Thursday, February 28, 2008

Angel or the Todd Oldham influence?


Angel Dormer was a former assistant to Todd Oldham. This was her incredibly tiny Manhattan apartment in the 1990s.

Oldham said in a quote from the article: "I love(d) visiting Angel's house because it's like a tiny museum show. Her style is eclectic, luxurious, and pedestrian---all at the same time."
  • Angel's rug was made of inexpensive runners she found at ABC Carpet & Home that she then nailed in place.
  • Curtains were made out of scrap canvas then appliqued with black velveteen cutouts resembling huge eyelashes.
  • Her sofa was half of a sectional (the other half wouldn't fit) that she glued fabric over the original upholstery with a glue gun.

  • If you look closely you can see where she applied a Sharpie marker to the walls, creating scalloped moldings.
  • The apartment decor is mostly DIY, including all the upholstery work and her homemade leopard spotted and patchwork pillows.
  • Did you see all of that built-in storage? I believe the two doors near the kitchen are for her Murphy bed.

Her wall of thrift-store art.



Angel also painted the interior of her non-working fireplace with polka dots and used it as a picture gallery and studio space where she created her thumbnail painted canvases.

The Killer quote that ends the article,

"A house," explains Dormer, "is like a jewel box. It's a place to keep your dearest treasures."

Said just like a true SHELTERgirl.

Credits: HG magazine, date unknown. Article by Amy Taran Astley.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Letter from New Orleans

 
Casa Dietrich

Because of my recent Gulf Coast posts, I wanted to give you the perspective from someone who survived Katrina, aka "The Thing". I asked two of my New Orleanian (Orleanean?) friends, John and Linda Dietrich, to write about their thoughts, post-The Thing.

What Linda sent me was beautiful, touching, and amazing. I remember speaking to her while they were relocated in Houston. She was near tears all the time and there wasn't anything I could do to help. Reading this, I realize I don't ask enough about how's it going, and I am extremely sorry for that. I hope that this letter was somehow cathartic for her and John.

On SHELTER, I will only post the parts pertaining to my questions about the rebuilding of New Orleans' damaged areas. However, I strongly suggest you read the whole letter here, on my other blog. These are her words.

Letter from New Orleans:
I live in what local writer Chris Rose likes to call "the sliver by the river" or "the isle of denial.” I live Uptown in the Irish Channel. My neighborhood didn't flood. Wind damage only. Our house; my husband's and mine, was still standing after the storm. It had blown off it's piers on one side, but didn't break. We lost some wood siding, part of our fence, a washer and dryer, and one refrigerator.


There are still people living in FEMA trailers. People are still waiting to figure out how to rebuild and with what money. For all the billions of dollars poured into NOLA, it is definitely going to take more.

There are also plenty of abandoned houses, overgrown lots, and homeless people. Changes will be made.
Rome wasn't built in a day and neither was NOLA. Brad Pitt started the "Pink House" campaign. I think it's great and it is going to make a difference. Brad's houses will be much more modern, but with a nod to traditional New Orleans homes. Those places are gone in the Ninth ward and St. Bernard. Some can be salvaged, some cannot. I don't see any problem with modernizing some of the architecture here. It has always been an amalgam of styles, as people added on to the homes they bought. My house is 165 years old in the front and 120 in the back. The inside is brand new. Times change. This city will always preserve its history, but it will also continue to look towards the future.

I want to see the neighborhoods rebuilt with the wisdom of lessons learned. We need to have the growth of the populace keep pace with the growth of the infrastructure. I WANT THE DUTCH TO BUILD OUR LEVEES!! I want a real levee system. Not one made out of tin cans. KATRINA DID NOT DESTROY NEW ORLEANS! BAD ENGINEERING DID! I want wetland restoration to take priority. I want the American government to realize how important this city is to the rest of the country. America needs our port. The Mid-west is crippled without it. I want our oil related tax revenues back. We could afford to rebuild ourselves. I don't know which political genius gave that up, or what he got for it, but I hope his house flooded.


This has turned into a rant. It's hard to talk about the way you feel without getting overly emotional. I still can't watch clips of Katrina's aftermath without feeling as if my heart will literally shatter into a million pieces. Sometimes, I can't even drive by houses with water lines still on them without feeling slightly defeated. Other days, when the sun is shining, and I see a few houses sitting repaired and pristine among the wreckage, I feel the infinite joy of watching the miracle of birth and the resilience of the human spirit and know that everything will be just fine. It's only going to take time.


The Dietrichs

Sunday, February 17, 2008

A Few of My Favorite Things


  • Amber glass and red "swung" glass vases (also known as "pulled" glass)
  • Beaded fruit
  • Rehabbed and repainted sofa
  • The over-the-top gold bureau
  • The color orange
And above all, true funky decor!

Photos of Cynthia Rowley's home courtesy of marie claire magazine.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Gene Meyer: Then and Now

More from my scrapbooks and more from HG magazine.




These photos are of designer Gene Meyer's studio as featured in HG magazine, sometime in the '90s. The first picture above is of his incredible inspiration wall. He was quite famous then for his distinctive men's ties and, at the time of this shoot, his colorful silk scarves. In the photos above he has used them as curtains and to cover his furniture.

While not as white-hot as he was then, Mr. Meyer is still putting his great color combinations and love of pattern to use in wonderful ways.


A design he and his brother did for a friend's kitchen (with Benjamin Moore's Caribbean Blue Water and Kelly Green paints)


This business card case ($61) at Unica Home.


These Gene Meyer Rugs available at Modern rugs.

Photos courtesy of HG magazine (date unknown) and the corresponding linked sites.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Images from my scrapbook files:


The home of Jacques Kaplan and Violaine Bachelier
HG magazine, 1992



I love their skewed version of "French Country" with the unexpected color combinations and the boldness of the colors themselves. I also love the vintage icebox and the cow painting.


These images are from the years I personally thought
House & Garden (HG) magazine was at its best; in the early 1990's.