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Posts Under: fabrics

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Strut Like a Peacock With the Latest Shade of Blue

Vogue Cover

Rich, velvety, cool, vintage, yet so of-the-moment, I have completely fallen in love with peacock blue. In homage to my last blog about Couture Interiors by Marnie Fogg, I picked up the latest issue of Vogue at the post office today, gasped when I saw Nicole Kidman’s dress on the cover, and knew that I had to write about the way this hue can (and should) be incorporated into your interiors.

Blue.Jacket

A stunning Nicole Kidman is swathed in a custom-designed frothy silk gown with swirls of different shades of peacock blue, a hue once popular during the Art Nouveau era (approximately 1890-1905), but today is experiencing a massive renaissance in both fashion and interior design. Later in the feature she is shown in a form-fitting jacket and skirt combination, the perfect blend of cream and strut-your-stuff blue (above).

The popularity of this hue, in both fashion and interior design, has surged in the last couple of years, and continues to appear in both disciplines, whether in the spring/summer or fall/winter seasons. It is so versatile that you can use it to create a feminine vibe, imbue a more masculine ambiance, or a family-friendly tone depending on the pattern, color palette and room in which it is used.

This shade is bold and sophisticated, yet versatile enough to complement tobacco brown, burnt orange, black, white, cream, or other hues of blue, such as turquoise and navy. When paired with lighter colors this blue is more tranquil and casual. When fused with a darker palette it provides an ambience of grand hotels and turn-of-the-century libraries.

For example, in the photos, featured here in a 2008 issue of Domino magazine, a brighter version of this blue is used as an accent next to black and white interiors. This combination imbues the rooms with a family-friendly vibe.

Peacock 1

In the living room photo from Southern Living (above), the color is featured in a more chic, traditional interior with a peacock blue silk wallcovering that creates a bold contrast to the bone-colored bookcases. The result is strong and sophisticated that is softened with pale, feminine pinks.

Paints

If you want to go all out with a deep hue, try painting a powder room with one of the colors above: Galapagos Turquiose by Benjamin Moore, 2. Oceanside by Sherwin-Williams, 3. Blue Lagoon by Ralph Lauren

Or, if your taste gravitates more towards an East-Coast nutical vibe, try the color in a striped pattern, such as in the photo below.

Stripes

No matter what you decide to do with peacock blue, you can’t go wrong with a jolt of it here or there in your home. My apartment is currently swathed in a palette of browns, deep oranges, and various shades of green, but a pop of this exciting hue may be just the thing to update it for the coming months.

Peacock 2

What will you do to update your rooms? Let me know so I can help you put together a home that is a perfect reflection of you and what you love.

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Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Couture Interiors by Marnie Fogg

Book Cover

We all have our addictions. My mother (an art quilter) has collected thousands of fabric swatches. My best friend, hundreds of pairs of shoes. My personal addiction is books–seemingly harmless, but terribly unfortunate when it is time to pack up and move apartments.

On this week’s Saturday-morning jaunt to my favorite bookstore (latte firmly in hand) I came across a compelling interior design book by Marnie Fogg, a lecturer in fashion and culture at the University of Nottingham in England. Couture Interiors , $35.00, Amazon.com, examines the relationship between catwalk fashion and architecture, interiors and home design products.

Fogg reveals how the fusion between fashion and interiors is the result of several modern constructs, including the speed of manufacture, consumers who are increasingly more literate in design vernacular, and the dissemination of ideas via magazines and the Internet. Today, trends in interiors change as quickly as the fashions that roll down the catwalks each season.

Spreads

So what does all of this mean to you and me? Well, take a look in your closet, then look at your home. Do you see a common thread? If you favor a casual, preppy, East Coast vibe, are your interiors decked in dark, clean-lined modernist pieces? If so, consider throwing in a few more bright, classic accessories, you might discover that you feel more comfortable in your rooms.

Second Cover

Or, perhaps your wardrobe is filled with edgy, contemporary pieces in blacks, grays and neutrals. If your home has more flower prints than a Laura Ashley catalog, it might be time to rethink those pink, floral draperies.

Spreads

In short, it is important that your home directly reflect your personality and lifestyle. If not then you might as well be a guest in someone else’s house. The expression of your personal aesthetic is important, because if you don’t feel at comfortable in your rooms, then you will never feel relaxed. And, after all, what is home for other than maintaining a genuine reflection of happiness?

–By Kate Bailey

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Thursday, June 12th, 2008

From the Bookshelf: French and English Style and Decoration

english.jpg french1.jpg

Before I moved to New York, a friend gave me some good advice: don’t waste too much time traveling up and down or east and west; plan your day according to neighborhood. So, in the spirit of good time management, I always look forward to my bi-monthly hair appointment. It’s not because I love the pampering, but because it takes me to Midtown and that means a little escape next door to Rizzoli
Bookstore. Now, Manhattan has a lot of fabulous bookstores (I’m a sucker for every one!), but Rizzoli’s is really something special. I could spend hours browsing through their three floors of pure heaven.

On my most recent trip, I picked up two new re-releases from the London publisher Thames & Hudson: English Style and Decoration and French Style and Decoration, both by the well-known design expert Stafford Cliff. Originally published about a decade ago, these small gems are a design junkie’s dream. Tagged A Sourcebook of Original Designs, each volume contains over 600 designs and patterns from company archives and pattern books. You’ll flip page after page of gorgeous textile designs, sketches of glassware and ceramics, furniture renderings, room schematics, pattern book recordings of everything from toast racks to iron fence designs, and so much more. You really will want to study each and every page. These books are good resources for a brief history overview of English and French design, but, mostly they are visual treats of beautifully designed everyday decorative arts.

So, set aside a Sunday afternoon, make a pot of tea, crack open one of these beauties, and toast the designers that make even everyday items pieces of art. Enjoy!

Visit Rizzoli Bookstore at 31 West 57th Street or at www.rizzoliusa.com.

Both books are available at www.barnesandnoble.com or www.amazon.com.

–Jennifer Kopf

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Distinctive Lighting from Nicolette Brunklaus

Shady Tree

After spending several years writing about interior design, I have learned that lighting is one of the most important components of a room. The proper fixtures, placement and wattage, can create the perfect ambiance or ensure a total design disaster.

In my quest for artistic, interesting and funky lighting designs I came across the works of Dutch-born Nicolette Brunklaus, who was educated as an artist but eventually began designing interior products. In 1998 she established her label Brunklaus Amsterdam.

Her designs incorporate old themes into a new design language, creating objects that are both functional and poetic. Brunklaus notes that her inspiration “comes from imagery, scenes and stories I want to relate in my designs.” This inspiration can be seen in collections such as the Shady Tree Collection, and her popular Delight Shade Collection.

Yes.No

The latest collection from Brunklaus Amsterdam, Cycle of Life (which can only be viewed on her website at the moment), is “inspired by memories of the past and the way all objects go through a cycle of life.” She then shapes these memories into new forms and dimensions and translates them to innovative lighting fixtures as well as pillows (like her Yes No collection shown above), silk paintings, cushy ottomans, ceramics, and curtains.

Her pieces are truly unique and surprisingly affordable. I think you are going to love them!

–By Kate Bailey

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Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Cozy Graphic Eco-Blankets Made From T-Shirt Scraps

In2Green eco blanket

In2Green’s cheery, graphic blankets are not only chic and warm, they’re environmentally friendly, too. Designer Lori Slater knits them from post-industrial recycled cotton–basically factory scraps leftover from T-shirt plants. Spark up your decor and divert waste from landfill in one fell swoop!

Lori’s graphic design background is evident in her approach to pattern; her fun prints include catchy zebra stripes and elegant paisley. She’s also willing to customize and can do so in a matter of weeks–a great corporate giveaway or bridesmaid’s gift. Check out her website for more: hats, wine sacks, and kids’ goodies, plus more background info on the eco-cotton she uses.

So cute. –Jen Renzi

In2Green eco blanket 2

In2green eco blankets 3

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