty of the food is emphasized.   But for picnics and summer events, I love this look.

I Can’t Design as Well as Nature

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Filed under Friday Collage

From National Geographic Magazine

Nudibranchs.

Naked, hermaphroditic, blind, cannibalistic, toxic and possibly medicinal.  Nudibranchs live in the most hostile neighborhoods in the ocean.  Some own real estate a mile down.  They have it all:  Texture. Balance.  Dimension.  Perfect Color Arrangements. 

One slight concession. These creatures took a million years to evolve into such majesty.  I can expect less from myself, I suppose.  I am working under much more accelerated conditions.

 

Bob Tetro’s Photo Journeys Abroad

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Filed under Look What I Found!

I was introduced to another wonderful photographer today and I just had to share.  Bob Tetro’s images are beautiful.  Haunting in many cases.  His composition of colors are as striking as the subject matter.

View Photo Journeys Abroad  here.

Curb Appeal

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Filed under Home Staging

Wonderful flower beds last summer

More rain is on the way. *frown*  I still do not have any of my pots planted outside, but who has lingered long enough to notice? This is the latest it has ever been for me.  Will it ever dry up? 

While we wait for the sun to stay out, I am repeating two fair weather articles here that ran last year in my newsletter.

Coordinating garden plants to architectural style is the first step toward what Realtors elusively refer to as “curb appeal”.  Curb appeal is a phrase created for the real estate market to describe the critical overall first impression a home makes upon approach. It is important to consider your home’s external appearance when developing a design plan.  Of course, no rules are hard and fast, but consideration of the color scheme and architectural style of a home as well as the visual space.

A long low ranch will need different plantings than a tall townhouse. Some styles, like the ubiquitous brick colonial, can be equally appealing with formal English landscaping or carefree perennial cottage gardens. Scale is the key here. A large home needs large beds with similarly scaled trees and scrubs. In this case, a tiny border bed of azaleas and low lying annuals looks silly.

Consider color as well. Use orange, yellow and red flowers with warm tones of brick and siding. Purple and green look wonderful against pale brick and gray or taupe siding.

Beware of garden clutter! Too many tschotkes can ruin an otherwise beautiful garden. One flag and one statue is enough.

Adding some blooming perennials to landscape beds can add color to the exterior of your home. It is not as scary as it seems. The first three are even easier than annuals; they are often found in commercial settings.

Rudbeckia Goldstrum Black eyed Susans grow easily and bloom most of the summer
Coreopisis Lacy and heat tolerant
Hemerocallis Stella de Oro Everywhere for a reason

Slightly more challenging, but well worth it are these…

Delphinium Tall and truly blue, stunning to behold
Echinacea Like a purple daisy
Heuchera Gorgeous deeply colored leaves that look like red wine. Looks awesome with purple salvias, annual purple fountain grass and and a little accent of chartreuse green
Geranium Johnson’s Blue Nothing like the annual type, low with small flowers

Any big box home improvement store will have this list, but for help and quality plants try a nursery.

 

 

Washington Post House Calls

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Filed under Uncategorized

I designed a solarium for entertaining and relaxing.

A great end to a terrible day.  I had major plumbing issues today, but thankfully the drying out has begun. 

I am just as pleased as could be to announce my design plan for the House Calls article is up and online.  It will be in print in tomorrow’s edition, but the web gives much more detail, plus a clickable link to my website!

Here it is.

Paneling

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Filed under Current Projects, Design Principles

I should be at my weekly business meeting, and I have a furniture load-in going on right now, but I am at home blogging…All of work/life shuts down when you have sewage dripping from the ceiling.  So here I sit patiently waiting for the plumber.  Ok. Not so patiently.  My husband is on a redeye flying from Seattle.   (While on his trip he kept texting me, “I wish I could find a good cup of coffee. HA!”  Got old quick.)  So I found unexpected time.

I was reviewing my recent design plans, and I noticed a trend.  Including yesterday’s blog entry, three recent clients expressed concern over basement paneling.  Paneling must have been a huge trend, because the homes are in three separate DC  suburbs, and range in age about 35 years.

Lots of paneling at PotteryBarn.com

I have reassured them all that this is not a challenge at all.  It is a stylish upgrade!  I only had to spend about 3 minutes on the site from that bastion of American Interior Fashion–Pottery Barn, to find all these photos.  Pottery Barn has built enormous success by adhering closely to its style of casual-clean-just-a-little-country America and paneling is part of the package. 

I have recommended for the paneling to be painted white in all three cases.  Here is a photo from the house from yesterday.

Paneling painted clean white for the real estate market.

I have to admit right now that two years ago I recommended ash paneling.  Not white, but very 1950 gray wood.  The homeowner was a hip young dude who was one his way to what I envisioned was to be a very swanky pad.  I saw three tones of leather, shag, funky wallpaper and blocks of neutral tones on the stairwells.  I don’t what he saw, because I have to confess, I never heard from him again.  Maybe if I had recommended white paneling…

More Following Through

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Filed under Home Staging

Here are more befores and afters of the home I just staged. 

Living Before

New slipcovers and pillows, fresh paint, carpet removed and a decluttering.  Easy for me, lots of work for the homeowner.

Living After

Another Living After

So fresh and clean!  Now for the huge Family Room…

Family before

Paneling painted, carpet replaced with laminate, new recessed lighting and more decluttering.

Family After

Now the Master…

Master Before

Bye Bye wallpaper and carpet!

 Master After

And if you are still with me, here is one of the bedrooms…

Bedroom Before

Bedroom After

 Finally, a bath…

Bath Before

Lots of new, to match the whole house. 

Bath After

 

Following Flow, Following Through

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Filed under Color, Design Principles, Home Staging

What gives a home good flow?  In the world of home staging, seamless passage from space to space, from room to room and from floor to floor is crucial.  An abrupt halt, even if registered unconsciously can be a deal killer. 

An essential element to good flow is a tight color scheme.  Choose only a few colors and use them throughout the home.  In this case, warm cream, taupe and white are grounded with black.  An occasional accent of slate blue can be found.  The same three paint colors are used very successfully, and one of these three is the white on the trim.

Like a chameleon, the taupe is so sophisticated and modern, it is hard to see that the paint color is repeated in the kitchen, above the chair rail in the Dining Room and in two of the three full baths.   

I am gifted with these amazing clients that not only see the task ahead, but follow through until there is flow.

Here are some befores and afters:

Kitchen Before

The Kitchen is made lighter and brighter by painting the cabinets white.  The counters are updated.  The wallpaper is strenuously discarded and replaced with the signature taupe.

Lots of changes 

The Dining Room needs only two small changes, but what a difference.  The wallpaper is removed. 

 Dining before

Again, the taupe appears above the chair rail.  New formal draperies are stylish and fresh.

Dining after

Tune in tomorrow for more…

Where in the World?

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Filed under Digging Others' Digs

Image from http://www.roche-bobois.com/

The back page of today’s Washington Post Magazine features an ad for Roche-Bobois, a swanky furniture in Georgetown. They are running a sale…I mean…having “10 days of attractive prices”.  Recession hits all of us, apparently!

The photo used in the ad is really amazing.  Notice the ornate frieze on the soaring walls.  What an interesting setting for this very contemporary grouping!  Where is this wonderful place? I assume the furniture was assembled for the photo shoot, but check out the windows.  I can’t tell if that is lace, or some sort of ribbon.

Roche-Bobois is French.  Perhaps the photo was taken in a castle or a museum?  I did some googling, but so far I haven’t found anything. Not even a credit for the photographer.

I buy a lot of decorating books.  I am addicted to vintage books.  (Don’t judge.  IT’S RESEARCH.)  Being observant of the settings in the photographs is a source of stress for me.  I want to know WHERE everything is.  Most books give very little information about the designers and products and list nothing about the locations.  Reading so many books, I have noticed that many photos are reused, especially in Meridian publications.  (They produce all the Better Homes and Gardens books.) I guess the work is just “up for sale”.

Maybe one of my photographer friends will enlighten me (us).  Or my journalist pals….

Table Lamps

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Filed under Friday Collage

table lamps

Even Steven and Road Dog from Inhabit:surround yourself, Signac Petal Lamp and Dream Menagerie Lamp from Anthropologie.com, Lights Up! Devo Round Lamp from Velocity Art and Design, Moragas Table Lamp from Design Within Reach, Pipa Table Lamp from And Beige, Globe Ceramic Lamp from West Elm.