Panel a Wall is a great way to add considerable style and texture to a plain space or to disguise wall issues.
the longer I'm studying interior design, the more I believe that wainscoting, and applied wall mouldings, are the key to beautiful rooms.
A century-old limestone row house near Brooklyn's Prospect Park gets the high-end design treatment it deserves.
DIY Wall treatments - Four DIY wall treatments with tutorials. Add character and charm to your home with these wall treatments!
Benjamin Moore’s 2021 Color of the Year is Aegean Teal, the perfect relaxing color for kitchens, bathrooms & more. Here are 11 ways to use it in your home!
A week has past and the trends for 2020 keep coming! Some are brand new, some are refreshed versions of what we’ve already seen in the last couple of
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the longer I'm studying interior design, the more I believe that wainscoting, and applied wall mouldings, are the key to beautiful rooms.
the longer I'm studying interior design, the more I believe that wainscoting, and applied wall mouldings, are the key to beautiful rooms.
How Do You Design and Organize a Beautiful Custom Home Library? What Kinds Of Lighting Should You Use? See examples today, on Hadley Court
Benjamin Moore’s 2021 Color of the Year is Aegean Teal, the perfect relaxing color for kitchens, bathrooms & more. Here are 11 ways to use it in your home!
A wander through a suitmaker’s showroom has led to the custom fitting of a postwar Melbourne apartment. Photographed by Sean Fennessy.
Architect Bobby McAlpine and interior designer Ray Booth collaborate on a Cape Dutch–inspired home in Baton Rouge suffused with light and old-world refinement
We’ve come a long way baby! Though I must say, I sure am glad this modern boho guest bedroom with office refresh is now wrapped! While I always love participating in the One Room Challenge, I am generally equally as excited when it’s over. So great for motivation and collaboration but it sure gets tiring!
[Unless credited otherwise, all photography in this post is by Susan Sully © Houses with Charm: Simple Southern Style, Rizzoli New York, 2013. Published with permission.] Southern style as typically depicted in the movies isn't what you'll find in Susan Sully's new book. There are no grand Georgian or Greek Revival digs. Instead she's turned her attention to the kinds of places many of us natives admire most: the unpretentious "double-shotguns" of New Orleans and early Creole houses of greater Louisiana, the cottages tucked into old tree-lined Atlanta neighborhoods (see Ryan Gainey's garden above) and the brick townhouses of Savannah. Aesthetically, the houses on her radar are diverse but they all have what Sully describes as a sort of disarming quality -- an ability to enchant. Hence the title, Houses with Charm. What I've noticed about the sixteen included residences is a nod to tradition -- whether obscure or more obvious, in the case of Richard Gibbs and Randy Harleson's LeJeune House, above -- combined with lots of personal warmth. Sully says that Harleson, author of New Roads and Old Rivers, and architect Gibbs distilled Creole, French Colonial and American looks for a breezier, dressed down take on the classic Louisiana country house. Appropriate because, dating back to 1790, the bones of their place are Creole with later 19th century modifications in a reserved Classical style. In their sitting room pictured here, Sully specifically notes the transoms with muntins in a running-bond brick pattern above interior doorways and Creole-style divided glass doors. The absence of foufy curtains and upholstery lets these architectural details shine. (And speaking of personal warmth, those watercolors above the sofa were painted by Gibbs's mom.) In the master bedroom, a long swathe of boat-themed Scalamandre toile makes for a soft note in an otherwise restrained space. Used in a very different design mash-up, the soft blue-and-white toile sofa in this waterside Mid-Atlantic house done by Mona Hajj becomes the quintessentially Old School piece that serves as a European counterpoint to a host of Near-Eastern textiles: a striped Persian kilim; a Turkish suzani; and another Persian rug covering the Ottoman-style table. Down the coast at Sullivan's Island, the Cooper's previously mentioned house is youthful with a modern edge but retains a strong sense of place. I like how Timothy McDowell's contemporary triptych suggests old Asian screens or panel paintings frequently found in traditionally decorated Southern houses. One of designer Amelia Handegan's most unexpected strokes is the dining room mural. She commissioned Kristin Bunting to paint the walls with swimmers inspired by Matisse's abstracted cutout figures that dominated his own dining room walls at the Hôtel Régina in Nice. On paper I might think an interpretation in South Carolina would be contrived, but somehow it really works in this vernacular circa 1890 beach cottage. To see the entire mural, and how beautifully it connects with the adjacent living room, flip through Sully's latest book when it hits book stores mid-April. Regarding Matisse, it seems as if we've been talking about LACMA's new Brody acquisition forever. [Top right: Kate Carr photo of Matisse's monumental La Gerbe (The Sheaf) (1953) commissioned by Sidney and Frances Brody of L.A. for their mid-century A. Quincy Jones-designed (and Billy Haines-decorated) house -- image via Christie's. Lower left: Sidney and Frances on their patio with the piece -- image via LIFE.] Now, though, beginning April 21, the public can view the ceramic installation La Gerbe along with supporting materials such as Matisse's original maquette for the project (on loan from the Hammer Museum); the initial color samples he sent from France to the Brodys in California; Mrs. Brody's candid accounts of the process she and her husband went through with Matisse during the commission; her correspondence with the artist’s son and dealer, Pierre Matisse; and archive press about La Gerbe and its first installation. Also of interest: Rebecca Rabinow's Reading Matisse over at The Met online.
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If your love of music knows no bounds, then these 11 music rooms just might inspire you to create a special space of your own.
Our designer PVC wall panels are a great way to turn traditional wall space into stunning features. These decorative wall panels provide a modern look with classic inspiration for any space. Their chic and sophisticated appearance make them compatible with all styles of decor from modern to the more traditional.
Architect Bobby McAlpine and interior designer Ray Booth collaborate on a Cape Dutch–inspired home in Baton Rouge suffused with light and old-world refinement