Tuesday, August 31, 2010

JWD

You may or may not remember a post I did a while back on hunky carpenters. It is ok if you don't, here is the link. Well one of those carpenters sent me a sweet email thanking me for mentioning him on my blog. I was wildly embarrassed since I was basically giving him a verbal whistle! Sooo, I decided I needed to give him a more legit shout out this go around.

Jared Walker Dostie is not just a TV host, he is a legit, licensed carpenter who has his own business in California. He has teamed up with Tom Filicia on the show Tacky House airing Wednesdays at 11:00 on the Style Network. He also designs a line of custom furniture. Want to learn more about him, go visit his website. Need a little more encouragement? Let me show you his photo again...


Dang, there I go again with the hootin'! Sorry Jared!
Let's get back to business...here is some of his custom made furniture.


REMINDER ABOUT MY CONTEST...DEADLINE IS THIS FRIDAY!

Monday, August 30, 2010

Re-Decorating Contest

In today's economy, so much emphasis is being placed on decorating on a budget. Understandable, right? I feel that you can make BIG impact with small changes. Namely, by re-Decorating a space. You can give your home a fresh new look instantly by editing, moving some things around and adding a few new pieces.

Soooo, I am holding a lil' contest folks! If you have an area of your home that you want to re-Decorate (mantle, foyer table, bookcase, etc.), email me a picture of your space and give me a few thoughts on what you would like to achieve. I will pick one space to give free design advice on and this space will be featured on my blog next week.

Here is an example I have shown before of Rita Konig's living room. See, what I mean? Quick fix! (Well, apart from the re-upholstery!)


The deadline is this Friday, September 3rd so hurry up!

Beautiful Bedrooms 2 – The Comfort Zone


We all need a good nights sleep to be able to function properly the following day. Today's bedroom are seeing the removal of high-tech gadgets and moving back to bedroom as being a place for relaxation and sleep rather than being overloaded with plasma TVs, DVD players and built in sound systems.

Black out curtains or blinds can be your saving grace when it comes to sleeping at night. Outdoor street lights or going to bed early in the summer months can make it difficult to rest. You don't have to sacrifice style when using black out curtains or blinds as they come in a wide range of colours and patterns as you would find with normal window treatments. You may also consider layering your window treatments and combining wooden Venetian blinds with curtains for a more luxurious and finished look.


More and more contemporary bedrooms are seen with floor to ceiling wardrobes on one wall as opposed to lots of separate drawers, wardrobes and shelving. With everything tidily and conveniently in one space, there is more room to manoeuvre around and less clutter to have in sight. Built in bed storage has also proved to be a clever system to keeping your belongings neat and out of the way – the 'no clutter rule' applies if you want a relaxed mind which is conducive to sleep.

Image: Small Space Style

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Inspiration and my Benjamin Moore Tiffany Blue Office



Colour me Happy Blog 666
Turquoise office photos by Maria Killam
Sometimes I get direct inspiration for a project from reading design magazines, blogs or even movie sets. Everyone knows the Something’s Gotta Give set that is the most copied white kitchen! For my home office, inspiration came from Meryl Streep’s office in the Devil Wears Prada. I love all the haphazardly hung frames and that they don't match. What unifies this look are the white mats.
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My Lido office chairs finally arrived, I ordered them directly from Costco for $250 thanks to a tip from a reader. I’ve linked to them but suddenly I can’t find them on their site – maybe they are sold out?
image Here’s the empty room
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Here it is being painted, you can really see the pinky beige.
Colour me Happy Blog 674The colour is 626 Caribbean Breeze by Benjamin Moore. I had the yellow, turquoise and white linen from a display at the Spring Home Show so I sent them to my workroom to get sewn into these panels. I love the colour in this room, I get happy just walking into my office in the morning. The empty desk is a good space for sourcing fabrics for clients from my wall of books (below) and an assistant which I will need very soon.
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Here is the room with only the drapes and furniture installed (below):
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The desks are Jonas from IKEA. I wanted the one with the built in drawers but the white was discontinued so I had to get this style so I didn’t install the pull-out which obviously would get in the way of drawers. I had the black drawers already so I just re-used them. I chose this desk to hide the cords. Most of the desks at IKEA are so open you see everything. The shelving is Lack. I only had panels made for one side (as you can see) because there is very little wall left on the right and the drapery covers up the wall on the left. Since the bookshelves come almost to the window I decided it was okay to leave it asymmetrical.
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Colour me Happy Blog 680 Love my little organizer. The happy lamp is from Homesense.
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And my faux flowers, I just love them.
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Love this watercolor, a giveaway I won at Bright Bold & Beautiful by Laura Trevey, she is so talented!
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This was one of the first living rooms I decorated for a client many years ago. When I first started designing I thought the coolest thing about designer fabrics was the pattern mixing part of it. I have changed my opinion since then to include less pattern and more colour blocking and drama.
Colour me Happy Blog 662 A client sent me this card a few years ago. It’s a bit hard to see but she crossed off th in Martha and inserted i instead for my name. I loved it so much I framed it.
Colour me Happy Blog 687This photo of orange daises I received from Victoria and Kelly over at Design Ties! It looks terrific sitting on top of the bookshelves!
Colour me Happy Blog 690My water station.
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This little oil painting I bought in Paris when I was there a few years ago. My sister found me this tape dispenser.
Colour me Happy Blog 694My fan decks (in the closet behind me) from paint companies all over the Country for my on-line consultations and I finally have a Dulux deck for international if you are in Australia or London (for example) and need a consultation. I’m doing an average of about 5 per week and they work really well, email me for more information. Remember I can also decorate your house from top to bottom if you are local, in addition to colour :).
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My invisible assistant :)

I just found a blog party at Centsational Girl that my office coincidentally fits right in. Check it out here, so many fun offices to see.
If you would like your home to fill you with happiness every time you walk in, contact me for on-line or in-person decorating and colour.
Related posts:
How to Create an Ethereal Colour Scheme
Sneak Peek of my Entry
Painting is so Emotional
New to this Blog? Click here ; Subscribe to my free Monthly Newsletter; Become a True Colour Expert

Saturday, August 28, 2010

The Butler's Pantry – A Hidden Treasure In Interior Design

I’m often asked, as an interior designer, “What is on your clients’ luxury wish list?”  Some may presume their desires would be of major proportion.  In actuality, more of the conversations have been steering towards making the best use of an existing area, adding better function, while, of course, making it all beautiful.  I refer to many of these areas as “hidden treasures”.  They aren’t always hidden from view, but the optional uses could have been overlooked in the original house design plan.  Sometimes, if we can jump into the design process, and reallocate some square footage, we can carve out specialty niches for daily activities.

A wonderful example can be the Butler’s Pantry.  This is typically a room, found off of the kitchen – or - as in European homes, off from the wine cellar.  It’s usually used for storage, preparing food for service, and a various sundry of kitchen-related activities.  In some European households, the butler actually slept in this area in order to protect the silver pieces which might have been stored under lock and key.  In the late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries it was not uncommon to find middle class homes, with a Butler’s Pantry included in a house plan . . . sans the butler!

Copy of Sink Wall

In one of my client’s original blueprints, this space was planned for a small desk area and a pantry closet access.  I had chatted with the client to be sure she had enough workspace, and after determining it would be a tight squeeze, we moved her desk space and created this lovely layout of cabinetry. Asking the right questions, opens up options. We blew through the wall, at the end of the hall, for better egress to the dining room, added a china pantry, (not seen in this photo), and moved the door for the storage closet.  The architect did a beautiful job in placing the arched top window between the curves of the groin vaulted ceiling.  I worked with the stone counter installers to create a pleasant profile for butting up to the hammered copper farmhouse sink, as well as to provide for shaped side returns to the upper cabinets.  The delight is always in the details!

Copy of Cabinets

One of the other challenges was to work with a special configuration, due to the back of a spiral staircase coming into the area.  My clients wanted to have some added storage capacity.  The plan was to create a pocket in the wall for a small freezer.  In the end, there wasn’t quite enough space to use this option, so we changed the dishwasher to an ice maker, and let the dishwasher in the kitchen handle the workload. (A bit quieter for the adjacent dining room, too.)  We skirted panels over the deepest part of the curve, so it looks like a continuous wall of cabinets.  There is ample storage for larger serving pieces, cookie sheets, and all things related to entertainment.  My clients do love to throw a good party!

Butlery

Here is a bird’s eye view of the footprint.  Investing in the whole team concept - architect, contractor, interior designer, and great service/product providers, allows for the best outcome.  Another set of eyes, coupled with the combined years of experience, lessen the likelihood for errors. 

The Finishing Touches:

1-1612-6-56-02 But & China  IMG_2347

Lighting:  Progressive ~ Granite:  Golden Tulip

 Copy of Copy of Tighe Cab_ Hrdwre Pics - Pg 2

Tighe - Foyer, DR, LR

The flooring is maahvelous marble!

fir_7124_th_1  fir_7123_th_1

Vietri “First Stones” not only added a bit of Tuscan color, they are also supposed to represent good luck, blessings, and prosperity for a new home.  We placed a set of two, on each side of the cabinet walls, so my client should be in held good stead!

Other Options:

If you have a small alcove, hallway, closet, or even kitchen corner, which may not be finding it’s best use, a little space design and ingenuity can go a long way!  

HM9

Small quarters?  A brilliant layout squeezes in storage.  (Courtesy: Violet Designs)

Custom Cupboard Design

In another client’s kitchen area, I removed an old desk and side cabinet to create a separate butler’s area.  It opened up the space, gave her smarter storage, and it’s absolutely beautiful!  I drafted the above design for her.

Stout - Kitchen Desk Area IMG_1785 Stout - Cupboard

Before and in progress photos.

Stout - Cup. 2

This photo shows it almost completed.  I promise to post an update so be sure to stay-tuned!  I have the best wood craftsman, Phil Stapp!  (He hand-carved the side brackets on each end of the bead board back.)  Phil came back and removed the kitchen/family room door and we arched the opening to soften the edges.  It looks fantastic!  My decorative artist finished the cabinet and redid the original wall design.  New cushions and a rug are in the works. 

In my many years of experience, in interior design, I’ve never found it to be a more exciting time to help clients love the home they’re in!  I delight in finding hidden treasures of space and purpose.  You never know what jewel might be sparkling within!

What area would you change or add, in your own home?

Copy (3) of Signature

Colour Cues in BC Home Magazine

As promised, here is the actually story on my project featured this month in BC Home by Tiffany Sloan. If you missed the ‘before’ pictures from my last post, click here to see them.

image Interior Design By Maria Killam, Photography by Anna Beaudry

“We’ve always said we wanted our house to look impressive when people walk in,” says Laura Wong. “We wanted the ‘wow’ factor.”

Laura, her husband Edmund and their two kids moved into a brand-new house in White Rock last fall, and although they knew they wanted it to make a statement, they weren’t exactly sure how. A survey of local interior designers brought them to Maria Killam, a colour designer whose brightly hued online portfolio jived with their own design sensibilities.

“Right away Maria knew what she wanted to do,” says Laura. “We’d just moved into our house and it was pretty much empty, but she walked in and had this vision of what she could get our house to look like.”

Yet when Killam began introducing swatches and paint samples, Laura admits she was apprehensive. Edmund, too, raised a skeptical eyebrow – particularly the day he was greeted by bold green walls in the library. “I was intimidated, uncomfortable about these – what for me were – strong colours. I think most homeowners go for the comfort of beiges and other ‘easy stuff,’” says Laura. “You do it a little on faith – you trust that she’s the expert and knows what to do.”

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In the end, Laura says she wouldn’t change it for the world. Although the colours are bolder than what she would have felt comfortable picking out on her own, they aren’t at all overbearing in context, she says. “When you walk in, there’s flow. Everything goes together. It doesn’t mean everything is matchy-matchy, but it’s just natural as you walk from room to room.”

“When you’re creating flow – and certainly in the main areas of the home – it’s really important to repeat the colour,” explains Killam. “One way is to have it on the floor in one room, on the furniture in another room, and then have it as the wall colour in another. It’s a unifying element that way.”

For the Wongs’ home, Killam began with the fresh green of the dining room rug – a bargain find at HomeSense that inspired the entire colour scheme – and repeated it in the living room furniture, on the library walls, and in accessory pieces throughout the main floor. The four pullout ottomans of the living room coffee table – a piece Killam had custom designed for the family of four – are a bold complementary orange that draw the eye and make the coffee table the focal point of the room. Similarly bold shades of orange in the drapery and throw cushions round out the effect.

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“Just like I used to think sophisticated dressing was about wearing beige, black, white and brown, what I learned about wearing colour – and I think it works the same for interiors – is if I have a fabulous orange sweater, having the matching orange shoes is what really pulls the outfit together,” says Killam. “And it works for the same for your house.”

Orange also makes a more muted appearance on the library chairs and on the walls of the vaulted-ceiling entry and living room: “Laura didn’t want green everywhere, nor a really strong orange in such a large space, so we chose a butterscotch colour that would be a nice warm, neutral backdrop,” says Killam.

Clearly, Killam doesn’t shy away from using bright, bold colours – and surprisingly, less isn’t necessarily more. Using a bold colour once will make it stand out, but repeating that colour can make it look like it belongs. She references the commonly touted “rule of three,” pointing out that although the dining room seems bursting with colour, the colour palette is limited to green, orange and sunshine yellow (not including neutrals), all repeated at least twice.

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“You have to repeat the colour, and you want to use colour in gradations of scale,” she explains. “When you’ve got an accent colour like orange, you want to have a small orange, a big orange, and an even bigger orange if possible.” Taking the living room as an example, the throw pillows and decorative papered books on the bookshelf are the “small orange,” the ottoman coffee table serves as the “medium orange,” and the butterscotch-orange undertone of the wall colour works as the “bigger orange.”

The same technique is applied in the library – orange echoes from the framed artwork on the walls to the bold fabric of the curtains to the elegant upholstery of the chairs. And although this room’s green walls once sparked misgivings in Edmund, he quickly fell in love with the finished product, says Laura. In fact, the once-awkward unclosed space off the entry went from being “the one room we didn’t know what to do with” to the one that receives some of the most compliments from family and friends.

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SOURCES:

Bookcases in living room and library – custom made by Quality Cabinet Manufacturing, Vancouver, Green sofas, dark green chair and wing chairs – Van Gogh Designs. Round coffee table – Bowring, Square coffee table – custom made at Omega Furniture in North Vancouver, Two end tables in living room – Paramount, Dining table and chairs – Pier 1, Bird figurines on coffee table – client, Heron – Chintz & Co., Decorative moss balls – Chintz & Co., Orange shade lamps and yellow vases –˙HomeSense, Glass food display dishes – little: Pottery Barn, big: HomeSense, Dish and table holding pears – table: Paramount, dish: HomeSense, Paint colours from Benjamin Moore: Library: 2145-30 Brookside Moss; Living room: CC-304 Sisal; Dining room: HC-74 Valley Forge Brown

If you would like your home to fill you with happiness every time you walk in, contact me for on-line or in-person decorating and colour.

Related posts:

BC Home Article; Before & After

Style at Home mention

BC Home Interview with Colour Expert Maria Killam

New to this Blog? Click here ; Subscribe to my free Monthly Newsletter; Become a True Colour Expert

Beautiful Bright Bedrooms


If we can be honest for a moment, bright colours in the bedroom can't possibly prevent us from having a good night's sleep, if we are happy and comfortable with our choices. This is why it is important to use the colours that you have a natural attraction to - whether it be hot pink or acid yellow. If you are not convinced, stick with neutral walls to begin with and then bring in a cool colour such as blue, green or lavender to window treatments and duvet covers bedding. The third colour will be used as an accent - bright and contrasting to your other colour.

A good example would be a soft cornflower blue that offers a tranquil atmosphere, then given a fun twist by splashing bold orange to pillow covers and lampshades. In the same way, a zesty yellow will pick up lavender and a shot of red can give green a fresh look. It is all about little surprises!


Hot pink is a winning colour in feminine bedrooms. For a crisp and contemporary look, choose a hot pink floor rug under the bed and a unique piece of pink art on the back wall. You could also get a similar look by choosing a headboard in hot pink - try one with a floral pattern and leave the rest of your bedding in pure white or a subtle cream.

Image: A Life's Design

Friday, August 27, 2010

Hammocks

I am exhausted and I want to take a long nap in one of these...


And preferably in a location like this...


If you see me, please don't disturb me.


Since I live in the Lowcountry, I would feel remiss if I talked about hammocks without mentioning the Pawley's Island Hammock and sharing a little bit o' history. Christopher Columbus gets credit for discovering the hammock as he brought back boat loads full of them from the New World. But those hammocks were originally made of canvas and were rough and very hot! Many, many years later and many, many sleepless nights later, Captain Josh (Joshua John Ward) conceived the rope hammock which allowed for better air circulation. There was still the problem of the large knots so he continued at the design eventually coming up with the lattice style webbing as well as the spreader bar that kept the knots away from the body which allowed for a both a wider laying surface and much more comfortable for sleeping! The Original Hammock Shop, started in 1935 by Cap'n Josh's immediate family is still going strong today along the main road through Pawley's Island, South Carolina! Holla!

Happy Weekend!

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