Category Archives: Bedrooms

Updating the Master

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Filed under Bathrooms, Bedrooms, Current Projects, Rooms

Bette asked me to help her update her Master Bedroom and Bath.  She wants to keep her custom bedding, drapes and furniture.  I suggested continuing the deep brown, wide plank hardwood we put in the public spaces of her home two years ago into the bedrooms, and she agreed it was a good idea. 

Just a few changes will make a big difference.

Counter Choices  Rug  Rug  Mirror  Fabric for Roman Shade  Bench  Wallpaper

Decorate Your Space on the Road: Part Four

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Filed under Bathrooms, Bedrooms, Current Projects, Rooms

My final installation of Decorate Your Space on the Road features perfect finds and another less than unanimous decision. 

I have mentioned Pottery Barn a lot in these four posts because it is the only major mid line chain in Myrtle Beach.  It stands without its usual competition in a very nice mixed-use-New Concept-Town Centre-format-outdoor Mall.  Being the only people in the store on all three occasions, we had excellent service.  But the best part about shopping here was the deals:  I selected drapery panels for all three bedrooms at 75% off!  Silk Panels for $45! And the complete hardware set  for $35!!! This is cheaper than Wal-Mart.  I was positively gleeful about this.  Like a doctor scanning MRI film showing no cancer or Senator whose pork has passed, these are the moments that make my job. 

We were not able to complete a room with the stock available, but at such crazily low prices, we decided to buy larger panels than we needed and have them altered.  Out of 8 windows, we needed to alter only one panel in length for the Master Bedroom, split two 105″ width panels into four 50″ width panels for the room with the full bed, and split one 105″ panel into two for the room with the pair of twin beds.  The alterations expense came to $180, which is less than the original price from only one panel. 

We had more perfect finds.  Two lamps, exactly right for the Master Bedroom, were just sitting on a shelf and waiting for us at HomeGoods.  A solitary picture containing all the proper colors for the Guest Room hung on a peg right under an ideal black lamp with a green leaf shade at Target.  A pair of prints framed in an exact complement to the pair of twin bed frames was found on clearance for only $30 each. We loaded the van again and again, happy with our purchases, our bellies full of fresh seafood. 

I created a plan for the half bath rather late in my trip because I just couldn’t grab a vision for this space.  Since wallpaper was off limits, I felt tapped out.  Until I saw it.  A pretty little chandelier, coral and green and white, of painted iron with tiny flowers.  This was it.  I instantly saw a more feminine space, true to the color story in the Great Room.  In the showroom, wordlessly, I pointed up.  Jim’s face lit up.  He, too, received a vision of it hanging in the half bath. 

The perfect little chandelier for a vision-less bathroom.

This time Roseann was the holdout.  “No way!”  “Too grandma!”  “Not my taste at all!!” 

It was the last day.  I was flying home in a few hours.  I had to get tough.  “WRAP IT UP”, I said to the salesman (all along knowing that today the credit card was in JIM’S wallet…)

Silk Panels for under $50??  Unheard of!!

The cutest lamp from Target, and a pair of pillows from HomeGoods

I called this MY bedroom!

Master.  We got the drapery panels and the chair from Pottery Barn, the table was the second attempt, purchased at Pier 1.  The first was returned to Target.

Lamps were waiting to come home with us.

Black Walls

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Filed under Bedrooms, Color, Current Projects, Design Principles, Rooms

Who could forget Crazy Hildi's black walls in this Dining Room from Trading Spaces??

Kristi, over at Addicted 2 Decor, posted on her blog yesterday about wanting so badly to paint a black room. 

I completely forgot in my commenting over there that I had done just that, only last week!  (It has been a long and foggy November.  Three weeks of flu, Granny passing, the holiday and now my mother-in-law visiting…)

Stephanie bought a foreclosure.  The day we chose the flooring and the middle level color scheme, her 18 year old son was with us.  Let’s just say he showed a bit of concern for the decisions being made, as they did not include plans for the lower level that they had decided to let him make his own.  On that day, Stephanie had a lot of choices to make, and his space was not on agenda. 

As we made our selections, I could not help but notice poor Douglas, upset about being ignored.  He had on a zip hoody in the velvetiest shade of charcoal and a long tee with black and white splatter marks.  I asked him if he would like his room to look like his cloths—and was that a mistake!  The kid went wild.  “Could I have a black wall?!?” 

Stephanie is a good mom.  She relented and we ended up choosing mid-tone gray for most of the walls, black for the largest unbroken one, white for the ceiling, trim and fireplace, and a deep gray flecked Berber carpeting for the floors.  I haven’t seen it yet, but Stephanie said it looks great.  She told me today that she got him gray striped bedding for Christmas.  (Oh dear, I hope he doesn’t read this. HA!)  As of yet, she still doesn’t know about my plans for the splatter…

 

What a Master Bedroom Should Be

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Filed under Bedrooms, Creating a Sense of Place, Current Projects, Rooms

Photo of a room at the Inn at Little Washington by Carol Joynt for New York Society Diary

Photo of a room at the Inn at Little Washington from Relais & Chateaux

 

A good mother deserves a room of her own and sometimes it takes a mother to give it.

Mary and I first worked together about 3 years ago.  She was a patient of a dentist whose office I designed. She first hired me to sort through and utilize some inherited pieces. Soon after, she and her husband decided to retire to North Caroline, so we staged her home for the real estate market.  We have stayed in touch through her daughter who also became my client.

Well, Mary is a very wonderful mother.  And her other daughter, now a mother herself, is equally devoted to her three young children.  Three young ones who, as small children tend to do, have taken over the house.  And Mary, having been though this, understands how important a little grownup space can be.  So while the whole family is at Disney, Mary and her husband have snuck back to Virginia and into her daughter’s house.  They are spending the week creating a little haven in the master bedroom as a surprise.  A space without toys.  It is going to be just like television.

A master bedroom should be a haven, but in reality it rarely is.  Confessionally, my own also serves as an office.  Hardly Relaxing.  The pictures at the beginning of this post are from the Inn at Little Washington.  I am not saying that your room need be so outrageous, but you can get the idea. 

One Bed, Two Very Different Ways

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Filed under Bedrooms, Digging Others' Digs, Rooms

The Coconut Bed from cb2

An ad from cb2 appeared in my inbox today showcasing the Coconut Bed.  Fully upholstered in plain white canvas, I imagine shoppers need a little encouragement to accept the $1,000 purchase price.

The photographs are convincing, that’s for sure.  Both images are show stoppers, and as different as the country (top) from the city (bottom).  The bed is dressed in all white, a perfect foil for the grainy bleached wood in the top image.  The bottom photo, too, is bi-chromatic, but with clean and crisp black and white.  Notice the loopy graphic bedding and how perfectly it contrasts with the chandelier wallpaper.  The laptop, of course an Apple, is a lifestyle clue.  In this room, the owner is so important, work never stops, even at night.  But in the other room, we have a glass of water and an alarm clock.  The lifestyle here is relaxed.  We are on vacation in a cabin in the country.

The ad makes it easy to accept that this bed would be appropriate in many settings.  But in reality, it would be much harder to pull off.