I fell in love with a fabric.

I fell in love with a fabric few years ago & it's still my favorite. There are SO MANY amazing fabrics & new ones every season & this fabric still makes my heart beat fast. I would LOVE to do full on drapery panels with it! Wouldn't that be fab?! I've spotted the amazing Missoni Alice Pink Multi fabric in 2 portfolios online. Both from amazing designers I love & respect.

Sherry Hayslip uses the Alice fabric as an accent pillow in this contemporary bedroom in a Dallas highrise.

 

LA designer Molly Luetkemeyer of M. Designs used the Missoni Alice fabric on 2 ottoman squares in a living area.

Both designers used the fabric as an accent, I would LOVE to have it carry the weight of the room. I did a little mock up of what I might do if given the budget...

Missoni Alice- Stark Fabrics to the trade, Chandelier- Currey&Co, Floor Lamp- 1st Dibs, Chairs- High Fashion Home, Stool- 1st Dibs, Drum Cocktail Table- High Fashion Home,  Large Art Print by Slim Aarons, Rug- The Rug Company, Buddha Accessory- High Fashion Home, Sofa- Baker, Acrylic Side Table- Anthropologie

XX,

Jamie

Ms. Apfel.

“I don’t do minimal,” Apfel says of her design approach.

My love of Ms. Iris Apfel is no secret. I think she's incredible in her ability to express & maintain her person style. As well as the fact that she co-founded Old World Weavers with her husband. They make the MOST beautiful historically relevant fabrics. Stark purchased Old World Weavers in 1992 & also carries many other incredible fabrics & paints & carpets/rugs. FINALLY Architect Digest is featuring Ms. Apfel's incredible Manhattan apartment.

Her interior style mirrors her personal style. Bold, over the top, bohemian & completely her. Personally, it's a little bit much for me. But that's why I love it so much. After seeing home after home in my daily career it's refreshing to see a home completely out of the ordinary from what I see in Houston. I also LOVE when a person understands their style so completely that it envelopes every part of their lives. That's a hard concept & one that I think takes a lifetime to hone.

"Taste you can learn, but style is like charisma. You know it when you see it.” - Iris Apfel

Reading about other creative types journey are the most inspiring articles. I devour them. This quote is directly from Architectural Digest because I just couldn't get the point across as well as they already have. "A stint working for a well-connected woman who tarted up apartments to make them marketable during the World War II housing doldrums followed. “She couldn’t decorate her way out of a shoebox,” says Apfel, but she had a talent for scavenging from junkyards and flea markets the kinds of furniture and fabrics that were hard to come by in wartime. The thrill of the hunt was contagious, and the conviction that Apfel could outdo her employer was inspiring. “I realized I had found my calling,” she declares. “Interior design was for me.”"

“I guess people thought if I could decorate myself I could decorate a room or two.” -Iris Apfel

Iris Apfel became a household name in 2005 when the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute featured an exhibit displaying many of her unique accessories and fashions. Rara Avis (Latin for rare bird) highlights her exuberant style and ability to combine both high & low fashions (Dior with items from a flea market) into the same stunning outfit. The exhibition has traveled the country and changed the way people view person style. A book of the exhibition has been done, it's so beautiful I have been dieing to get my hands on it. I've seen peaks into her home before, but it's incredble to see her home as it relates to her personal style. Ms. Apfel is currently a visiting professor at the University of Texas at Austin’s School of Human Ecology, designing her own line of costume jewelry and photographer Bruce Weber is working on a documentary about her.

“People write to me: ‘You’ve changed my life!’, I’m giving them permission to be individual again.” -Iris Apfel

This is exactly how I want to grow into my career, with new exciting opportunities all the way into my 80's. Who needs to sit around being retired when you LOVE what you do. You can find the Architectural Digest article here, also each image above links to the article.

xx,

Jamie

Friday Back When.

"To be successful, a color scheme must be a source of pleasure for you and your family and at the same time be suited to the room and its uses. Consider the physical aspects of the room-it's function, size, exposure, and lighting-in your plans."

" Since the walls constitute the largest area of color in a room, choose this color first. Quiet colors for large areas live best, and are not so quickly tiring as bolder hues. You can often use a grayed tone of your favorite color for walls, and perhaps for the floor covering too."

"The second color, or colors, can be a bit brighter. Large upholstered pieces, and often draperies fall into this category. The sharp colors that accent the others normally make up a small percentage of the total color in the room. Reserve them for pillows, lamps, pictures, and other decorative accessories."

{image & expert from The Practical Encyclopedia of Good Decorating and Home Improvement Volume 1 A-AME}