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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?

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Read full story By on February 24, 2010 in color, Design Tips, interior design, Interiors, Living Room, living rooms, Tips/Tricks

San Francisco Indochine Style: Leslie Lundgren Design

San Francisco Peninsula-based interior designer, Leslie Lundgren worked hand-in-hand with her San Francisco client who has both French and Vietnamese ties to create a look delicately blending the two. The result is a stunning, sunlit Pacific Heights flat in a luxurious “Indochine” style. Furnishings and decorative items were either family heirlooms, picked up on travels aboard or in San Francisco’s China Town.

Lundgren used a traditional French palette of vivid yellow, jade green and coral red. Here in the living room, the walls are painted in Benjamin Moore Dalila 319. Two antique Louis XV armchairs in jade green mohair are placed in front of an antique Italian desk with exquisite marquetry. Atop the desk sits a sweet antique French mantle clock. A large Louis Philippe walnut armoire makes a beautiful backdrop.

Opposite the Louis XV chairs Lundgren places loveseat sofas in a warm coral velour fabric by Clarence House. Throw pillows in an Italian “fortuny-esque” fabric adorn the sofas. The floor to ceiling drapery fabric and silk tassels were purchased at Bouchara in Paris. A Chinese red lacquer trunk is converted into a coffee table and stands over a gorgeous silk and wool Chinese art deco rug. A beautiful French 1940’s wheat motif brass floor lamp is placed in the corner next to the sofa. The focal point of the room however, a large scale Chinese ancestor painting, is a family heirloom.

In the dining-family room, a limed-oak pedestal table is surrounded by reproduction Louis XV chairs. The worldly tablescape includes an Argentinean silver pitcher, Point a La Ligne candles and a 1970’s green vase made by a family friend. A collection of blue and white Delft plates are mounted on the wall.

In the family room, Lundgren brilliantly mixes color, texture and old & new by placing a zebra rug from Cost Plus World Market at the foot of a Chinese moon face traditional red lacquer armoire.

Lundgren creates a delightful bedroom retreat with a beautiful canopy over the bed in English Chintz fabrics. Fresh sunflowers and a green Tole Lamp add just the right decor to the red bedside table.

Lundgren’s sophisticated East meets West style is evident in this design and perfect for the culturally rich city by the bay.

Leslie Lundgren Design * leslie@maisonmondiale.com

I don’t know about you, but I’m still drooling over those antique Louis XV armchairs in jade green mohair!

*photos courtesy of Leslie Lundgren Design

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Read full story By on February 17, 2010 in antiques, chinoiserie, interior design, living rooms, upholstery

President’s Day and Michael S. Smith Interior Design

Last year President Obama and the First Lady selected Santa-Monica-based Michael S. Smith to transform the private quarters of the White House. Michelle Obama said, “Michael shares my vision for creating a family-friendly feel to our new home and incorporating some new perspectives from some of America’s greatest artists and designers.”

Over his distinguished career, Smith has designed homes for Steven Spielberg, Dustin Hoffman and Cindy Crawford and his work has been showcased in two best-selling books from Rizzoli Publishing; ‘Elements of Style’ (2007) and ‘Houses’ (2008). His style has been characterized as a blend of “European tradition and American modernism.” In celebration of President’s Day and Smith’s appointment to the Committee for the Preservation of the White House, here are some beautiful images from his portfolio.

Happy President’s Day!

*images courtesy of Michael S. Smith

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Read full story By on February 15, 2010 in interior design

The Island – Kitchen Design Trend Here To Stay

More and more the kitchen is the hub of a home. It’s where guests mingle, family meetings are held, and meals are prepared and enjoyed. For this reason, designers are getting back to the basics of functional kitchen design. One element with a perfect mix of form and function is the kitchen island. In fact, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), islands are one of the most popular kitchen design features among today’s consumers. They claim reports that state approximately 80 of home buyers consider a kitchen island to be a must.

Many of today’s kitchen islands have unique design styles of their own. Most include storage, sinks {prep or main}, appliances and/or seating areas. Kitchen islands can have the same design as the main counter and cabinets or it can have a look all its own.

Here are some examples of great kitchen designs that have an island {or two}:

This beautiful open kitchen by architect, Steve Giannetti features a large island with a sleek custom sink and warm wooden countertop. It is balanced nicely with two large industrial pendants. Gorgeous!

Interior design blog, Things That Inspired recently posted an excellent article on Kitchen Sinks and my heart started racing when I saw this kitchen. Designer and architect, William Hefner created it with a stunning island topped in what is thought to be zinc. I just love how the gray surface plays off the two light pendants, dark gray upholstered stools and White Carrara Marble tiled backsplash. Hefner places a small prep sink in the corner of the island {opposite a main sink on the other side of the room}.

In this white kitchen designed by Mark J. Williams, the pale gray island resembling a table takes center stage. Not only does the island’s paint color differ from the other cabinetry, it’s white marble countertop contrasts with the dark countertop on the cabinets flanking the range. The heavy steel pendant hangs off center over the island and makes me wonder if there is a matching pendant to balance the look not visible in the image. The wooden bench with upholstered seat is my favorite design element in this room. I love how it warms up this otherwise cool space. The image via Traditional Home and photo credit Michael Garland, was first spotted it on Things That Inspire.

In this stunning {and large} kitchen, the dark stained center island stands out from the soft sage green perimeter cabinetry. The slate flooring pulls the color palette together beautifully. The island counter’s rounded edge echos the arch in the hood for the range. Picture via flickr.

The former editor in chief of Food & Wine magazine, Carole Lalli designed this large island topped with butcher-block and marble in her Connecticut kitchen. Not only does it provide plenty of space for prep cooks, it houses a sink and dishwasher. Love this! Featured in House Beautiful’s January 2008 issue.

Also featured in House Beautiful, Architect Steven Laurin’s design for this kitchen’s island was inspired by a farm table. The dark CaesarStone countertop and warm wood saddle stools contrast beautifully with the white colored island. Designer Meg Braff also balances the island by selecting a large double pendant fixture.

Seeing double? Designer Anne Miller incorporates two islands in her own kitchen design. Coordinating with the room’s other cabinets, both islands are painted white and are topped with white marble. Providing task lighting and a pop of color, Miller hangs two pairs of copper pendants with blue gingham prints above each work area. The islands not only give Miller loads of prep space, but provide seating areas at kitchen dinner parties. Image courtesy of House Beautiful.

This gourmet kitchen in Ted Turner’s private desert lodge on Armendaris Ranch sits on his 350,000-acre wild animal preserve along the Fra Cristobal Mountains. Laura Hunt Design created this space featured in Architectural Digest and inspired by historic kitchens of Spanish colonial house in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The tiled center island offers sitting for two {great rush seat stools}, a beverage refrigerator {or two, depending what is hiding behind the wood panel} and of course additional space for food preparation.

This highly functional kitchen by Atlanta-based designer, Jo Rabaut is stunning and recently won Atlanta Homes Magazine’s 2010 Kitchen of the Year Contest. The color palette of warm walnut floors, soft vanilla cabinetry and pale aqua walls gives this busy room a calming feeling. But it is the large island, Rabaut used that anchors the room. The island’s dark soapstone countertop focuses our attention and provides a tactile surface for food prep. A custom double trough sink housed in the island also makes food preparation more efficient. A table {on wheels} is placed at one end and can be easily moved to serve as an additional workstation or buffet.

his NY townhouse kitchen by New-York-based design team, William Diamond and Anthony Baratta of Diamond Baratta Design is beautifully eclectic. The white kitchen with pops of ice blue features a stunning stainless steel island. This sleek modern centerpiece is topped with a white countertop {marble?}, under mounted sink and provides numerous drawers for much needed storage. The glass-front kitchen cabinets would have been perfect for this post.

I love kitchen islands. Do you?

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Read full story By on February 8, 2010 in Design Tips, interior design, kitchens