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Real Deal Photoshop

01/01/1970, 01:00 | Original Site: 2Modern Design Talk

Stylin With Hearts

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: k style
Jam thumbprints were the first cookies I learned how to make and have been a favorite ever since. I love the heart versions I found at mathastewart.com and if I were organized I'd make a batch and give to all my awesome friends for Valentine's day. IF! k

A Green Remodel: Making a Cottage Modern

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Hatch: The Design Public® Blo

BEFORE:

TWO LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT OWNERS, A GUTTING, AND 14 DUMP TRUCKS WORTH OF FILL LATER:

Hello, Cottage Living, are you reading?  When I missed my flight on Sunday I really lucked out. My friends Sophie and Kent offered me shelter in the 1940’s cottage they have been lovingly modernizing for many months. Circa 200 years ago, their neighbors would have been Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, as it is located between Monticello and Ash Lawn. It is truly one of the most beautiful spots around Charlottesville. It sits between the flood plain of Houchens Creek and beautiful woods, and when you look in out from the back, you can spy neighboring cows. Sophie and Kent are two of my pals from grad school. Kent has his Masters in Urban Planning and both of them have Masters in Landscape Architecture. Kent also has lots of experience in construction with a focus on green building, and Sophie is a kick-ass fiddler and gardener.

I wish I had some interior before pictures to show you, but unfortunately, they no longer exist. The space shown below used to be four dark, cramped rooms: A kitchen, a dining room, a bedroom and a bathroom.  S & K ripped the whole thing open and installed all new windows, which are all Low E, argon-filled sashes. The ceilings, once low and dark, were ripped out, and now they are 10′ high. The beams were restored from the original structure. The space is so peaceful and sunny that I felt like I was in one of the charming chapels that dot the landscape in the country around Charlottesville.

A very small addition that accommodates a new bathroom was added to the house’s original 840 square feet (it’s on the right side of the exterior “AFTER” photo). The floors are reclaimed heart pine, and all of the poplar siding and trim came from the Appalachian Sustainable Development mills in southwest Virginia, all of it harvested from certified-sustainable wood lots in the southern Appalachians.

I love that they used an antique dresser for storage in the bathroom:

Formerly an unused attic, Sophie and Kent opened up to the roofline and created an upstairs loft. Yours truly was not feeling confident about scaling the ladder after two margaritas, but I could see from below that it  added a lot of usable space to the house:

Here are a few more sweet nuggets:

There is a real nature study aesthetic all around the house:

While all of the walls are crisp and white, S & K’s careful editing of antiques, oriental rugs, artwork and objects add so much warmth to the modern space.

Curious about that lamp? The lovely and talented Christina Michas made the gorgeous shade for them as a wedding gift:

The house is still a work in progress, but I kind of dig these little traces of it:

To read more about the project, check out Strata Projects Design.

Auction for cancer

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: desire to inspire
Roan emailed Jo and I, and I had to post about this because he is a fellow Canadian, and my parents are both cancer survivors:

"I was hoping you'd be interested in perhaps blogging about my annual Cancer Society charity auction of 20th Century Design and Decorative Art. This will be the 5th year of the auction, with sales helping generate vital funding for cancer research and emotional support programs for those living with the disease. Held in support of the Canadian Cancer Society, a portion of every sale will be donated to the cause.

The auction will take place on eBay, with items to be listed throughout the week of November 28th, with all listings to end in sequence on December 8th.

This year's collection includes works by Charles and Ray Eames, George Nelson, Eero Saarinen, Hans Wegner, Jean Prouve, Charlotte Perriand, and many more. As well, some interesting art pieces by Takashi Murakami, Larry Clark, Mark Gonzales, and Jeff Koons are also in the mix.

The complete catalog is online now at: ModernLove "

The items up for auction are absolutely incredible. I seriously had a hard time not grabbing every single photo on the website. I love every single piece. Below is just a small sample of what is available. Wishing you lots of luck with the auction Roan!!




A Coat of Red

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: style court
I think the charms of red sports cars and red lampshades have been fully explored, but has enough been said about red bathtubs?

Certainly they aren't for everyone or every bathroom. Once in a while though, in the right spot, red tubs add such flair.

The first non-decorator I knew who experimented with red was a friend from my High days, the talented Ellen. She and her husband bought a house in Atlanta's Grant Park, where many of the homes are at least a century old and sometimes still have original claw-foot bathtubs. In one of their bathrooms, Ellen kept things really simple but injected full-tilt flair by painting the exterior of an ancient tub red.

Unfortunately we can't find any old images of that bathroom but the look was similar to the interiors I've included above. Ellen used her own hands to get the job done and decided to hang a pretty chandelier. Otherwise though, the bathroom was quite understated. Now the couple is involved in their second home and another renovation. Going the adventurous route again, one tub was painted black.

She explains, "I painted the tub at our old house with some tub refinishing paint. It seemed to work very well, but it was not a tub that we used on a daily basis. This time around, someone else did it for us, but he used a spray refinishing product that can be purchased at home improvement stores. It left a nice, smooth finish and covered up all of the rust stains and yucky yellowing of the tub. For the outside, he used spray paint designed for metal surfaces in black."

(BTW: I love the hand towels Ellen embroidered for her guest bath. You can catch her now over at The Long Thread.)

Image one is a Harry look-a-like; Harry was Mrs. Blandings' dad's car.

Interior design in image two, Emma Jane Pilkington, as seen in House & Garden, January 2005; photo by Oberto Gili.

Image three is from Kathryn M. Ireland's Classic Country published by Gibbs Smith, 2007.

Image four is a Peter Dunham-designed bathroom. I know. Loads of Dunham lately but this was a perfect example
.

LOVE her style...

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: MadeByGirl
Pamela Love has got to be my 'favorite jewelry designer'. She's as EDGY as her jewelry designs, being a painter, drummer and designer...oh & did I mention shes totally beautiful? Her 'eagle cuff' design has been featured in many editorials as well as her bird's skull. Of course, these aren't made of real claws & skulls, thankfully.....that is what makes them even better! Pamela said in an interview for New York Magazine that her hair is so hard to manage. She is wanting a hat from the Sonia Rykiel collection & she mentions it in all her interviews in hopes they'll send her one! Smart gal. Hmmm, I'd LOVE an eagle cuff from Pamela Love.... hint hint.


(photo above by: Melissa Hom)

Moi

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: k style
Hey Kstylers, Thought it was time I finally put a pic with the "K" and of course by now you all know that I am NOT in the under 30 blogging group. Hope you all had a great weekend and are staying warm. We are talking snow here in Ashland. Maybe some photo ops in the next few days. Am still working on getting my computer back into blogging order. Wow I had no idea how much stuff I had on there and how IMPORTANT it is to back up. Will be blogging about design again soon. i promise, k

Little Put Books

01/01/1970, 01:00 | Original Site: Bloesem

The Weekly Gallery

01/01/1970, 01:00 | Original Site: Bloesem

Vendors We Love--Kyle Bunting

11/04/2008, 00:17 | Original Site: Mark Cutler Design

Bathroom Furniture

10/30/2008, 11:29 | Original Site: absolutely beautiful things

I am very fond of placing small pieces of Antique furniture in bathrooms. I think it adds an element of coziness. It also adds interest and personality to a room which we usually don't think about furnishing.

Whether it's a small table {like above} to place some towels on & a beautiful tray with lots of perfume and lotion on for your guests or a lovely old chair upholstered in a pretty fabric, I think it's a great look.

In the Gumdale house I have been working on I suggested this concept to the client and she went with it. We painted the old pieces we found for her bathrooms white and they look fantastic.

So, if you have room for a lovely little old table or chair or even an old mirror in your bathroom my advice is...go for it!

Oh and while we're on the subject of furnishing bathrooms - I also love little paintings in bathrooms too!!

A Pretty White Cottage

11/02/2008, 11:52 | Original Site: absolutely beautiful things

Over the weekend I was having a little look on realestate.com and spotted this very cute house for sale in Clayfield in Brisbane. It has all the right attributes in my opinion - it's white, it's a cottage, it has a pretty garden and a pretty white picket fence...

Anemone Lamp

11/09/2008, 15:47 | Original Site: Design Mind

The Anemone Lamp ships flat then forms into a honeycomb structure with a ridged steel interior frame. Designed by Heath Nash for Artecnica.

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Belle Vivir

Really cool patterns in the new Pottery Barn's Fall Collection.

Working a lot now!

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Karin's Style Blog
See the first snow bigger here. The first snow came in big, wet flakes on Sunday and was all gone before it hit the ground, but it looked softly beautiful. What is this?? See the answer bigger here. I'm working every day at the moment, sending parcels here there and everywhere. I'm ...

Storage: Hello Goodbye Coat Rack

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Remodelista

From Julie:

We love the sleek industrial look of the natural steel Hello Goodbye Coat Rack, designed by Atelier Haussmann. Currently available from POAA in the Netherlands for €79 or from Manufactum for €86.90.

manufactumsteelcoatrack.jpg

Happy July 4!

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Bluelines

Ft071_flags03_l Ka100079_su03_balloon_l

Happy Independence Day. Have a festive, fun holiday wherever you are...

Eat, drink, and sing as loud as you want.

Mla103821_0608_ribs101_l Mla101277_0505_limeade_l

An Architectural Alphabet

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: The Peak of Chic




Remember how we all raved- for months- about Andrew Zega and Bernd Dams' Chinoiseries? Well, hold on to your hats because they are back with a new book that I think might be one of their best yet!

An Architectural Alphabet (Connaissance et Mémoires) is the new limited-edition artist's book that features the duo's watercolors of the alphabet. Each letter is featured in an architectural or garden related scene. In fact, a few lucky letters are painted against backdrops of Chinoiserie follies. How great is that?

The new book, with a forward by none other than Charlotte Moss (I told you this was good!), is hand-bound in silk, numbered, and slip-cased. Forget the jewelry, baubles, trinkets, and bibelots- this is what I want for Christmas. I better start writing Santa right now.

Cynthia Conigliaro and Will Rogers of Archivia Books and Catherine Cormery of Connaissance et Mémoires are hosting a book party where Zega and Dams' new book as well as some of their recent watercolors will be featured. The event takes place at Archivia Books on Thursday, November 20 from 6 until 8pm. To RSVP, call 212-570-9565.









Valentine Green

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: k style
I'ts hard to believe it's almost Valentines Day and I know we almost always think in terms of red or pink but I love the unexpected greens in this set by artist Mondring. And it doesn't hurt to be thinking Spring which is also just around the corner. So lovely, k

september allure

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: studio wellspring
suddenly it feels like the seasons are starting to shift. september is a glorious month of harvest and learning and shifting gears. and with so much bounty to look forward to this fall i'm welcoming the new season with open arms. i collected some inspiration for this time of year from all around our fabulous internet to share with you {please click on collage to enlarge} . . . . . . a feather mobile made by caitlin keegan, an old timey kitchen found on for the love of country, a red bicycle bag made by kate durkin, the wandering waif outfit made {& given away for free} by grosgrain, some pretty books photographed by kay loves vintage, handmade honey bee soap by amethyst soap, gorgeous handmade pottery by christiane perrochon, a collection of bird cards from bird vs bird, peep toe pumps by prada, and a fall inspired photo by shining egg.
hope y'all have a sanguine september weekend!

Rust Designs...

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: MadeByGirl
Jessica Rust Designs has some amazing dessert plates that you can personalize with your initials . Even though my style is slightly wilder than this, I can appreciate the simplicity. Hope you can check out her website, she has quite a collection I'm sure you'll LOVE!

Christmas Colorways: Blue

11/29/2008, 06:38 | Original Site: ::Surroundings::

Blue Christmas by Surroundings

Art to the Rescue

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Bluelines

I was recently preparing my house for a friend’s baby shower when I noticed the non-curtained French doors in the den provided a great view for guests to my not-so-neat bedroom.

It’s the kind of thing you don’t think of until the door bell is about to ring.

My quick fix: I took a few of my son Sammy’s paintings from our massive collection and taped them neatly with white artist’s tape to the back of the doors.

Jodi_door_3

It was meant to be a temporary solution, but my husband and I love it. (We know we are biased.) I might even laminate the art so I can hang the masterpieces neatly with some tiny eyelets on cup hooks.

Since there is a lot of Sammy art where that came from, we often have “art shows” at our house. (His teacher told me that he “uses up more paper than anyone in the class.”) I was proud, even though I’m not sure it was meant as a compliment.

Our shows are installed in hallways, on doors, and strung on clotheslines under the mantle. One “piece” that is on permanent display over our mantle is a series of his first people drawings collaged and hung in one of Ikea’s “NYTTJA” frames.

Jodi_mantle

They come in lots of colors and sizes. The one above is the large (19 ¾” x 27 ½”) orange one and it’s only $7.99! (One downside with the frame is the plexiglass starts to bow and sag after a while. I plan to replace it with glass.)

Collaging a bunch of your child’s artwork is a great way to capture a series and create a larger piece of art.

Now that my younger son, Lionel, is starting to draw himself, we may have to move to a place with more walls!

CHI Open Thread: 107

01/01/1970, 01:00 | Original Site: Apartment Therapy

Spike In Traffic?

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Bluelines

During this important year (presidential election and all), I readily admit that I don't rush to the front page of the New York Times or the Washington Post each morning.

More than likely, I am flipping through party pictures on style.com or my new favorite: a weekly blog feature on New York magazine hilariously dissecting the latest "Top Chef" victim.

See the latest cooked turkey, Spike, below.

30_spiketopchef_lgl_2

I plan to return each Thursday (the day after the Bravo show airs) to read through the silly commentary. After that, I will look through this and last season's archives.

It's frivolous. I am not learning a thing. But a girl needs to ease into the weekend.

Share your online guilty pleasure -- we won't tell your boss.

The Modern House with a Soul II

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Hatch: The Design Public® Blo

Remember when I told you about this house that I fell in love with on the Modern Atlanta House Tour? Apparently Metropolitan Home found the house as well*. Their photographer Mali Azima provided pictures of it that are far superior to the ones I took on my iPhone! While they have some great shots of the branch chandelier and the folk art collection, they did not show the mask wall! I am not finding this spread on PointClickHome as of yet, so to check it out, you’ll have to buy the December issue and turn to page 134. UPDATE! It’s up, just click here to check it out over at pointclickhome. There was another interesting article written about the home you can check out for free in Creative Loafing.

To see more work by the home’s owner/architects Cara Cummins and Jose Tavel, check out their firm’s website at TaCStudios.com. Also, many of the self-taught artists whose work you see in the home are represented at one of my very favorite spots in Georgia, Around Back at Rocky’s Place.

*I’m trying to remember if Met Home was a sponsor of the tour; I am 99% sure that they were, but the Modern Atlanta website is down at the moment so I cannot confirm. UPDATE: Yes, Met Home was a sponsor, and the MA website is back up! Personally, I prefer a house tour such as this one to one “Idea House.” I think it provides a magazine with so much more to share with their readers. I’m sure an idea house probably helps the magazine strike deals with advertisers, and in the already overcrowded shelter mag category this is likely crucial to help them stay alive (O At Home is the latest one to bite the dust), but the feeling of one big advertising spread is apparent in a lot of Idea Home pages.

Diwali Ki Shubhkamnayen: 6.11.2007

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: Rang-Decor {Interior Ideas predominantly Indian}
This has to be one of those impromtu ideas, which just strikes you when you are doing something as simple as making Idlis for breakfast;-)
Serve traditional Indian sweets in one plate of an Idli mould, dry fruits in the other and light oil diyas in the mini-cocktail Idli mould:-)
You have a simple, instant Diwali Decoration ready!

(Images & ideas by Arch, feel free to get inspired and link to me but if you want to use my photographs for some other purpose please send me a mail)

The Animals at the Faire

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: katiedid

Aubergine 18" high porcelain Dragon with forehead horn.

On my last visit to the Sacramento Antique Faire, I came across a number of interesting creatures. I had originally gone to find a table, and to hunt for additions for my various collections. Also, I do like to take pictures of the more unique finds I stumble upon for you all to see. This trip, I noticed a distinct trend to the photos as I was sorting through them for a post. Animals of various kinds stood out from the rest of the photos, and I began to think about finding homes for all of these strays.

I saw this porcelain dragon, which was quite large and fantastically colored. And I imagined that he would enjoy a home like this:

House and Garden, June 2004, Photo by Francois Dishinger

Art dealer Gian Enzo Sperone might find a spot for him among the ceramic figures by Paolo Maione in his New York loft, above.

I spied this two foot high plaster pug just hanging around. I think he would be right at home in Liz Lambert's bunkhouse outside of Marfa, Texas. The slate colored walls and salvaged billboard would provide the perfect setting for this comical pup:

House and Garden, September 2006, Photo by Francois Halard

The brown ceramic elephant standing about a foot high (top), and the vintage metal elephant penny bank both have a rustic natural quality that appealed to me.

Elle Decor, Jan/Feb 2006, Photo by William Waldron

I don't think that designer T. Keller Donovan would mind too terribly if these pachyderms made themselves at home on his antique Irish pub table. I love the mix of natural textures and colors here, and the mix of objects.

This sheepdog was one of my favorites. I like to think of him as a "faux-Jeff-Koons-puppy" (I posted about this puppy here). Maybe if I painted the nose and tongue white? No? Well anyway, this pup might still look cool in a house like this:

Elle Decor, August/September 2003, Photo by Fernando Bengoechea

This very chic house is owned by taste makers Franco Mariotti and Alessandra Tabacchi Mariotti, owners of the very stylish modern and antique furnishing shop, FLAIR ( Florence, Milan, Capri and New York locations).

So tell me....do you all do this too? I mean, do you see something that catches your eye and immediately imagine the sort of place it should call home? It seems to be a little game I play, and perhaps it just comes with the territory of the creative world.

Shopping at the Museum

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: style court

It wouldn't be a blockbuster exhibition without the specially installed adjoining gift shop. I know some of you have an intellectual aversion to the whole concept of blockbuster shows, museum merchandising and coffee bars in the atrium, but I won't lie: I'm pretty pleased with the Asian-inspired offerings at the High's temporary First Emperor store.


The thing about Chinese decorative arts is that the aesthetic created centuries ago is so refined and sophisticated that today's inexpensive copy-cat pieces usually look quite nice. I know decorator Mary McDonald, for one, is an unapologetic fan of mixing reproduction catalog finds with her pricey things.

This morning at the High I saw many lovely items priced at $20. Some pretty pieces were even under $10. Just a few objects were in the $60 range, and of course there was a great selection of Asian art books. While I was up in the galleries, a high school group from a county outside Atlanta was touring the exhibition and I observed some male teens picking out holiday presents for their moms.

The cloth ornaments were what caught my eye (very much like pieces my grandmother either made or bought at a church bazaar decades ago). But the Chinese horses I nabbed have fabulous gold tassel tails that remind me of Jennifer Boles Dwyer.

Oh and the exhibition? Definitely worth a trip. Obviously the terracotta soldiers are the stars of the show, but I also think design and architecture enthusiasts will enjoy studying the smaller excavated pieces -- tiles, utilitarian objects, jades and bronzes.

The blue-and-white tea mug is $8, the ornaments are $12, the turquoise snuff bottle is $20, and the leather box is $70. Many of these items are also available online.

Remember how Heidi Friedler told the Times-Picayune that the red objects on her mantle range from "fine lacquered pieces to rubber jars and a couple of funky holders from Target..." ? The museum currently has some wonderful affordable red boxes that one could buy to emulate her.

Friedler images are by Kathy Anderson

The museum also has charming handpainted ceramic emperors, similar to the figures Carolina Herrera Jr. had on her mantel, as seen in Vogue Living. The High's figures are $20.

Go Ducks!

00/00/0000, 00:00 | Original Site: k style
If you've been reading Kstyle for awhile you know that I am a diehard University of Oregon duck fan. So check out this darling "green and yellow" purse I found at J. Crew. I just came back from a weekend in Eugene to attend the Oregon/USC basketball game and I could've sold a hundred of these just standing in the lobby. too cute, k