Category Archives: Rooms

Design Diary: Jeff Osborne’s South End Loft

I’ve been meaning to highlight Jeff Osborne’s South End condo for a while now. I originally wrote about it, “Living With Less, for the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine.  Why now? I have just hired Jeff and his partner Amanda Hark (their newly created firm is called Hark + Osborne ), to do design work in my apartment. So excited.

Jeff’s loft isn’t large, but he makes great use of the space. And  he as an amazing eye, mixing old and new, high and low. He had to do some serious editing to make it work. He gave all his old furniture to his brother, who lives in Maine.

Photo: Josh Kuchinsky

In the main living space, the television blends right in with the art. The ebony, bamboo-topped coffee table by Gervasoni from Showroom in Boston has simple lines, with an Asian feel. The rug is Italian, made from linen and wool. The sofa, upholstered in linen, is Flexform, from Showoroom in Boston. Owner Doug Gates is his best friend.

Photo: Josh Kuchinsky

The vintage Louis Vuitton trunk was a gift from Osborne’s parents. The painting of man on left is a self-portrait by Cyrille Conan from a local Boston art gallery. The smaller piece on the right was painted by his grandfather. It’s a cottage on Ballston Beach on Cape Cod, that has since washed away. Underneath, on the white lacquer Poliform shelf, is a whaling-ship propeller that he found at a Boston antiques show.


The smaller ceramic bowl on the far left is by Tim Christiansen, purchased from The Society of Arts & Crafts on Newbury Street. (Christiansen and Osoborne went to boarding school together.) The larger one is from Norway from his parents, who collect ceramics and art.  “They have fantastic taste,” he says, “They downplay it, but it’s been a huge influence on my work.” Both bowls sit on wood blocks from West Elm.

The artwork is hard to see here. The vertical is a drawing of a nose that he bought when he studied abroad in Florence; it’s a local contemporary artist but in an antique French frame that he bought it from a store called Flair. Next to it is a print from Paris of hats flying off people’s heads by Charlotte Reine.

On the bottom shelf are Chinese bronze animal bells from Intarwut in Cambridge.

Two aluminum frame full-length mirrors from IKEA are propped up behind the Flexform stainless steel and rope folding chairs.

Photo: Josh Kuchinsky

The bed is beyond the main living space, in a south-facing, floor-ceiling-windowed nook. The bed (high) is upholstered in white leather and covered in gray houndstooth linens. The nightstands (low) are from West Elm. The industrial-style lamps are from Casa Design in SoWa. The chair in the foreground, upholstered in striped chenille, is Flexform.

A trio of postcards depicting Greek ruins were discovered in a junk shop in Provincetown.

Photo: Josh Kuchinsky

The kitchen is standard issue from the building. The wrapped countertop is bisque-colored speckled Caesarstone, the applicance Viking, and cabinetry Wenge wood. Osborne added the three silvery pendant light fixtures from Casa Design over the bar. And note the Alessi juicer next to the bowl of oranges.


The entry is lined with family photos and artwork.

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Fine Print: Victoria Hagan Interior Portraits

Victoria Hagan’s Interior Portraits came out back in October, but I’ve been so busy these last few months I’m just catching up on my reading now. I’ve been a fan of Hagan’s work for years. Her environments are quiet, yet strong, perfectly balanced and sophisticated. I especially admire her sense of composition. Although I tend toward slightly more lively elements and more color  in my own living space, I really appreciate her aesthetic.


I often look to Hagan’s interiors to understand furniture layout, something I’m not very good at. The seating and tables are well-balanced, symmetrical without looking “done.” I love the artwork over the fireplace here.

I’ve always appreciated a perfect blue and white room. Love the slightly rumpled striped rug, bold sofas, and crisp white X-benches.

I love that although this is a purely black and white room, there’s nothing stark, or (gasp) bachelor-ish about it. The lines of the sofas are strong and they look comfortable in that delicious black velvet, and the mix of chair styles lends just the right touch of eclectic.
This room is much more saturated in color than Hagan’s usual spaces. The blue/green walls have an ombré effect. And I adore oversize artwork.
Again, a large format artwork; its blues set off the topaz of the amazing Murano glass chandelier and amber glass candlesticks perfectly.
I love the chandelier in this room; slightly swirly and elegant. The desk looks very  cool, with clear acrylic side panels. The modern artwork hanging above is great too.

A perfectly relaxing bedroom; no distractions.

The symmetry of the sinks frame the statement tub.

A home office with a view that encourages daydreams. Love the chairs.

Again, a great big canvas adds life and color to a neutral room.

 

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Fine Print: Tricia Guild Colors, Patterns, and Space

Color temptress Tricia Guild of Designers Guild has a new book out this month. As always the palettes and mix of patterns is fabulous. And, I love the book’s black and white cloth binding.

Tricia Guild Colors, Patterns, and Space

Tricia Guild

© Tricia Guild: Colors, Patterns, and Space, Rizzoli New York, 2010.  Photos: James Merrell, 2010

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Montage: 16 Butterfly Rooms

It’s wet and rainy in Boston. When I was in NYC last week, it was wet and rainy there too. For a final touch of beautiful days, I thought I’d break out the butterflies. I’ll start with everyone’s favorite . . .

Domino

Kara Mann

photographer Chris Court

Quarto & Sala

Fawn Galli

Stylist Selina Lake                                             Elle Interiors Norway

Turner Pock

Domino

Viva Terra

Better Homes & Gardens

Absolutely Beautiful Things

Stephanie Sabbe                                     Lee Essex Doyle

Madewell in Boston

John Jame

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Fine Print: Mary McDonald’s New Book – The Allure of Style

Mary McDonald has finally published a book, Mary McDonald Interiors: The Allure of Style, and it is amazing. Many of the pages feature her Beverly Hills estate,  but there’s also a Bill Blass inspired bachelor pad, as well as the favorites we know from Domino, like the green and pink striped King’s Road media room,  the bedroom with the pagoda-shaped headboard and orange pillows, and the pink entry adorned with gilded Chinoiserie mirror and zebra skin rug. There are plenty of photos of Mary too, who is as elegant and beautiful as her rooms. I had no idea she started out as a milliner after attending Parsons. She’s based in L.A. now, which is where she grew up. I’ve been corresponding with her via email, and she’s as gracious and lovely as she looks.

Mary McDonald in her leopard-print study.

Rizzoli (October 2010)

The always helpful folks at Rizzoli have allowed me to publish ten photographs from the book.

I love the boldness of this room, and the symmetry. I assumed it was a guest room, but no . . . it’s a room for twin girls. Mary designed the twin beds. The finials on the footboards and valance are an interesting detail. Toys? Apparently in baskets on floor-to-ceiling shelves on the other side of the room.

I hadn’t seen this photo before. It’s a detail of either the foyer or dining room of Harkham House in Beverly Hills. I love the stenciled wood floor and the black-and-white photographs (by designer Vicente Wolf) of bamboo, a fun riff on Mary’s usual, more ornate faux bamboo details.

Oh, to have this dressing room, those dresses, and that life. (Though it is the Veranda Greystone Mansion Show House.) The walls are paneled in gray suede, and the rear wall is draped with pleated charcoal faille. She added a velvet inset to the top of the fabulous acrylic Allan Knight vanity. The gilded mirror, which looks like it’s floating, hangs from ruched-fabric-covered chains. The ceiling is covered in silver paper from Phillip Jeffries, and the pagoda chandelier, which looks like wicker, is actually crystal. The dresses? From Mary’s personal collection of vintage couture.

A room in the Veranda Greystone Mansion Show House. Mary aimed for the aura of an haute couture salon in Paris. The trim is painted a creamy semigloss adn the wall panels are covered in a Phillip Jeffries ultrasuede. The daybed is a low tuxedo sofa hung with a Zoffany fabric. I thought the back wall was covered in wallpaper, but it’s actually a hand-painted chinoiserie screen. Loving the acrylic Allan Knight coffee table and the painted striped ceiling. The large photos are interior images of Moscow’s Ostankino Museum, by Miguel Flores-Vianna, who shot many of the photos in this book.

The original black-and-white marble floors in Mary’s breakfast room reminded her of Laudrée, a Paris bakery, and was the starting point for the design.  The faux French vintage chairs came with the house. She had them lacquered the same gray-flannel color as the tablecloth. The layered window treatment included shell-pink, cotton faille curtains with a pleated valance, a striped under curtain, and black-and-white damask Roman shades. Recognize the chandelier? It’s similar to (or maybe the same  plus lampshades) the beaded crystal one in the room above. Mary found it in Paris. So lovely and tres français.

Mary’s aqua and white bedroom with millwork, which she had made for the room, reminds her of a fondant cake. She based the design of the bed on a Thomas Chippendale cabinet she spotted in a book. The supports are faux bamboo; the fretwork and carved pagodas are fabulous. The klismos leg coffee table was custom made;  the graphic upholstery of the footstool adds a dash of ’70s style.

A detail in the room shows part of Mary’s collection of blanc de Chine and Quan Yin figurines.

Her sitting room is very symmetrical – apparently her friends tease her that it looks like she’s about to hold a board meeting here. The color scheme is based on a bolt of vintage 1950s brown and aqua striped fabric, now the square pillows on the sofa. The drapes are matelassé from Ralph Lauren, trimmed with carved wooden bells and gauffrage ribbon.

Mary’s beyond wonderful dressing table, a restored mirrored piece from the 1926 Buster Keaton estate in Beverly Hills, a home she helped to remodel. The fanciful hardware is original. The top is covered with Mary’s collection of jewelry-filled pink Murano glass ashtrays which she inherited from her grandmother. I absolutely love, love, love the flame-stitch wallpaper, which I believe is Osborne & Little. She writes that the contemporary pattern keeps the room from feeling too “old ladyish.” Note the fun feathers Mary tucked at hte top of the gilded mirror to hide some damage. She calls it a “tad showgirly” but “amusing for a closet.” Heavenly.

And finally, an overview of the dressing room. I could live in here happily. Mary says she wanted the “closet” to have a lounging area as if it were an elegant dress salon from a bygone era. It has 18th century chairs and a rock-crystal chandelier.

The wardrobe does not have doors so that she could enjoy the sweeping view of her dresses, handbags, and shoes. (Note the sweaters folded on the left, and the pink wicker baskets, likely from Pottery Barn Kids.) Here’s how she organizes her stuff: The evening bags are hung on hooks and arranged by color, begiinning with pink and gold and then moving to silver and gray, black, green, and brown. The shoes are color-coded, too.

For more photographs and Q&A, check back soon for a link to “The Inside Source.”

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