Showing posts with label bohemian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bohemian. Show all posts

Monday, September 15, 2014

Rich Hippie

What do you think of when you hear those words together? Rich Hippie? Honestly, if it's conjuring up images anything like mine, I don't blame you if you can't formulate the words. I wasn't sure what to think, and I wasn't even really sure how I came to know that the two words were being used together to identify a particular style, not only in interior design, but in fashion, jewelry, and more.

I had always loved the look of the multi-layered and eclectic "old school" Ralph Lauren Bohemian rooms. You know the ones, where beautiful things mixed symbiotically with the aged and decrepit? One of those collections from Ralph Lauren was called New Bohemian, and had rooms so layered and collected it boarded on hoarding:


I've always called this style Bohemian. That crazy mix of rough and refined, old and new, and a collection of genres and periods, from French and Victorian to antique books and vintage posters. It's an acquired taste, I assure you - but one that I think never quite leaves your palette once you either perfected it, or seen it perfected.

Personally, I love it, and a room like this makes me smile - not cringe. So, when I realized that the style formerly referred to as Bohemian, was now being coined Rich Hippie, I had to do a pinterest search to see what came up.


The first thing to come up was this gorgeous room by Furlow Gatewood. An eclectic mix of fabrics and furniture, ikat with stripes and other ethnic or tribal motifs, Asian porcelain mixed with Victorian birdhouses and steeple studies ... French upholstered furniture and Hollywood regency side tables. If this is rich hippie, count me in!

 
 
Here a gorgeous Flemish tapestry hangs above a chintz sofa, which clearly has seen better days. Fortuny throw pillows, mixed with pottery barn feed sack ones ... it's captivating. Wrong and right all at the same time, and certainly a room you either love or hate. There are some, I being one of them, who would say, switch out the sofa and the ottoman for something new (or at least in good shape) and it'd be magazine ready. But, the ideology behind the Rich Hippie look is about comfort, artistic expression, and creative composition. The ability to afford is not a question here. It's the ability to define a personality. One that says "screw convention!"; one that embraces the things we love - whether they be new, old, worn, or pristine.
 
 
Color is also not something the Rich Hippie is shy to use as a method of expression. The rooms are bold and vividly patterned. Prints on prints on prints, with seemingly no worry of their pairing are used without abandon. It's gypsy meets Marrakesh meets Pottery Barn meets flea market, and yet it all seems to work.
 
 
If I had to pick a decorator who I thought embodied the Rich Hippie look, I'd point you immediately to the work of Tony Duquette. I did a review of his book, More is More here. His home in Beverly Hills is exactly what you'd expect of the Rich Hippie:
 
 




and his partner and protégé, Hutton Wilkinson is carrying on his legacy in his own rooms ...



The style is enigmatic, isn't it? Fresh and classic all at the same time. It's the wild use of color, the crazy display of bold and uninhibited style that I find so alluring about all of these spaces, but namely Wilkinson's. He's not copying anyone, he's not looking at a magazine - any magazine - and saying, I want to recreate that look. He's not found a blog to emulate, or a blogger or designer to shadow. He's bought the things that he loves, and he's used them - together, unsparingly.

Another designer that comes to mind, is the great Sid Bergamin, who also has a love for color and an eye for pattern pairing:

 

 
His approach, like most of the other designers and rooms above, is about mixing without fear. A 1970's mesh chair pairs up with a French daybed, and vintage folding iron garden chair. A roman statue towers atop a 70's table and boldly colored Kilim rug plays off the other handblocked and ikat fabrics used on the chair and daybed. It's clever and magnificent, and totally unique.

Other designers have pulled off similarly unique rooms, like this parlor in Jonathan Berger's home:

 
And this living room in John Robshaw's Manhattan apartment:
 


This glorious living room by Martyn Lawrence Bullard, the penultimate of his work for me:

 

The mirrored living room of Lindsey Coral Harper:
 
 
And last, but not least, the beautiful prior Ojai home of designer, Kathryn M. Ireland:
 
 
So while there is no Webster's definition for Rich Hippie, this look book is as close as you'll come to a Vanderpool definition. So what do you think? Are you bold enough to make a statement in your home, and let a little of that hippie out? Make you sure you give them access to your checkbook - you'll need it! As I finish up this post - I have ebay open to a gallery of global and ethnic fabrics. Just you wait - Artie's got a few ideas! 



Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Ralph Lauren Home's Bohemian Ile Saint-Louis

You know I love Ralph Lauren Home products. I've blogged about them a lot, even cataloging some of the most amazing Ralph Lauren Home collections throughout the years here and here. While they are all outstanding, I tend to truly covet the more bohemian of the collections.

Through the years, we've had La Boheme:



A gorgeous collection of jewel toned, and worldly tribal fabrics mixed with gilded antiques and modern art. Of course, the layering upon layering is what makes this truly bohemian, that subtle mix of color, texture, and style that only the brilliant minds over at Ralph Lauren seem to be able to pull off.

We also had the New Bohemian collection:


 
A dirtier, less refined collection than La Boheme, however still lovely, and still mixing those genres and textures and styles all for that bohemian-glam look that Ralph Lauren has made so covetable. One of my favorites, if not the favorite, St. Germaine:
 



Another lovely collection of things new and old, rough and refined, luxurious and destined for the trash - all paired up together and layered upon layered to create this intimate experience. And really, isn't that what we all want out of our houses? Perfection without having to be perfect?

So, when I popped in on Ralph Lauren Home to see what collections they had for Spring/Summer 2014, I was so happy to see another bohemian space, this time called Ile Saint-Louis:








Gorgeous, right? As I soaked up these images, and looked, then relooked at the detail of each one, it seemed as if all at once, my idea of the Ralph Lauren bohemian "look" shifted. What I had remembered of collections like La Boheme, New Bohemian, and St. Germain, these over-filled, over-decorated, over-layered rooms, so beautifully hoarded - had collectively sealed my idea of what bohemian rooms should look like. Yet here we are, with Ile Saint-Louis, delicately spare in decoration, simply styled, and devoid of overpowering layers, and the bohemian look still rings true, shining through in every image.

Industrial tables mixed with French antiques, linens mixed with cashmere and velvets, found objects mixed with off the rack specials, it proves that often you don't need a room filled with objects for it to be beautiful. More over, you don't need all of your objects to be antique, or unique. Quite the opposite, sometimes you have to break up those antiques with trendy off the shelf specials and visa versa in order for a room to feel truly collected, and ... special.

Yes, indeed, there's always a lot to learn from the brilliant designers over at Ralph Lauren who put these stunning visual feasts together for us every season. For more on this one, and to see the other less bohemian collection for Spring/Summer 2014, go to RalphLaurenHome.com.