Entries by Laurie Gorelick Interiors (190)

Monday
May142012

Peaches and Cream

Some nights when I can't sleep, I lie in bed and in my head re-decorate rooms in my house. Well that's not entirely true. You see, there are a few rooms in my house that I have not yet decorated. Partly, it's the cobbler's children syndrome: I can't settle for just anything, so I'll wait until I can get what I want. That's true for my living room, but it's no excuse for my master bedroom. Especially because I have furniture for the room.

I had picked out fabrics over the years for my bedroom that were a combination of yellows, reds and blues. In my head, I was painting the walls yellow. Then, one sleepless night as I was re-thinking my bedroom decor, it struck me: not yellow, but peach! Why peach? Because peach is a color that makes white skin look pretty, so it's no wonder that it would be a good color for the bedroom. Not to mention that Benjamin Moore just last week forecasted peach as a color trend for 2013.

Peach varies from a blush color (what I'm thinking for my bedroom) to salmon, apricot, coral and melon. I like it because it acts as a neutral. The paint color I'm thinking of using--Benjamin Moore Sunlit Coral 2170-60--is a pale backdrop for the English pine bed and armoire and painted antique bureaus I have in my bedroom. It also works with my blue carpeting and bedding. It feels fresh to me as opposed to the yellow I had been wed to for a while.

Some of us may remember 1980s peach--paired with gray or teal in fabrics and wallpapers. To prove that peach can have a renaissance, I combed the internet for images of contemporary peach interiors (not necessarily in style, but in time period).

                         Dining Room by Ashley Whittaker Design                                        Bedroom by Kemble Interiors
Notice how well the coral dining chairs in the photo above left blend with the other soft pastels in the room. In the bedroom on the right, peach and blue, in tones ranging from light to dark, seamlessly fit with the wicker and other natural elements in the space.

                   

                              Living Room of David Flint Wood and India Hicks in Sept/Oct 2011 Lonny Magazine

In the living room above, the peach sofa becomes a focal point in a room of black, grays and tans.

      

                         Garrison Hullinger Interior Design                                      Elizabeth Dinkel Design Associates, Inc.
In the bathroom above left, peach painted walls complement the marble subway tile. Neutrals of white and ivory work handsomely with bronze metallics and a satinwood night stand in the bedroom, above right. These photos in particular showcase how soothing a peach color palette can be in a bedroom or bath.
                 
                                                     Library by Elizabeth Dinkel Design Associates, Inc.

In the library above, peach and coral with analogous color yellow create harmony with the warm wood paneling. Peach with blues and soft pastels, peach with grays, peach with ivory, tans and golds. As you can see, peach is alive and well and reinterpreted for the future.
Tuesday
May082012

Why I Love Brimfield

This week marks the return of the Brimfield Antique & Collectibles Show, an event that, three times every year between May and September, draws hordes of people like lemmings to a small central Massachusetts town. I first heard about Brimfield 20 years ago when I moved from New York City to Massachusetts, and it's been an annual pilgrimage for me ever since. Why? Because it draws out my primal hunting urge.

I've always been fond of antiques. My parents used a decorator who was also an antiques dealer to help design my childhood home. So naturally, some of the furnishings I grew up with were antiques. When I moved into my first apartment in the East 20's of Manhattan, there was an antiques dealer in my building, and one of my first purchases was an old oak chest that called out to me from the storefront. Ever since, this chest has moved with me everywhere, from being a foyer fixture to currently being a bedside table.

I started collecting arbitrarily. In an antiques shop, I saw a green swirled bowl with a lovely apple-green color. So began my "green plate collection." I collect anything that is pottery or dishware in this matte green color. The collection took off long before I even knew what I was collecting. But I discovered at Brimfield that what I was collecting was McCoy pottery, W.S. George Petalware, Homer Laughlin Riviera, Stangl Colonial and other early to mid-century dishware patterns.

                   

I'm also a fan of vintage textiles. I collect tablecloths from the 1930's and 40's with floral, fruit and state designs. They're so cheerful and colorful. They really make me happy when I use them.

                              

So what's so special about Brimfield? I can go to Brimfield for a couple of hours, set a budget of even just $100 and come home with several treasures that give me that thrill of the hunt. And along the way, I'll meet vendors that share the same crazy obsessions that I have. Or I'll see some memento from my childhood that makes me feel so nostalgic. I'll pick something up for 5 or 15 or 50 dollars that touches me in a way that few possessions can.

And add to this the creation last year of the Brimfield Tweetup by Cynthia Bogart of The Daily Basics and Gretchen Aubuchon of Fashion + Decor. I went to the second Brimfield Tweetup in September of last year. It was the first event I attended where everyone was brought together by social media. Many people I met at the event, who I knew before only as Twitter handles, have since become colleagues and friends. So from hunter I became gatherer. That's why I love Brimfield.

Friday
May042012

High Point Market Spring 2012 - Part 3: Certified Organic

If I polled interior designers, I bet all of them at one time or another base their concept for a space on some element of nature. As an instructor of interior design, I hear it all the time from my students: "I wanted to bring the outdoors in." It's a no-brainer: natural elements provide form and texture. Their primitive and earthly origins connect us viscerally to our surroundings in a way that man-made and machine-crafted materials cannot. So it's no wonder that at High Point, furnishings made of natural materials were a mainstay. A trend? Hardly. A fundamental.

At Market, Global Views introduced their Teeter Totter Stone Table with a terrazzo top and cut travertine base. In two sizes--a large coffee table with a 40-inch diameter top and a smaller end table with an 18-inch diameter top--the table can be used inside or out.

                 

I absolutely adored the Phillips Collection Freeform Consoles. Made of species like teak, rosewood, and monkey wood, these tables are as close to nature as one could get, short of rootwood.

                 

Phillips also fashions slabs of wood into coffee tables and in a similar vein, makes bronze facsimiles as benches.

                 

This woven Abaca ottoman or coffee table by Made Goods shows tremendous versatility: the top lifts off for storage.

                                   

I was fascinated by the tables below and other pieces by Mr. Brown. They have a multi-layered paint finish which is applied by hand, so no two are alike. The finish is called "putty." But to me, it had the feeling of gesso--a mixture composed of paint, clay and animal-glue binder--which is an old-world multi-layered finish (gesso is mostly known as a substrate for paint canvases). The finish on these pieces was so textural and complex. But I wondered if it was practical. I mean, really? Can you put a drink on it? No worries though: there is a protective topcoat. You'd treat the tables like any fine piece of furniture.

       

Currey & Company featured a similar gesso-like applied finish on their Amedeo Table Lamp in Ancient White and Applied Rust.

                                           

Speaking of table lamps, natural materials featured prominently on lamp bases at Market. Zentique showed this twig lamp base on their large Le Sculpture Lamp.

                                 

Arteriors featured hand-thrown terracotta lamps with earthly glazes. Below left is the Treva Electric Moss lamp and on the right is the Wagner Organic lamp with pistachio glaze.

        

If you want to go organic, though, my favorite of the Arteriors lamps was this Wyatt Clay white porcelain lamp. Straight out of Chez Flinstone in Bedrock.

                                           

Underwater water elements surfaced (ha ha) at High Point also. These tables by Mr. Brown and Julian Chichester showed the color variations possible in urchin bone. Cool bases too!

               

This mirror from Made Goods was overlaid entirely with cut shells. An amazing pattern and feat of delicate handiwork as you can see from the close-up.

 

          

 

 

 

On the wall, if you like skins, this laser-cut Hair-on-Hide by Gold Leaf Design Group was fabulous. I could see it hanging as a pseudo-headboard in a master bedroom. Talk about sensuous! Skip the bear-skin rug.

                         

 

Tuesday
May012012

High Point Market Spring 2012 - Part 2: High Point Prep

I'm no etymologist, but I would say that the term "preppy" became part of our vernacular in the 1970s and 80s with the movie Love Story and with the publication of the Preppy Handbook. I was in college, and at an Ivy League no less, when this term evoked such clear images: Lacoste polos (collars up), Pappagallo shoes and bags, Shetland sweaters tied around the neck, L.L. Bean monogrammed canvas totes, turtlenecks (with necks up, not folded over), wide-wale corduroys, pants with whales on them, and pearls worn with everything. We're seeing a come-back of preppy, perhaps due to the publication of a sequel to the original Preppy Handbook. Or perhaps because the lagging economy makes a classic, but static style, a way to be trendy without seeming so.

In interiors, preppy style manifests itself in colors, patterns and classic forms, and these abounded at Spring Market in High Point. Without going to the obvious (Lilly Pulitzer, whose showroom I missed), I found plenty of this look elsewhere. Hickory Chair pulled off the preppy look in colorful upholstery patterns and painted furnishings.

 

 

This classic ikat appeared in the Hickory Chair showroom on this sofa, on side chairs and throw pillows. Red, yellow, and navy. Throw in a little turquoise for good measure. Bam! Preppy.

 

 

 

The Sara Side Table by Alexa Hampton for Hickory Chair (right) and the Fretwork Side Chair, part of the James River Collection for Hickory Chair (below), can be finished in Benjamin Moore paint. The floor models were finished in Benjamin Moore HC-136, Waterbury Green.

                                       

Also classic preppy was this pink bedroom suite created by Suzanne Kasler for Hickory Chair in Antique Ivory. My favorite piece is the quatrefoil-back Alexandra Chair in the foreground.

             

Across other showrooms, upholstery stayed true to classic preppy forms. C.R. Laine combined a yellow leather chesterfield sofa with chinoiserie pillows to create an updated preppy look.

             

Thibaut, a long-standing company known for their fabrics and wallcoverings, introduced their Fine Furniture line at this Market. The Brighton Sofa (below) with its gently arched back, winged arms and bamboo-style legs was a delight in pink Spring Velvet. Notice how it's paired with a green ottoman.

             

This Brentwood Chair, much like a slipper chair, with buttoned back and bamboo-style base and legs, had an old-fashioned silhouette and the feel of a family heirloom. How much more preppy can you get?

                                  

Oly Studio introduced this new green velvet called "Lily Pad" at Market. Maybe it's the combo with the pink throw pillow that makes me think preppy.

                             

And talk about pink and green! How about these headboards introduced by Company C with the accompanying linens?

                        

Light fixtures and accessories did prep too, just as a rep tie would finish off a navy blazer and khakis. Robert Abbey featured this Penelope Pendant with a drum shade in orange, fuchsia, black, navy or taupe with a silver mylar lining. Polished nickel and a lead crystal finial complete the look.

                         

For the die-hards, Oomph, a favorite at High Point, featured their Charleston mirror (below left), a take-off on a classic Chippendale style, in 16 colors (by the way, that's Stacey Bewkes of Quintessence reflected in the mirror). Is plaid in your heritage? Maybe you'd like these Tartan stools by Tozai Home (below right).

  

Finally, what's preppy without some ancestral portraits or busts. These, by Oly, may just fit the bill.

                

Thursday
Apr262012

High Point Market Spring 2012 - Part 1: Heavy Metal

As a first-time visitor to Market Week at the High Point Furniture Market in North Carolina, I was overwhelmed. It reminded me of when my father would take me, when I was a teenager, to work with him at menswear shows in New York City. Except that the menswear shows occupied a hotel. The furniture market occupies High Point.

Props to the High Point Market Authority. Every logistical aspect of being at Market is taken care of. And I don't think this is just Southern hospitality. Transportation is free and can get you anywhere while at Market. Event planners have a daunting job, and I now marvel at their forethinking and ability to handle the minutest of details.

There are so many angles to report about High Point. Ask two different bloggers and I'll bet they'll have two different takes on the trends spotted at Market. To make it easy, I'll categorize mine, starting with Heavy Metal.

Metallics continue to be important in interior design. After all, as reflective surfaces, they add shimmer and light to interiors. At this Market, metallics showed up on big ticket items, like the metal clad Oly Studio Amelia armoire. Below left is the Parker Armoire (new at Market also) in painted hardwoods. On the right is the Amelia armoire encased in stainless steel. The metal is definitely an industrial look reminiscent of aviation. I like the look and see it in an urban setting or loft, or to introduce contrast in a wood-laden mountain or country retreat.

     

In tables, metal appeared in the base of this new introduction by Oly on the left topped by a cast resin round top. On the right is Arteriors new Zena Oval mirrored cocktail table with a base of distressed gold leaf. I love the clear glass top with the mirrored base: the way the mirror reflects the tablescape above adds depth and magnifies the sparkle of the applied gold leaf. Definitely jewelry for the home.

    

Metal continues to be a strong material in lighting. Jamie Young introduced cast metal table lamps in three colorways.

                          

Global Views took their Twig Pendant, introduced last fall in brass, and reinterpreted it in polished nickel for spring. They also introduced the companion wall sconce.

    

In accessories, metal adorned everything from vases to pillows. Barbara Barry for Studio A, the sister company of Global Views, introduced porcelain vases with painted electroplated metallic glazes in gold and pewter.

                    

Nailheads, one of my favorite ways of adding a little shine to upholstery, showed up at this Market on pillows by Jamie Young.

                              

 Next up in the series: Preppy Style. Stay tuned.