Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The Original "My Space"

Nobody really likes hearing stories that begin with "When I was a kid....", but here goes anyway. When I was a kid 'my space' (though we didn't exactly use that term) meant your bedroom. And if you were lucky, your bedroom was truly your bedroom-meaning not having to share it with a sibling.

Recently a favorite client of mine came to me hoping I could help her surprise her daughter with a room redo. She wanted to give her daughter a space that was designed just for her and she wanted to put some mom sweat-equity into the space by making the drapery and some of the bedding with her own two loving hands. That struck me as very special ( it's been a long time since I've run across anyone doing their own sewing) and I couldn't wait to get going on the space.

First off Mom picked the main drapery fabric and began sewing away. In the meantime, we chose a coordinating paint color and decided to paint walls and ceiling all the same-enveloping her daughter in a really soft sea of green. We skirted a niche to create a vanity space. Then we did a bit of furniture rearranging-placing the bed in front of the window and using the drapery to softly frame it.

Finally, we hung some antique looking mirrors and pictures around the room to play up the refinished white antique furniture. The result is a really cozy space that her daughter can truly call her own.

I wasn't there for the unveiling, but I heard it was a huge success and beyond her daughters' wildest dreams and her special space has now become the local hangout.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

I'm So Pretty



I just have to say that I am one lucky designer. All of my clients are really great and I mean that from the bottom of my heart. Recently I finished a project that just wants to scream for itself "I'm So PRETTY!" And it makes me happy to
visit my client and see how much she loves her house.


I am by no means taking all of the credit here. It was a complete collaboration of tastes and style. My client and I bounced a lot of ideas back and forth and spent a lot of time deliberating fabrics and colors and, in the end, came up with a look that is classic, comfy and elegant-something her husband really wanted to convey.


You might want to take a minute or two and click on these photos to enlarge them. Look around the room and notice the elements that give it the qualities I mentioned before: large comfy furniture and 'sink in and cuddle up' fabrics and fillings, dramatic windows and window treatments, large scaled lighting fixtures, antiqued moldings and beams, patterned carpeting and little 'pops' of that dreamy aqua here and there.


No doubt the room has a lot of built in drama with it's vaulted ceilings and arched openings, but sometimes those features can make a room feel sterile and cold. Many times I've found that when folks buy a home with those kind of details, they want to decorate around them-letting those details keep the focus of attention. In this room, I feel like we've done a good job of spreading the attention all around the room -end to end, top to bottom and everything in between-it's all fun to look at. I hope you think so too.




Thursday, February 26, 2009

Before /After

I recently had the privilege of working with a really great couple who have a vacation home on one of our city's great streets near the lake. They spend very little time in Chicago-a few weeks in the summer-yet when they are here they love it. And why not? They are in a great location in a great city at the greatest time of the year...remember how nice summer is in the city? (sigh!).....but anyway...


Initially they were looking to replace the living room sofas and possibly the window treatments. The Mrs. dearly loved the window treatment fabric and was not going to easily part with it. However, despite the fact that it was a lovely Clarence House fabric, it was over 25 yrs old and was showing it's age. We began the fabric search thinking to replace the beloved fabric with, if not the identical fabric, then a close relative.


Showroom after showroom failed to produce an acceptable facsimile of the original Clarence House fabric and it was with a great leap of faith that my client decided that if she couldn't have the original, she would go with something entirely different. For my part I was hoping that she would cross that line as I really feel strongly that if you're replacing, why not REPLACE!!? Change the look, the feel and the mood of the room. Don't be scared now.....I know, when you're comfortable with something it's hard to picture anything different, but OH! it's so fun to get that whole new look while still keeping some treasured pieces.


As you can see from the photos, the drapery is new in both fabric and style, as is the layout of the room and we added not only new sofas but also 2 new chairs and an ottoman. We've also added quite a sizable mirror, but they did keep some pretty impressive pieces that they love-the grand mirrored coffee table and Stickley grandfather clock to mention a couple.


So when you are inclined to think you'd like a change but are afraid that involves changing everything and spending a great deal of money, remember you can keep most everything if you are willing to make one MAJOR change that will affect the entire look of your room.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Vignettisizing




I'm pretty sure that I made up that word-vignettisizing-many years ago when attempting to describe to a client what we were going to do with a niche of shelves in a wall in her entry. I wanted to make the niche interesting and pretty and not just a catch-all for stuff she didn't know what else to do with.




I think that display areas are a tricky thing for a lot of homeowners, which is too bad because they can really make or break the overall appeal of a room. There are a few tricks to making bookshelves look great. In general you want to follow these few simple rules:



-use the '3' rule-place 3 exact items on one shelf-i.e.

3 potted plants, 3 glass apples, 3 carved boxes-you get the idea.



-stagger the shelves. for instance if you are using mostly books and you do not have enough books to completely fill all shelves (an interesting look all on it's own), then place most books at one end of one shelf, at the opposite end on the next shelf, on their sides on some shelves and standing upright on others.



-add at least a little bit of greenery: ivy works well as does philodendron.



-vary the size of objects you place on the shelves.



-add a few family photos, if possible in varying size frames.




The thing about interest in these spaces is to play for a while with what you have. Putting things in and then moving them around is the way to figure out what is going to be most pleasing to you-and that's the important thing: that you like what you're looking at and that it has some meaning to you. For instance, my fiance has his shelves filled with only books and family photos. It's meaningful to him because he loves to read (and believe me, he will NOT put a book on the treasured shelves if he didn't enjoy reading it!) and he loves his family.




So take some time to fill your shelves with things you love in a way you love looking at them-and if it doesn't work the first time, don't be afraid to play some more.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Blah Humbug!













So here we are once again at the Holiday season. Yes, I love the holidays but my enthusiasm for decking the house out is not what it once was. It's a lot of work to drag out all those boxes of Christmas goodies. And it's a lot of work to do it when you're doing it alone. Yes, I have family and they are wonderful but they are much more into looking at the decorations once I've done them then they are into helping me deck the halls.



Last year was the first year of my adult life that I did not put up a tree. GASP! It was with equal portions of protest (as in I am NOT doing all of this work alone. Again) and laziness. What I discovered-though my family does not quite agree-is that it is definitely possible to make your home look festive without putting up a Christmas tree. This may sound Bah Humbug! but it is definitely not Blah Humbug!


I've found that by pulling out my very favorite Holiday decorations and adding some fresh greens and flowers, I can make the house look pretty festive without dealing with strings of lights and boxes of ornaments. I agree that a lot of the spirit of Christmas is visual, but I've also found that Christmas music playing and the scent of cinnamon and pine really pulls that visceral feeling of Christmas all together. So it is with scented candles and Nat King Cole that I round out my Holiday decorating.


Traditions can change, at least it's okay for the outward signs of tradition to change. Isn't the important thing to remember what Christmas is really all about? And I don't mean ever increasing numbers of gift cards piling up. It's about honoring the birth of Jesus and in doing that, honoring our relationships with our loved ones. At least that's what it means more and more to me.


I'm learning to de-stress the Holidays and by scaling back on my Holiday decorating, I'm doing just that. I love the season: parties, baking, entertaining and being with the people I care about most in the world. But I don't love dealing with the dressing up and the inevitable dressing down of the season. So here are a few of my ideas for adding the Holiday feeling to my home in about two hours rather than the previous two days!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Goodbye OAK!


There are still quite a few men out there, and even an occasional woman, who think there is no more beautiful wood than oak. I've been around for a while and, in my opinion, nothing dates a home more than oak: oak cabinets, oak moldings, oak furniture....Oak is out. That's a general
rule of thumb, of course, and there are exceptions: quarter sewn oak in a beautiful old bungalow is an example. But your standard gold-toned oak is not the premium upgrade that it was once considered. I do remember the days of almost awestruck enthusiasm when one was describing a new kitchen-'It's solid Oak!' was a sign of prosperity. Unfortunately, that's no longer true. Now it's more common to hear-'well, it's only oak'. Poor oak. I almost feel sad for it.

Earlier this year I visited a new client who was interested in doing some redecorating. She was talking new furniture and painting woodwork and new window treatments. I listened to her wishlist as we sat in her very oak kitchen and when she was finished with her list, I asked her what her budget was like and what she was planning to do with h er kitchen. Well, doing anything in her kitchen-other than possibly painting-hadn't made it to her list. My suggestion was that, given her fairly healthy budget, she should consider giving her kitchen an update. She is such a great client! She jumped on the bandwagon almost immediately.

She remembered that she had a neighbor who was in the refacing business and so she gave him a call. With very little mess to her home, his fabulous company (http://www.elitetrm.com/) was able to come in and reface the old cabinets, provide new doors and drawers, update the general look of the room by replacing a catch-all desk area with new glass uppers and counter height lowers. He even refaced the cabinets in the adjoining family room.

While one might think this is a much less expensive fix than new cabinets, it's actually not all that big of a savings in terms of money. What it does save is a lot of time and mess. I'm even thinking she didn't have to empty all of her cab inets! The result is really beautiful and updated the looks of her home tremendously.

And, yes, you will notice that there are also new appliances and painted trim and light fixtures-all part of the plan when redoing a kitchen. But!! She is very happy that she made this investment in her home. Buying new drapery and furniture may make your home look nicer, but it adds no value, and it is my opinion that when faced with the dilema of new furnishings for your home or adding value by updating, the later should always win.


Oak, you symbol of strength and stability, have no fear you will always have fans....maybe just not when it comes to kitchen cabinets.


















Monday, November 10, 2008

Colorblocking For Impact and Interest

Trends come and go and that's what keeps the interior design business hopping. A trend that has gained re-popularity over the last couple of years is color-blocking with paint. If done properly, color-blocking your walls can add a lot of impact and interest and vitality to a space that might otherwise be ordinary. The idea of using multiple complementary or contrasting colors on your walls can be a way of charging even the smallest of spaces with vitality (click on 'each and every inch' to see my son's cool version of color-blocking).


The idea behind colorblocking is to take at least two, but up to three and four, colors and apply them to either opposite or adjacent walls. These pictures illustrate what I've done in a den, living room and dining room of a home in Plainfield. You will notice that the colors were pulled from the fabric and art that is in these three rooms. I've used 4 colors. The color in the den is the color from the sectional in the living room. In the den, which is quite small, I used only the taupe from the living room sectional, but as you stand in the hall area between the two rooms you really get the sense of how these two rooms pull together. The orange color on one wall in the living room and one wall in the dining room is in the artwork in both of those rooms and also in the print fabric in the living room.

It's tricky to know which color to put where. I usually make that decision based on contrast. If a piece of artwork has a lot of the lighter colors or a light background, or if there is furniture on that wall with a lighter background, I put one of the darker shades behind it. The opposite is also true: if there is a darker piece of furniture that is going to be on a wall, then that is the wall that will get a lighter shade from the pallet. Generally, you want a balance of color. If there is only a small amount of a certain color represented in either your fabrics or artwork, then use that color more sparingly.

As in all things design, the idea is to make your space uniquely yours and choosing to use color-blocking is a great way to tie your home together from room to room. And the great thing is you can get a really custom look with only the price of a gallon or two of paint. Go be creative!