Tag Archives: Lindsay Bentis

41 (More) Rooms with Poufs

My pouf post,  34 Rooms with Poufs,  has proven the most popular on the site. So, seeing as the trend is still going strong, I’ve curated a whole new batch of interiors featuring Moroccan leather, knitted, and even wicker poufs, plus a couple of bean bag varieties.

Daniel Pafford in Lonny

Lindsay Bentis in Boston Home

via Bo-Laget

via Decorpad

via Decorpad

Photographer Simon Upton in Elle Decor

Tineke Triggs of Artistic Designs for Living

Jonathan Adler

CB2

Desire to Inspire

The Parker Palm Springs, Jonathan Adler

Alexandra Angle

via A Piece of Toast

via Pinterest

via The Aestate

Cebula Design

Domino

Jayne Wunder

via Decorpad

Adore Home Magazine  |  Jeffers Design Group

Ana Ros  |  via Jokemijn

via Designhund  |  via Desire to Inspire

via The Aestate   |  Zid Zid Kids

via The Aestate  |  via Design Sponge

Amanda Nisbet  |  Apartment Therapy

Heart Home Magazine  |  House Beautiful

Finnian’s Moon Interiors  |   via Mugutu

via Zay and Zo |  photographer Anna G. Tufvesson

Lee Ann Thornton  | Stylist Selina Lake

American Fashion Designers at Home book | Angie Hranowsky

Looking for a pouf?
Get the Look: 31 Poufs
Get the Look: 25 (More) Poufs

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Home Accessories, Montage, Rooms

Designer Spotlight: Karen Combs of NAMA ROCOCO

Karen Combs of NAMA ROCOCO

I first came across Karen Combs wallpaper line NAMA ROCOCO in an article about a West Newton house in Boston Home, for which Lindsay Bentis of Thread Art & Design did the interior design. Lindsay framed individual sheets of NAMA ROCOCO French Dot and hung them in the stairwell. I tore out the page and kept it in my files.

West Newton house, design by Lindsay Bentis, Boston Home.

An installation from the NAMA ROCOCO website.

And a detail.

Ok, so I’m obssessed.

I re-discovered the line while researching eco-friendly wall coverings for “Raw Materials” for the recent “green” issue of the Boston Globe Magazine.

Combs uses French acid-free papers and hand-mixed artist’s pigments. The painting is done by hand and printed by hand, using silkscreens and other reproduction techniques inspired by artisan practices of 18th century Europe and Japan. In fact, it was a Chinese scroll painting at the Met that spurred the creation of a wallpaper line.

The NAMA ROCOCO studio in North Adams, Massachussetts.

Karen describes the NAMA ROCOCO aesthetic as “a mix of mod bohemian, rock, and soul, with 18th century European and Asian art influences.”

She goes onto say, “I like to mix bold pattern and high style with simple plain organic shapes and geometrics. I like for spaces and objects (and my wallpaper) to feel luxurious but surprising, relaxed, but engaging enough to draw you in.”

Here’s a sampling of NAMA ROCOCO designs:

Serious Bokay in Black & White  |  Chateau 66 in Kraft  |  Sixty-Eight in Mellow Orange

Serious Bokay in Orange  |  Little Butterfly Loop in Chinese Red

Random Geometry in Graphite  |  Serious Bokay in Emerald

Tokyo & Vine in Cerise in Karen’s own house.

*  *  *

For more on Karen Combs and NAMA ROCOCO read “Shopping with… Nama Rococo” on The Inside Source.

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Designer Spotlight

Montage: 23 Wall Installations

I’ve been really interested in the idea of wall installations lately; a natural progression after last year’s obsession with wall sculptures. While you can use pretty much anything to create pattern and texture to blank walls, the ones I’m most attracted to are the art works. ( I have an ‘everyday objects as wall art’ post in the works as well). A few months ago I blogged about Tracy Melton’s tree ring encaustic paintings I purchased on Etsy. We finally hung them yesterday and they look fantastic – the picture is below. (My lack of photography,lighting and styling skills don’t do the installation justice.) I had planned on lining them up in a grid, but my ever artistic husband (he has a knack, surprisingly), insisted they’d look better scattered. Like ’em?

Our house on the Cape

From top: Amy Lau  –  Amy Lau  –  Brad Ford

From top: unidentified  –  Lindsay Bentis  –  Amy Lau

unidentified                                                  Emily Gallardo Studio

From top: Living Etc.  –  CB2

The Swell Life blog

Artist Eva Moosbrugger

Artist Keita Egami

Clockwise: Dwell  –  Coburn Architects  – unidentified  – Apartment Therapy

Sabbe Spot blog                                                          Cookie magazine blog

Madewell, Boston

Artist Jennifer Prichard

Kara Mann

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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Art, Montage, Rooms

Event Alert: Style Clinic with Kara Butterfield & Lindsay Bentis

Two of my favorite Boston stylists/designers are teaming up once again to hold a style clinic at a local home furnishings shop. This pair is super talented, so if you have a brick wall in your place that you’re trying to make the most of, definitely sign up to hear their ideas.

What: “Decorating with Exposed Brick”
Presented by: Stylist Kara Butterfield and interior designer Lindsay Bentis
When: Wednesday, May 26th, 6pm – 8 pm
Where: J.E.M. Home, 470 Shawmut Ave., South End, Boston
Attendees receive 15% off purchases made at J.E.M. that evening.
Price: $15 – RSVP

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Montage: Tree Trunks

When did logs become so stylish? (Around the same time as antlers, perhaps?) It used to be that trees belonged outdoors. Or up in your cabin in Maine. Designers eased them into our rooms gently with white resin, silver or ceramic pieces fashioned to look like logs. Now they simply hack down a tree and plop it into our decor, proclaiming it “mahvelous.” Ok, not really, but almost. This touch of the earthy, when done with restraint, can soften a space. It also adds texture (designers love that) and reminds us that two worlds really can coexist. I found tons of rooms in which logs, stumps, and branches have been incorporated with perfection.

Tree tables 2

Tree Tables 3

Tree sides 2

Tree sides 1

Tree sides 3

Tree table vert

Tree bench vert

Trees wood ladder

Trees access

Tree-spruce-pappas

Tree-kell-and-pappas

Trees screen and bed

Tree last

Tree-porch-table

Photos: Hotel Frank, San Francisco; Bahia de la Luna, Oaxaca via Apartment Therapy; Lindsay Bentis; Amy Lau Design; The Surf Lodge, Montauk in Coastal Living; Hotel Vertigo; Amy Lau Design; photographer Simon Watson; Susanna Salk via Habitually Chic; Joe Schmelzer; Gerald Pomeroy in Traditional Home; Spruce Design + Decor; photographer Max Attenborough; unidentified; Pure Design and Decor; Canadian House & Home; Kelly Wearstler on Style Compass; S.R. Gambrel; architect Eric Cobb in Metropolitan Home; unidentified; Pappas Miron; Spruce Design + Decor; Sam Cardella Design; Lindsay Bentis; Apartment Therapy; Parker Sims; Wendy Blount; Kara Mann;Spruce Design + Decor; photographer Kelly Ishikawa; Pappas Miron; Bleu Nature; Jayne Wunder; Elle Decor; Dave Coote Design; Johnston Architects; Eric Roseff.


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Filed under . REGULAR FEATURES, Montage, Rooms