Category Archives: Rooms

Montage: Daybeds al Fresco

Today is hot, hot, hot. And sunny. Why I am not at the beach I am uncertain. Mainly just lazing around, with open windows and no breeze. Kids tossing the football and playing Star Wars (with plenty of fighting in between). Perhaps I’d be more inclined to sit outdoors if I had a set up like some of these. I have a patio, and a lounge or two with cushions, but I like to be ensconced and über comfortable. What I need is a mattress piled with feather pillows and high thread count sheets. Then I could lounge al fresco, in the style to which I am accustomed year round.

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Bolig LivingPhotos: unidentified; TopsyTurvyStyle; Elle Decor; Flickr-marc0047; Flickr-myturtleneck; Flickr-k!mm!e; Mimmi O’Connell; Coastal Living; Living Etc.; Marie Claire Maison; Emma’s Design Blog via Style Files; Domino; Everything LEB; unidentified; House Beautiful; Country Living; Bolig Living.

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Design Diary: Kristine Mullaney Goes Glam

heatherHHeather Hazelton at home.

This week’s Stuff Magazine features Heather Hazelton’s condo designed by Boston-based interior designer Kristine Mullaney. Heather is a fun and gorgeous girl who’s the local ad manager at CW56. That means she gets to meet “Gossip Girl” cast cuties. But that’s not what the story is about. “Beantown Boudoir: TV Exec Heather Hazelton Gets Her Glam On At Home” looks at Heather’s Back Bay home, made newly fabulous by Kristine Mullaney.

Heather had the usual mélange of IKEA, Pottery Barn and Crate & Barrel pieces; you know, the particleboard wardrobe and the mammoth brown sectional complete with olive paint. That is, until she hired Kristine, who transformed her place into a glam and girly haven. Heather told me, “I travel a lot. I’m never here, so I don’t focus on decorating. My place definitely didn’t match my personality or my wardrobe.”

Kristine started by asking Heather to pull her favorite dresses from her closet. Out came the Diane von Furstenberg, Theory, Chanel, Gucci, and Herve Leger. (That may well be what I’d buy if I were a single, childless exec with an amazing body.) The bold patterns and colors were Kristine’s inspiration. She says, “I try to pick colors that my clients wear, that they look good in. From opening up her closet, it was clear that Heather wasn’t afraid of color or bold statements.”

While a DVF print influenced the overall tone, it was a coral Leger from which Kristine took color cues. For the entry, Kristine says, “We took that Leger dress and kicked it up about five notches.”

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The checkerboard marble floor was already in place. They painted the walls Birds of Paradise by Benjamin Moore. Kristine found the chandelier at an estate sale in Beacon Hill at auction. It was dusty and gross but she knew it would shine when it was all cleaned up.

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The bedroom is glam, but softly romantic too. Kristine wanted to evoke the feel of old time Hollywood starlets. The wallpaper is Schumacher Kyoto Flower in silver and the silk charmeuse drapes are from Osborne & Little. Kristine says, “I wanted it to look like a silk charmeuse evening gown.” The Stark Leopard Rose rug adds to the Hollywood vibe. Heather bought the Donna Karan bedding on sale at Bloomingdale’s, and she found the light fixture at Domain, pre-Kristine. “It was the one thing I did that was good,” she jokes. The raspberry and pink pillows are made from Jane Churchill fabrics.

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The closets are completely new, and the perfect use of the room’s extra space. A large closet was crucial for Heather. Kristine based the design of Heather’s new closet on Dorothy Draper’s style contrasting black and white. Heather says, “All I wanted was a closet. Kristine was talking about the molding; I didn’t’ know what she was talking about, but when she finally showed me a picture, I said, ‘I want that!’ And then I went to L.A. for a week and when I came back, it was done!”

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This was the original closet. Kristine turned it into a shoe and accessory closet. It’s based on a picture of Kim Cattrall’s closet, which she saw in a magazine.

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The bathroom is painted in another bold shade of pink – Benjamin Moore Vibrant Blush. The original black tiles tie in with the black and white closets.
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The best seat in the living room.

The living room isn’t complete yet, but here’s the statement piece – the Jeannie chair from Mitchell Gold. And Heather found it all on her own. It came in hot pink, all ready to go, but Kristine suggested this rosey raspberry cotton velvet from Duralee instead. The contrast leather piping is the perfect finishing touch. The ivory carpet is from Stark, and they’ve ordered a mirrored console from Ballard Designs to use as a media cabinet. Heather loves mirrors, so much so that her friends teaser her about it. There’s a mirrored piece in the bedroom too.

Of the overall look Heather says, “I wanted my place to be feminine and sexy and comfortable. When I finally come home its shut down time. The high heels are off and pajamas go on. I make dinner and hop in my chair.”

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Montage: 40 Rooms with Maps

I have a definite thing for maps, though I never really considered going all out with them to decorate. I had a stamp collection when I was little. I wasn’t geeky, I just loved matching up the stamps to the right countries in my stamp book. And I loved looking at the world map on the back cover to figure out where all these places were. Randomly, my first job out of college was as the maps editor at a travel magazine, assigning illustrators to execute various styles of maps to accompany the articles. Later my sister worked as a mapmaker. And, most recently, my children bring me home numerous watercolors of maps they painstakingly create at their Montessori school. They’re actually lovely – perhaps I’ll dig some out.

S0, I’ve been collecting images of rooms incorporating maps for a while. By now, lots of blogs have done a round-up of rooms, and even Pottery Barn has plastered them on the walls for their newest catalog. I recently visited a friend with an old map of the Cape executed in an interesting way – the previous homeowners had cut out the landform and mounted it. The guy who owned the original home on our Cape house site also left one of these maps. I had previously deemed it too dingy for display (TDD), but clearly I need to rethink. You can see a picture of my friend’s below. Enjoy the others too. Hopefully there are a few you haven’t seen yet!

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Photos: Living Etc.; Apartment Therapy; Cookie; Skona Hem; Diana Kellog Architects; Pottery Barn; Sara Gibane; Steven Gambrel; Jan Gleysteen photographed by Eric Roth; Cookie; Domesticali; Lara Smera; Ferm LIving; Flickr-Ooh Food; Revista TPM; Kelly McGuill; Flickr-bckueser; DIY Magazine; Skona Hem; Flickr-dayataglance; Ara Design Studio via Apartment Therapy; South Stream Design; Flickr-Chez Larsson; Flickr-Posidriv; Apartment Therapy; Cookie; Flickr-Heike Schmidt; Domino; unidentified; photographer Ben Anders; The Goods; Kerry Joyce; Miguel Vidaurre; photographer Jim Franco; Peter Dunham; Adrian Grenier’s home in Domino; Peter Dunham in Domino; Living Etc.; Desire to Inspire.

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Escapes: The Bridge House B&B in South Bristol, Maine

Architect Dianne Haas, of Taylor Haas Studio, sent me a note this week about her newly refurbished B&B , The Bridge House B&B, in a quaint fishing village in South Bristol, Maine.

When she purchased the property twelve years ago, the house was literally falling into the river. She did some quick fixes, opened an ice cream shop inside, and used it here and there for a bit. Two years ago, Dianne decided to move up there practically full time to get the project finished once and for all. Today it has two charming guest rooms, a fabulous living area and kitchen in which you can book private dinners with local, organic food, and a design shop, complete with freshly squeezed lemonade and a design library. It’s truly charming.


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Designer Spotlight: Kara Butterfield

I visited stylist Kara Butterfield at her small but perfectly styled South End apartment in April. You can read the interview, “A Local Design Diva Spills Her Styling Secrets” in Stuff Magazine. (Kara has since moved into a more spacious loft, and I’m eagerly awaiting a peek. Kara, are you reading this?!)

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Kara hails from Australia, where she studied theater and film production design and worked in set design, which led her to styling homes for magazines in Sydney. She still styles photo shoots today, in Boston, but also does a lot of design work for people’s homes. She’s recently teamed up with Lindsay Bentis of Thread Art & Design. Lindsay is a trained artist turned interior designer, and together they are a whirlwind design team. Kara also teaches style clinics through her business Make Ready, offering design advice on such topics as “Bookshelf and Mantle Display” and “Dinnerware and Décor.”

You can read the article to find out Kara’s favorite trends, must-have items and secret shopping sources. Here I wanted to share an aspect of our conversation that I found particularly interesting, that didn’t make it into the magazine. And, of course, plenty of extra photographs.

Magazine photos of interiors look so gorgeous. Is it possible to live in a space that’s been styled for a photograph?

No, it’s not. That’s why editors aren’t all using stylists now – they want to get a sense of how people actually live. The trend is very relaxed and comfortable; ease of living.

There is an art to photo styling that is different from interior design or decorating; you see things in frames. When you look through the camera lens you see a contained area. In real life there is the issue peripheral vision, which you don’t have in a photo still. There is also the issue of depth of field. You need to modify the tableau for a photograph. You create a composition and adjust it to fit in the frame it will go in, taking into account what will be in the background, foreground, etc.

The still life on the mantle would work, but if I were to shoot the coffee table you’d have to adjust the composition to look normal. If a vase and books are too close, it will look like they’re touching in the photo. And you need to think about shapes more. I’d want a plant to come across with a particular shape, so I will have move it around to achieve that.

kara fireplaceThe fireplace is the focal point of Kara’s living room. When I asked her about common mistakes people make when they’re decorating she said, “Not creating a focal point in the room. You want to limit the focal point to one major feature in the room.” Also, don’t be afraid to experiment. “A focal point can be easily changed by repositioning furniture and forming smaller areas in a larger room.”

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Kara’s artfully arranged mantle includes a fab piece of black fan coral and mollusks she purchased through Pam Levine at Surf-N-Turf. But don’t expect it to look this way on the next visit. Kara says, “I change it around all the time.”

kara crabThe horseshoe crab was a boyfriend’s find on a beach in New Haven, Connecticut. He’s displayed under clear plastic stands from, get this, Staples. There’s a fresh idea for all those stolen (excuse me, “borrowed”) office supplies.

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Kara picked up the rocks on a Rhode Island beach. They’re under plain old bar glasses. She says, “If you put anything in a glass, or behind glass it celebrates it, gives it meaning, like a picture in a frame.” Other uses for rocks: “You could write someone’s name on them for a place card.”

plantThe plant has been re-potted in a lychee tea tin that’s been placed inside a simple, square, glass florist vase. Kara tells me, “I have this thing at the moment, of putting things inside other things, I am doing that quite a bit.” She loves using recycled containers.

The tin is from Asian market Super 88, one of Kara’s secret sources. Kara reveals that the market has “Great modern ceramic pieces and basics that you can mix with classic white dinnerware, or bowls you can put your jewelry in.

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The living room mixes vintage finds, reproductions, and economical pieces for a pulled together feel. Kara’s a big fan of IKEA for basics, which is where her sofa is from. Like many designers, Kara finds that blending low priced pieces with high end ones elevates the whole look. She loves discovering new pieces at IKEA stores around the world. She got a water decanter for the bed side that she’s never seen here, in Australia. And she says that some of textiles are different as well as the gadgets.

kara sapienThe red Eames chair is from Design Within Reach, as is the Sappien bookshelf. She says, “I was only getting one chair, so I thought it should be splashy. It was the first piece I purchased in Boston, and I know it will be the piece I take with me wherever I go.”

Picture 1_2The coffee table is from Reside in Cambridge. Shop owner Pamela Watts curates a beautiful collection of mid-century modern finds. Kara prefers quality over quantity, and strives to keep her environment uncluttered. She admits, “Stylists are known for being pack rats, with lots of stuff and props. My partner is an architect whose style is more minimal, so I have to be mindful of not having shelves of tchokes. We always have our own opinions about beauty and design.

Her advice? Make a conscious effort to un-clutter so you can discover the gems.”Filter to find the aha piece that will make your room complete.” And edit! If you bring something new in, take something else out of the mix.

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The chest is a Scandinavian design from Machine Age in South Boston, of which Kara says, “It’s a stunning store. It’s filled with twentieth century and mid-century vintage classics in a meticulous layout.” There’s also a Le Corbusier lounge her partner purchased there.

kara art montage“Art,” says Kara, “is the souvenir I collect when I travel.” She also makes her own. The bottom pieces is a framed sheet of postage stamps.

Other tips: “People often hang artwork too high, so it doesn’t connect to the furniture or the accessories placed on the furnishings. The general rule is to hang pictures at eye level, but I tend to place them slightly higher, usually about two- or three-inches. I have found that this adds more drama to the room. Hanging works at this level makes your eye look slightly higher, which helps make the ceiling appear taller and the room more airy.”

Also, Kara pleads, “Art should be displayed in groupings. And, it’s more visually pleasing if the frames have a consistent theme, like a similar color.” A pet peeve? A zillion framed family photos scattered all over the house.

kara lt on tableKara’s obsession? Lighting. “Why do I have a thing for lighting? Maybe because I had fluorescent lighting in my room growing up, and at school. It’s brutal and invasive. I would never turn it on. When my mother told my sister and I we could get new lamps, y sister chose like that. I waited until I found the perfect one.

“These days, she says, “I have many more lights than I need. It’s good to have a combination of task, table, and standing lights. Neena’s Lighting is like a jewelry store for me.”

Picture 2Kara’s bed is dressed with crisp linens. The tall windows are wonderful. The windows are bare. She finds that many people dont’ let sufficient natural light in. (This shot is from her website. She said she’d kill me if I posted the ones I took of her “messy” bedroom when I visited.)

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Some parting words, “We can go overboard with obsessions and wish lists. But I think we can be very happy with the things that we already live with it.”

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Art, Designer Spotlight, Home Accessories, Rooms