Monthly Archives: February 2010

Where Even Professionals Can Fail

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Filed under Living Rooms, Other Dilemmas, Rooms

Nothing can strike fear in the hearts of homeowners like the need to purchase new furniture.  Analysis Paralysis often results, and so many of my clients live with furniture they HATE for years before venturing into the Land of Confusion.

 The easiest cure is to hire a decorator, of course. :)   And a good one at that—I personally know a decorator who purchased a sofa for her Living Room that was too big. Because it is impossible to judge the size and visual weight of an object in the showroom.  Furniture stores are huge. Your perspective is off as soon as you walk in the door.  My advice? Don’t even think about making a purchase before you take the dimensions back home. 

My recommendation is to get some painters tape and mark off on the floor the area of the item you are considering.

There is more to study than the footprint. Add items inside the marked area so that you can visualize the space in three dimensions. (If a sofa is in question, two Dining Chairs can be placed at either end of the tape marks.)  Is there enough room to pass by?  What about the height?  Will something be blocked by the piece visually, like a window or door?  Does the piece just feel too small or large for the scale of the room?

Drawing a floorplan is always a good idea, but if you are a woman, don’t rely on just that Was this the problem with my decorator friend?  It is no secret that I am less “traditionally feminine” in a lot of ways than my colleagues.  I’m not afraid to admit it. 

Changing the Theme

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Filed under Creating a Sense of Place

Once I start thinking about something, it’s hard for me to put it away.  You may have noticed that after long periods of absence, I’ve posted for a few days straight.  The snow–and another dump on its way at this very moment–has given me time to sit in from of my computer and blog.  It’s hardly surprising, then, that now I am itching to update my theme. 

I paid someone to create this Wordpress theme, even though I wrote my website myself.  My learning curve on DecorateYourSpace.net was so huge I was just too tired to even try.  I didn’t use a content management system, so it was backbreaking work for a total novice like myself to try to learn code.  When I ran across an opportunity to have a theme created for me cheaply, I went for it.  I have never been happy with the results.  It is just too cluttered for my taste. 

I want something simple and clean on the body.  The current layout feels too squished for me.  But I want a very interesting and energetic background, on the place where I have teal with a few stripes now.  I am thinking about creating a collage for this area with pictures of things that make me happy, not strictly decorating per say, but of things that speak to a lifestyle.  (Like the image my friend George took this summer at the beginning of this post.) And I am thinking of removing “Create a Sense of Place, Decorate Your Space” and adding something along the lines of “The Diary of a Decorator balancing clients and teenage daughters and blah blah blah while reigning in the occasional desire to take over the world.”  In order for new readers will know what they’re in for…

 I think I am going to delete the ads.  They certainly don’t pay me enough to compensate for how ugly most of them are.

Suzy’s Dilemma

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Filed under Color, Design Principles, Individualized Advice, Kitchens, Rooms

I received a series of emails from Suzy in Maryland yesterday. I will copy the first here:

Denise –

I came across your website looking for ideas for my kitchen/family room.

We are in the process of redoing the kitchen.  The layout of the area is very open and includes the kitchen, a nook for the table, the family room (with a reddish brick fireplace – brick to the ceiling) and a hallway area that connects the kitchen to the ½ bath and foyer.  This hallway area isn’t really a hallway, it is more an extension of the kitchen. The family room is one step down.  The family room has a vaulted ceiling on the fireplace side.

The whole area is southern exposure with lots of windows and tons of light.  The family also has 2 skylights.

The space before had very little color.  White walls with a stenciled design around the top.  Cream sofas with small colored pin stripes. Cream tile floor in the kitchen, light oak cabinets…you get the picture.  BLAH.

My goal was to add lots of color.

The new kitchen cabinets are a medium-maple shade.  The counters are “verde butterfly” granite – a grey/green/blue with black, gold, cream and specs of deep red.  The deep red you really only can see when the light hits it right.  The floor will be a 13 x 13 porcelain tile – colors vary from deep grey to light grey and various shades of beige (i.e. LOTS of variation in the tiles).  The backsplash will be fully tiled with a natural stone tile that is creamy colored.

Now I am trying to decide what to paint the walls.  I have already added a lot of color just with the cabinets, granite and floor.  So perhaps I no longer need to worry about putting lots of color on the walls.  I don’t know whether to paint each distinct area its own color – (1) nook (2) kitchen/hall (3) family room, or if 3 colors is too many, given all the color in the new kitchen.

The colors I am drawn to are earthy reds, greens, tans/browns and golds.  Although the granite has a lot of grey/blue in it, I really do not want grey or blue on the walls.

I would like a bold color in the nook – 3 sides of the nook are all windows (the 4th side being open to the kitchen)…I was thinking of something in the deep red family.  But then I am lost as to what to put in the family room (which has LOTS of wall space) and the “hallway”.

Any advice or ideas?  I can send pictures of the space if that helps.

Thanks-

Suzy in Maryland

Ok, deep breath. This is not as hard as it seems. First off, I want to congratulate you on your Kitchen remodel. You have made some wonderful choices. I am especially delighted in the backsplash. Using a darker tile as a border and then rotating the creamier remainder will be unusual and interesting. And your choice for a variegated tile floor will be very dynamic. 

Your biggest challenge is finding a way to blend the older but still pristine wallpaper with your more current choices. Since the Dining Room wallpaper is so visible from many angles in the Kitchen, it would be a mistake to just ignore it. The good news is the teal tone below the chair rail, though dated, coordinates well with the new granite. The bad news is….the very 90′s burgundy in the stripes make using red virtually impossible. Today’s reds are very “earthen”. In other words, they have a lot of orange in them. Plus, you already have a lot of tones of red: in the brick fireplace, in the cabinets and, of course, in the wall paper.

 My solution would be to paint the Eat-in Nook, which butts to the exigent wallpaper, Waterbury Green. (HC-136 from Benjamin Moore). This tone is bluer than the sage green choices you already tried, but it will act as a perfect connector to from the old to the new. Plus, it is really beautiful. I believe it will draw some color out of the granite and will harmonize perfectly with the orange undertone in the cabinet and the teal in the wallpaper.

The Kitchen proper, and the hallway containing the Mudroom and Half Bath should be a soft but strong gold. Try Henderson Buff (Benjamin Moore HC-15). A soft gold that is not too yellow or bright will set a perfect note that allows the cabinets to sing. The cabinets should steal the show here, not the wall color. (Ok, enough with the theatre metaphors.) You should also sample Summerdale Gold (Benjamin Moore HC-17) since there is a lot of light entering the room. Repaint all the trim and doors and ceilings white. My favorite is Cloud White OC-130.

Now for the finale. Oh no, I said I was done with the metaphors…I want you to paint the Family Room a deep rich brown. Don’t be scared! This will be stunning. You have all the elements to make it work— A tall vault in the ceiling, skylights, and a pair of glass doors. Use Middlebury Brown (HC-68, also Ben Moore). This brown has enough red it in to make it lively, and will bridge the three colors of tile and the accent stain in the ridges on the cabinets with the reds in the brick on the fireplace. If facing the fireplace, paint the wall to the right brown all the way to where it ends on the short wall to the left of the refrigerator. All sides of this short wall will be gold. You can decide which of the three colors you would like on the half wall on the back of the second island.

Bold reds aren’t forever gone. They can be added back in on furnishings and in accessories. I would love to see a huge piece of art on the long Family Room wall with brighter, bolder tones of all the colors we used.

Thanks for writing, Suzy! Remember to send pictures of the “After”!

I’m on Facebook

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Filed under Trend Spotting, Uncategorized

I caved.  I’ve had an active Facebook profile for over a year now, and I update my status daily.  But for some reason I have dragged my feet creating a page for Decorate Your Space.  I don’t know if I was afraid I wouldn’t work on it, and it would be embarrassing.  Or what if I only have like 20 fans?  That would hardly scream success, now would it?  And I am pretty raw on Facebook.  I post my real life, without a lot of filter.  So maybe I have been afraid that potential clients would friend me—then WHOA. 

But I’ve had a lot of encouragement, and what the heck.  I realized that most of my clients come from referrals, anyway.  And by that time, my work speaks for itself.  I have always wanted to revive a series I used to send via email, back before blogging was the rage.  A few years ago I used to send out Quick Tips–short decorating snippets of advice.  Facebook will be a perfect venue to try this again; the 420 character limit will ensure I stay succinct!

So here’s the link.  Become my fan!

Eggplant or Aubergine?

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Filed under Current Projects, Living Rooms, Rooms

We are snowed in.  And may be for days.  Another 4 to 6 inches is coming on Tuesday!! What in the world did people do before they had the world in front of them on their computer screens?  The internet is the reason I am (semi) sane right now.  There is so much to learn out there in cyberspace.  Today, for instance, I found out that Aubergine is the British phrase for Eggplant. 

So in honor of my newly found knowledge, here is a room I designed for a client that is crazy about purple. 

Sofa  Chair  Rug  Ottoman  Endtable  Drapery Panels  Lamp  Pillow  Pillows

One Room Two Options

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Filed under Accessorizing, Color, Current Projects, Design Principles, Living Rooms, Rooms

Cinde and I have worked together for many years.  She originally hired me immediately upon our meeting  at a Chamber of Commerce function. Only a few days prior, she had closed on a beach house still under construction and  she had some pressing decisions to make regarding the cabinets and counters.  So our meeting was fortuitous.  Since then, we have done many projects together. 

Her family room is the latest.  We chose the paint colors at least a year ago.  A deep sage covers three walls, and the far, fireplace wall is a russet. 

I gave her these two options.   

 

Option 1: Sofa  Chair  Rug  Drapery Panel   Media Stand  Coffee Table  Console  Pillow  Vases

Option 2:  Sectional  Chair  Rug  Ottoman  Side Table  Media Center  Pillow  Pillows  Vases