• Musings
  • 6Dec

    4 Comments

    Last night I started thinking about who really inspires my lifestyle and design choices.  I realized that it wasn’t interior designers, or people who make things look pretty. Instead it was people, real and fictional, whose outlook inspired me perhaps more than their amazing style.  The essence of who they are and how they lived, inspire my designs choices daily.

    Here are my top style “muses”.

    PIPPI LONGSTOCKING

    To this day this amazingly written character might have had more influence on my design and lifestyle more than anyone else.  I grew up watching the 70′s TV series in Sweden and like most Swedish women she was my idol.  Not only was she the most fun character you’ve ever met. You wanted to be like her. A fearless girl, who would do what she wanted when she wanted to, filled with fun crazy ideas, and live in a big colorful house with a horse, and of course the adorable monkey!

    I think perhaps she is the best role model any young girl today could have. And I have to admit I still want a monkey!

    Pippi never followed any boring rules, and her home was used for fun.  She slept with her feet on her bed pillow, and used her home in very unusual ways.  The kid’s next door who grew up in a very strict and plain household had their lives changed forever by meeting her.  …. If you haven’t seen it, go rent the Swedish Pippi TV series, it’s a gem. Style wise is 60′s-70′s styles mixed with turn of the century designs.

    I will be eternally grateful to Astrid Lindgren (with Pippi) who authored this character that changed the life for so many women and still continues to do so. I wrote her a letter when I was 8 in school, and she actually wrote me back. Nice lady!

    CHANEL

    My other muse is Chanel.  For  a big part of my life I worked as a fashion model in Paris and New York. All those years and jobs in Paris with the incredibly stylish French women will influence me forever. And none more than Chanel’s sense of style. Her strict black and white clothing is classic. Things go in and out of fashion but black and white never do.

    I love color, but nothing is as chic as black and white.

    If you haven’t seen the movie Chanel & Igor – go see it for the interiors in her country estate alone! Amazing black graphics outline every inch of that home. Insanely cool.

    Besides her style, she was also a woman who worked and wanted a big career when women where just supposed to get married and do nothing.

    Crush!

    INGEMAR BERGMAN

    Okay this is my ultimate obsession.

    He is a genius. The Swedish director Ingemar Bergman and his amazingly talented cinematographer Sven Nykvist created more beauty on screen than anyone.  He inspires me daily. All his movies where like pieces of emotional art set against the backdrop of the barren Swedish landscape.

    I have watched “Scenes from a Marriage” a million times, and will probably watch it a million times more.

    Here is Liv Ullman from “Persona”.

    TONY DUQUETTE

    Tony Duqette would be my design icon.  He truly is the master of magical interiors.

    Really what’s a space that doesn’t move your senses?

    The most important part of design is that it changes people’s lives and it alters how they feel.

    Tony Duquette was a master of fearless creativity and also an avid  “recycler” way ahead of his time!

    Can’t think of a place I would rather have visited than his mountain top castle.

    If at any point I get creatively stuck, all I would have to do is ask myself “What would Pippi do? And surely I would have an answer.

    Now, who are your style muses?

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  • 17Nov

    2 Comments

    Here are a few things that made me smile this week…

    1. The persistent furry help in the office all day.

    2. Toby Fairley inspiring office space for a lucky client!

    3. Reneliza my great assistant getting notes from Bellybutton.

    4. Caitlin Wilson’s happy colorful office with her beautiful fabrics

    5. We can finally ship to all the lovely people around the world who e-mail us.



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  • 31Oct

    6 Comments

    I hope all of you on the east coast survived the storm without too much damage. Perhaps some of you have been spending the last few days like we have?

    Our power went out Monday afternoon and it just came back this evening. No light, no heat, no internet, and no phones for a few days.  The first few hours of a power outage are pretty cozy and magical. All your candles are on, fires are lit, everyone gathers around the living room fireplace since it’s the only warm and light room. Suddenly people are present, family members don’t have their faces buried in their laptops, or staring at the news, instead they are conversing. (Luke was thrilled “we can grill hot dogs in the fireplace!”). You settle down and just enjoy the complete silence you so seldom hear, and let the peacefulness engulf you.

    It makes me think of how people lived their lives before electricity…

    …a time when house guests stayed for weeks, because it took so long to get there. A time when no conversation was interrupted by a cell phone call.  E-mails didn’t come in at a rapid rate awaiting your response, instead a messenger came on a horse, and you had all the time in the world to ponder your thoughts and feelings. It makes me think how useful all the Swedish candle sconces are in Gustav III’s castle with mirrored backs so you double the effect of the candle light.  It makes me chuckle at my favorite line in a Jefferson biography when he wrote in a letter to his mistress in London saying “why don’t you come to Paris? It’s only 4 days away”.

    We surely live in a very fast world today.

    However when you wake up cold the next morning with no running water, you can’t get a hot cup of coffee, and your cell phone is dead it suddenly doesn’t feel so romantic anymore.

    Instead all I thought of was how dirty people must have been back then, and just how badly I want a hot shower.

    After an additional two days trying to help with homework by candlelight, having to drive to a friend’s house to sleep…

    ….I’M SO OVER IT!

    So tonight I’m thoroughly enjoying our modern creature comforts, a long hot shower, warm air blasting, lights are on. As I’m sitting in front of my computer I realize just how much these comforts really affect our home designs. What powerful impact every invention has on how we live.

    Sometimes I wonder what time period was the best?

    What do you think?

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  • 23May

    6 Comments

    Honestly I didn’t spend much time thinking about that, until one morning last weekend Luke was sitting in my bed on my Greek Key Duvet and said “why do you have Pandora, the God of the dead’s pattern on all of your designs? I was a bit disturbed. Luke is studying ancient Greece, and most of all my private label products have some form of Greek Key.

    So I dove in to reading about the history of Greek Key, and thankfully it turns out Luke was not exactly correct.

    The Greek Key/meander motif took its name from the river Meander in ancient Greece (present day Turkey). The Meander was characterized by a very convoluted path.  

    It became the most important symbol in Ancient Greece, symbolizing infinity or the eternal flow of things. Many temples and objects were decorated with this motif.

    Meander symbolizes as well the bonds of friendship, of love and devotion and that’s the reason it’s often given as marriage gift. It can symbolize as well the four cardinal points, the 4 seasons, waves – especially in the round version of it, or snakes, among others.

    Velvet Regency pillows (from bottom bark,dusty pink, chartreuse,charcoal)

    Reading this I felt much better about all my use of Greek Key.

    Our new color Marmalade Regency velvet.

    Would have hated it to be the God of the dead’s sign…

    Fancy Greek Key -pink and navy

    Speaking about Greek Key…

    A bunch of my bedding and pillows are in a three day event on Joss & Main currently.

    Check it out, you can grab them at sale prices until tomorrow. Trilled to be sharing space with Trina Turk’s beautiful designs.


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