Category Archives: Rooms

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.”

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Montage: Orange Aid

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ven though it will probably rain, we are going to the Cape this weekend. Despite the dreary weather, when you step into (or even just glimpse) my younger son’s bedroom, you can’t help but feel invigorated. In celebration of his favorite color, today’s post is all about orange.

The color’s made quite a comeback since the ’70s. (We had an orange and white shiny vinyl booth in our kitchen when I was in elementary school, to match the orange and gold oversize plaid wallpaper. Wish I had photos!) In the ’80s, orange was seen only in Burger Kings. (The color supposedly incites hunger.) These days, orange is considered hip, and is especially popular for kid’s rooms.

I wasn’t being purposefully trendy. My son declared orange his fave shade when he was about three and grabbed an orange mug in a housewares shop, and wouldn’t let go. I don’t know how long it will last (he’s seven now), but in the meantime, it’s definitely his signature shade.

Here are a handful of other spaces outfitted in orange:

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Photos: Sara Story Design; Jeffrey King; Cookie; Skona Hem; Coddington Design; Flickr-Spring Globe; Wendy Blount; InSpace; Desire to Inpsire; Living at Home; Cookie; M. Design; Mark Roshams; Flickr-Spring Globe; unidentified source; Frillie Designs; Flickr-iancr; Kumler residence; Flickr-Moakidi; Flickr-The One and Only Jet Guer; Shoot Factory; Domino; unidentified source; stylist Selina Lake; Jamie Bush; Cookie; Remodelista; Viceroy Hotel Palm Springs; Cookie; Tia Zoldan; Sara Bengur Interiors; Flickr-magicmikas; Donna Griffith; Marie Claire Maison; Flickr-unidentified.

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Design Diary: Andrew Spindler’s Magic Garden

birdseye-and-ext1Back in the fall I visited Andrew Spindler at his Cape Ann house. It is absolutely spectacular, inside and out. The assignment was for the the “Outdoor Living” issue of the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine, and the piece, “Magic Garden” ran yesterday. Spindler is an antiques dealer with a shop in Essex, Mass (you can also find him on 1st Dibs). The Globe story focused on the terrace and incredible garden, but the inside of the house is amazing too. (Above photos: Eric Roth)

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Can you believe that when they bought the place, which was built in 1937, it was wholly unimpressive, and a bit of a wreck? Spindler and his partner added the stone terrace at the back of the house, the second floor balcony, and the widow’s walk. There’s Spindler walking out one of the sets of French doors, which they also added. Originally there were just some dinky windows and an aluminum door that opened to a few concrete steps into a yard. They built up the land about seven feet to create the granite terrace. Spindler describes the building as one done with “old-fashioned brute strength.” I can imagine lounging there all afternoon.

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The teak furniture is by Henry Hall. The stone table is a found slab of stone. The sculpture; how I adore the sculpture. It was conceived in 1947 by Walker Hancock, who created Prometheus at Rockefeller Center. Spindler and his partner found the plaster cast Hancock had modeled, and then had it cast in bronze in upstate New York. It’s the only bronze cast of this work. They own the original model for this work as well; it sits on the mantle in the living room.

globe-spindler-view-to-ocean-2-copyPhoto: Eric Roth

The original owners were avid gardeners, but by the time Spindler and his partner took up residence the grounds were pretty much in disarray. Now, the grounds and gardens are unique, with all sorts of rocky paths, water views, places to sit and lots of charming natural features.

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Top left: Stone orb from an architectural salvage shop at the top of the stone steps that lead from the terrace to the garden (Photo: Eric Roth). Top right: Pyramid-shaped Euonymous bush is a very classical element in this otherwise wild wonderland. Middle left: A wall of granite with a bench fashioned from found slabs of stone. Middle right: Petra, an outbuilding that Spindler likens to a “little Hobbit house,” that was part of the original property, sold off, then reunited by a recent purchase. There’s an outdoor fire pit, perfect for “Survivor”-esque gatherings. Bottom left: A dramatic gnarled (and dead) Japanese white pint tree that has grown around the boulders, conforming to its shape. Bottom right: A fragrant juniper tunnel makes a lovely secret passageway.

japaneseThe garden tour ends with a Japanese garden that includes a bridge between two man-made ponds. Plantings include Japanese maples, Japanese umbrella pine, dwarf juniper, a pear tree, a crabapple and white azaleas and peonies that bloom in springtime. The owl, mounted outside the kitchen door, has eyes that light up.

globe-spindler-kitchenPhoto: Eric Roth

The kitchen opens onto the Japanese garden. It’s painted a deep aubergine. Spindler says this about the effect: “The dark color puts outside in high relief. It’s almost as though you are in a darkened theater looking out.” The light fixtures are outdoor lanterns from a property in Palm Beach.

kitchen-cabinets The stained glass panels of the kitchen cabinetry were found at an architectural salvage shop.

drThe dining room paneling is recycled chestnut church pew backs ; the floors are salvaged wide plank chestnut. The Prarie glass windows have a strong affinity with Japanese design and Frank Lloyd Wright, as do the Arts & Crafts style furniture. The tapestry is a petit point landscape made in 1972.

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Photo: Eric Roth

Isn’t the chaise longue in the living room divine? It’s an Anglo-Indian teak and inlaid ivory piece. Spindler says, “The house is about experiencing the nature the light, water, air.” This is indeed the perfect spot for such.

You can see the garden room in the background. They painted the furniture the same color as they painted the outdoor trim, a sort of sea foam green.

The tiles on the floor were made by the Moravian Pottery & Tile Works in Doylestown, PA. There are similar specimens in the European galleries at the MFA and at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

The frieze (c.1910) is by Jonas Lie, an artist with a strong Gloucester connection. It was originally made for a Viking-themed room in a lodge in the Adirondacks, which was apparently all the rage in the 19th century. Below is a photograph of this very frieze, in its original Adirondack installation.
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I hope you enjoyed the tour!

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Design Diary, Flowers & Gardens, Rooms

Montage: Nurseries

Quite a few of my friends have been busy having babies. First babies, second babies, third babies, and a fourth (eek!) baby. It’s the first time mommies that need to nest most, devoting the last few weeks of their pregnancy to making sure the nursery is perfect and that they have all the right equipment. (The friend on her fourth, she’s simply wondering where she stuck the stroller, and how’s she going to explain to #3 why it isn’t “lost” anymore.)

Words of advice to those of you going into this endeavor the first time around: Make sure the nursery is comfy – for YOU. Babies don’t sleep through the night – for YEARS sometimes. (It took a tonsillectomy at age 4 before my son slumbered soundly.) Make sure you have a comfy spot to nurse. Gliders are ugly, but they are really comfortable, and you can resell it when you wean.

Do you feel peaceful surrounded by the paint color? I chose a cheerful yellow for my first born (not knowing the sex) and I discovered really quickly that the color agitated rather than calmed me (and maybe him, who knows). Be sure to have a bookshelf, and a side table for all the water and juice you’ll need to drink to stay hydrated while the little guy suckles. And an ipod, and even a little television to get you through long nights. (First time around I was addicted to cheesy detective shows, from Matlock to Magnum. Second time it was HGTV.)

A mobile above the changing table and a little hook on which to hang the distraction toy you’ll hand her when she’s old enough to entertain herself, because she’s not going to suddenly enjoy having her diaper changed. That should get you through the first year.

I’ll do kids’ rooms with big boy and big girl beds soon.

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Photos: Living Etc.; Domino; Domino; Domino; Domino; Coochicoos; Domino; Domino; Cookie; Flickr-cathinca; Cookie; Cookie; Flickr-magicmikas; Cookie; Cookie; Cookie; Flickr-magicmikas; Flickr-iancr; Flickr-douglasspics; Cookie; Cookie; photographer Justin Bernhaut; Flickr-house_n_baby; Flickr-Juliansmum; Flickr-innocentcharmer; Cookie; Cookie; Flickr-made-good; Flickr-veronikanika; Flickr-cathinca; Cookie; Flickr-carlinhouse; Cookie; Cookie; Flickr-keightyj; Boopalina + Bebe; Flickr-haqqy; Flickr-It’s what I do . . . ; Flickr-ali edwards; Flickr-minimarsh; Flickr-Frithmobiles-Modern Art Mobiles; Flickr-innocentcharmer; Sixx Design photographed by Costa Picadas; Apartment Therapy; Flickr-jennyology; Flickr-mixed palette.

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Fashion, Furniture, Montage, Rooms

Montage: Feeling Cagey

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Obviously, as an interior style writer, and now blogger (!) I see lots of beautiful spaces and images of beautiful spaces. I am constantly sorting pictures into various themes. I have about 40 albums in iphoto on design themes alone. And they keep multiplying. “Modern Chairs” suddenly seems too vague and gets divided into “Eames,” “Mies van der Rohe,” et al, and then gets even more specific with individual albums full of just Eames rockers and Barcelona chairs. Of course I have an album devoted to Harry Bertoia’s Diamond Chair by Knoll.

When I saw the “Graphic Patterns” trend page in this month’s Elle, featuring grid looks, I immediately thought “Bertoia chair.” (We all know that interior styles take their cues from the runway.) The Yves St. Laurent cage necklace in silver metal is particularly reminiscent of the seat. And at $995, even more expensive. (Bertoia Diamond Lounge retails for $909 at Hive Modern; the Side Chair starts at $460 at Design Within Reach. There are deals to be had on ebay and such.)

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Right: Tear from Elle, April 2009; left: YSL metal cage necklace, $995 at YSL.com

Personally, I’ve never been particularly attracted to this chair. True, there’s no doubt it packs a visual punch. But, a lattice work of welded steel just doesn’t seem all that comfortable. Still, its silhouette is striking, and its construction extremely practical, as the chair can do double duty, inside and out.

PUBLIC SPACES

The chairs are used in a number of public spaces. I think the top image of the black Bertoias were shot in the MOMA Sculpture Garden. The second picture is Paley Park on 53rd Street, NYC. (Ten years living there and I never knew the name of that space.) Gorgeous in white with the Saarinen pedestals.


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Top: Flickr – Chris Ferebee; bottom: Flickr – landscaperess.

FARNSWORTH HOUSE

Here’s a shot of Bertoia side chairs at Mies van der Rohe’s Farnsworth House in Plano, IL. It’s sprinkled with Barcelona chairs inside, natch.

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Photo: Flickr – 24gotham

IN RECENT PROJECTS

I recently wrote articles about two different homes with Bertoia chairs.

The photo below on the right shows white Bertoia chairs around a basic butcher block table in the home of the Gamota family in Lexington, Mass. Homeowner Christina Gamota put the whole house together on her own. She and her husband have been collecting for four decades. They have artwork and furnishings from Africa, China, England, and the Ukraine, as well as wonderful modern furniture by Eames, Mies, Saarinen, and Bertoia.

The left shows a new kitchen in Lynnfield, Mass, designed by Boston-based designer Shellie Donovan. She chose the Bertoia counter stools from Showroom in Boston, upholstered in Knoll’s heathered bouclé Cuddle Cloth. They’re a sleek and simple counterpoint to the white Aran granite countertop, with its snakeskin-like, rock’n’roll aesthetic.

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Left: Gamota residence from “Collected Wisdom,” Boston Home, Spring 2009; right; Testa residence designed by Shellie Donovan from “Cooking Gets Comfortable,” Boston Globe Sunday Magazine, March 29, 2009, photographed by Eric Roth.

ADVERTISEMENTS

The chairs are oft-used in ads. The crisp lines and graphic sensibility complements the product, in this case wallpaper, without upstaging it.

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Right: unidentified; left: Birds on Branches wallpaper by Danish design company Ferm Living.

OUTDOOR LIVING

Here are some shots of homes using the chairs outdoors. Looks lovely! (Not sure what’s up with the cat – a bunch of the Flickr shots I found of Bertoia chairs feature cats…).

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Left to right: unidentified; Flickr – itomica; Thom Flicia; Flickr – hustler of culture.

INTERIORS

Here’s a sampling of shots of rooms put together by interior designers. As you can see, they use the chairs all over the house – living room, kitchen, bedroom – in all variations – side chair, lounge chair, counter stool, with cushion and without, in white, black and chrome.

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bertoia-designed-rooms-2Above: Unidentified; photographer Sarah Blee; styled by Michele Michael; designer Nate Berkus; unidentified; designer Thad Hayes in Architectural Digest; Domino; Living Etc.; Living Etc; Marie Claire Maison; designed by Bonesteel Trout Hall.

FOUND ON FLICKR

Finally, here are 15 shots I found on Flickr. Clearly this is the people’s chair, – there were tons of images to choose from. These are my favorites.

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Flickr photos: back_garage; back_garage; m.bibelot; Wiz Wharton; jeana_sohn; olya; richardbaybutt; sarahleeab; Moakidi; beeeeej; jp-o; Filip001; tastevick; wwkangaroo; Shannon Frances.

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Furniture, Montage, Rooms