Monday, May 11, 2009

More on proportion and scale...got the picture to load!




This is a very large foyer that most of us don't have but I love this table for the entrance.


It is large enough to make a statement (scaled to the room) but visually does not feel heavy and you can still see through to the next room, which draws you in and isn't that exactly what you want.Your entry and foyer should say "welcome to my home!" The centrally placed light fixture brings the high ceilings down and the large floral arrangement brings your eye up. Quite lovely...


Friday, May 8, 2009

Design 101 - Scale and Proportion

Great example of pattern scale - large on
the walls and small on the floor
The deco vanity bounces the pattern around
the small room. Interior by Woodson-Rummerfield
Great scale and proportion in this interior by Paul Wiseman
The artwork and fireplace are obvious but also notice the coffee table and
sofa scaled perfectly and the arched window mirroring the wall arch.

One of the first things you learn in any fundamental interior design course is the principals of good design. This concept is not necessarily rocket science but it does seem that it's a right brain/left brain thing which some people have a natural talent for. It's really a matter of understanding relationships in space; between objects, colors and light and it's what interior designers are great at doing.

Proportion can be hard to define and ancient Greeks actually had a theory called "the golden mean', which happens when the ratio of small elements to larger elements is the same as the larger elements to the whole. Have I lost you yet? What that boils down to is the size of an object compared to everything else. It can be the size of your furniture in proportion to the room, or the size of you in proportion to the furniture. How to balance color and pattern are also components to getting the scale of a room right. In the picture above of a room designed by Michael Taylor, the huge windows could easily dwarf everything in the room but by flanking them with the tall tables and stunning mirrors, he's filled up the space and created a focal point. This looks to be a large room but there are not a lot of small things to create clutter. The paint color helps ground and absorb the light filled space.
I'm having technical difficulties and can't seem to upload all the examples but just keep in mind when planning your rooms that the shape, scale and layout of your rooms provide the foundation for what's to go in it and if I can get the rest of the pictures uploaded I will post them soon.

Have a great weekend and a Happy Mother's Day!
Michele













Wednesday, April 22, 2009

A Front Door That Says 'Welcome'


I haven't posted for the last month and it's good to be back. Life and death happen and unfortunately my dear "grams" passed away a week ago. She lived a long life and had two sons, grandchildren, great and great great grandchildren...that's a legacy. I will miss you grams.

My post today is about front doors. They are the welcome to the outside world and often the first thing that makes an impression to someone visiting or driving by. I want a new one but that is not in the budget right now so at the very least, now that the weather is better, I would like to paint mine and change up the hardware a little bit.

I have found some amazing inspiration pics online and have been noticing what others are doing in my area when I'm driving. My house is the typical California stucco, tan/beige and my door is currently black. Our home model is called 'Tuscany' and we've gone with that both in landscape and interiors. I still like it but feel the door could be more...so here are some of my inspiration photos. Do you have any suggestions or doors that you like? Do share...



I really like this one that i found on Jeld-Wen's website and the style is right






This is in Provence...character for days!



I am so attracted to red doors...good feng shui




I also like this blue!





This is just cute and creative and a testament to the power of the internet. I found this on Flickr.com posted by Craft and Creativity. It's painted with chalkboard paint...thanks Helena! She is one talented woman.

We have a side door on the driveway that is visible from the street, so I would like to paint them both the same. So now it's time to get out my paint decks and try and make a decision...sigh!

Happy house and home...

Michele






Saturday, March 21, 2009

The Green Pea Boutique

Antiques, Collectibles, Fashion, Home Decor & One-Of-A-Kind Items


One of the things i want to do with this blog is highlight design related businesses in and around N. California. My first one is Sandi Vander Dussen's Green Pea Boutique in Escalon, CA. Escalon is a small farming community that people pass through on their way to the mountains and Sandi has definately upped Main Streets cute factor.


Her shop was originally built in 1906 and was a mercantile and post office with the livery in the back. She and her husband Jim spent 18 months and many long hours transforming it into a charming place with exposed brick walls and the original wood floors for selling antiques, fashion and home and garden decor. Sandi had previously been leasing a smaller shop a block off Main St. but when the opportunity came available to own this historic building she said "where do I sign?"



I want this chair...it has such possibilities!

Sandi had seen the green paint color of her building somewhere else and fell in love with it. She and her daughter were brainstorming names for the new store, leaning toward something french. Her daughter hit on "The Green Pea" but it didn't translate as well in french so the "Green Pea Boutique" was born.



That same daughter lives in Texas and Sandi makes several buying trips there a year, as well as Las Vegas for the gift items she offers. Her future vision for the store is to bring in more kitchen accessories and garden products and decor. Her style is a little cottage, a little rustic and she loves things with character and blemishes that show that someone has loved them and used them. Being in a small town adds quaintness to the experience. Her customers make it an excursion to come shop and have lunch at local restaurants and on the weekends, the clientele switches to couples out for a treasure hunt!



Too bad...these are already 'sold'


She also carries great baby items!






I think it's important that we support local businesses and especially businesses run by women, although Sandi gets lots of support from Jim. (I want to take pictures of these amazing doors he built for the Livery in back). Sandi's advice for other women business owners is to "buy what you like". She sometimes has a hard time parting with items she loves, but its even less fun to look at things that don't sell, that you don't like.
Thank you Sandi for your time and sharing your lovely store.
The Green Pea
Escalon, CA
(209)838-1913
thegreenpeaboutique.blogspot.com

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Happy Spring! Decorating for the Seasons


Welcome Spring in an orchard near my house


In this part of California, you definately know why we are called the 'Golden State'. For about three months, usually January thru March, it is green and beautiful. Then the gold part sets in and actually it's more brown, but right now it is stunningly gorgeous with the almond and peach trees blooming. It may not be the coastline but when you see acres and acres of blooming trees, it truly is a sea of pink deliciousness. So i thought i would share some spring time and talk a little about decorating for the seasons.


In some parts of the country, it may not feel like Spring but its 'on' here and i'm getting the itch to change things up in my house. It's a sickness that happens every year and i just have to go with it. My mom was recently here for a visit and admiring some curtain panels I had up. I said "thanks mom, but those are about to be taken down for something different...actually wouldn't those look nice with your colors?" Her comment back was something along the lines of once she has it up, it's staying there. Alas, i am afflicted with the disease to change decor. Do you think there is a support group?



Pier 1 panels
In Fall i tend to want to nest and cozy things up, add warmer colors and textures, but in the Spring it's all about shaking things out and lightening up (and don't we all need just a bit of that right now!). In Spring we're ready for lighter and brighter, so you could put a light colored slipcover on a couch or chair. Change pillows (this is where you can use some new colors from last months newsletter), candle colors and accessories. Bring in more nature inspired objects; a birds nest with some blue eggs displayed on a cake stand or a large vase with pussy willow or blooming branches (try Michael's if you don't have the real thing). Putting items in glass apothecary jars or vases is a great way to display them and the reflection from the glass adds light and sparkle to your room.
Throw rugs and area rugs are another way to add color to the floor and outdoor or cotton rugs can be used inside as well. They're relatively inexpensive and indestructible. In the Fall, just wash and store them until the following Spring.
If you have a collection of pottery, glassware, rolling pins, whatever it may be, rotating your collections in and out of view is another way to keep things fresh. By paring down what you display from season to season, you eliminate clutter from your room and shelves and this gives your eye a place to rest and appreciate what is there. Plus everytime you change what's displayed, you get to appreciate it all over again and remember why you loved it in the first place.




Williams Sonoma Home



Pier 1



Williams Sonoma Home



So this year when it's time for some Spring cleaning, make an appointment with yourself and your home, put on some good music, move some furniture around and change it up a bit! You'll be surprised how good it looks and feels...Happy Spring!























Sunday, March 8, 2009

It's All In Good Taste!

So i was talking to a friend the other day about a home we had been in. My friend said "this homeowner has such good taste and she was right. The home is lovely and welcoming. You felt comfortable in every room. The colors were rich but muted, the furniture of great quality but not pretentious and collections displayed in a way that showed off their importance without feeling like you were in a museum. Later that evening I was thinking about just what exactly is good taste? Some people have it in their homes and some people have good taste in clothes; always seem to have that perfect look no matter the occasion. It's one of those intangibles thats hard to define; that it factor, and very subjective. One of Webster's dictionary definitions is a sense of what is fitting, harmonious, or beautiful. So if beauty is in the eye of the beholder, then we all have good taste, right?






Below is a taste of what some of the greats think in an article that appeared in House Beautiful magazine.





Design by Kelly Werstler


Benjamin Moore Paints


I have the simplest tastes. I am always satisfied with the best.

Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)


I don't believe in the goodtaste/bad taste thing. It's like being in or out, and I think it's all stupid and snobby. I don't believe in taste-only in personal likes and dislikes...You should like what you like and the heck with anything else.

Betsey Johnson, Designer, 1973


Michele says "Amen sister!"

Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) "Ah, good taste- what a dreadful thing."

Sometimes it's more important to be human than to have good taste.


Bertolt Brecht, Playwright (1898-1956)

Taste, I think, is a form of sensitivity. You can have an aptitude for it , like a potential for playing the piano, but you will never be a great pianist unless you do your finger excersizes.

Sir Humphrey Wakefield, President, Mallett & Son, 1973

The discovery of the good taste of bad taste can be very liberating.

Susan Sontag, "Notes on 'Camp'," Note 54, Against Interpretation (1966)



A little bad taste is like a nice dash of paprika. Dorothy Parker, wirter (1893-1967)

Nate Berkus, featured on Oprah



What is your taste?












Tuesday, February 17, 2009

"Seeing Red Contest"

So I guess great minds think alike or something like that. Today I found a great post on one of my favorite blogs Design*Sponge using red in rooms. If you haven't heard about the contest, in a nutshell i'm asking you to send me pictures of your home featuring red (the color of the month) for Valentines and Go Red For Women. Email pictures of how you've used red in your home; accessories, fabrics, furniture or even a whole room painted red. Below are some pictures to inspire you and get you going. Send them by Tuesday 2/24 and I'll post and announce the winner on February 28th...


P.S. I have had a request to extend the submission date a couple of days, so I will wait until Thursday, Feb. 26th and here's some inspiration below.


Michele





For the living room… clockwise from top left: cafĂ© lamp $53, toilx “A” chair $275, blik Chandelier decal $30, Regal Aquaglo Paint in Confederate Red from Benjamin Moore, Enamel Letter $14, Red Candles $4.95, Red Lacquer Box $125.







Pictures from House Beautiful, Design*Sponge, Abbey Goes Scouting, New York Magazine