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Brooklyn Boheme

A Curated Lifestyle

September 21, 2015

Small Spaces: Jewel-Box Powder Room

by Brandi Brown in Interiors


A dramatic color-saturated space need not be grand in size, and small need not be vanilla.  This powder room is a mere 4.5'x3'.  With all of the layered gilded jewel box-like accessories, statuary and vintage mirrors, we transformed our doll-size powder room into a jewel-box that lures even the most claustrophobic of guests. 

Walls painted Benjamin Moore's Van Buren Brown cause the walls to recede. While vintage mirrors create a small and chic space by adding the illusion of space, depth and reflecting light. Vintage mirrors, statuary, art and gilded details were found at flea markets and garage sales, creating a rich yet affordable layered look that keeps our "captivated audience" guests entertained while indisposed.  Rather than painting the walls, I would have preferred to clothe the room in silver leaf Chinoiserie wallpaper, but the walls are wavy - and wavy wallpaper is anything but chic. 

Small-scale efficiency of a narrow Kohler sink and a shallow vintage toilet expand the narrow entrance to our petite room.  And, the coordinating jewel box-like color scheme of gilded decor and white accessories avoids a cluttered look while providing visual interest. 

The DIY Romanesque shade was crafted from Pottery Barn fabric and a shade kit from Jo-Ann's.  In order to create a cohesive look, I used the fabric remnants to cover a lamp drum shade that I converted into a chandelier using a simple lighting pendant from Home Depot.  Simply wrap the shade with the fabric and secure with fabric adhesive.  To create a warm electrical glow, I spray painted the interior of the shade gold and covered the interior fabric seams with gross grain ribbon. Total cost $15!

DIY Drum Pendant

DIY Drum Pendant

When decorating a small space, think beyond the walls!  Hang art on doors, maximize the ceiling's blank canvas with wallpaper or stencil, and don't forget to decorate the utilitarian features of the sink basin and toilet top.  A flea market oil painting adorns the interior of our space's door.  Seashells collected from adventures litter our sink basin, and an antique French bust protrudes from the wall creating depth in this tiny space.

Candle.jpg DSC_0606.jpg Seashells.jpg Hermes.jpg gilt.jpg matches.jpg FooDog2.jpg DSC_0531.jpg

Improving small-scale spaces can be a challenge but with a little creativity, you can create an efficient high-style space. 

Design Notes:

  • Transform decor that you already own with spray paint.  I spray painted some old red foo dogs white, and I transformed gilded frames into mirrors by painting the glass with mirror spray paint.
  • Enhance the height of a short ceiling by continuing window treatments up to the top of the wall (my treatment stops at the window frame because I cut my fabric too short - hence, the old adage, measure twice and cut once).
  • Visually expand a petite space and create a sense of a canopy by coordinating the ceiling with the dominant pattern in the window covering.  I plan to stencil the ceiling in a Moroccan tile print to visually expand the pattern out from the ceiling pendant and down to the window covering.
  • Avoid a cluttered look with color coordinating accessories.  I stuck to classic white and gilded details.
  • Create depth in a small space with walls painted a dark color or enveloped in wallpaper.  Paint the ceiling a lighter color to avoid a cave-like feeling in a small dark space.

Images by Brooklyn Boheme.

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TAGS: Decor, Design


September 19, 2015

Fall-ing for Boots!

by Brandi Brown in Style Bar


Chloe lace-up knee-highsPhoto by Mark Leibowitz

Chloe lace-up knee-highs
Photo by Mark Leibowitz

Chloe lace-up knee-highsPhoto by Mark Leibowitz

Chloe lace-up knee-highs
Photo by Mark Leibowitz

Two things excite me about Fall, Halloween (hello, with all of the fun decor options and costume fetes!) and BOOTS! I can't think of anything more chic, transitional and, above all, comfortable.  Boots are the cornerstone shoe of the chicest of closets.  A sleek riding boot pulled over denim or leggings can elevate the everyday outfit to a haute look, and a heeled ankle boot can pull together any autumn look.  While the combat boot and manly oxford styles littered the Fall 2015 runways, fear not, this season also offers wearable stilleto booties, fur wedges and feminine riding boots.  Here is my lineup of this season's most stylish boot offerings.

View fullsize 3.1PhillipLimLeatherandSuedeHarlethBootrs.jpg
View fullsize ChloeFurLace-UpWedgeBoots.jpg
View fullsize CholePull-TabAnkleBoots.jpg
View fullsize JimmyChooBalanFlatBoot.jpg
View fullsize JimmyChooRogue110Boot.jpg
View fullsize LouboutinStuddedVickyAnkleBoots.jpg
View fullsize MarsellSuedeWedge-HeelBoots.jpg
View fullsize PaulAndrewTaosAnkleBoot.jpg
View fullsize ValentinoRockstudDouble-StrapBoots.jpg
Kate Hudson for Jimmy Choo 

Kate Hudson for Jimmy Choo
 

How versatile is the boot?  Just ask Kate Hudson, pairing Jimmy Choo's Dayno boot with a pink and lavender chiffon gown.  Tres Chic!  Run to your nearest Barneys, Jimmy Choo and/or Louboutin for the above styles.
 

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TAGS: Fashion, Shoes, Runway


September 17, 2015

Garden Design: One Berkeley Courtyard Two Different Designs

by Brandi Brown in Jardins


Today, we continue our tour of Lola Thompson's exciting outdoor living spaces.  On Tuesday, we visited Lola's front courtyard, and, today, we tour Lola's interior courtyard in two different looks.  Design as intended is never finished - just as life is not static, the best of spaces evolve with us.  Lola takes this design theory to heart and is continuously redesigning her spaces to evolve with her changing decor needs and tastes. The result is always refreshing and inspiring. 

In the courtyard, the two different looks serve two different purposes, one is designed with entertaining in mind, while the other serves as a personal sanctuary akin to a boutique hotel room's balcony.  Both looks, however, bring elements of the inside out, artfully layered to create an inviting, lovely outdoor living space.

Look One: Social Courtyard

Look One: Social Courtyard

Look Two: Courtyard Retreat

Look Two: Courtyard Retreat

The first look invites entertaining, with its modern benches diagonally placed on the carpet with an antique bistro table centered in between them.

The second look, featuring the acid green chaise with a Turkish towel blanket thrown across it, makes me want to curl up with a book in one hand and a drink in the other.  This look is a retreat designed for peaceful and quiet seclusion.

Look One: Chinese Drum Tables

Look One: Chinese Drum Tables

Look Two: Moroccan Tray Table

Look Two: Moroccan Tray Table

Whether lucky enough to visit this courtyard as a dinner guest or as a personal retreat, you are enveloped by an enchanting environment.  Boxwood topiaries frame the courtyard, an antique window guard and shutters provide a photographic backdrop, and twinkling bistro lights are strung overhead.  Carefully curated artifacts bring depth to the space and invite guests to linger as their eyes absorb the surrounding beauty.

Antique Moroccan Lantern Hangs Overhead

Antique Moroccan Lantern Hangs Overhead

Succulents Bring Vibrant Chartreuse Colors to The Space

Succulents Bring Vibrant Chartreuse Colors to The Space

Antique Corbels Transformed Into Planters

Antique Corbels Transformed Into Planters

Shoe Molds Greet You at The Front Door

Shoe Molds Greet You at The Front Door

Remnant of Antique Chinese Lantern Serve as a Candle Holder

Remnant of Antique Chinese Lantern Serve as a Candle Holder

Paper Ephemeral Decorates Topiary

Paper Ephemeral Decorates Topiary

Design Notes
Elevate the design et décor of your outdoor living space.

  • Create a room by defining the space with a rug and a border.  Structured boxwoods create a linear border around Lola's courtyard.
  • Center your courtyard around a seating arrangement, water feature or sculpture.
  • Create a private sanctuary in your courtyard by using a privacy screen created from plants (such as tall hedges, Cyprus trees or a flowering trellis), outdoor curtains or architectural elements, such as shutters in Lola's space.
  • Create a moody environment with string lights and candles.
  • Keep plenty of side tables on hand for functional entertaining.  Chinese drum tables are versatile and easy to move around.

Images by Brooklyn Boheme.

1 Comment

TAGS: Decor, Gardens, Lifestyle


September 15, 2015

Garden Design: Bringing the Inside Out

by Brandi Brown in Jardins


Wasp nest artfully layered on freshly-cut lavender
Wasp nest artfully layered on freshly-cut lavender

From layered interiors to flowers and gardens, everything she touches is gorgeous and trés chic. Today we explore Lola Thompson's high-style courtyard. The cornerstone of her landscape design is to bring the inside out, to be at home in the garden. Interior fabrics drape over pillows, mirrors hang on exterior walls and oil paintings find a home in the garden alongside religious artifacts and statuary. 

Lola has created a garden space that integrates with the home's eclectic interior - it fluidly transitions for entertaining and just enjoying a daily read in the garden. 

The crunching of the decomposed granite beneath your feet and the glimpses of statuary through the greenery invokes the feeling of a stroll through France's finest of manicured gardens. Varying topiaries, native grasses and succulents, all artfully contained, are highlighted by pops of fuchsia mumms and lavender lilies.  An assemblage of cast aside flea market tables, statuary fragments and remnants of vessels provide design-depth to this space.  A discarded old workbench becomes the perfect hostess coffee table.

Esther Garden Tour 115.JPG
French wine bottle dryer becomes garden art alongside concrete spheres

French wine bottle dryer becomes garden art alongside concrete spheres

Religious artifacts

Religious artifacts

Mirrored garden

Mirrored garden

Rough luxe

Rough luxe

Painting décor

Painting décor

Interior fabric draped over pillows

Interior fabric draped over pillows

Tactile garden art

Tactile garden art

Hidden statuary

Hidden statuary

Rusty beauty

Rusty beauty

Legs of interior chair peak thru the layers of grain sack and French flag

Legs of interior chair peak thru the layers of grain sack and French flag

Courtyard entrance

Courtyard entrance

Impromptu statuary candle holder

Impromptu statuary candle holder

Beaded statuary

Beaded statuary

Garden entertaining

Garden entertaining

Esther Garden Tour 109.JPG

 Design Notes

Indoor or out, the décor goal is the same, to create an inviting, stylish living space. 

  • Instead of throwing out that old chair, use it to create an impromptu living space in your garden. 
  • An eclectic mix of garden furniture, in varying styles, are more inviting, relaxed and visually pleasing than a matching set.  Garage sales are a great place to score one-off patio chairs and urns.
  • To ground the eclectic space, paint the mismatched tables and planters in a coordinating color or pair with coordinating pillows.
  • Grain sacks bring a tactile quality to a garden and fare inclement weather surprisingly well.  (As with any fabric, prolonged use outside will cause the fabric to fade or mildew.)
  • When decorating the garden with paintings, place the painting out of direct sun and under an overhang to protect from rain.
  • Include statement pieces, eye-catchers, such as Lola's oversize statute or bottle art, in the distance.
  • Antique gates add style, function and interest.

Images by Brooklyn Boheme.
 

2 Comments

TAGS: Decor, Design, Lifestyle, Gardens


September 13, 2015

Loot Shoot Sunday: Best of the Flea

by Brandi Brown in Brocante


Chippy blue painted door juxtaposed against pastel pink ballerina slippers
Chippy blue painted door juxtaposed against pastel pink ballerina slippers

My home is indebted to flea markets around the world, without which my house would be empty and soulless.  I like to browse the fleas not only for treasures but also decor inspiration.  Flea market vignettes offer an education in layering, re-imagining the obsolete and pairing the unexpected with the norm, creating a curated chic home.  Here's my roundup of this week's best of the flea. 

Enamelware and bottles re-purposed as vases corralled in a vintage sifter

Enamelware and bottles re-purposed as vases corralled in a vintage sifter

Provence baskets

Provence baskets

Baskets - round, with handles, square, with lids, or lined with linen - no matter how you shape them, I cannot get enough baskets and the flea offers a plethora.  With a toddler, there is always stuff that needs to be contained and concealed, and baskets are the perfect, decor container.  The woven chunky-rope basket is the "little black dress" of every room.

French school prints

French school prints

Vintage French-school prints in muted tones offer an affordable chic wall space filler, and a layer of depth to a contemporary space.

Vintage easel

Vintage easel

An easel to display a mirror, canvas or television, yes please! I love the subtle remnants of paint on this easel, a remembrance of the creativity that once took place on this grande painter's tool.  The blackening age of the mirror is divine.

Silver loot

Silver loot

Vintage pottery hold silverware on a lovely red enameled bistro table, ready for the perfect backyard fetes.  I love mixing and matching vintage silverware.  The quality is far superior to what a dollar can buy you these days, and the delicate designs of vintage wares make every bite of dinner more delicious to the eyes.

African textiles

African textiles

Graphic black and white textiles satisfy my craving for B&W decor.  These African mudcloths would be fabulous on a stool, pillow or a french gilt chair, or even thrown across a dining table.

Cabinet of curiosities

Cabinet of curiosities

Mannequin and shutters become table-top display

Mannequin and shutters become table-top display

Indian textiles

Indian textiles

Images by Brooklyn Boheme.

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TAGS: Decor, Design, Flea Market


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