Archive | color RSS feed for this section

More Designer Living Rooms in Green

This beautiful living room designed by Tobi Fairly of Little Rock, Arkansas recently featured here and on Odi et Amo had me thinking about one of my favorite colors, green. Last year, I featured a post on living rooms in the hue of green and wanted to share some more great examples.

Speaking of Tobi Fairly, she was recently interviewed on The Skirted Roundtable. Tobi is so talented and charming too.

Lauren Liess, an interior designer and fellow blogger of Pure Style Home features green in her own living room shown above. She bought {scored} the Lee Industries sofa off Craigslist and had it reupholstered in a bright green velvet {her favorite color}. The sofa looks amazing paired with her lucite coffee table, table lamp from Pottery Barn and mirrored reproduction French flea market nesting tables from Crate & Barrel.

In this living room the designer {unknown – let me know if you know!} a traditional sofa in green looks sharp with coordinating graphic pillows. The white shag rug and glass round coffee table provide modern elements. The beautiful yellow blossoms behind the sofa adds height and pulls the yellow accent from the middle throw pillow and books on the side table. Photography by Anna Williams.

Jonathan Adler creates a beautiful living room in a green, yellow and brown color scheme. The sofas are covered in kelly green which contrasts nicely with the yellow trim detail and white legs. Adler mixes vintage, modern and traditional styles with ease. I particularly like the dramatic floor length drapes, white lacquer coffee table and yellow and white geometric rug.

Interior designer, Pheobe Howard is known to use green throughout her creations. This gorgeous living room by Howard showcases green with both dark and light furnishings. The airy white upholstered sofa is beautifully contrasted with heavier dark wooden casegoods and carved chair. The pair of green and white geometric slipper chairs adds a fun contemporary element. I am also loving the natural bamboo stools!

The living room beautifully painted in leaf green by Billet Collins is reflected in a stunning over-sized mirror. To balance the color scheme, upholstered chairs and the rug are in a neutral white.

Do you love green too?

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Read full story By on March 29, 2010 in color, interior design, living rooms

Irish Eyes are Smiling

May you always have

Walls for the winds,

A roof for the rain,

Tea beside the fire,

Laughter to cheer you,

Those you love near you,


And all your heart might desire!

~ Irish Blessing

Happy St. Patrick’s Day to you!
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Read full story By on March 17, 2010 in color, interior design

Design Tips For Styling a Living Room

Recently, Canadian House & Home published a great blog article, Styling a Room by Michael Penney. I completely agree with Penney; It’s the layers that make a room and pull it all together visually. In the before photo above, the living room has some nice design elements, but is unbalanced, uninviting and lacks a focal point.

The after photo below (via Country Living), shows what a little styling can do. As Penney points out, a few design elements haven’t change including the sofa, wing chair and wall color. Here are some principles and elements of design that come to play in this redesign:

Define the Space
The most obvious addition in the room is the striped area rug. In addition to anchoring the furnishings and defining the space, it also brings needed texture to the space. When purchasing a rug, it is important to find one that is large enough so that all your furniture fits (it’s okay if the back half of a chair or sofa are not on the rug, but the front half should).

Establish a Focal Point
New drapes, parallel furniture arrangement and artwork in a vertical pattern emphasizes the room’s architectural window and creates a needed focal point in the room. However, I would have added the same drapes to the adjacent window for a more balanced look. This leads me to my next tip;

Create Balance Through Scale and Proportion
The original room also had too much visual weight or mass. In the styled room, one wing chair is replaced with a lighter Windsor chair. Mixing materials can also help balance a room. In this case a metal coffee table takes the place of a wooden one (too many wood elements in the before room). Equilibrium is also achieved by the parallel furniture grouping.

Build Color Harmony
Pulling from the room’s wall color, solid yellow and green throw pillows are added to the sofa creating a more harmonious color palette. However, I would recommend at least one textile print for a pillow, window treatment or chair that pulls all of the primary colors in room’s palette together. Galbraith & Paul’s Donuts pattern in warm would be a good choice for this living room.

What elements of design helped you pull together a space?

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Read full story By on February 24, 2010 in color, Design Tips, interior design, Interiors, Living Room, living rooms, Tips/Tricks

Bloomingdale’s Big Window Challenge 2010: Design Trends and My Favorite

The Big Window Challenge at the Bloomingdale’s on 59th street in New York City is underway! Three very talented designers – Eddie Ross, Eileen Joyce and Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan – have created some inspirational and trend-setting model studio vignettes. Here’s a look at each designer window:

Eileen Joyce, Interior Designer and Bloomingdale’s Operating Vice President creates a sophisticated NYC apartment-inspired space for a travel magazine editor. Joyce states, “The room has an early 1960’s sensibility, combining modern furnishings with a grass cloth wall covering and appliqué fabric as the window treatment. It’s a mix of primitive, Asian, folk art and photography in an urban environment—all anchored by a custom-patterned area rug.”

I love and appreciate the room’s furniture arrangement {perfect scale & rhythm} and uncluttered look {perhaps the homeowner is traveling again?}. But, my favorite element without hesitation is the grass cloth covering.

Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan, designer and founder of apartmenttherapy.com {love this site!} created a beautiful writer’s library for a dear friend, Amor. It’s a dark den set for a romantic dinner, filled with books and showcases treasures from worldly travels. The room has a great mix of masculine and feminine decor elements including a leather Ralph Lauren chair and ottoman, floral wallpaper by Neisha Crosland and glass top Excel Cocktail Table by Allan Copley. I love the relaxed feel of this room and would love to have seen a fireplace mantel added to the design.

Eddie Ross’ room for Elle Decor was designed for a media mogul and mother of two boys {this woman knows what she wants and gets it!}. Ross says, “The signature space shimmers with a mix of classic and modern, new and old, together with a balance of bold patterns and vibrant colors. A spatter-paint print, like stars in an endless sky, reflects the owner’s love of travel to wide-open spaces, and her passion for sparkling evenings at home entertaining friends and family.”

There are several interior design trends that are repeated in each room:

First, wall coverings. Joyce covers her room’s walls in a dramatic, textured grass cloth. Gillingham-Ryan selects a romantic wallpaper called Birdtree {above} by Neisha Crosland. And Ross incorporates a splatter-paint print inspired by Harry Hinson design from the 1970s.

Second, shades of orange. Soft, warm oranges are picked up in Joyce’s upholstered chair and wall covering {sketch above}. In Gillingham-Ryan’s room, the wallpaper’s burnt orange floral motif stands out. Ross uses a vibrant Hermes’ orange in the wall art and throw pillows.

And third, mixing design styles. Ethnic art and modern furniture mingle perfectly in Joyce’s design. Gillingham-Ryan completes his look by combining a retro shag rug, antique books and a classic club chair. Ross brilliantly mixes modern art, contemporary furniture {i.e. Allan Copley Snowmass Bookcase}, vintage Italian brass flowers and a collection of antique Chinoiserie plates, vases and ginger jars {image above}.

My favorite window design is by Eddie Ross. Ross takes risks and hits it out of the park. The room’s mix of color, texture, pattern and old & new is brilliant. The well balanced, split complementary color scheme of tonal blues, layered with hints of turquoise, orange, hot pink and gilded bronze is simply stunning. The throw pillows Ross selects pulls the color palette together beautifully. Love that ikat print pillow above, although I think Ross switches it out for an even better one in the window’s finished look.

Even though the room is a bit cluttered for my taste, Ross’ attention to the personal details and accessories is delightful. If you ask me, this stylish, media mama homeowner is busy enough and could use a little organizational help. Call me!

Now it’s time to vote! You can vote for your favorite two ways {online & text} everyday. Here’s how:

Online: Visit this page to cast a vote for your favorite design using the radio buttons that will appear at the top of the page.

SMS Text*: Please send a SMS text to the number 89800. Enter the number of the window you are voting for (1, 2, or 3) into the message body and send to cast a vote for your favorite design. *Standard text messaging rates may apply.
Please Send a Text to 89800-Enter Only 1, 2, or 3:
1-ELLE DECOR (Eddie Ross)
2-Apartment Therapy (Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan)
3-Bloomingdale’s (Eileen Joyce)

Voting will run from January 20th through 28th. Dont’ delay!

And now the big question: Which window design is your favorite?

*images courtesy of Apartment Therapy, La Dolfina, Neisha Crosland, Eddie Ross

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Read full story By on January 22, 2010 in color, interior design, wallpaper