Category Archives: Rooms

Montage: 20 Artfully Arranged Afghans

Designers  elevated granny chic on spring and fall runways with afghans fashioned as um, fashion. Not sure anyone would actually wear a crochet square getup (other than Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, who’ve been spotted with granny square scarves), but the look is taking hold in decors for the under 60 set. A lot of these images are from Flickr, but there’s the usual Anthropologie shot (their displays are always on trend), and a couple from magazines. For additional commentary on the look, see “Trendlet Alert: Crochet” on The Inside Source.

Chanel Spring/Summer 2010  –  Missoni Fall/Winter 201  – Paul Smith Fall/Winter 2010

unidentified

Anthropologie, Boston

Clockwise: Flickr-Aunty Cookie; Miguel Vidaurre; Flickr-prettyshabby; photographer Permille Kaalund and stylist Louise Kamman Riising

Clockwise: Flickr-Live Bohemian; Flickr-solutionsoap; Flickr-Smilerynker; Urban Outfitters

Top row:  Flickr- Casper James  –  Flickr-Live Bohemian
Middle row: JJ Locations  –  Fun On the Floor
Bottom row: Flickr-Smilerynker  –  Apartment Therapy

Top: Flickr-MissKittyKat
Bottom: Photographer Permille Kaalund and stylist Louise Kamman Riising

Knit tree covering as seen in Philadelphia Weekly and garland on a bike rackcreated by the South End Knitters club in Boston.

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Design Diary: Asian Infusion

This duplex condo in a 19th century townhouse in Boston’s South End neighborhood is the home of restaurateur Matt Burns, a partner in The Aquitaine Group (Aquitaine, Gaslight, Union Bar & Grille). I visited to write  “The Italian Job” for the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine. The interiors were designed by Meichi Peng, whose well-balanced work is flawless.

Meichi mixed Asian art and objects (some of which Burns already had, some of which Meichi found) with his existing contemporary contemporary Italian sofa and cane back chairs that he had purchased at Showroom in Boston.  Burns says, “I love modern Italian furniture, but when used exclusively, there’s not much personality.”

The coffee table, which Peng describes as “very sculptural,” is a new piece imported from South Asia that bridges the new furnishings with the antique elements. The floor lamp in the living room and pendant over the Saarinen dining table (a piece Burns plans to replace) are both by Anta, from Casa in the South End.

The large oil painting that hangs over the fireplace is by Chinese-born photo-realist painter Yingzhao Liu, from Newbury Fine Arts.

Peng punctuated the rooms with decorative Chinese antiques, such as the Qing Dynasty lions that guard the living room’s hearth, the 19th century lacquered food storage vessel on the table, and the mid-18th century Chinese pewter wedding containers on the marble mantle.

A pair of Japanese-style ink drawings (above and below) done by Rod House, a family friend, hang over Asian style chests which flank the fireplace.

All three decorative pieces are early 19th century rice cake molds that Peng found on a shopping trip to Taiwan. They would have been used in holiday ceremonies. They are in the shapes of a turtle, currency, and fish all of which symbolize longevity and prosperity. Today, such items are made from aluminum casings.

The Asian side table and cabinet are both from Danish Country, an antiques shop on Charles Street in Beacon Hill. The ink drawing depicts a Japan-ized coastal scene of Marblehead, Massachusetts.

A second oil painting by Yingzhao Liu, this one a still life, hangs behind the sofa, on the wall opposite the fireplace.

The throw pillows, both chosen by Peng, add warmth and texture to the room. The solid chocolate ribbed fabric is Glant, and the shimmery russet velvet, which takes color cues from the painting over the mantle, is Bergamo.

The walls are painted in Benjamin Moore’s Iron Gate — a gray-toned taupe that serves as a unifying background. “The statement here is the art,” Peng says. “We just tied it all together.”

A funny little sculpture in the living room.

Burns purchased these pre-Columbian (c. 1400) Bolivian arrowheads in Columbia. When he returned, he had them authenticated by a scholar in Cambridge and then framed.

The den is also done with a mix of Italian and Asian pieces. Peng re-decorated this room from top to bottom, choosing a Victor sofa and Happy chaise, both by Flexform from Showroom, and a Maxalto coffee table by B&B Italia from Montage in Boston.

The distinctive cast iron fireplace is original to the home, and one of Burns’ favorite features. He also loves the whimsical and “kind of evil” monkeys, found by Peng in Florence, which sit on the mantle. The silk rug is from Steven King at the Boston Design Center.

Burns’ Chinese artifacts include a dragon carving (above) and three imperfect Tang Dynasty pots (below), all of which he purchased from Asian Collections in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Burns says that apparently these pots, which he was told are Tang Dynasty, were found in a building found on a construction site in China, and were probably rejects, meant to be thrown out.

Detail of the evil-looking monkeys that sit on the mantle in the den.

The original art poster, bought at International Poster Gallery on Newbury Street,  is a piece that Burns had already. He says, “It doesn’t really have a place other than the color works well.”  He thinks it’s Swiss, from 1920s – 40s.

The embroidered tapestry fabric artwork over the bed is from Judith Dowling in Beacon Hill.  He had been looking for a long time and pestering Peng for something to go over the bed when he discovered this in the back room of the antique shop.

Photographs (as indicated) by Josh Kuchinsky.

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Art, Design Diary, Rooms

Montage: 14 Rooms with Elephant Decor

I don’t have as many images as I like to present in my montage posts, but I wanted to get this  up while the trend was still on the upswing.  In absence of image overload, I added captions to each.

M. Design • Designer Molly Luetkemeyer’s master bathroom includes an elephant she found in India.


M. Design •  Actress Julie Bowen’s master bathroom  boasts a wicker elephant Luetkemeyer found in Palm Springs. She appreciates the juxtaposition of its natural material  against the concrete tub.


M. Design  • Actress Julie Bowen’s dining room • Elephant painting by Dutch Touch Art Company

Apartment Therapy LA •  45 Three Modern Vintage

Caspar James – Flikckr

A home in Boston’s South End.


ESJ Designs  •  “Festive Table”  • Shreve, Crump & Low  •  Boston

Apartment Therapy LA •  White ceramic elephant side tables.


Traditional Home  • Elephant side table.


Moises Esquenazi  •  House Beautiful


M. Design•  An elephant planter on designer Molly Luetkemeyer’s Laurel Canyon terrace.

Timothy Whealon  •  Elle Decor


Living Etc. •  Jonathan Adler elephant on the mantle.


Betsy Benn  •  “Nelly” elephant print

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Designer Spotlight: Amy Butler and Kelly Hoppen for Graham & Brown Wallpaper

Wallpaper company Graham & Brown, which recently launched at ICFF in New York last month, debuted new patterns for 2010 from designers Kelly Hoppen and Amy Butler.

Amy Butler

PATTERNS BY AMY BUTLER

Fountain in Midnight

Georgia in Stone

Temple Tulips in Ocean

Lacework in Moss

Memento in Sunset

Kelly Hoppen

PATTERNS BY KELLY HOPPEN

Hicks in Burnt Orange & Gold               Hicks in Taupe & Charcoal


Bold Stripe in Charcoal Silver                               Rose in Red & Black

Vintage Flock in Black                     Vintage Flock in Grape

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Montage: 19 Bicycles in Interiors

Bicycles. I’ve got more than any city apartment should. Four, plus three scooters. In my living room. Unsurprisingly, they don’t look nearly as lovely as the single bikes shown in these interiors.  Bikes seem to be the prop of the moment though. I’ve snapped photos of them used in displays in boutiques and restaurants all around the city. I can’t find found my favorite boutique example, the bicycle in Looc in the South End; and here are some others.

Looc Boutique, Boston

Living Etc.

Living Etc.

Architectural Digest

Kristin Rivoli

Architect Thomas Bendel

Club Monaco, Boston

Sel de la Terre, Boston

Hotel Chocolat

Photographer Graham Atkins-Hughes                                   Cynthia Rowley, Boston

Photographer Louis Lemaire                                                 Lucy Berridge

via Desire to Inspire                                                via Desire to Inspire

Villa & Villa                                                                  Andrew Waller

via Desire to Inspire                                                   Jessica Helgerson

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Montage, Rooms