2012 Home Design Trend Architecture Oriental Sweetness

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Everybody wants to know about the predictions of next year trend in all things. It is still early days for interior predictions for 2012, but let's going to look into one of the trends that is looking hot for 2012, "Oriental Sweetness".
"Oriental Sweetness" is all about the East: Asian & Oriental influences are all big. Look at old skool floral Japanese textiles for inspiration. The simple, minimal shapes & striking colours are key here.

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As for colour palettes for the range, you are looking at strong tones of red, burgundy (wine red) & purple, mixed with brighter shades / neutral tones in alternative combinations. The base for all the colour palettes is made up from Neutrals, white, tan and bark.

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Oriental florals are beautifully simple in their form, one of the aspects that I love is the minimal "block" colour approach, similar to pop art, but pioneered hundreds & hundreds of years early. If you look at Japanese & indeed a lot Asian art, it closely resembles what graphic design has now become in a CAD based design world.

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Best Asian Home Design : Best Architecture, Interior and Decoration

Asian Home Design Architectural
Asian Home Design Architectural
In the world of home and architectural design, we recognize the so-called trend. Trends are always changing and shifting, with the influence of several factors. In line with developments in information technology, reference designs are so readily available, thus allowing inter-cultural exchanges across the world. A person living in Europe could have adopted a Middle Eastern architectural styles, or Asian people use the European style, it has become common fairness. The development of the latest architectural trends, shows a spinning wheel change to Asia.  Now, asian home design to be the best design, most in demand by homeowners, and many are developed by developers around the world. If you feel curious about this design, you should continue to follow this article to gain a valuable reference.

In the second picture, can be an inspiration for you to decorate the room with the asian theme. You can get a beautiful decor with classical calligraphy, Japanese or Chinese style. Calligraphy can be attached to the wall directly on the media or whatever furniture you want. For the choice of words used for calligraphy, you should use strong words, which could give inspiration, courage, and energy to move.

From the third picture, you can find abundant inspiration associated with the values ​​of Chinese-style beauty. A special dining room, by adopting asian home design, feature a very unique lighting elements. Using the typical Chinese traditional lights, called lanterns, very powerful in creating a romantic impression. Do not forget, there is a strong myth of the dragon in Chinese society. It will be very supportive, if you bring the Chinese dragon in the form of murals or painting on a red cloth, which serve as mosquito nets as well as insulation between the dining room with other rooms. On the other side of the room, a traditional Chinese fan painting will give the impression of beauty. The combination of dragon and the fan became a kind of equilibrium concept of yin-yang, the dragon as a symbol of strength and courage, while the fan is a symbol of softness. Now the strength and softness combined to create a wonderful dining room designs, with the dominant red color in various places.

Design the room on the fourth image, adopting the Japanese style. Painting the walls with the typical Japanese frames, adorn the walls of the left and the far wall. A typical Japanese interior furniture, a table called Kosatsu, further strengthening the nuances of Japanese tradition in this room. A rectangular table with a clean dark lines. All interior furniture in this room adopting Japanese culture, with a touch of modern design that is very alluring. After reading this article, you are more convinced by the beauty of asian home design, and perhaps you are interested in implementing this design into your modern home design. Please try and good luck!
Decoration Asian Home Design
Decoration Asian Home Design
Asian Home Design with Unique Dining Room Lighting
Asian Home Design with Unique Dining Room Lighting
Interior Asian Home Design
Interior Asian Home Design

Designer Lillian August

I ran across designer Lillian August in a post about the Hampton Designer Showhouse's pool house at Habitually Chic. Most of this showhouse didn't appeal to me, but the poolhouse had a number of naturalist touches, and I thought the designer would be worth another look.

These two pictures are from the designer's (online?) magazine.

A nicely done cabinet of wonders, with aged/antiqued wood frames.

It's been a while since I've seen the really big clock, but I like it here.

I think that's the best of the bunch, but you can poke around the website and see what else you can find.

Kid- Friendly Design Rant

Let's talk about "kid friendly."  I may be tired today or I many be impatient this morning, but I'm going to say it pretty straight:  You CAN (and SHOULD!)  have a well-done beautiful home with children in the house. 
I find that sometimes kids are people's excuses for not getting exactly what they want or for buying ugly furniture.  Not okay.

{Coastal Living}

There are plenty of beautiful homes out there and most of them have (or had) kids living in them while they still looked beautiful.  Yes, kids are messy and they will turn your house upside down, but generally this mayhem is pretty fixable.  (My house looks like it was ransacked by burglers multiple times a week but it's just "mess" not damage.) 

There is no reason why having kids should keep anyone from buying a sofa with a beautiful silhouette or fabric.  Yes,  we might have to choose the ottoman instead of the glass coffee table in the family room, and there are safety issues we need to look at, but there are beautiful child-friendly options for just about everything out there.   (Let me be clear too, that I'm not talking about money/ budget issues...  if something unattractive is chosen for a room because cost is an issue, that's completely different. )  Curtains & pillows can still be made in beautiful fabrics that will withstand time.



{Coastal Living... I'm in the mood}

I think it's important when putting together rooms that people have realistic expecations.  They should also understand the pros and cons of what they're choosing.  So yay, we have an unattractive piece of furniture that they kids can't destroy no matter what they do to it:  Does it matter if they can't destroy it if it's an eyesore on a daily basis? (Ever had a piecce of furniture you pray gets destroyed so you can justify replacing it?? ;)

I'm typically pretty diplomatic on my blog (and in person) but I do have very strong opinions about certain "don'ts."  (Some of them, I've even committed myself and now regret!! )

Some things are REALLY unattractive to me and I see a lot of young families with kids - or even just young couples & single people- buying these things.  (Including me!)  Here's a quick list:

-Upholstered pieces with bulky silhouettes / bad lines.  (I honestly think that a lot of the upholstery being sold / mass marketed is pretty bad.  (I even own some of it.) ...I think the typical furniture "set" that the typical young family goes out & buys isn't attractive.   I've seen it over & over: the microfiber sofas with big arms in some sort of darker neutral color.  (My friend Maria of Colour Me Happy recently wrote about microfiber here.)   (And I own some microfiber so I'm not just outing others here! ;)    I wish this trend would just STOP now.  I really do.  (Why?  Because microfiber/ suede isn't at all timeless.  It looks very manufactured/ fakey and the "suede" doesn't fool anyone.  I will admit that I find it to be very practical, although there are other practical options that look much better.)



- Lighting:  Insubstantial iron lamps on either side of a sofa.  Sometimes being afraid of glass or porcelain scares families into buying the generic lamp.  They haven't taken any risks, and it shows. 

-Artwork: "Decorator" artwork can be everywhere.  It's those large pieces -either framed or on canvas- that can be of anything really that takes up a lot of space/ fills the walls, but feels like it belongs in a hotel.  And be wary of ikea's artwork too.  Some of it can actually look pretty good but it can feel really impersonal/ generic.  (Again, to out myself, I've bought this stuff before too!) 


{Generic Tuscan = my pet peeve}

-Rugs that are too small.  I see this all the time.  Sometimes rugs that truly fit a space aren't readily available, so families just buy what they can.  (The rug might sit in the middle of all of the furniture instead of under it.)  They might figure that the smaller rugs are cheaper and that their kids are young and messy and it's not worth spending on the right rug becausee the kids will destroy it anyway.  But not so!!!  Get the right material, and you can have the rug for life, even after the kids have grown up & gone. 


{Don't do it!!}


There are definitely more & these are just the ones off the top of my head, but please don't hate me for that list if you own a micriber sofa with bulky lines or have "Tuscan" artwork all over your house.  I wrote that list not to find fault with anyone who has these things in their homes, but to hopefully raise awareness.   When I walk into clients' homes and see these items, there's no judging.  I too have purchased these items a time or two, and have worked really hard to train my eye & hone my sensibilities, which is an ongoing process.  

 Most of us working in the design field & those who are reading magazines & blogs are growing
design-wise almost daily.  And sometimes part of that growing is realizing we've maded "don'ts" in the past & being okay with that.  Maybe we can't fix them right now, but we can at least start a plan for the fixing and be sure not to make the same mistakes again.

I came up with a short list of things to keep in mind when thinking about decorating a home with kids & I think it even applies to single people or couples.  (I'll be honest that I'm the one in the house who usually makes the most damaging messes...  well, my dog does too.)

The fundamentals are:
-Washing hands  (a LOT)...  teach the kids to do it automatically after meals to avoid accidents on soft goods.

-No ball (or anything) throwing in the house. 

-Teach kids to put away their things (hahahaha  I have been trying this for years but it never gets any easier...  just try not to give up the fight.)

-On pretty things low & within reach:  When my kid first learned to walk, they were too little to understand "no" and pretty much wanted to touch & pick up everything / anything I'd put on the cofee table or other low areas.  For that point in time, I removed breakables & bouquets from their reach.  (Now that Justin is "getting it"  at a year and a half, we have breakables/ flowers/ plants back out on the tables and he's pretty goood with them.   Every once in a while when he's being naughty and wants some attention, he'll pick one up and (start saying "no no no!" and then I'll put it up for a lilttle while.)

-No eating/ drinking on the upholstered furniture.  (Exceptions are made for movies & dry snacks like popcorn/ gold fish/ etc.)  Heee heee I have completely broken this rule myself, but mostly on our slipcovered sofa.  One night about a year or so ago, I went on a chocolate binge and just started eating chocolate chips on our family room sofa (which is an off-white/ natural slipcovered shelter sofa).. And I fell alseep and woke up with chcocolate all over the sofa.  (How gross am I??)  But all came out because that slipcover is THE BEST.  And sometimes  a little someone will escape with dirty fingers or with something yucky and we'll find a mess on something upholstered but we just clean it right away and all is fine.

- On white:  It depends on who you are & if you're into slipcovers/ washing, but white can be very kid-friendly.  Some people think the thought of having to wash a slipcover as ridiculous, while I love it.  (Ie the "chocolate incident.")  I have both off-whit and pure white slipcovers and I like my off-whites better because they don't show any general dinge.  The pure whites do.  Both are easily fixed but it really just depends upon you & what you're willing to do.  I think living with all dark furniture -if it's not your style- is a bad thing. 
 It's important to notice the difference betweeen white and natural/ oatmeal/ beige & gray. Pale neutrals give you a LOT of wiggle room.  They can even read white in a room.  (Everyone who visits thinks of my family room sofa as white, but really it's a sort of natural/ off-white color.)   But the important thing is, they're not PURE white and don't show every little tiny thing.  Just being slightly off saves mulitple washings a year.
 
- On upholstery.  If you can, and when you can, buy good upholstery and plan on having it for many years.  You can reupholster it when the fabric's worn/ dingy or the stuffing's flattened.  Have realistic expectations about it.  I've heard lots of different "rules of thumb" for upholstery lifespans, but ones I hear a lot are 5-7 or 7-10 years.  (And I've seen fabric last 30+ years at my grandparents' house...) Either way, just know that the fabric will age and that's okay.  Some fabrics age beautifully (ie linens, velvets) and others hide things like patterned fabrics.  Just know what you're getting into and be okay with it.  But upholstery will eventually neeed to be freshed up if you plan on keeping it for life.  That's reality.

-On rugs.  Buy good rugs.  They don't have to be expensive.  They can be seagrass or cotton but make sure they fit the space & needs of the space.

Anyway, I'm off for the day, but I'd love to hear your thoughts on these subjects.  I also hope that I didn't hurt any feelings with my list of things that I find unattractive.  I normally try to keep my posts focusing on the positive, but these are just a few things I see over & over that I think ruin rooms.  If you have some of these things & truly love them, then that's what's important.  Enjoy your day!!


xoxo, Lauren

If you'd like help creating a home you absolutely love, contact me about our design services.


hello friends,
wow - what a week - I hope on the weekend you have a chance to relax and do some crafting.
there's a little table with two little chairs next to my sewing machine - the kids use this table for all kinds of things, drawing, eating, playing and it's nice to have them next to me and we can chat while we both work. sometimes it's hard to chat with lliam when he's assembling lego - such intense concentration.





one more bag prototype - it's called an egg bag (I made ones similar to this years ago, but it didn't have a zipper)
thanks again for visiting - enjoy your weekend - I can't believe school starts in three weeks - where did the summer go? xxa

p.s. see this wood hook thing that is in my photos - well we've been getting lots of emails if we have them for sale - I finally convinced john to make more - so in the shop soon.

I am often inspired by the art my children do - this "fence" drawing was done by lil' p - I'm thinking it would make a great digital print on fabric.

I will have a new guest workshop coming soon - I will announce it when all the details are ironed out - it's going to be a photography workshop - this guest is one of my favourite photographers and stylist. this class is going to be small and when you find out who it is - I have a feeling it will fill up quickly - so excited to tell you!




I often get requests from lovely customers to alter certain elements on my bags - most are doable like changing lengths of straps and extra pockets, etc.
I often get requests to make the popular triangle tote bag in different sizes. I recently got a request for a smaller scale version and the proportions just seemed to work , so - I decided I would add this sweet little bag to the shop. it's similar to the triangle tote in every way just a wee smaller. as you can see lil' p was pretty taken by the new size as it is a scale she could carry.

Creepy & Hysterical

I'd forgotten all about one of the games I used to play as a kid:  My best friend & I called them our "wizards."   We would look at each other upside down, cover up our noses & mouths and see "wizard" faces.  It looked like creepy men with beards.  Sometimes we'd draw lips on our foreheads and then make ridiculous facial expressions to see the mouths move.  Last night, I shared the game with my 4 year old (Christian) & husband (Dave) & my little sister (Morgan).  Christian's wizard was by far the best one I've ever seen.  It was so tiny & his eyes were so big.  I seriously CANNOT handle this:

{It's easier to "see" the wizards if you put your hand over the screen to hide the real nose/ face}

Dave's killed me too.  I drew lady lips on his head and since he's bald, his wizard had no beard, just a massive jowl:


This seriously makes me cry from laughing so hard. 

You won't regret playing.


xoxo, Lauren

If you'd like help creating a home you absolutely love, contact me about our design services.





a few weeks ago when I was in muskoka for the arts and crafts show I met jen for the first time - we both had a mutual friend - christine a fellow rug hooker - when jen pulled out her purse - I was smitten by the loveliness of it and quickly asked her if she would ever be interested in trading. last week a beautiful clutch arrived wrapped in hand dyed wool. check out jen's blog here and I hope this piece inspires you to want to give hand hooking a go. thanks again jen - I love it!


I had to take a photo of these two dinosaurs dressed by piper after her bath (it put a smile on my face), she's got a bit of hair now - enough to do a tiny french braid - how exciting! - and a splash of colour from some flowers in the backyard.

day bag update now in the etsy shop

House of Fifty



Have you seen the latest issue of House of Fifty?    (I'm not tech-savvy enough to know how to copy the pages and put them in a blog post or I would definitely show you some photos from my favorite articles, but if you haven't read it yet, you definitely should.)  With all of the new online magazines popping up, I have to say that House of Fifty is one of my favorites.  It's practical & beautiful.  There's even an article (by Kate at Centsational Girl) outlining how to take better photos!  (have you seen Kate's photos?!! = perfection)

Thanks so much to editor Janell Bealls for including me in the issue, and to my friend Sherry Moeller for writing an article about me & my new textile line.  (Sherry & I met through the DC Design House where Sherry was the PR guru.  She lives in the area and manages her own PR firm - Moki Media- and many of her clients are interior designers & architects.)

"Live Paisely" in Indigo (Linen)

I'm constantly amazed by what people in blogland are doing.  Reading through House of Fifty shows just how real & talented bloggers are.  From the authors to the photographers, those featured- it's really a special thing.  I had no idea -almost 3 years ago- when I started blogging that it would become such a big part of my life & introduce me to so many wonderful & giving people. 
Click here to read the issue!


xoxo, Lauren

We're taking on new clients for Fall!  If you'd like help creating a home you absolutely love, contact me about our design services.  We are in the DC- area but travel for select projects.




thanks everyone on your kind words on the last post - it means a lot to me that you took a moment to write to me. I wanted to continue showing you prototypes of the new window print (if you're interested in this prototype - it's for sale here). I got caught up with house chores yesterday and got a bit delayed on finishing the day bags in time to be photographed - that's the issue with working with natural light - your always racing for the right light needed. later today I will post the day bags in the etsy shop. I think they're quite stunning.
I enjoy prototyping - I also like posting them on the blog (my virtual sketchbook) - I forget about certain designs and sometimes when I look back at older posts I see them in a different light and might re-visit the design again. I am still playing around with the shapes and fabrics, so I will show you more soon. I really like the fragments of the window print on the oblong pouches. I still have two more print designs to show you - I might have to do that next week.
have a great day and see you tomorrow!

I'm feeling like I need to get real for a moment - this is not regarding any specific event or person
I'm not trying to make any kind of statement - I just want to tell you how I feel
sometimes things happen and you feel a certain way already and then something makes it surface.
I don't know if it's age or life itself, but I feel that people in general forget about kindness
the kind of kindness that comes out of you even if you don't get anything in return -
like helping a mom with a stroller on the bus
or holding the door open or treating others the way you want to be treated or respected

I'm not a perfect person, I'm not the most talented, I'm not the most beautiful

but I give - like you couldn't imagine how I give, I give to strangers, I give to my family, I give to friends - I give so much that sometimes it hurts my heart.
when I write on this blog - I don't show all facets of myself - because it's so public and your subjected to praise and criticism

I am sure of who I am and not afraid of criticism - I think it makes me a better maker.

I just don't like criticism that is meant to hurt - that is meant to harm - I don't know all of you out there and always enjoy meeting you at the craft shows and in the shop, but most of you remain anonymous to me - that's what makes the blogging
thing a bit weird - it's one sided.

I remember a question I was asked at my grad school interview in 1996 "tell us about yourself?"
I said with a big smile "there are things that I need to discover about myself, that's why I want to be here, what I know about myself is that I'm a really hard worker and love what I do and want to spend the rest of life putting what I feel on the inside in some kind of form - being it sculpture, printing or drawing....."
the above image is one of the first images I posted on the blog - a blog I started as a record of my journey and a journey I enjoy sharing with you everyday. hope this not too much real for you - I forget sometime that the internet is like the real world - I guess - I wish it's a different kind of world. thanks for reading - it made me feel better to write this - I just had to mention that a little bit of kindness goes a long way.
much love xxa



our shop has looked pretty empty so john put up some of our art work - these drawings are done with templates and charcoal dust - john found a photo of his process - when I get a chance to scan it - I will post it. he was thinking of doing more and getting giclee prints done - giclee prints are kind of like a good quality photocopy. there's a place in toronto called pikto that does some nice printing.

Implementing a Project

I'm off to another client installation today.  We're doing a living room & a dining room.  My clients will be gone for the day & they'll come home to the completed spaces.  Here's what the house looked like before: (My clients didn't buy anything new when they moved in.)



Over the years, I've changed how my processes work.  (I may be forever changing, as the more I learn, the more things change.)  One of the things that we do now that I feel is really important is doing our installations all at once.  We have almost everything that needs to go into our clients' homes shipped to a receiving warehouse where the goods are inspected and stored until installation day.  (We used to have items individually shipped to clients which can be inconvenient for them and can also result in clients being nervous about the items because they only see one part of the plan and they worry it won't be right.)  With the single installation, clients get to come home to the house exactly as it should be and don't need to use their imagination to envison the final result.  (Plus, it's a bit like Christmas after all of that waiting!!)

Anyway, after the previous post, I got a few questions about how long projects typically take from start to finish so I thought I'd share a bit of the process with you.  From the point where we "survey" a client's home, it takes about one month for us to create a plan for them.  (Obviously this can be done in a much shorter amount of time, but I really prefer to let the room sink in with me.  It takes this time to source interesting pieces & to shop around and rework floorplans.  The final presentation itself takes a few days to put together and this includes, budgeting, final floorplans, design boards, etc., but I really like to mull a project over & get immersed in it.  Also, in our projects I often leave "holes" for items we plan to find along the way if we know it needs to be a one-of-a-kind piece and we haven't come accross it yet.)   Once the clients approve everything presented (this can take anywhere from 1 day to a few weeks) we begin actually implementing the design:  scheduling contractors, ordering products and shopping for one-of-a-kinds and artwork. 



{Some of the fabrics used in today's design}

Like I mentioned, this "waiting period" typically lasts 2-4 months (with the norm being 3) when we're using custom goods, which we pretty much always do.  As anyone in the industry can tell you though, there are often backorders which can delay projects & rearrange your plans completely. 

At the onset of our projects, when we place all of the orders (this can include anything from custom upholstery to casegoods to antiques) we typically have to wait anywhere from two- four months for everything to be made.  (And some items can also be much longer...  A custom rug can take almost a year just to give you an idea.)  It takes patience, but is always totally worth it in the end. 

As the months tick down, I begin collecting and purchasing unique accessories & items that I think will be perfect for my clients.  The night before installation, my van is FILLED with them.

(me, on installation day ;)
image from here


On installation day, everything is delivered & placed in the home.  We hang artwork & window treatments and the electrician installs lighting.  Unless it's a very high area, I prefer to install artwork myself.  I make sure everything is just right.

I start "playing" with the accessories, which is how I prefer it.  I typically use about 75- 80% of the items I've brought to try out.   Sometimes I know exactly where an items will go when I find it and other times I just know it will work in the room but I'm not sure where yet.  When my clients come home, these items are a total surprise.  They receive a price list of all of the items and can buy whichever ones they like.  (Since most of the items are vintage items & one-of-a-kinds, I can't return them unless I took them out on approval, but that's okay because I only buy items I truly love.)  It might sound risky, but for now, it's the way that's really been working for me.  (And most clients want everything.)

Anyway, time for me to run, but have a great day & I'll be sure to share after photos soon!!
  

xoxo, Lauren

If you'd like help creating a home you absolutely love, contact me about our design services.

One Shot Coffee

I thought this space, The One Shot Coffee Shop in Philly (found via a post on Apartment Therapy), was beautiful.


Reclaimed wood and tin tiles.

The menu changes daily.  So does the kraft paper roll.  I love this idea -- wonder where you could use it in a house?
The "card catalog" style drawers are for tea. 

Check out the entire post on AT, including closeups of the awesome tea drawer labels.