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Showing posts with label interiors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interiors. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2010

Nursery Know How

I am so excited,  one of my best friends is having a baby boy at the beginning of the summer, she looks so adorable and can't wait until he is here!  Of course I am also a little crazed about what she is going to do with her nursery so I thought I would subliminally influence her with this entourage of awesome nurseries.  I also have a list of my favorite sites for modern children's furniture and toys!



Jenna Lyons, creative director of J. Crew, black walls and yellow striped ceiling is fabulous.  

via Domino



This little guy has a fireplace in his room and a mom with fabulous style!

via Domino



Another view of the room with the Oeuf crib converted into a toddler bed.  
I love this crib!



Dwell Studios Transportation bedding 




I love how elegant this nursery looks, the colors are so soothing 
and this lucky baby has a fabulous view!




This nursery is so simple but I love the antique looking map shade.  
Maybe a future explorer lives here?!




The infamous Eames rocker, a staple in any modern nursery.




I thought this was such an interesting theme for a baby room, camels are hidden around the room!  
And I love that chartreuse wall.




More animals done in a very fresh way, and I love the wall color.




This happy little room is great.  And this little dachshund dog 
shows up in many modern nurseries.




I wish this was my room, the light and the space is magnificent and this Noah's Ark is great!




I love all of the color in this nursery.




This shabby chic nursery is beautiful and would become a great little girls room.




I love this room, the reclaimed wood wall is fabulous and the 
baby bedding with kangaroos is awesome!




My Favorite Sites





















Wednesday, February 17, 2010

I Love Blue

I have always loved blue, especially deep, nautical, navy blue.  It always looks crisp and classic, especially paired with bright white accents or moody grey.  I have completed a few home designs that utilized a dark navy palette.  The pictures below are from House Beautiful's Kitchen of the Month section and I think it is an elegant example of how blue can be utilized.  The white Carrara marble is so beautiful, albeit extremely high maintenance, but the simplicity of the design and the bold color makes this space worthy of the "kitchen of the month" title.

I love the size of this island and the huge window over the sink.  
I also love having the extra wall oven for big baking jobs!



The square farm house sink takes simplicity to heart and is classic yet modern.


This kitchen is boasts traditional cabinetry and yet remains young and fresh because of the bold color and the minimalist detailing.



Photos via House Beautiful

Monday, February 8, 2010

Wall Coverings Galore!

You know how your mom/grandmother's wallpaper was dusty blue with a little pattern of geese holding baskets?  Or perhaps it was dusty pink with a fleur de lis pattern?  Anyway, the 80's ruined wallpaper for you and you swore up and down that wallpaper would never again be applied to any surface of your home, especially after countless hours of scraping the stuff off of walls and praying to the gods of design that paint would cover up the mess!

Well wall coverings are back in a big way (has been for a while actually), but don't worry the patterns are bolder, more vibrant and they aren't your grandmother's wallpaper!  I have not even scratched the surface of what is out there but I hope I have provided enough of a variety to peak your interest.

Enjoy!


Julia Rothman for Hygge & West 

Wallpaper available by the yard for those accent walls!




Julia Rothman Design



Stripes courtesy of bellemaison23



I love this wallpaper!  The dinosaur bones glow in the dark!  



Coordinating papers from Osborne & Little



I always love a menswear stripe. Photo courtesy of Fanfare Interiors




Osborne & Little "Genoa"  paper



Ralph Lauren Home - Haberdashery Collection



Designers Guild- Amalienborg Collection




A Few Designers to Look For:

Brunschwig & Fils
Cole & Sons
Designers Guild
Osborne & Little
Nina Cambell
Thaibaut
Romo
F. Schumacher
Ralph Lauren Home




Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Book Review: The Glass Room



"High on a Czechoslovak hill, the Landauer House shines as a marvel of steel, glass and onyx. Built specially for newlyweds Viktor and Liesel Landauer, a Jew married to a gentile, it is one of the wonders of modernist architecture. But the radiant honesty and idealism of 1930 that the house seems to engender quickly tarnishes as the storm clouds of World War Two gather. Eventually, as Nazi troops enter the country, the family, accompanied by Viktor’s lover Kata and her child Marika, must flee." 


This is the synopsis of the new novel by Simon Mawer, The Glass Room,  which made the short list of The Man Booker prize in 2009.  Written as historical fiction, this novel immediately caught my attention when I found out that it centered around the design, construction and habitation of one of Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe's most famous pieces of architecture, The Villa Tugendhat in the Czech Republic. This exemplary piece of modern architecture plays a central role in the lives of the fictional characters in the story, however, in real life this home was commissioned by a Jewish couple in Czechoslovakia between the two world wars.  Mawer takes extreme artistic license to create a tale of art, architecture, sex and betrayal but the description of the house is accurate down to the very last detail.  And as the review from The Guardian in the UK stated, "The Glass Room is not merely a piece of architecture within the book; it is the architecture of the book."


The Villa Tugendhat is Mies Van der Rohe's crowning jewel, the architecture is spectacular as are the interiors.  It is amazing how keenly aware, architects of the past were of the little details of a project.  From ones approach leading up to the property, to how you enter and exit rooms and the views you experience within the space.  I remind myself that it is often an interior designers job to come in after the fact and work with the "architecture" of today to create these types of experiences, long after the "architect" of today has gone.


I look forward to reading this piece of fiction and hopefully someday soon visiting The Villa Tugendhat in the Czech Republic, until then...









"living inside a work of art is an experience of sublime delight - the tranquillity of the large living room and the intimacy of the smaller rooms . . . the most remarkable experience of modern living" (From The Glass House)







"Ever since man came out of the cave he has been building caves around him, he cried. Building caves!But I wish to take man out of the cave and float him in the air. I wish to give him a glass space to inhabit." 
(Mawer channeling MiesVan der Rohe)






The slender columns are so elegant marching through the living room.





The sitting are in the Villa Tugendhat with the famous onyx feature wall behind.










The huge expanse of windows must have allowed the family fabulous views of the country side in Brno, Czechoslovakia throughout the seasons.





Critics of modern architecture cannot say that this space is cold, it exudes warmth through the use of exquisite materials.





A beautiful view of the approach of the residence and the surrounding landscape.


Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Young Designers to Watch

I am always slightly depressed when the lists of "young designers to watch" come out. I often feel like I haven't accomplished anything in the design world, but then I remind myself I am only 26 and have plenty of time to become one of these young designers. This particular list features 20 designers who have a more traditional flair, and in today's world it is refreshing to see young designers following in the footsteps of great designers of the past but at the same time "exploring what it means to be traditional in the 21st century." I pulled out a few of my favorite rooms but for more photos and the bios of these up and coming stars visit Decorati. Hopefully in a few years I will be on one of these lists!





Paul Corrie- Washington, DC





Meg Braff- New York, NY





Massucco Warner Miller- San Francisco, CA





Massucco Warner Miller- San Francisco, CA






Marshall Erb- Chicago, IL






Mark Roberts- Cedar Rapids, IA





Jessica Helgerson- Portland, OR






Garrow Kedigian- New York, NY





Elizabeth Bauer- New York, NY





Brad Ford- New York, NY





Brad Ford- New York, NY