The traveling red dress revisited
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If you’re a long-term reader of this blog you already know all about the
traveling red dress and the magic it brings to those who wear it. If
you’re new, ...
Rustic Romantic Pillows
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Rustic and Romantic Pillows~ I made these large pillows for the sofa for a
winter look. I used a french script fabric by Braemore and a roll of
Michaels ...
my life in france...
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This is the weekend for *My Life in France*. Are you as fascinated by Julia
Child as I am? I learnt of her long after she was America's favourite and a
p...
Secret Garden
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I've always loved secret gardens. You know the type: surrounded by high
walls allowing only glimpses of whats inside by a stray vine over the top,
neatly c...
The second Unannounced Contest
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You might recall my list of pet peeves
of a few weeks ago.
Tina of The Enchanted Home, listed several pet peeves but the best of them
was "people ...
Trending: Horn and Bone Pieces
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Horn and bone pieces are so versatile, both in fashion and home decor...no
wonder they've been so popular lately! Here are two of my favorites that
we ...
Photo Editing with Photoscape
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Pin itThere’s been a lot of screaming all over blogland when recently, it
was announced that Picnik photo editing is closing down in April. Lots of
blogge...
A library project
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A few months ago Natalie of *Natalie Haegeman Interiors* contacted us
asking for help with the realization of a library project for one of her
Belgian cl...
HILLARY THOMAS DESIGNS COMES TO THE NY GIFT SHOW
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Photos courtesy of Chic Shop
Gutsy and glam, Hillary Thomas Designs finials, found at her LA-based Chic
Shop will be making their New York debut at the Gift...
THRIFT - Do More With Less Challenge
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I was enlisted by VoucherCodes.co.uk and their Most Wanted blog to join
their 'do more with less' challenge, a concept that's on most people's
minds duri...
Design Crew
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Got a problem? Need some help? Just standing there shaking your head? Don't
know what to do? You're not alone. Send us a link to photos of your design
qu...
9 Tips for Better Blog Photos
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Over the past year I've gotten a lot of emails/comments asking if I would
share some information about taking photographs for blogs. I've been a bit
reluc...
Share your NYIGF favorites with me!
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*New England Finery Magazine, Issue One, February 2011, pages 58-59*
Last year I attended the New York International Gift Fair with my good
friend, desig...
Made Goods Newest!
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The inspired designers at Made Goods, known for using natural elements to
create unique products, have officially launched their latest collection
online ...
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photo credit: elena shabalina
oh, and also, I'd like to fill my house this weekend with the smells of
pancakes, fresh coffee, fruit and the sounds of
T...
SPECIAL SALE!!!!
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Don't Miss Out !!!!
HURRY NOW to Fifi Flowers Shop
WHOLESALE PRICES - 40% OFF EVERYTHING!!!!
EVEN ORIGINAL PAINTINGS... Look in PRINTS section to see wha...
I Challenge You Not To Lick The Screen
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[image: fabulous still life photography]
Une Ame en + is a Parisian Antique Shop that has the MOST amazing website.
I could just sit all day looking at thei...
Bits of Blue
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Happy Friday!! Maybe it's the unusually warm weather or that it's one of
my favorite colors, but I've been drawn to touches of blue lately. We just
prese...
Loving CDS
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image Castro Design Studio, LLC
I would adore having some spaces like this to display art pieces.
I've mentioned Rodolfo Castro, of Castro Design Studio,...
FONT FRIDAY | Monograms by August Empress
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Love these colorful monogram designs from August Empress. (Such a gorgeous blog!) Download the EPS vector file for free here. Check out weekly font picks fro...
lipstick and pigs
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Did you read the latest issue of House of Fifty yet? It's great, maybe my
favorite one yet- but then I say that about all the newest magazines.
Anywoo, my...
Our Five Favorite Things {Hannon & Kristina}
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We realized it’s been a few years since we shared a few of our favorite
things [que The Sound of Music...] and lots has changed around here! Stay
tuned ove...
Penny for Your Thoughts?
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And this bathroom has about everything I love...an ordered mix, just the
way I like it! A little pretty...see the venetian mirror reflecting in the
pine on...
Alt-ered State of Mind
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Okay, kids, if you've been strolling through the blogosphere lately, you're
probably tripping up on one post after another extolling the virtues of the
re...
The Daily Basics: A Tastemaker’s Take on Paris
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[image: The Daily Basics: A Tastemaker’s Take on Paris]
Dear Diva Readers, Myra Hoefer - Photo Credit House Beautiful In my column
in The Daily Basics this ...
Heading Off
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*Hope you have a great weekend. Next week I'll be hitting the pavement in
freezing cold New York city looking for some fabulous things to bring home
for...
Inspiration House
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The other evening, I had the opportunity to attend a press preview of the
2012 Inspiration House, just one of the many events related to the
Cathedra...
Color Me Pretty: Pops of Pink
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Hello friends, it is Leslie here with January’s edition of Color Me Pretty.
How are you? I hope that you are doing good and I’m happy to be with you
for ...
A Great and Luxurious Giveaway!
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*[image: image]*
*Elsie de Wolfe, 1936*
**
*How do you like to dress your bed? For decades, we all used bedspreads
like this, quilted and to the f...
VALENTINES DAY @ ETSY
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Romantic message in a bottle sent to your sweetheart *here*
*
*
Dainty heart tag style necklace from Juliana W Jewelry on etsy *here*
*
*
Ditch the predi...
Viva Las Vegas
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For those of you attending the Las Vegas Design Market (or just happen to
be there at the blackjack table and need a break), I will be speaking on *Desi...
flourishing friendships
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ivy clad it’s already getting late but i wanted to post what i’ve been
thinking about all day. it’s getting to visit new and old blog friends who
have left...
LIKE This!
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I am lucky to have a lot of talented friends. Shawn and John are two of
them. We’ve known each other since our college days, and in the way things
are in...
La Cornue - Kitchen Le Magnifique
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I had the pleasure some weeks back of dining in New York City with Xavier
Dupuy, president of La Cornue, my colleague and friend, Leslie Clagett from
the...
vroom, vroom! (metropolis II at LACMA)
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back when maison21 was just a little boy, his favorite toys were 1) legos
and 2) hot wheels. our indulgent mother used to let lil m21 set up giant
hot...
chicken update and an annette tatum giveaway...
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I've been spending (way too much) time researching inspiration for my Patina Farm chicken coop! How cool is Martha Stewart's coop: le Palais des Poulets? Ima...
french fabrics : Tassinari and Chatel
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France has the most beautiful fabrics ... I love the XVIII th century reproductions from Tassinari and Chatel , you can see them in Versailles, in the most b...
Craft & Hobby Association Show Here I Come
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Show seasons is upon us! Last week was the Atlanta Gift Show and this
weekend I’m getting ready to drive down to Anaheim, CA for the Craft &
Hobby Associ...
Love Feast 2012 and Giveaway
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What if we all decide to share the love in 2012.
*Love Feast Table is starting with a Giveaway of their Heart Gram Set in
Rose and Crimson*
*With Va...
Tick tock its four o’clock…
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And January 2012 is half over and we are NOT caught up yet!! In fact, lots
to tell you about holiday adventures and snoops…so let us begin. Barbados
aga...
Four Beautiful Homes–2012 edition
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This year, the 2012 Cathedral Tour of Homes is delighted to present four
beautiful landmark Atlanta homes that exemplify the best of Atlanta’s
architectura...
Progress Report
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We are in flux. I'm offering a quick update on Dexter. He is big. In
fact, the boys are delighted as I call him a "big galoot" ("galute" is also
an ac...
A Rejuvenated Bedroom for Southern Living
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Under a cerulean blue sky, on the outer banks of North Carolina and about a million miles away from her busy life in High Point, Elizabeth Harris sat quietly...
In Hong Kong…Happy Chinese New Year!
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I just arrived in Hong Kong from Thailand. I missed the fireworks display
for Chinese New Year, but the city is still all lit up. I leave Hong Kong
and h...
Silverleaf & Mirrored Bar Cabinets
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At our sister retail site, The Well Appointed House (bookmark it if you
haven't!), we've received many requests from designers looking around for
silver an...
Ready for Spring
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[image: CIMG8730][image: CIMG8718]
remember the feeling of sun on your neck? toes in the sand…bees and blooms?
[image: CIMG8743][image: CIMG8752]
lemona...
The Vintique Object
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Hey, go check out The Vintique Object blog today. She's doing a post
on our kitchens which we both redid with very little money. If you don't
know...
Beadboard Sheets Become Chevron Paneling
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Designer Janelle Steinberg of the blog Maison Classique transformed a
plain, builder-grade powder room by designing an innovative use of
beadboard paneling...
3 challenges to the status quo of bath design
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My momma said I always asked too many questions when I was a kiddo. My
husband tells me my favorite word in the English language is why? Or,
really he says...
Project Accessorize
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I’m on the road again! This time I’m at my client’s in Massachusetts.
Today we are off to accessorize their MASSIVE built-ins we had made. Wish
us luck…...
"Walking the Dog . . . "
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Greetings,
- a conversation between Rhonda Hirata, the Marketing Director of the SF
Design Center and me -
*"Scot, I have a quick question to ask - do y...
An enchanting escape...
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Winter blues anyone? I certainly am suffering a rather serious case of
winter blues, laying in bed for the past three days with strep throat,
bronchitis...
Road Trip to Phoenix
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I am getting ready for a road trip with Jodees Inc. We will be at the Phoenix fairgrounds selling Sealah No Sew Adhesive products at the Rusty Barn Show. CLI...
Landed In Stockholm
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Hello all. After that big snow storm in Seattle last week, where the whole
city came to a quick halt. (The area was declared ”State Of Emergency” with
powe...
Back soon...
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Darlings, I have problems with my modem and broadband speed, hence the lack
of posts and visiting. Sorry x
*via etsy*
I am not a 'techy person' and this k...
A Peek at the Marin Designer Showcase
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Things are coming together at the Marin Designers Showcase! I am still
waiting for a few items of furniture, curtains and some odds and ends, but
we are ...
Well Said: Lily Bart
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*Manhattan debutante turned silent-movie actress Katherine Harris Barrymore
(1891-1927). She portrayed Lily Bart in director Albert Capellani's 1918
film o...
A Gallery Style Interior
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If a person were to ask me to offer an off the cuff phrase describing
Sally’s and my style, I would say “classic traditional with an enticing
European infl...
MISS SOFFIT
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*Soffit *(saw-fit). *def. * The underside of an architectural structure
such as an arch or overhanging eaves. An odd plague of city-dwellers,
apartment com...
Such A Dreamy Bathroom!
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[image: Alisberg parker architects Bath 3]
I wasn’t surprised when Architect and Design firm Alisberg Parker won an
award for this wonderful bathroom.
[...
If I could turn back time: a Blog Off post
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Every two weeks the blogosphere comes alive as blogger of every stripe
weigh in on the same topic. The topic for this iteration of the Blog Off is
"If I ...
Tumblr
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It’s simple you know.
Some things just go together.
Being the visual gal that I am, I thought I would share some incredible
photographs that I’ve pai...
Off to New York!
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Morning loves! Today I’m headed to the airport to catch a plane to New
York. I’ll be shooting a couple things for Matchbook’s anniversary issue
and speakin...
Cozy & Warm
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Interior by John Jacob Interiors
This is where I want to be on a cold Sunday afternoon. By the fire, books
at hand, a desk at which to pay a bill or two...
Water Water Everywhere, but Cold Only, for the Moment
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It is a good news/bad news sort of day. The good news is that plumber installed the toilet, the faucet, and the water filter. The sink and toilet work! I hav...
Design With Style Redesign:
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*As a designer, I love to add a touch of animal print when possible. *
*In this case, we dove right in! **A pair of disheveled club chairs, *
*with great ...
Taj Falaknuma Palace - Heaven on Earth
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For a designer or photographer the Taj Falaknuma Palace is Heaven on
Earth...
Everywhere you turn there is a romantic picture to be taken and/or a detail
t...
Lazy Christmas Afternoon Eye Candy
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*I took these images from my Pinterest boards, which means they came from
someone else, and from someone else before that , and someone else before
that, ...
DOMOTEX 2012 Carpet Trends
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[image: DOMOTEX 2012 Carpet Trends]
DOMOTEX 2012 has just released an ebook with Carpet Trends for 2012. It's
visual candy and wonderful inspiration for id...
The Essentials of Fabulous
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[image: The Essentials of Fabulous]
I just returned from a ‘fabulous’ six days in New York. It really is a
special time at Christmas with all the lights ...
Inspirations from High Point Market!
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Twice a year I head down to High Point Market in North Carolina to immerse
myself in what's next and new in the industry. This time around was a
little sp...
www.mariakillam.com is the new Colour me Happy
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My new website is finally live! If any of you have a blogger site and you
have almost 3 years worth of content and over 600 posts to transfer, take
it fr...
Reflection of a YEAR!
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Oh how another year has come and gone, and today I am in reflection. Yes,
another Birthday celebration!!!! When I look back on the past year I have
so many...
Last year I interviewed Eddie for the blog Blogging Top Design after his appearance on BravoTV's "Top Design". Here is a replay of that interesting conversation. I hope you enjoy this and our SRT chat with both Eddie and Jaithan!
This has been an oddly busy, yet slow week, which is kind of strange. As I'd mentioned before, I've been working out of the Trianon Antiques showroom in the Boston Design Center this week, while owners Diana and Scott Cooper are in France. Unfortunately, the internet connection is s-l-o-w... zzzz...zz.. So it's taken me much longer to do much of anything and therefor I haven't been able to post as much as I'd hoped! I have several posts going around in my head - I just need the time and the speedier internet connection to get them out!!
I've been meaning to get this post done for a couple of weeks. I spent a weekend at the beginning of the month with members of my business roundtable group at a house in Falmouth Heights, Massachusetts. Falmouth is on Cape Cod (I live over the bridge, about a half hour north) and looks towards Martha's Vineyard across the water. The weekend we were there was one of the few nice days we've had all season! So, I hope you enjoy the tour of this quintessential New England beach town as much (or nearly so!) as I did being there! These houses are situated on the hill overlooking the bay, across from Martha's Vineyard - all have an amazing view! Most date to the end of the 19th century/beginning of the 20th century. How cute was this little group of kids from a wedding party I came upon. I love the formal with flip flops look. The wedding was taking place right on the beach. There's a strong late Victorian gingerbread aesthetic going on in this neighborhood: This is a traditional Dutch colonial with widow's walk: This is the house that belongs to our host, which dates to just about 1900. If you are interested i learning more about the house and rental possibilities, click here. I highly, highly recommend it!! If you look closely, you'll see our hostess setting up croquet and one of our group members doing her yoga on the front lawn. Sitting in the living room, looking through the dining room out to the bay. The current dining room used to be a porch, which they enclosed. The colorful and oh-so-comfy living room. A few of Martha's Vineyard - gotta love the telephoto lens! Another Dutch colonial style shingle home that I loved: I love little hidden pathways... there were several of them leading to private beach and moorings for residents:
This house looked closed still. But oh, all those windows with great views! A nice water view from the road - love the beach plums (aka beach roses) Nothing but view... This house is okay, but look closely for the carousel horses on the first level and silver cow on the second! Odd, but fun! Another private little nook.... And another with boardwalk: The beach roses were in full bloom: I hope you enjoyed my photo tour of Falmouth, Massachusetts. Have a great weekend and stay tuned next week. We have a great pair of guests on The Skirted Roundtable (I can't wait to reveal who they are!!) and I'll be spending the end of the week out in the Berkshires, attending two concerts at Tanglewood. I'll be dining al fresco on the lawn, so stay tuned for posts on the perfect lawn picnic out under the stars. * I'll also be visiting Edith Wharton's home The Mount, and doing who knows what else!
* unless it rains, which is all it's doing these days!
I'm spending the week minding my friends Scott & Diana Cooper's French Antique showroom, Trianon, at the Boston Design Center. I started poking through a book they have on their coffee table on interior designer Juan Pablo Molyneux and was instantly captivated by the unabashedly high end, yet witty designs. The book. published in 1997, showcases some of his bigger projects between the years of 1985, when he began taking work in New York, and the mid-90's. Mr. Molyneux was born in Santiago, Chile and spent a childhood surrounded by a mixture of British and indigenous influences. His maternal grandfather was British, who got a little lost on his worldwide grand tour and ended up in Santiago, where he fell in love with a beautiful local girl. His parents were well-traveled and so was he. He attended a "veddy British" boarding school in Santiago that, as the book says, "was like a little British colony...". It is due to these experiences that Mr. Molyneux attributes his attraction to English design: paneled walls, Regency furniture, and "the patina of age and elegance that develops out of being rooted in one pace for generations". In 1946, he enrolled in the architecture program at the Catholic University of Santiago and was immediately immersed in the disciplines of La Corbusian modernism and all things Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius. There was no study of classical architecture - as if the field began only in the 20th century. While he loved what he was learning, he instinctively knew that he was missing out as well, so enrolled at the Ecole des Beauxs-Arts in Paris - where he nearly failed his initial project assignment of designing an orangerie. He had to learn an entirely new vocabulary of architectural design - the work of the ancient Egyptians, Andrea Palladio and even Jacques Ange Gabriel, designer of Le Petit Trianon, which Mr. Molyneux feels is one of the most "gracefully precise" buildings ever designed (and who could argue with that!). Over the next several years, Mr. Molyneux traveled back and forth between his classical training in Paris and the modern aesthetic espoused at University in Santiago. Even in Paris, the social unrest of the late 60's provided a certain push back against the old school classics espoused by the Beaux-Arts. Upon graduation, he traveled extensively throughout North and South America, Africa, Russian and, of course, Europe. He opened is own design practice in Santiago in the early 70's and quickly became a recognized and lauded designer. However, due, in part to the social unrest and military coup in 1973, work was scarce in Santiago, so he moved his business to Buenes Aires, which he found to be more cosmopolitan, and more classical inspired design wise. He remained there for the next ten years until the lure of New York City overtook him. He developed a client base in NY and traveled back and forth until 1987, when he moved there permenently. He quickly came to the attention of the Architectural Digest editors and is on their AD100 list. He is now a US citizen and is still practicing in New York.
What attracted me to the work showcased in this now out of print book, Molyneux by Michael Frank, was not the OTT glitz and glamour of his spaces, but the quieter moments and the whimsy. His use of trompe l'oiel (a personal favorite of mine) is both beautiful and fun. He views trompe l'oeil not as something fake, but as a way of freeing oneself from the inherent restrictions of built architectural details. As he said "With trompe l'oeil, you can create spaces, moods, shapes. It's not fake. That's what people usually say, and it's wrong. Trompe l'oeil is a fantasy that provokes reality". Love that!
Take a close look at the book jacket art below. This is called the Palladian Dog House, which he designed for a Kips Bay showhouse. His client? His beloved Scottie Max, whom he described as having a "noble, Palladian personality". The structure was sized for Max - at 3' square, with a portico in front with Corinthian columns and a pediment. Max's coat of arms (crossed bones) was also prominent. The house was made of plywood, except for the real marble floor - which was perfect as it was a "summer house". Could you just die??? The rest is a tromp l'eoil masterpiece!
The living room below includes a tromp l'oeil depicting a seascape and "paneled" doors opening up to it. There's something so easy about this room - despite the immense work this painting represents. Mr. Molyneux's own houses were showcased in the book as well. I am so in love with the Michelangelo inspires pillows on this bed! It's so unexpected and lively! And steal-able. While these pillows were likely hand painted. one could also print the art onto transfer paper and apply to a plain silk.... hmm... I feel a DIY project coming on!!
btw - have I mentioned that I shot photos from this book as I don't have access to a scanner today? So, my apologies for the less than perfect images!
This next space was a New York pied-a-terre for the children of a well known restranteur. They were looking for something "young, light-hearted and European". The architectural details in the living room were left as is - as they are clearly very formal and balanced - while the furnishings and surfaces are significantly more casual and almost outdoorsy. For those who find symmetry boring, this is not your space - no question! Both sides of the room are nearly mirror images, however, I fell this works to achieve a peaceful space amid the hustle and bustle of the big city. The image below is the master bedroom in the Molyneux country home in Western, Mass. How cozy! The linen, from Portugal, was selected because he felt that the floral pattern lent the space a wonderful country feel. How true - without being cloying, or "horsey"! Note that the headboard is very similar to the one in their New York home with the pillows shown above. Clearly a signature style!
I find this little bedroom vignette to be quite charming. The shade of blue is just lovely and I adore the toss pillows - it's hard to tell in the photo but they almost look like they are made from an organdy as there seems to be a translucent quality about them. The headboard fabric, interestingly enough, was also used in another of his projects - on both a chair and another headboard of the same style. I'm fairly certain that it's not the same headboard as the pattern placement is different. Mr. Molyneux has been a frequent decorator showhouse participant. This gorgeous dining room (in shades of blueberry blue and parchment that I just adore!) was for the 1988 Kips Bay Decorator showhouse. The chinoiserie wall panels, painted in the 1920's by Alan Cox, were original to the room and set the stage for the design plan. Mr. Molyneux had their gold and silver- leafing restored as well (which unfortunately can't be seen in the photo - but must have been magnificent!) The window treatment fabric silk was first manufactured in the 1920s and had enough silver in it to relate to the silver-leaf on the walls. The carpet - of his design - had a decided "chinoiserie mood". He also incorporated some Chinese blue urns from his own collection, but in a departure, selected the gothic revival dining chairs for their architectural detail. As a final whimsical note, Mr. Molyneux wrote out name cards to "John, Mary, Susan and Howard" rather than the normally stuffy showhousey habit of making the name cards to "Sir this or Lady that". Little touches of humor and earthiness abound.
This image is the drawing for the center medallion of the floor in Mr. Molyneux's 1995 Kips Bay design. And below that is the painted marquetry medallin realized. And the entire room:Some details: And note the return of Max, the Scottie dog: Don't you just love the swank with a little humor??
This is a just a taste of the rooms showcased in Molyneux by Michale Frank. Unfortunately, this book is out of print, but used copies are available. You can also see more recent photos of his work here, here and here at his website, and here's a little youTube I found. Enjoy!
Pretty linens and baubles - a big thank you!
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*I *wanted to send a big *thank you* out to Andrea Drexelius from French
Basketeer and Metis Linens for sending me this beautiful package of
vintage lin...
Home Alone (1990) House for sale
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For a cool $2.4M you can own a piece of cinematic history! The beautiful
1920's Georgian style house in Winnetka, IL featured in the movie "Home
Alone" is...
Bachelor decor inspiration!
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Click on images for readable size view, or launch the magazine below.
Open publication - Free publishing - More holidays
Reprinted with permission ...