• Madly truly talented
  • 25Sep

    4 Comments

    Yes…. if I’m really honest I start feeling slightly depressed when I’m in a home with no color or imagination. I start feeling restrained and bored, and it makes me fidgety and stressed. While somehow in really expressive interiors,  I get a sense of calm.

    I’m probably the last one to tune in to Martyn Lawrence Bullard’s genius work. Now that I just added his fabric in my foyer, I want to share his amazing interiors, filled with TONS of fantasy,pattern and color.  No wonder amazing, famous artists with excessive creativity clamor for him to do their homes.

    Insanely cool.

    Happy green wall.

    Welcoming hotel in Palm Springs.

    Makes your mind travel.

    What a dream teen room!

    Dreamy color combo.

    Fun.

    This might be my favorite of all. A theatrical seating out in the sun.

    Hello foyer chair fabric! Looks great as a curtain.

    Zebra outdoor seating.

    Awesome black and white outdoors.

    Yep, I would feel very calm in his spaces!

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  • 10Mar

    2 Comments

    I came upon some wallpapers a few months ago, and fell madly in love. The designs were vibrant, wild, colorful and insanely cool.  It made me track down the designer, and to my delight I discovered an Australian woman way ahead of her time, Florence Broadhurst.

    It turns out her life was almost more intriguing then her designs….She was the queen of reinvention, and actually didn’t start designing the famous wallpapers until the age of 60!  She was a dancer, an actress, and owned a million different businesses.  Then when her husband left her for a much younger woman, she started designing wallpapers.  She went under false names, wore giant fake eye lashes, tight gold lame outfits, and was a cougar 50 years before it was hip.  And to top it all off, she was brutally murdered in October 1977, at the age of 78, perhaps by some one who worked for her, but the Australian police has yet to solve her murder.

    Intrigued yet?

    Perhaps you’ve already heard of her.

    Clearly I’m not the only one who finds her life fascinating.

    There’s already a book on her. You can find it here.

    And a movie about her, you can find it here. I’m definitely going to try to pick that up.

    And take a look at her cool wallpapers and fabrics.

    Apparently she painted all her wallpapers by hand first.

    Wouldn’t you love an office desk in front of that wall paper?

    Here are a bunch of her fabrics and wallpapers used in a room.

    You can check out her collection, which has been restarted by Weego Home in Australia.

    Kate Spade apparently was inspired by her, and created a collection with some of her prints.

    I can’t wait to use some of her stuff in my upcoming projects.

    Hope you’re having a nice Easter weekend!

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  • 17Feb

    3 Comments

    Recovering from record snowfall in DC, with school and work canceled and being confined to my house for ten days, I’ve decided to rename my house and life to “The Little house on the Prairie”.  Shoveling and digging firewood from underneath snow piles is now a daily routine…Living only ten minutes from the nations capital it’s stunning how isolated and left to the elements you are where I live after several snow storms.  You can’t drive on the icy steep incline, cab’s wont come here, and when you do try to drive, you do it at your own risk, under broken trees hanging on suspicious power lines.

    Sitting in my new unflattering wardrobe staple, fleece sweat pants, fearing another snowfall  might be detrimental to my health, one of my coffee table book’s headline grabbed me “IN THE PINK-Dorothy Draper  America’s most fabulous decorator”. Finally having time on my hands, I picked it up and actually read it (the pictures I’ve already studied endlessly).

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    I was shocked how inspired I felt about this woman. For you who might think I’m talking about Don Draper’s wife on Mad Men I’m not—Dorothy Draper is possibly Americas most wellknown decorator, or as the book says, the most fabulous.

    Dorothy_Draper

    In the 1930′s in Manhattan, when most women weren’t working she designed friend’s homes, started a design firm, then designed several building lobbies (The Carlyle, Hampshire House),  large hotels (Greenbrier, Fairmont), furniture, fabrics, hospitals even airlines.

    While World War II was being fought she set out on a crusade to help middle class Americans live more graciously, stylishly and happily. She developed a correspondence course called “Learn to Live” also billed “finishing course in the privacy of your own home”. She promised to change your “dull, weary life into a miracle of charm, glamor and excitement”. She was speaking right to me!  Seems I should take the course!!

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    Greenbrier Resort

    There was nothing timid about her designs. She was known for her bold use of colors and patterns, her work was the opposite of minimalism.   Here is what she said  €œThe drab age is over€¦  Until very recently people were literally scared out of their wits by color. Perhaps this was a hangover from our Puritan ancestors.  But whatever the reason, browns, grays, and neutrals were the only shades considered safe.  Now we know that lovely, clear colors have a vital effect on our mental happiness€¦ Modern doctors and psychiatrists are convinced of this!€

    Therefore she designed hospital interiors with bold, cheerful colors to make the patients feel good instead of depressed.

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    She became a household name after writing her first book “Decorating is fun”.

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    The lobby in The Hampshire House with one of her often used large plaster designs.

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    The Greenbrier Resort

    Dorothy’s husband asked for a divorce when she was forty.  Wounded by her husband’s rejection she spent several years in therapy and in church.  Her new found point of view gave her artistic freedom, she no longer wanted earth tones, or washed-out colors. She now imagined the world in vivid, clear strong hues. The color blue was the optimistic color of a cloudless sky.

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    The famous and often copied Dorothy Draper chest. I need one.

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    Image of Dorothy Draper’s own living room with green striped walls (via Peak of chic ).

    “Your home is the backdrop of your life, whether it is a palace or a one-room apartment, it should honestly be your own- an expression of your personality.  So many people stick timidly to often uninspired conventional ideas, or follow some expert€™s methods slavishly.  Either way they are more or less living in someone else€™s house.€

    -Dorothy Draper. 1939

    Yes, you need to Live Like You. Or, as Carleton Varney, who runs her company, says in true Dorothy Draper fashion  “Live Vividly”!

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