• Visit Cutting Edge Stencils and pick your favorite stencil. Leave your choice in a comment! {provide your email if I don’t have a way to contact you}.
• Extra Entry – become a new follower of Simplified Bee’s Blog, Twitter or Facebook Page.
• Extra Entry – become a Cutting Edge Stencils fan on Facebook.
• Extra Entry – mention this giveaway in a post or tweet, then leave a comment letting me know.
• Please post a separate comment for each extra entry.
• Entry period closes at 9 p.m. PST on Tuesday, February 8, 2011. The winner will be chosen by Random.org.
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Cutting Edge Stencils Giveaway!
February 2, 2011 · Comments { 126 }
Love the look of wallpaper, but afraid of the commitment or the price tag? Wall stencils may be your answer and one store to check out is Cutting Edge Stencils. They offer a huge variety of stencil patterns at great prices. Here are some of my current favorites, but keep in mind this is just a small sampling of their designs.
If you are craving change and have been thinking about adding a beautiful accent to your walls, you are in luck! Cutting Edge Stencils is giving away a $40 gift card to one Simplified Bee reader. Here’s how to enter:
Happy decorating and good luck!
Interior Design Tips by BluLabel Bungalow: Small Spaces and The Luxury of Less
October 20, 2010 · Comments { 17 }
Today I am thrilled to have Erika Ward of Atlanta-based, Erika Ward Interiors as a guest blogger. Erika is passionate about interior design and it shows on her lovely blog, BluLabel Bungalow. I’ve also had the pleasure of meeting Erika while in New York to watch The Nate Show. She is delightful! I also think you will love this post… tip #2 is my favorite 🙂
In the House Beautiful July/August 2010 issue, they pose the question, “Is Small the New Big?” Initially, I was irritated by the question simply because it sounded like yet another trend. In 7-10 years will we once again be in love with sprawling estates?
Naturally, small is the new big when so many are downsizing due to current economic conditions. While everyone is not in financial straits some have chosen to reduce their living space in order to be more ecologically responsible. The article examines three homes, the largest a mere 650 square feet, and concludes that living large is all about quality and not quantity.
When visiting potential clients, I find they have enough furniture and accessories to furnish two homes. In fact, most of us have more than we really need. My first inclination is to grab a box and begin removing excess from the walls and mantels, but I know better than that. We are sensitive about our stuff, aren’t we? Instead I offer the following suggestions, applicable to both large and small homes, when practicing “The Luxury of Less” principle:
Edit Your Space
Perform a “healthy purge” and keep only what you love. If you can’t bear to part with your knick-knacks, consider a wall display or arranging them together in a curio cabinet. This works best when you have a collection of one or two items.
Seek Help With Organization
Living with what you need requires you to know what you need. Perform an assessment of each space noting the function of each room. If an item in the room does not serve a relevant need, then remove it. Be sure that each remaining item “has a home” or an assigned place when not in use.
via Lee Industries
Choose Dual Purpose Furniture
Shop smarter. Choose furnishing that serve two purposes, i.e. a ottoman that serves as additional seating as well as a coffee table.
Seek Help With Space Planning
The wrong furniture arrangement can kill a space. Employ designer tricks to find optimal seating arrangements and traffic flow in the room. The House Beautiful article lends two pieces of advice:
- Keep the seating arrangments pulled away from the walls. Creating spaces beyond the furniture adds volume to the room.
- Use furniture with exposed legs. This creates air space and a feeling of openness you cannot achieve with upholstery that goes to the floor.
via Summer Thornton
Buy the Highest Quality You Can Afford, Fake the Rest
Your budget is small, but you splurge on your dream wallpaper. You don’t have money left for a custom bed so make one. There are countless tutorials on the web that guide you through the steps of making an upholstered headboard. Give your headboard an expensive look with tufting and/or framing.
via BeeLine Home
Inject Interest with Color and Patterns
Using colors and patterns provides eye candy and really draws you into a space. Painted floors, playful wallpapers, artwork, and soft fabrics help to bring the room to life and establish the personality of its owner.
Do you find satisfaction in living with less?
How have your made your life simpler this year?
Read full story
By Cristin on October 20, 2010 in color, decorating small spaces, Design Tips, home organization, interior design
Orange October Interior Design – Go Giants!
October 16, 2010 · Comments { 16 }
The orange trend is in full swing here in the San Francisco Bay Area. Giants baseball fans are over-the-moon that the boys of summer have moved on in the play-offs. They will be playing tonight in Philly and we will all be watching, cheering and wearing our orange & black.
To celebrate the Giants and send them good wishes, this “Orange October” post is for them. You are sure to enjoy it, even if you are rooting for another team.
More on Designer Jamie Drake… The King of Color
August 9, 2010 · Comments { 15 }
Living Room, Upper East Side, NYC (Photo: Drake Design Assoc.)
The first thing that comes to mind when thinking of Jamie Drake’s high-end interior designs is his brilliant use of color. Known as the “king of color,” Drake’s creations are world renowned for their use of sophisticated color schemes and eclectic furnishings. And as I mentioned in this post about Drake’s New York Upper East Side Design, he achieves visual harmony and balance in a room by using at least three colors.
Living room in an East Hampton home (Photo: Minh + Wass)
Recently, a San Francisco friend, interior designer and blogger Claudia Juestel had the pleasure of sitting down with Jamie Drake to drink tea and chat about design. Their discussion is a wonderful peek into Drake’s design philosophy. The full article is locate here at ResideSF.
“Eden Rock” table lamp in Manhattan House apartment (Photo: Lucas Allen)
In the interview Drake was asked about how he approaches using color. He said,
“I think there are two great parts. One is intuitive: I can walk into a room and sense what tonality it should be, whether it should be pale or intense, grayed out or vibrant. And then the equally important part is just what is right for the client. Very few clients will actually say I want purple and blue with a touch of aqua. But they will tell you a general range of what they like, such as pastels, or fresh colors, or jewel tones. They can usually tell you what they don’t like.”
Dining Room, Upper East Side, NYC (Photo: Drake Design Assoc.)
The article also features some sweet and very sophisticated design drawings Drake created as a boy. It is fascinating to see how at such a young age, he knew what he wanted to do when he grew up.
Bedroom in a West Chelsea apartment in NCY (Photo: Wouter Vandertol)
Drake also reveals in the interview that if he hadn’t become an interior designer, he might have been a prosecuting attorney. Aren’t we glad he didn’t? Thank you Jamie for following your heart!
Again, be sure to drop by ResideSF to read the entire interview by Claudia Juestel.


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