ARTmonday: Stephen Sheffield

On Thursday night my husband and I stopped by The Achilles Project on Summer Street for the opening of the solo show of Stephen Sheffield, a friend and, as we just discovered, a very talented fine arts photographer. (Not that we had any doubts!)

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Check out Stephen’s blog, . . stephen sheffield has something to show you . . , for video of the installation, previews of new works, and general artistic musings.

Get the Look: 25 Pink Wallpapers

A sampling of 25 pink wallpaper patterns, from butterflies and bees, to books and flowers, to psychedelic prints and classic damasks.

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Shopping Guide

ROW 1: Osborne & Little Bedlam – Mod Green Pod Butterfly Jubilee  – Lorca Gattopardo

ROW 2: Cole & Son Fornasetti ExLibris – Flavor Paper Luxury – Harlequin Twinkle Toes

ROW 3: Flavor Paper Kabloom –  Kelly Wearstler Imperial TrellisCole & Son Cow Parsley

ROW 4: Flavor Paper Cycloid – Osborne & Little Rosabella –  Timorous Beasties Napoleon Bee

ROW 5: Jessica Lynn Designs Deer Bird Damask – Jessica Swift Ingrid  – Dropper Embossed

ROW 6: Linda Barker Tempting – Designers Guild Primrose Hill Peony – Geometric Squares Velvet Flocked

ROW 7: Designers Guild Sevilla – Designers Guild Tokyo Dahlia – Designers Guild Corazon – Pink Peony Mini Mural 

ROW 8: Graham & Brown Elizabeth Flock Effect – Linda Barker TranquilGraham & Brown Midsummer

Design Diary: Emily Kumler Travelista

I recently profiled Emily Kumler for Stuff Magazine. Emily, 31, is the co-owner of Prep Cosmetics. Turns out Emily is also quite skilled in nesting. She designed and decorated her 2,000 square foot condo in Cambridge, Mass., where she lives with her teacup Yorkie, Rocky.

ek-mainPhoto: Tim Gray for Stuff Magazine

Emily’s kitchen is outfitted with all the best appliances. She knows she’ll never recoup the money she spent, but doesn’t mind eating the loss. She says, “Having these appliances is sort of ridiculous, but I love cooking. And it’s so nice to have people come over and not want to leave.” Emily is quite the hostess; like her grandmother, who was a fantastic cook, she loves to entertain. She even whipped up lunch for me – steak salad and the most delicious lemon cupcakes I’ve ever tasted. (I ate three!)

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Photo: Tim Gray for Stuff Magazine

The custom cabinets have plenty of storage space for her myriad of spices, appliances, and collections, like the aprons and Starbucks mugs she brings back from every country she visits. Have a birthday coming up? Sometimes she gives them as gifts. She says, “A mug from the UAR. . . it’s just so random.”

ek-lrPhoto: Tim Gray for Stuff Magazine

Emily is not afraid of color, thanks to her mom, who encouraged her to look at books filled with paintings by well-known artists to develop her sense of aesthetics. Emily loves Matisse, so likes to incorporate his palette of blues, greens, and orange. The orange velvet sofa was her grandmother’s, given to her by her mom for her birthday. The leaded glass cabinet doors are original to the building.

ek-lr2Photo: Tim Gray for Stuff Magazine

I love the way Emily uses the little cut out as a bookshelf. You get a glimpse of the chandelier, from Brocade Home, which is the same ones that hang in the Prep retail stores. The chair is a real Eames lounge (yummy), and the vintage poster, from International Poster Gallery on Newbury Street, was a gift from her parents.

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Photo: Tim Gray for Stuff Magazine

Emily’s bedroom is an ode to Rome, her hands-down favorite city. When she studied there in high school she lived in a dorm that was an old monastery. She remembers, “We had these huge windows with no screens, just big shutters. I used to sit in my window and read all the time.” So, when Emily found a set of old shutters in antique store in Somerville, she snatched them up. Her painter made a matching pair for the other window. She also hung a shuttered mirror from Wisteria (not pictured). Emily’s sister thought she was crazy to paint her room in what she called a “hell fire orange.” But Emily loves the combo with the blue shutters. The combo (and crackled texture) is very Tuscan. She says, “I love that in Italy, people aren’t scared to put bold colors next to each other.” (If you’re wondering, its a C2 Tangerine base with C2 Babylon mixed with a crackle inducing glaze painted on top.)

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The painting above Emily’s bed is “Dive” by P. Murphy, which she bought at a gallery in the West Village of New York City. She loves to swim and finds the image very calming. The bedding is from Garnet Hill; the lamp with fringe shade and the chandelier are both from neighborhood shop Boutique Fabulous.

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Above left: The bathroom has cute built-in cupboards that are original to the building. The shower curtain is Marimekko. Above right: Emily wanted the TV room to be a bit dark and cozy; the paint color is Benjamin Moore Aurora Borealis. Besides, green makes her happy, and it goes with all the other colors she loves. On the walls are the covers of old magazines that she started collecting when she knew she was going to buy a place. Most came from a used bookstore near her parent’s house in Maine.

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Left photo: Tim Gray for Stuff Magazine

There are three small areas that Emily papered with William Morris Iris, ordered from England through Sanderson. The inspiration here was her mom. The home in which Emily grew up has lots of it. Above left: Emily’s study, complete with a chair from Crate & Barrel which you can also find in her Prep cosmetic boutiques.
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Emily, the lucky duck, has a balcony off her study that her friends jokingly call her cabana. Who can blame them, with its Sunbrella curtains, daybed, and quaint cafe table? She eats out there almost every night in the summer, if she’s home, and naps out there on weekend afternoons. She admits, “It feels like a vacation.”

ARTmonday: Vivienne Strauss

I discovered Vivienne Strauss on Etsy last year. Her quirky paintings of fashionable ladies and couples in equally fashionable settings make me laugh. (I love her titles too.) Her work has been featured on a couple of other design blogs, but since two of her paintings are perched on the shelf right above my desk, I thought it would be okay if I too talked her up. : ) Besides, her pieces seem to move pretty quickly, so you may not have seen these images before. Check out her blog, The Artist Side of Vivienne Strauss, for commentary on the origins of her creations.

I own the first two . The others are currently offered on Vivienne’s Etsy shop as either original paintings or limited edition prints.

m“Martin Loved Dora, He Just Wasn’t Sure About All Those Dogs”

cimg7067“Jean, Tillie and Albert Relaxing at Home”

evelyn“Mrs. Evelyn Bradstreet of West Palm Beach with her Dog”

mabel“Everybody’s Talking About Mabel, She’s the Talk of the Town”

luisa“Luisa Gingelbuscher in her Living Room in Budapest on an Early Autumn Afternoon”

mary-alice“Mary Alice and Joan Were Grateful that Dorinda was There So They Wouldn’t have yo Think for Themselves”

margaret“Margaret and Fern, 1949 by the lake”

elinor” Elinor and Clive Arviddson Enjoy Their Morning Coffee, Early Spring of 1933″

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“Edna Mae Mueller Drinks Her Morning Coffee and Wonders if Life is Passing Her By”

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“Lillian Wasn’t Sure What was Making Her So Sleepy, the Warm Sunshine, the not Very Good Book She had Brought with Her or Henri’s Monotone Voice”

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“Iris Higginbotham Crosses the English Channel, First Class”

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“Lily Was Almost Positive that Her Cats, Edward and Franklin Talked About Her When She Wasn’t in the Room”

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“Iris Higginbotham at Her Upstairs Bedroom Window, London, UK”

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“Ms. Olive Gladstone Reflects for a Moment While Warren Almost Dies of Boredom”

On Trend: Rock Candy

Last week I illuminated how black & white made its way from the runway into the home. Another trend I highlighted in that article – “Fashion In the House” for the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine – was rocks and minerals. While jewelry and fashion designers are reveling in rough and chunky stones, interior designers are finding ways to bedeck rooms with earthy gems.

Let’s start with a peek at the Spring ‘o9 shows, where Burberry Prorsum, Marc Jacobs, and Roberto Cavalli were just a few of the designers rockin’ out.

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How is this being translated on the home front? Here’s a gorgeous tableau of home accessories from Good, an exquisite boutique in Beacon Hill, Boston.

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I’ve noticed a number of designers incorporating hefty hunks of shimmering, fantastical mineral specimens into interiors. They’re often pricey pieces, but quite magical. (And, a much more interesting and sophisticated take on the preppy Palm Beach coral display.) Boston-based interior designer Frank Roop has a number of beautiful minerals and chunky glass pieces scattered throughout his studio and condo. Home furnishing designers are crafting lamp bases from minerals. I’ve also noticed textile manufacturers getting in on the action, be it with granite-textured wall covering, or stone-like cut velvets.

I love the mineral specimens, and I absolutely adore the jewelry. I’ve put together some translations…

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Left: Asheer Garnet cuff by Double Happiness, $180, Right: Pyrite doorknobs at Door Jewels.

rocks-neckl-chandelierLeft: Gracia necklace by Jill Golden, $400. Right: Bubble glass light fixture available through The Bright Group, Boston Design Center.

rocks-lamp-base-pendantLeft: Central Park quartz necklace by BYLU, $500. Right: Chinese Gypsum Calcite lamp by Katy Briscoe, $6,000.

rocks-fabricLeft: Dina earrings in gold plated steel with pyrite nuggets by Gemma Redux, $246. Right: “Les Galets” fabric by Boussac available through The Martin Group, Boston Design Center.

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Left: Amy bracelet in steel chains with angled prehnite pieces by Gemma Redux, $272 at  (as seen in In Touch). Right: One-of-a-kind Russian white mineral on stand by FDO Collections at Lee Jofa, Boston Design Center.

rocks-amethystLeft: Amethyst Anthias necklace $335 at Obsidian Jewels. Right: Amethyst cabinet pulls at Door Jewels.

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Left: Larvae necklace by Katerina Bogatireva. Right: Mineral specimen from China at Frank Roop’s design studio.

rock-sconceLeft: Stone necklace by Danielle Welmond at Good, Boston. Right: Loomis – Zaffiro sconce, $4,000, available through The Bright Group, Boston Design Center.

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Left: Sarah bracelet in steel with large amazonite cuts by Gemma Redux, $369. Right: Glass chunk from Brimfield used as a bookend in Frank Roop’s design studio.

rocks-ring-lampLeft: Oxidized silver and 14K gold rings by Any New York by Naoyo Terada, $330 (as seen in Lucky). Right: Moroccan Calcite lamp by Houston designer Katy Briscoe, $6,000 (as seen in the New York Times).

rocks-turqLeft: Turquoise ring at Good, Boston. Right: Asteria tile made from jewelry-grade turquoise available at Ann Sacks.

Finally, here is a piece I picked up on ebay last night. Can’t wait for it to arrive!

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