Category Archives: Furniture

MoMA’s Open Call for NYC Designers

MoMA has put out an open call to designers based in New York City.

 While designers from all over the world can submit items year round, this is the first time the MoMA Store has specifically asked designers in New York City for American made products.

The MoMA Design Store is inviting local designers living and working in the city’s five boroughs to submit items for a product collection launching in 2013. Product categories will include, but are not limited to, paper (note cards, postcards, journals), home (tabletop, kitchen, home textiles, desk, gadgets/tools), kids’, games and toys, and personal accessories (bags, jewelry, scarves, wallets, pouches, and other small accessories), furniture (wall clocks, stools, lighting), and books.

In order for your submission to be considered, products must already be in, or close to, production, manufactured in the continental United States, and able to be delivered to MoMA in saleable condition. Visit MoMAStore.org/NYC for more information about the submission process. Deadline:  June 30, 2012.

Let me  know if you plan to submit, or if you’re item is chosen. I’d love to hear and blog about it!

Take your place among the elite—Eames, George Nelson, Castiglioni.

Your clock could hang here. Hey, you never know.

I love pretty much everything in the MoMA Store. (And the museum.)

The market could stand for more design-y kid toys, in my opinion.

M O R E    M o M A   G O O D N E S S

•  My interview with MoMA Store president, Kathy Thornton-Bias on Design Milk.

•  ARTmonday: My Visit to MoMA

MoMA Design Store: Destination: Mexico

MoMA Store, SoHo

1 Comment

Filed under Art, Furniture, Home Accessories, Shopping

Montage: 54 Living Rooms with Gray Sofas

I apologize for missing two days of blogging. I took a quick day trip to Connecticut to visit a friend. A friend who has so much faith in my taste that she has hired me to decorate her gorgeous new apartment in New York City. You didn’t realize that I’m an interior designer? I’m not! This very loyal friend is confident that through my writing and research, experience overseeing the building and renovations of my own places, and years of absorbing interior images, that I can do this. Or rather, we can do this. It’s definitely a collaboration. And really fun.

The project doesn’t involve any construction, kitchens, or bathrooms. The apartment is brand new and will be delivered finished and pristine. We  will pick paint colors, wallpapers, rugs, and furniture. The budget is similar to what I would spend if it were my own home, which makes it a lot easier. I’m nervous, but excited.

We’ve decided to go with a gray sofa in her living room. We’re thinking about a serene white and gray scheme, or white and gray with green accents. The dining room is in the same space, so we can play with that too. I’m sure I’ll be treating you to a lot of posts inspired by our deliberations and eventual decisions.

Vita Designs

unidentified

House to Home

Photographer David Duncan Livingston

Marcelo Lucini’s Buenos Aires apartment

Steven GambrelElle Decor

Greg Natale

unidentified

unidentified

Katie Ridder

via The Aestate

Andrew Flesher Interiors

Burley Katon HallidayElle Decor

Photographer Francesca Mantovani via French by Design

Light Locations

Home of Joanna Berryman of Matrushka

Katie Lydon

Anthony Baratta

Dwell Studio

Home of stylist/photographer Elisabeth Dunker via Design Sponge

via Apartment Therapy

Rest Sofa by Muuto

Steven Gambrel – Elle Decor

Burnham Design

Home of Emily Robison of the Dixie Chicks – Metropolitan Home

Emily Summers

Courtney Cox’s Malibu home – Trip HaenischElle Decor

Axel Vervoordt

Jonathan Adler

 Ix Design

Turner Davis Interiors – Elle Decor

reader’s home – Cote de Texas

 via little green notebook

Photographer Manolo Yllera

unidentified

Sally Wheat Interiors

bloggers own sofa (IKEA) – Pretty Petals blog

Sally Wheat Interiors

Crate & Barrel

Ashe + Leandro

unidentified

unidentified

Daniel M. Pafford

Francisco Costa’s NYC apartment via Habitually Chic

Greg Natale

 Emily Robison of the Dixie Chicks – Metropolitan Home
Architects Jim Poteet & Patrick Ousey – Interior designer Joel Mozersky

Emily Summers

via House of Phila

Sally Wheat Interiors

unidentified

unidentified

unidentified

unidentified

Burnham Design

4 Comments

Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Furniture, Montage, Rooms

Covet: Geo Coffee Table by Paolo Piva


 Paolo Piva  •  Italy  •  1960s
The Warehouse, 1st Dibs

Leave a comment

Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Covet, Furniture

Just In: Fashion Designers Debut Home Collections in Milan

A number of fashion houses presented home collections at Salone del Mobile in Milan this week, including Hermes, Missoni, Bottega Venetta, and Versace. Here are the highlights, via WWD.

Blumarine

Missoni

Versace

Bottega Veneta

Diesel

Hermès

Roberto Cavalli

Photos: Davide Maestri

Leave a comment

Filed under Fashion, Furniture

Just In: Preview the IKEA PS Collection 2012

Yesterday IKEA announced the launch of its 7th IKEA PS Collection, debuting at the Milan Furniture Fair right now. (I’m hoping to go at some point, as its the design event of the year.) Janice Simonsen, design spokesperson for IKEA U.S. is blogging live from Milan this week, if you’re interested.

IKEA PS  first launched in 1995 to strengthen the IKEA as a design company. The collection focuses on cutting-edge Scandinavian design without losing sight of affordable pricing. Collections are launched every three years. For 2012, the designers drew inspiration from 60 years of IKEA design history–looking through IKEA catalogs and archives–to reinvent past products .They updated form, function, and materials to make the pieces more relevant and sustainable for today.


The PS collection will available at U.S. IKEA stores starting this August.

Read below for the designers’ inspirations.

S H O P P I N G + More

TV Bench $179
Designers: Lisa Widen and Anna Wallin Irinarchos (WIS Design)
Inspiration: Wavy doors inspired by old furniture with drapery. 

Easy Chair (not yet priced)
Designer
: Wiebke Braasch
Inspiration: He fell for a classic 1950s IKEA easy chair and developed a modern, scaled down version. “The old upholstery and other unnecessary material disappeared., but we kept the original metal frame. The best things became more prominent.”
Green angle:  It’s made from only one material, can be used indoors and out, and is much easier to recycle.

Wall Lamp $49.99
Designer: Johanna Jelinek
Inspiration: LED technology makes it possible to create smarter solutions because LED lamps can be made smaller and slimmer. It’s what makes this one possible to fold flat against the wall when not in use. “It fits in every room.”
Green angle: “LEDs are more energy efficient than ordinary light bulbs.”

Side Table with Bowls $49
Designer: Henrik Preutz
Inspiration: “Flower stands that were popular years ago.” These are designed for people who can’t make up their minds—there’s a flat top, one with a big fruit bowl, one with four smaller bows that can be used for anything from flowers to snacks. Combine all three to make one large sideboard.
Green angle: Bamboo frame.

Flatwoven Rug $99.99
Designer:  Maria Vinka
Inspiration: Dots. “On one of the rugs the dots are cut out and on the other rug the dots are in raised relief, so the pile itself becomes a decorative element in the design.”

Sofa $899
Designer: Nike Karlsson
Inspiration: Old tubular steel sofas that are light and airy.
Green angle: Uses metal pocket springs which are easier to recycle than typical stuffing.

Drawer $44.99/set of 4
Designer: Sarah Fager
Inspiration: “Traditional spice drawers.” These offer more possibilities to decide about size and placement of storage. They can hang on a wall or spread them out. And you can see through the drawers to know what’s inside.
Green angle: Made from PET plastic and bamboo.

Twin Duvet Cover Set $49.99
Designer:  Maria Vinka
Inspiration: “All my textiles all have dots. Dots are energetic and spread joy.”
Green angle: Made of linen, which can be grown in cooler climates where artificial irrigation and pesticides are rarely needed.

Coffee Table $49
Designer: Ola Wihlborg
Inspiration: She stumbled upon an IKEA tea trolley when browsing old catalogs. They’re old fashioned items, but “there’s still a need today for mobile things.” The casters on this coffee table make it mobile, and there’s a shelf for storage.

Stool $39
Designer: Lisa Norinder
Inspiration: Her father was a designer at IKEA, so she further developed one of his chairs by removing the back so now it’s a cross between a chair and a stool. It’s stackable like a stool, making it a great extra to take out when there are guests.

High Back Armchair $89
Designer:  Ebba Strandmark
Inspiration: “Armchairs are true classics and they’ve had a given place in our kitchens for a very long time. Today, we socialize in our kitchens more than ever before. . . That puts high demands on comfort and is what inspired us. . .  We raised the backrest and added two armrests. Now it’s easier to sit down and stand up, and you can lean back comfortably and spend hour after hour in the company of good friends.”

Dining Table $179
Designer: Jon Karlsson
Inspiration: “Flirts with ’50s design.”
Green angle: “Bamboo is a material that grows quickly, and when it’s layer-glued it becomes extremely hard and durable.”

Bowl (not yet priced)
Designer: Marcus Arvonen
Green angle: Produced in two versions with different materials; one in recycled PET plastic and one in WPC, a mixture of plastic and wood fiber. “PET is easier to recycle than WPC, but WPC is more environmentally friendly to produce. The bowls look the same, giving one the chance to think about the advantages and disadvantages of the materials.”

Daybed $350 for frame with two drawers
Designer: Sarah Fager
Inspiration: IKEAs daybed from just a few years ago. “My aim was to designe something that is comfortable regardless of whether you’re sitting or sleeping.”

Leave a comment

Filed under Furniture, Home Accessories, Shopping