Tuesday’s Chat… The Best Store In Town…
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Sometimes I forget that the very best store is right under my nose… my own
closet. I take my wardrobe for granted… guilty as charged… I neglect it,
walk r...
AUDREY CARDEN ~ DESIGN ON IBIZA
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If you missed the linen towel giveaway, visit here.
This stunning 10,000 square-foot-home overlooking the Mediterranean was
designed by interior designer A...
Photos of note
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When devouring the portfolio of photographer Jonas Ingerstedt the other
day, I found a few photos with elements I wanted to take note of.
I love wood le...
Fashion: Summer Hats
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Hi everyone, Kat from *With Love From Kat* here. Summer in New York has
gotten off to a steamy start and hats have been my lifesaver. No matter
what I se...
3 Easy Ways to Create a Word Canvas
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I love word canvas art, Subway Style, and even more so the ones with
Sayings and Quotes. If you do too, I found a great comprehensive tutorial
that shows 3...
Her Curious Nature
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[image: Her Curious Nature]
These beautiful headpieces are by young UK designer - Sabrina Ismail. Her
designs are right up my street and are available via h...
Details from London
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I recently returned from 10 days in London and Paris – first London for my
cousin’s wedding (the wedding actually took place in Richmond, a charming
boro...
Luxury at Home
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lux·u·ry
/ˈləkSH(ə)rē
*n.* *pl.* *lux·u·ries*
*1. *Something inessential but conducive to pleasure and comfort.
*2. *Something expensive or hard to obtain....
Provincetown's Shor
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We were at Cape Cod the other week visiting my Dad and took a trip over to
Provincetown where I happened upon Shor. So, while others were
entertaining t...
Formal Foyers
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This morning I am working on the stair in the foyer of our Newton project,
as seen in this post. I had always envisioned the foyer as being quite
formal un...
Outside Living Spaces
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I've been hunting around for inspiration for our back patio area in
Florida. These images from Better Homes and Gardens, are a great starting
point. O...
SERVE AL FRESCO WITH SEASIDE STYLE
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Summer cocktails are made better when accompanied by little bites. Serving
savory treats on cutting boards and in baskets? Add an elegant touch while
ent...
Make Me: Paper Patchwork Art
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Hello, it’s Lisa here from the red thread. I’m happy to be back this month
on decor8 with my Make Me column to share another simple and stylish craft
proje...
Visiting Beautiful Celebration, FL
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[image: celebration-30.jpg]
[image: celebration-30.jpg]I’ve traveled to Orlando a few times over the
years, but it’s been quite awhile since I went to Disn...
Concours d’Elegance
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Ohhhh, that’s just the fancy way of saying antique car show! We do it every
year at the Baltimore Architecture Foundation’s golf tournament. The men
(and y...
“Let’s go surfing now”
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As I am sort of (pseudo) helping my brother and sister-in-law with their
home in Manhattan Beach, CA – I came across the idea to incorporate a bit
of surf ...
Glass Half Full
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Shopping for a client today I ended up buying a couple of things for
myself. The first was a well-priced quilt for the daybed in the sunroom
which I *n...
Glossy Gloss Gloss
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There seem to be a ton of new construction homes around these parts. Other
parts as well, I just notice where I live. Obvi. Often, with new
construction ...
Before & After: Powder Room
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Do you all remember the Del Mar project with the breakfast nook I revealed
here? Well here’s the first floor powder room! It might be small, but
packs a ...
It’s (not) Flag Day.
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When I was a kid I was assigned “Flag-Duty”, which basically meant that me
and a classmate were responsible for raising and lowering the flag at our
elemen...
Come along with me and Colin to work in Boston!
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Usually Colin and I stay in Malden and operate out of our store there,
while Justin runs Boston Friday-Sunday. Malden is about a fifteen minute
drive from...
Chisel & Mouse: at it again!
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You may remember me talking about Chisel & Mouse before and now the guys at Chisel
& Mouse are at it again; this time transforming many of their beautiful ...
Updating a Small Cape from the 1820s in Vermont
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This “petite antique cape” in Vermont was built in the 1820s and reminds me
of one of my favorite movie houses–Diane Keaton’s in Baby Boom. After a
recent ...
Evolution of the Living Room
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[image: living room] Today my living room is eclectic. Tomorrow maybe it
will be all white. The next day my living room might be my dining room.
You ne...
Dining with Mario
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There seemed to be a lot of enthusiasm for last week's post on
tablesettings, so if you'll indulge me, I've got one more for you. But the
twist is that a...
Happy Outdoor Living: Before & After
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My sister Elizabeth called to tell me her husband had found a sectional
for a great price for their patio. "We need pillows" she said, "And I'm
worried t...
ANNECHOVIE TURNS 6!
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Wow. I can hardly believe it's been 6 years since I started this little
blog!
It's been a great vehicle for growth, networking, sharing my work and
g...
Blogger Alert, Google Reader Ending in Two Weeks
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First, can I tell you how much I love my iPhone 5? Who could have imagined
a photo like this could come from a phone?
But that's not the reason for...
"Sunday Runway - The Straw Boater Riots . . . "
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Greetings,
Well, it seems we've had our first proper warm, summer weather here in SF
this week - and that almost always turns my thoughts to summer acce...
Mon Bouquet du Jour
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Daisies, simple Daisies.
They're not particular. Daisies will grow anywhere.
Growing in profusion at the back of our house.
Inside or out...
Oh for the need of a new studio!
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Despite a valiant effort thus far, the hunt for studio space continues! So
far my best options have been not perfect matches for my criteria: First
there...
oopsy daisy!
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Just having some fun with my footer and pinning to my Garden board on
Pinterest. Wishing you a great big fun weekend friends!
Now go outside and play!
Three designers with their own kind of lamp shades
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The interiors of Walda Pairon, Pam Pierce and Natalie Haegeman are
trademarked with their personal lamp shade design.
Paying attention to the design ...
Sactown is Revving Up!
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Hello all!
I know it has been too long, and I am anxious to get back to all of you!
Things have been quite interesting around here lately! Katie Denham
I...
You're gonna LOVE this.
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I have a garage full of furniture that's:
A. too nice to stick out on the alley
B. too nice to hock at a garage sale
and
C. probably will join the r...
The Royal Treatment
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A dear friend whom I haven't seen in a while is coming to visit on Friday
night. We are both anticipating the evening--a girl's night, lots of
talk, stay...
Lunch with HGTV + Blogfest 2013 part 4
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A memorable Blogfest moment from my trip to New York in May (was it really
almost a month ago??) was when my travel companion designer Linda Holt and
I ...
neon in nature
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38702878020724926 good morning and happy tuesday. i hope your week is off
to a good start! it’s officially almost summer! the weather’s been a little
crazy...
patina farm update: the chicken coop...
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Welcome back to Patina Farm! We are still pretty dusty around here, but the gardens are moving along. I thought you might enjoy seeing how the chicken coop i...
DIY Graduation Wreath
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Graduation time is here again! I have been receiving a few emails about my daughter's graduation cap I adorned last year with flowers. Time to share my direc...
Come on, let's go....
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*...prowling through one of the most fabulous vintage Provençal fabric
shops in all of Provence, *if not all of France... la Boutique de Francine
in *Isle...
Swimming pools...La piscine
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Romy Schneider and Alain Delon in the french movie La Piscine
I live for the warm days and nights of summer. I live by the pool. By the
pool, I sleep, dr...
Design Day at Home in Berlin
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Dear Diva Readers, Recently a blog reader emailed asking where I lived.
With my job leading antique buying tours all over Europe I’m on the road 2
or 3 we...
Indoor Plant Tables Are Back In Vogue
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… at least in Sweden (and not Grandma style, folks!). You will find them
in many chic furnishing shops. (Which means that you will see more of them
her...
Nashville Dining Room
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Hi all! Our Nashville project has so many fun rooms it is hard to choose
your favorite…. But I think the dining room is up there for me. With the
black and...
IDEAS - Chartreuse Hues
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Cushion Cover - Zara Home - £9.99
Ben de Lisi Bed Linen Set - Debenhams - From £36
Hemnes Bedroom Furniture - IKEA
Bedside Rugs - J Hayden Carpets
Every c...
Peonies in Bloom in Greenwich
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This week, the peonies are in bloom in our area and my house in Greenwich
has the most stunning peony garden! These fragrant, oversized blooms make
mornin...
New Kitchen Ideas That Work - Book Review
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New kitchen Ideas That Work, by Jamie Gold is, simply, a good book, a great
reference, and a source of inspiration for the entire kitchen design
process....
m21 featured on domaine!
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just wanted to say thanks to the nice peeps over at domaine, who were sweet
enough to feature my california home + design showhouse bath as the lead in
...
Fifi's Official Site for her Romantique Novels...
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The OFFICIAL "Champagne Girl Studio" website for Fifi Flowers' contemporary
romance novels is NOW online...
for Book One teasers & information about Boo...
My Studio Deck
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It's where we spend the most time that means the most to us, and this is
the case with my studio deck. It's covered, comfortable and cool on hot
days. Wit...
Ready For Surtex!
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[image: For JackieVT-flat]The last collection is finished and all of the
artwork is off to my agent! I’ve been working like a mad woman for the
last few...
Ring Party
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The darling Catbird chart above made me smile. I love jewelry, but in all
honesty, I don’t wear much of it. My exception of course is rings – dainty,
bold,...
Water for People
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It's no great secret that I have some pretty strong relationships with a
number of manufacturers. In all of these cases, I get involved with brands
that ma...
Strawberry Panna Cotta with Rhubarb Compote
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[image: Strawberry Panna Cotta with Rhubarb Compote | The Bedlam of Beefy]
As much as I love rhubarb I still hang on to the false idea that it
is associ...
Today I’m at Wakefield Design!
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Interior design friends, If you’re anywhere near Stamford, Connecticut,
today please join me and a whole cast of design-lovers at Wakefield Design
Center f...
Lust For Chairs
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My name is Liz and I am an addict. There, I said it, but it’s not what you
think. I mean, I do love my one cup of coffee in the morning…and a good
glass of...
Keeping Up with Technology
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As I’ve said many times before, I don’t touch computers. I know it’s bad,
but personally I’m slow to learn about technology. I’m the person who
believes a...
Super AbbeyK Has Left the Building!
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http://www.typepad.com/site/blogs/6a00d834519f3969e200d834519f3b69e2/post/6a00d834519f3969e2017ee83ee046970d/edit#
Past, present and future
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In the world of design often we find new ideas based (either
coincidentally or on purpose) on old ones. The same goes for other aspects
of our life, of c...
Black & Spiro Website Launch
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**
*Hello! After what seems like an eternity, I am thrilled to let you know,
tonight, our brand new Black & Spiro Interior Design website will go
live. ...
LIVE AND IN PERSON
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Join us! Canadian readers will be pleased to hear Nicky is in Toronto next
week and will be signing copies of his new book ‘Folly de Grandeur’ at
Indigo bo...
Phuket 'Bolt Hole' - Before and After
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Just goes to show one should really work harder on the before pictures when
documenting what can be done for before and afters.
Looking for a gr...
New Louis XV armchairs
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these armchairs had an horrible fabric on them and the color of the wood was old fashioned. After going to our workshops and thanks to Pierre Frey fabrics an...
Wishing all a Happy Easter...
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Darlings, Easter is less than two weeks away and I wanted to duck in here
to wish you an early 'Happy Easter'!
image credit: Ylva Skarp *
I know I have be...
Au Revoir, Bébé
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*Roger Prigent of Malmaison Antiques (1923—2012)*
Read my Architectural Digest tribute to Roger Prigent (1923—2012), a
spirited, rascally, and knowledgeabl...
Impact
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So ..... it all started here, or perhaps I should say.... ended here.
With this grand event my life took a different turn and the inspiration ...
Fashionably Inspired: Prada and Schiaparelli
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I can't say enough how important a role fashion plays into my daily life as
designer, artist and mom. My favorite designers constantly serve as
inspiratio...
Anna, ANNA, Anna!
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Introducing you to my amazing friend, wife, mama of 3, artist & seriously
cool girl! I love her art as much as her spirit. Anna has been painting &
cre...
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!
An elite group of interior designers and bloggers are brought together to soak up the world of design in a great city. In April I will be going to New Orleans! Follow us on Twitter using #BlogTourNOLA
Not your Grannie's Wall-Stencils
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I have to say that I am just loving Royal Design Studios' collection of
wall stencils. Modern, budget friendly and completely customizable - the
sky's th...
Chatting with India Hicks
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We are thrilled to announce our newest interview with the beautiful and
fascinating India Hicks - model, mother, designer, and 2nd cousin of the
Prince ...