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Showing posts with label Miles Redd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miles Redd. Show all posts

decorating on the dark side

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 design by David Hicks


there are rooms- and then there are dark rooms- not of the photographer's sort- but the living, dining, bedroom kind.
Dark colors do work- a coffee, a plum, a black, Yes, black has its place. No matter the naysayers. I wrote in a post about some of the rooms Lady Diana Cooper decorated- her first as a young girl was black.


Portrait of a young Diana by James Jebusa Shannon




The first room she decorated on her own was her bedroom at the family's ancestral Belvoir Castle. She must have been very much as she( at left) is drawn in this National Portrait Gallery work by her mother Violet-(on the right, a self portrait)  Duchess of Ruthland - an accomplished artist.




Here- she describes the room:   

He gave me a narrow four-poster bed. for my now room at Belvoir, which was to be painted black. The bed was upholstered in red damask. An alcove was scooped out of the wall for my jug and basin and painted by me with stylised sea waves...The black walls were hung with swags of everlasting flowers a la Crivelli. The table and chair were Savonarola-esque and the window, granite fireplace and coalbox solid Victorian. There were four coloured reproductions of Madonnas in gold Italian frames and the candlesticks from Florence, regilded... I thought it was beyond compare, but greatly feared criticism. My mother never damped our taste-she who had so influenced it.


My money collected for months, went on church candlesticks (cheap because the gilt had come off, which I could later home-gild-myself with gesso, size, gold leaf and a burnisher), tassels and braids, anything to make my new room at Belvoir more like Carpacccio's idea of St Ursula's. 

Carpaccio's The Dream of Saint Ursula, 1495




Carlo Crivell's Renaissance Saints with intricate fabric details







So- now you have adjusted  to darkly painted rooms, and read with the details the 14 year old Diana lavished on her first interior decoration- She referenced Art, shopped well & took on diy.


a Sister Parish- deep Prussian Blue Living Room








an incredible bedroom at Blake's Hotel in London
Created by Anouska Hempel



I wonder if Anouska Hempel was inspired by Crivelli as well?

                                                        

Now-what do you do when you find your own young ones wanting to decorate on the dark side? My experiences with most children & teenagers in decorating rooms has been exceptional. Two clients called me in specifically to work with their children directly- No input from the parent- Perfect projects resulted. In most cases a parent works through the details of a room with me for smaller children and then later imput comes from the parent and teen. One teen Lady  wanted to channel an Anne Boleyn room. I was willing- I was even into it. Unfortunately, she had Anne's temperament too-and we all know how Anne's story ended-same story with the room.

A recent trip to a plumbing & fixture showroom with a client and her  Lady 5 year old-proves the point- Children can be taste makers at an early age. So just know. Lady She asked to show me the sink and fixtures she favored -
I follow her to the most perfect in the showroom. Inside a special display- in black I might add - I found Lady 5 standing at a  Czech and Speake vanity with fixtures. I had to agree. We've also discussed tubs, tile, paint colors and fashion. She has good taste &  at some point her Mother will cut her loose to decorate her own room I have no doubt.

What happens when IT happens?
think of Purple? as PLUM.
Brown? as COFFEE.
Black? as MIDNIGHT.

Sit them down your Aesthete with ART- give them research to do before they paint or decorate.
Have them ask why?
How will  their DREAM ROOM look ? Have them find their inspiration.
Not a literal translation. No copying- it's not creative or cost effective-
But It will Inspire & that's what you want to do- Remember Diana's words:
My mother never damped our taste-she who had so influenced it.



more of Carpaccio's work here
more of Crivelli's work here
Mile's Redd here
David Hicks here

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NEW RULES, Mrs Blandings Enduring Style Series- gets me thinking...



It is ever more inspiring to give readers- A Room to Aspire To- Better Not having the LOOK of the Moment-only to find that LOOK is no longer. Give readers a room that sends them to an antique store in search of treasures that will move with them from their first home to last.


Simon Upton photograph WI Cover of Carolina Irving's home

A room that will inspire for years- the aesthetic of Pauline de Rothschild is the bar.

a Pauline de Rothschild Sanctuary-Paris, photographed by Horst

My mother scrapbooked rooms our family home for years; A large den with paneled walls, dark wood floors, classic oriental carpet, grand oversize wing chairs upholstered in a classic blue woven- slightly sampler style fabric, and a wide beamed 10' red ceiling. By the time my parents achieved this room the tear sheet was dog eared, a little tattered and etched into all of our minds. My father painted the entire house-that ceiling required according to my father 10 coats of paint to achieve the perfect effect. Our floor finisher moved before the job was complete and a new crew was brought in; our family of five- I was 9 years old. The floors turned out just like the ceiling- It was perfect. The room continued to evolve over the years.



de Rothschild's London flat


The recent buzz of  bloggers and their readers has been the inspired posts of MRS. BLANDINGS. Her Enduring Style Series got me to thinking-



de Rothschild- London, photographed by Derry Moore



Here are some stellar examples of my NEW RULES via MRS BLANDINGS Enduring Style Series:

de Rothschild's Mouton Bedroon

 

An Aesthete's Lament selected ROSE TARLOW: She is truly- a master of design.

Rose Tarlow



"There are those who spend lifetimes in houses that have nothing to do with who they really are. They may be perfectly designed, yet if they fail to reflect the personalities of the people who live in them, the very essence of intimacy is missing and this absence is disturbingly visible."
-Rose Tarlow


The All Knowing HOUSE OF BEAUTY AND CULTURE said "if one had to choose a legendary decorator I would choose Miles Redd-Given the right clients, he will be his generation's equivalent of Parish Hadley. Bloggers-Style Court and the Peak Of Chic dubbed Miles Redd too as the one to watch.

Miles Redd



I love this room!
photographs Simon Upton, ED 2009


Miles Redd said to Mrs. B on the subject of- Enduring Spaces "Pretty much everything the de la Rentas touch is masterful in its room arrangement, color palette and collection of objects and furniture."

the De la Rentas
image from Vogue


The prevailing pick from most of MRS BLANDINGS' Enduring Style- was Miles Redd. Miles Redd in turn cited Oscar and Annette de la Renta as one of his own enduring style picks, while Emily Evans Eerdman tapped the de la Rentas as one of her picks.

A Trend?
Let Us Hope.
Genuinely beautiful classically appointed rooms.

I fall in line with these experts and for your preponderance suggest two designers and one "style-setter*"-editor-textile-clothing designer-who for me- make the list.

Thomas Jayne


photgraphs from T&C, & Francois Dischinger, & Elle Decor


Classic Americana rooms that evoke the past, livable rooms with good eclectic pieces (a much overworked-misused word in design-used to describe a mixed miss. Eclectic-It is what Thomas Jayne does-and does well.

Nicholas Haslam






photographs from Haslam's Sheer Opulence and Southern Accents 2001

I have always loved the rooms Nicky Haslam does- they have that monied Colefax and Fowler look. I savor his book Sheer Opulence and covet all his published work. Other than the overdressed windows in some of the rooms- He would be my personal decorator- great fun and glorious rooms.

&

Carolina Irving




photographs Simon Upton
(WI)

The Carolina Irving home is what Rose Tarlow calls "the essence of intimacy." It is a space that exudes that certain intimacy that I admire and aspire to. We will be watching this room reappear over and over again in years to come. More about Carolina Irving in a future post.


*look for little augury's next book post on Friday* Mrs. Blandings builds a Summer Reading List*

*from Emily Evans Eerdmans

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MILES well REDD

We all take our books seriously- stacks here, everywhere, there aren't enough bookcases to house them. I've heard so many confessions recently-" I've tried to stop collecting, buying, I'm tapering off "- which usually means there isn't anything alluring enough to tempt.

The recent Enduring Style Series from Mrs Blandings dubbed Miles Redd the one to watch. Here he is:



Miles well REDD-
on top

The Peak of CHIC- C'est CHIC Summer Reading





C is for CHIC





dorothy draper C'est CHIC







Over at the PEAK of CHIC its curator even boasts a second blog called BIBLIO STYLE. To say the least- I wished I'd thought of that. I suspect hordes of Peak of Chic wannabes say the same as they read her fresh, oh so Chic- posts. Ms. Chic , Jennifer Boles, writes almost daily and with gusto.



BiblioStyle C'est Chic (click)





What Books are on your Summer reading list?

“Churchill’s Bunker: The Secret Headquarters at the Heart of Britain’s Victory” by Richard Holmes (What can I say? I was a history major.)

“Rogue’s Gallery: The Secret History of the Moguls and the Money that Made the Metropolitan Museum” by Michael Gross



Where do you read and When? Does the genre you are reading dictate the place you read- in other words, Do you take just any old book to bed?



My coffee table design books must be read on the sofa or in a chair- too heavy to read in bed. I take my biographies and history books to bed.



"Reading in Bed"

James Whistler







What does your nightstand look like? or your side of the bed, floor, chair?



On my vintage nightstand, I have a small stack of books, fresh flowers, and my radio alarm clock (I’m still a big fan of these radio alarm clocks.) Oh, and of course my glasses so that I can see what I’m reading.



What is you all time Favorite Book for its sense of place?



“Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen.



vintage classics book cover by megan wilson

(mybookcovers-will weigh in on her picks too)





(dorothy draper room with Empire portrait over mantle)





What is your Security Blanket Book?



Dorothy Draper’s “Decorating is Fun!”



the chic Jennifer Boles of the Peak of Chic





Dorothy Draper strikes a pose







What is your favorite Genre? Why? What is your most recent purchase in this category?



I would have to say that my favorite genre is design because the books are not just informative, they also provide so much inspiration too. Biographies and non-fiction history come in a close second.





& from DOROTHY:

"good showmanship is the answer. the colour of your front door announces your personality to the world" DD



"too much of anything is the beginning of a mess." DD

(Never a truer word said- Unless of course it would too MANY BOOKS!)





What is the seminal book in your field or your passion that you would recommend to young would be(s) of the same?



Same as my security blanket book: Dorothy Draper’s “Decorating is Fun!” While interior design is a serious career, Dorothy put it in perspective. It should be fun and it should enrich one’s life.



READ about Dorothy Draper at the Peak of Chic





Wintergreen Dorothy Draper's Masterpiece





Draper Stripes





Latest Obsession Author, Designer, Photographer?



Miles Redd. We need to have a book of his work published. Mario Buatta deserves this as well.





Miles Redd channeling Draper's Palette & her STRIPES




I went through many of the Peak's posts and she has 34 posts about Mrs. Draper and Mr. Redd. She knows where her passions live.





Book covers can be art- Do you have a favorite cover in your stacks?



Almost all of Cecil Beaton’s books have wonderful cover art.



Going out on a limb here –define LIBRARY in the nontraditional sense?



A library should be a room where books that are actually read reside. It should be a place where you really live, where you read, where you might even take drinks or meals. It should be a room where you go to broaden your horizons. This might sound traditional, but I think we’ve gotten away from the real meaning of a library.





What is Your most CHIC reading material?



Mine would have to be a true indulgence read- I actually got it on Friday- and placed it before all others-meaning I have already violated the code of order in my Summer Reading list- GYPSET Style a fusion of Gypsy and Jetsetter- well- Yes, a bit of a frivolity- but I needed a bit.



As a reward for being a Chic Reader or just A Bit Frivolous- and confiding!- reap the rewards of the BOOK- A PERFECT RED, by Amy Butler Grenfield. it's yours, but you have to tell.