Posts tagged home
4 Furniture Studio Faves from AD Home Design Show

Cabinet on Stand from Bart NiswongerJanet Ramin - Whenever I visit the Architectural Digest Home Design Show, I make a beeline for the furniture displays. The AD show has everything a home design addict would love: artwork, furniture, lighting, tabletop displays, kitchen, and bath – so much so that it can be overwhelming. But furniture is the heart of every room, so I love to check out the latest furniture lines from the big, established firms to the new work from the smaller furniture studios. 

Just as bold bright colors were the top trends in fashion, brilliant colors were also seen in many furniture designs. The cabinet on a stand – seen above - from Bart Niswonger is a perfect example with its red-hot and yellow colors and floating yellow-green flowers. Made of ash, cherry, and cast urethane, the cabinet provides that pop of color and touch of unexpectedness to any interior.  Another whimsical piece is the ball side table.  Floating orange urethane tops the table as red balls pop out from its sides.

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Adding Color to Your Walls

Irwin Weiner ASID -- Color is very visceral. It's very emotive for people. Picture a white room or a black room -- people feel very different in different colored spaces.

One way to choose color for a room in your home is to follow the advice of master interior designer Samuel Botero. I was told by a friend that he led one of his clients to the refrigerator and said, "Alright, here are the vegetables. Pick your colors." And food in the fridge made up the colors his client chose: hot peppers, green peppers, butternut squash, etc.

Different spaces call for different colors, and even different countries and the quality of the natural light in different parts of the world often determines appropriate color palettes. England is often dark, gloomy, and gray, and the Victorians went with very bright colors for porcelain, paint, and accessories.

Scandinavia, with its relatively weak sunlight, inspired pale grays and whites in home colors (see photo below). By contrast, Country French has its palette inspiration from hot and sunny hues. Mixing up colors and appropriate connotations can be sometimes jarring, like having hot colors in Scandinavian interiors. (Although rules should always be broken!)

In times before the 20th Century, color pigments were very expensive. Cobalt blue was made from lapus lazuli. Turquoise came from turquoise gemstones.

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Turning Scraps into Gold

Irwin Weiner ASID -- It's always easy to decorate when you have so many ready-made furnishings and accessories to choose from. We take it for granted that we can walk into any dealer or showroom, and pick up any catalog and either order what we want, all ready to go, or slightly customize an item with a few minor tweaks.

Today's economy might make us look towards other solutions, and apply a bit of imagination while saving some money. I recently had a client ask me to find a large tapestry to hang in the blank marble expanse above a fireplace, partially filling the void between the mantle and the top of the room's tall cathedral ceiling.

Good tapestries cost a fortune, and I didn't want to break my client's budget or burden him with a request to "fork over the cash" for an extravagant decorator piece. After almost giving up the search and settling on an expensive but great item, I came across two tapestry fragments on the 1st Dibs website. What a find!

The creative lobe in my brain began to kick in and I crafted

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