Showing posts with label My Favorite Rooms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Favorite Rooms. Show all posts

Friday, May 30, 2014

Our Backyard Round Garden

Well, things are finally starting to slow down around here, and the light at the end of the tunnel is a view into the relaxing round garden at CDLV instead of the train. I've got a garden party tomorrow, the Lewiston Tour of Homes the following weekend, and then one big push with my gorgeous cross bottles, and then I am done! I can get back into the groove of blogging and sharing my changes and additions with all of you! There have been plenty! Til' then, know that I'm still here - and I haven't forgotten you - please don't forget me! 

See you soon! 


Sunday, April 27, 2014

A CDLV Before and After

Remember when our sunroom used to look like this? 


I have to confess that it didn't look like this for long. I really only had it this way long enough for the magazine article, and then it went back to looking like Scott's office. Just about everything in there was sold, including the little blue chest, the leather chair, the sofa, and the ottoman and the basket that was on top of it ... I think that floor lamp is gone too. It wasn't that I didn't like the room this way - I just wanted something different. Not a big surprise right? 

So after a long time of collecting, and waiting until I had the money to have everything slipcovered or made, here's what the sunroom looks like now:


So, not a huge change, right? Or maybe it is? The curtains are the same, made from a Ralph Lauren suiting plaid, the wall color hasn't changed (MSL Ash Bark) the main rug, one we picked up in Turkey is still there, but I took up the cowhide - mostly because I was sick of tripping over it! 

The main change is in the furniture. The camel back sofa was upholstered in a beautiful natural cotton, and I had my slipcover maker make a cushion in both the cotton and an espresso velvet. Two pillows in the same natural cotton were a must have - but I splurged on a beautiful mossy green silk from Brunschwig & Fils and then had some Samuel & Son's trim attached to both the front and the back in those rusty reds that are found in the living room and dining room. The bolster pillows may look familiar. They were in the dining room once upon a time.

The sofa had three cushions when I bought it. so I had them replaced with one single cushion, which I find to be much more comfortable. This is the room we watch television in, so we need a cozy lounging sofa, this fits that bill for sure! 

The ottoman is an old one ... and isn't ugly under this beautiful slipcover, it just didn't work for my vision. So when I found this fabric (Ralph Lauren) which had that natural cotton base, and rusty red and green window plaid, I knew it had to be used in the sunroom and on that ottoman. I've left it without a tray or basket, or bowl, or anything because of two things: 

1. I'm trying to cut back on clutter. EMPHASIS ON TRYING! 
2. We use it for propping up our feet. If I'm lazily watching television, the last thing I want to do before and after is rearrange artful clutter. 

Moving on, that chair is new. I got a smoking good deal on it, and because it's so deep, it makes a wonderful little television watching chair. Next to it I brought in a directoire table in brass that I used to have in the living room, and atop it a beautiful copper bowl I was gifted by a sweet, sweet, friend - is filled with tangerines. 


 Isn't the pattern on this magnificent? 

Next to the sofa, an old tool box painted green acts as a library table. 


This is where some of my design books are for ease of reading when I'm not in the television mood but still want to spend time in the room. Again, I"m trying not to clutter it all up ... but I'm a more is more kinda guy! 

For drinks or the occasional bowl of popcorn there's a blue and white garden stool next to the sofa, in front of the library table that does a great job of being useful and beautiful. 

As I finish up in here - I'll do a new tour of the room with close ups on the special finishes that I chose in the slipcovers and give some stories behind the accessories. But since I've not been a very good blogger lately, I wanted to post a quick little something from CDLV to let you know that I haven't forgotten about you - and please, don't forget about me! 

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Chinese Porcelains ...

When I cataloged the reason I loved the 20 Top Living Rooms on my list of 50, I showed you this room by interior designer Mary McDonald:


It's a lovely room - for so many reasons. I honestly love every last piece in this room - but beneath this picture in the Top 20 List, I wrote Blue and White is a must have for any great living room. A lot of people consider Chinese porcelains to be perennial. They bring them out in the spring, and put them away in the fall. Not me! Nor do some of my good bloggy friends ...

The Barn Room - Joan, For the Love of a House Blog

Probably the most amazing house I've ever had the pleasure of visiting, not to mention the sweetest owners and 4-legged resident, Ella, Joan and her husband Dan have a remarkable home. I'm sure you've all gone over and seen her house, I don't know many people in the blog world who haven't gotten inspiration from Joan! But, I digress, the reason for this picture, the blue and white Chinese porcelains on the bar. 

Joan's husband Dan could probably make a lamp out of anything. Not to mention a dozen other things! He's a gifted creator, and I walked around their house in awe of some of the things Joan and Dan collaborated on to build lamps from scratch! 

The Reading Room - Joan, For the Love of a House Blog

Dan has made Joan a couple of lamps from her collection of antique Chinese porcelains, including this temple jar. Joan's mix of high-end antiques and Ikea, painted furniture in fine fabrics with linen and burlap, it all appears to be effortless. In reality, it's crafted with great talent and care, a refusal to deviate from her own decorating advice: "Buy what you love!" Love Joan, Dan, Ella - and their blue and white porcelains!

Family Room - Joni Webb, Cote de Texas

If you don't immediately know who this room belongs to - you haven't been introduced to the amazing Joni Webb. Her home in Houston is probably one of the most coveted among the Houston-style lovers. Seagrass, white linen slipcovers, antiques and the random scattering of the most trendy things around - Joni has her finger on the pulse of interior design. So, when she leaves her blue and white porcelain out all year long - you know it's ok! 

Dining Room - Joni Webb, Cote de Texas

From the rustic luxury of Joan's barn room, to the feminine formality of Joni's dining room - blue and white porcelains can bridge any interior design style, and fit seamlessly into any room. 

Courtyard - Mark D. Sikes, Mark D Sikes Blog

Then there is the covetable courtyard of Mark D. Sikes. His home with partner Michael and HRH Lilly, has been featured in LonnyMag, House Beautiful, and about every interior design blog - including an interview he did with me, here

Like Joni, Mark has several Chinese porcelain garden stools, both inside and out, and a collection of pots, jars, bowls and planters that would make your head spin! 

Living Room - Mark D. Sikes, Mark D Sikes Blog

As you can see, each of these three bloggers have a different design aesthetic, but blue and white porcelain works in each of their houses without fail! And they're all in different climates, too! So while Mark and Joni might enjoy their blue and white porcelains on their patio's year round in California and Texas, Joan spends a long New Hampshire winter enjoying hers in the cozy comforts of her barn room. How many other design accessories can you pay that compliment to? 

Our Dining Room

At our house, I have blue and white ginger jars in every room. Some of them hide little things I don't want to leave out - but definitely need, and others are empty. 

Our Bar

I use plates, bowls, and saki cups for vignettes with other things, like wicker, crystal, silver, and bamboo. 

Our Living Room

And I use my blue and white garden stools to hold books, bowls, the occasional glass of wine or cheese plate ... even as additional seating. Bowls and the cutest little trinket boxes are atop my antique leather trunk turned coffee table, and the list goes on and on. 

Recently I purchased these temple jars to add to my collection: 

I got an email a couple of days after I posted my Top 20 rooms, asking me if I could give sources for budget friendly blue and white porcelain. Of course, there are the jars at Wisteria: 


I've used this set for clients, and purchased the small and large ones individually. They're really great, and have a vintage look, far better than the cheaper ones you can find at HomeGoods. If you have a design friend who can buy at wholesale, you can count on Tozai Home to have good deals. Then, there's eBay. 

I like to buy my porcelain from the seller, RoyalYorkArt. Their collection ranges from the truly antique, to the 20th century vintage, to even new made to look old. (Like Wisteria's). But the prices are fantastic! Many of their listings are Buy-it-Now with Free or very inexpensive shipping, and some auctions start out at just 99 cents!!!

My favorite listings at the moment include these vases, which I've decided if they aren't snagged by one of my reader friends, they'll be coming home with me on Friday:




So there you go - my source!! Now, off to dream about those vases ... have a great week!!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

The Top 20 - Why I Love Them ...

I'm glad that you all enjoyed my accounting of my Top 50 Living Rooms. I figured that since the last couple of posts were all photos - I'd give you a run down of why these Top 20 living rooms are my favorite. Each of the rooms check more than one box for me, but for the sake of time and ease in posting, I'll do one piece per room. Here we go

20. Victoria Hagan

Face to Face Sofas: If I had the room, I'd definitely do face to face sofas flanking our fireplace. There's something about this classical, traditional layout that just turns up the intimacy of a room, and takes a formal approach and makes it livable.

19. James Michael Howard

Custom Upholstery: Nothing is more beautiful than custom upholstery, and now more than ever it's incredibly easy for custom upholstery to be a part of your room on even the smallest of budgets. PierOne, BallardDesigns, even HomeDecorators all have furniture that can be customized with a selection of fabrics to fit your look. 

18. Ruthie Sommers

Clutter: To me, a room just isn't personal without some clutter. Sure, there's a difference between clutter and "Call Hoarders" ... some of us have learned to call clutter, vignettes or displays or collections ... but it's clutter, and it's ok. Every room should have some! 

17. Richard Hallberg

Texture:  I think that texture is important in any room, and the combination of leather and upholstery adds to the juxtaposition of feminine and masculine that any good room should have. Just as no room should be made up of all leather, no room should be without some leather, or at the very least, multiple textures in upholstery ... linen, velvet, cotton, suede ... you get the idea. 

16. Miles Redd

Mirrors: Whether they're over a fireplace, part of an art display, above a bar or a console table ... the reflection of a mirror in a living room is a must. I particularly love them when they're gilded or have elaborate frames. 

15. Bunny Williams

Books: What's a living room for if not to live? There are few things more enjoyable than having a quiet day at home, in a clean and beautiful living room, candle of your favorite scent, maybe a little light music, a fire in the fireplace, and your favorite book. My suggestion, take them out of the shelves, lay them on a chair, the floor, an ottoman ... make them part of the clutter in your room, use them as art. 

14. Markham Roberts

Color: Don't get me wrong, I appreciate a neutral room, whether it be all white or gray or taupe or tan. But if you really want to express yourself, and have your living room (and your home) say something about you, you've gotta have some color. Whether you're bold enough to cover camel back sofas (face to face by the way) in apple green velvet, or you plop a bright yellow pillow on your white sofa ... every living room should have color.

13. Vicente Wolf

Gilt: Nothing makes my heart go pitter-pat faster than a fine piece of gilded furniture. There's just something so regal about it, it takes what might otherwise be quite ordinary, and makes it extraordinary! If you can't afford the old stuff, do your own! Just about every craft store sells DIY gold leaf - a couple of bucks and a day in your garage - and voila, gilt! Ottomans, chairs, side tables - all perfect choices for gilding.

12. Albert Hadley

Lamps: It might seem obvious, but I can't tell you how many people I know with no lamps in their living rooms. It's as if they think that the builder-provided overhead light fixture is ample, so there is no need for lamps. WRONG! Lamps, both shaded and not (think Sconces, Art Lights, or Pharmacy Lamps) add to the romance of a room. Go get yourself some lamps!

11. Stephen Sills

Plants: Whether it's a potted tree, ivy, succulent tray, orchid, or simply some cat tails in a vase, plants (and flowers) are important and inexpensive ways to breath life into a space. Plus, the time spent watering them gives you a reason to spend time in a room that so many of us simply walk past on our way to the kitchen or family room.

10. Bunny Williams

Animal Print:  The easiest way to pull this off in any space is to plop a pillow on your sofa or a chair. Zebra, Leopard, Cheetah - it depends on the room, but if you're looking for a way to add some character to an otherwise lack-luster piece of furniture or room - nothing is cheaper or faster, than introducing a little animal print! 

9. Jeffrey Bilhuber

Art: Art is not easy to define. Everyone sees "art" differently, and as it most certainly should, art speaks to each person in a unique way. No matter your taste, you can't have a beautiful, personal living room without some art - even if it's Abraham Lincoln on olive green paper. 

8. Suzanne Rheinstein

Ottomans: Quite possibly the most useful piece of furniture in a living room - an ottoman can be a seat for unexpected guests, a respite for tired legs and feet, the perfect stand for a tray outfitted for drinks, or a side table for those books! They fit most anywhere, tucked under a coffee table, next to a chair, in a corner - if you're looking for an inexpensive way to add more seating when you need it, get yourself an ottoman. Then gild it! 

7. Rose Tarlow

Candles: Whether they're scented or not, candles are just as important to setting the mood of a room as the ambient lighting of a lamp. You can fill the inside of a fireplace with candles, clutter up a mantle with matching or varied candlesticks, or a lone pillar candle on a copper candle tray - candles are the easiest and cheapest way to add a little ambiance to your room. 

6. John Saladino

Custom Slipcovers: Chairs, Tables, Sofas - if you're looking to dress your pieces up (or down) - look no further than custom slips/tablecloths. A fraction of the price you'd pay for re-upholstery, a slipcover can be a budget conscious decorator's best friend. 

5. Mary McDonald 

Blue and White: Blue and White Asian porcelains are, in my opinion, the perfect accessory. They look great on top of a bureau or cabinet, on a coffee table, console table, side table ... you name it! Designed for storage, they are beautiful pieces of functional art! 

4. Vicente Wolf

Curtains: I love fabric. I won't admit to how much I have just laying around the studio, waiting for the right project - even projects I know will never come! And one way for fabric lovers like me to get a big dose is to invest in curtains. A lot of people think if they have a great view, or unlimited privacy, the don't need curtains. WRONG! Curtains frame a beautiful view, they don't take away from it, and they add a softness to the linear lines of a window - making a room more intimate and personal. 

3. Nathan Turner

Pillows: Depending on your fabric, pillows are a second to candles on cheap ways to add to a room. On a chair, on a sofa, on the floor - pillows can be changed easily with the seasons, and add a high-end look to a mid-range piece of upholstery. So if your budget pushes you to ikea for your sofa, don't be ashamed! Get yourself some scrap pieces of high end designer fabrics from the house of Scalamandre or Schumacher, and make a few pillows! 

2. Jeff Woosley

Rugs: Nothing makes me happier than a room with layered rugs. Zebra over seagrass, oriental over seagrass, cowhide over oriental, oriental over oriental - you get the point. Just as curtains add softness to a window and frame the perfect view, a rug anchors and softens a seating arrangement, and adds to the overall design aesthetic. Can't afford a custom rug, or one big enough to fit your room? Layer smaller rugs over inexpensive sisal or broadloom! 

1. Miles Redd

Personality: By far, the most important piece to what makes up my top must-haves in the perfect living room, is personality. Just about every magazine on the shelves right now is featuring rooms that look like they could have fallen off a Restoration Hardware truck, or are a study in white on white on white. There's nothing wrong with that - I mean, they wouldn't be publishing them if we didn't all find them beautiful - but if you want to be at the top of my list, you'll follow the beat of a different drum, and add as much personality to the space as you can! Color, quirk, whimsy, pattern play, maybe even a bit of the unusual - it all adds to the personality of a space, and although it costs you nothing - it's the hardest thing to get right. 

So there you go. Now, how about we do this for dining rooms, bedrooms, foyers ... what do you think? 

Monday, October 21, 2013

My 50 Favorite Living Rooms: Part Two

24. Jeff Woosley

23. Markham Roberts

22. Richard Shapiro

21. Dan Carithers

20. Victoria Hagan

19. James Michael Howard

18. Ruthie Sommers

17. Richard Hallberg

16. Miles Redd

15. Bunny Williams

14. Markham Roberts

13. Vicente Wolf

12. Albert Hadley

11. Stephen Sills

10. Bunny Williams

9. Jeffrey Bilhuber

8. Suzanne Rheinstein 

7. Rose Tarlow

6. John Saladino

5. Mary McDonald 

4. Vicente Wolf

3. Nathan Turner

2. Jeff Woosley

1. Miles Redd