Dwell
The Academy of Home Staging's hands-on approach to learning and application equips you with the tools and training needed to leave the program and launch your own business. Over the course of five fun, information-rich days, our instructors and guest speakers will help you master critical design principals, employ a systematic process to simplify each home staging project, and integrate sound business fundamentals into your new staging practice.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Great Magazines for Home Design
Dwell
Monday, December 6, 2010
Interior Design Cheat Sheet
Want to know a little secret? There is actually a science to making a room look good. It is all about understanding, and acting, basic design principles, overreaching ideas like balance scale. You also need to consider color, texture, light, and other specific elements. First, here are the basic principles that will impact your space.
Harmony
Make sure the mood of the room is cohesive or unified. The arrangement of furniture should fit they style of your furnishings. For example, if you are going for a minimalist. Modern look, do not have a cluttered corner of traditional accents. Harmony does not expel the chance for contrast. Using opposing elements like modern and traditional furniture can be successful when done in equal parts, like a checkerboard.
Rhythm
It is the repetition of elements in space and time. There is always a beginning and an end to the pattern: think of columns, or an organized grouping of photos, Symmetry arranging elements around a center line like a fireplace, is one way to repeat shape or color.
Scale
Scale compares the size or dimensions of one thing to another in order to properly keep a room to scale you need to take the sizes of objects into consideration. The heights and weights of your furniture should be relative to the size of your room. A giant sofa in a tiny living room will not work right; neither will tiny nightstands next to a king- size bed. This also relates to the proportion of objects. The shade of a lamp has to be in proportion to the base.
Emphasis
Every room needs a focal point, the area that draws your eye. Whether it is and existing focal point or a chosen one, you need to emphasis the area around it so that everything else leads the eye to the focal point by placing hot colors or small and visually interesting items away from the area.
Balance
Similar to establishing harmony balance is all about arranging furniture in a way that is pleasing to the eye. Centering certainly does the trick, but it is more about evenly distributing the visual weight of furniture so that no one piece overwhelms another. You need to arrange the elements of the room to provide equilibrium. You would not put an entertainment unit next to an ornate fireplace. If you have a large piece of furniture at the end of the room you need to balance it with another viually weighted piece at the other end.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Interior Design History
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Tuesday, November 23, 2010
A Material World
Fabrics are the heart and soul of decorating. Fabric adds important elements of comfort to every room by bringing texture, pattern and color to living spaces. Fabrics come in different colors, patterns, weaves, and textures, which influence the feel and the look that makes them function. The strongest fabrics are tightly woven; these types are perfect for heavily used furniture. It limits the wear and tear of the fabric.
Washed rayon chenille is one of today’s most versatile fabrics. This luxuriously soft and highly durable material looks right at home in spacious, contemporary lofts. Rayon also achieves an abundance of comfort for those who prefer the eminence of traditional, antique filled rooms.
LEATHER
Resists cracking and tearing, and is the longest-wearing upholstered material. Even better, leather ages gracefully, providing wonderful character and depth. It is easy to maintain, just clean with a damp cloth.
WOOL
Fabric brings warmth. Some wool is scratchy and gives some people the idea that they are "allergic" to wool. Wool fiber comes from a variety of animal coats, not all wool is scratchy but rather extremely soft. The wool fiber has crimps or curls which create pockets and gives the wool a spongy feel and creates insulation for the wearer. The outside surface of the fiber consists of serrated scales that overlap each other much like the scales of a fish. Wool is the only fiber with such serration’s which make it possible for the fibers to cling together and produce felt.
SILK
Is the fabric that makes its own statement. Say "silk" to someone and ask them what do they visualize? No other fabric generates quite the same reaction. Silk has had its reputation
as a luxurious and sensuous fabric for centuries. For those associated with
wealth and success, only had the best silk in their possession. Silk is one of
the oldest textile fibers ever known to man. It has been used by the Chinese
since the 27th century BC. Silk is mentioned by Aristotle and became a valuable
commodity both in Greece and Rome. Silk was sold for its weight in gold.
LINEN
Is elegant, beautiful, and durable. Linen is the refined luxury fabric. Linen is the strongest of the vegetable fibers and has two times the strength of cotton. Linen table cloths and napkins
have been handed down from generation to generation. Not only is linen fiber
strong, but it is smooth. With linen the finished product is always lint free.
China, silver and candles are enhanced by the brilliance of linen which only
gets softer and finer the more it is washed.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Have you committed a Decorating Faux Pas?
- Do you have a focal point?
A Focal Point focuses specifically on a point of interest which makes a room unique. It could be a wall with art, a sofa with art above it, a fireplace, and it could even be a spectacular view of the outdoors. Each of these can provide your room with a visual anchor that can bring it together as a whole.
- Trying to make an old piece of furniture look new?
We all want asofa that will not only continue to look good when times and styles change, but we want one that will hold up like new as time goes by. It is worth saving and buying a new sofa. Although, if you desire to keep the one you have, use your creativity and look for slip covers you can use and change out as the seasons change.
- Using the space you have wisely.
If you have a sofa that is placed right against the wall, leave about 3 feet of walking space behind it. You can also add a nice sofa back as decoration and place plants and accessories to make it feel cozy. If you have a seating area with a sofa, chairs and a coffee table, leave about 18 inches of scotch room between the leg room and the coffee table. This will create a traffic pattern that lets you enter and walk around the room easily.
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- Not sure how to hang your photos?
The height at which art should be hung is according to your eye level. When spacing art that will be hung right next to each other, leave about 3 to 4 inches of space, or four fingers width. When hanging art all of the headers should be at the same height. This keeps the flow of the room feeling nice.
Monday, November 8, 2010
What are Green paints and are they as good as regular paints?
Benjamin Moore's proprietary colorant system also addresses another, often overlooked "green" factor: performance. Many Low VOC paints require multiple coats to get good coverage. The new waterborne colorants actually improve the performance of Aura and Natura paints. Fewer coats needed and the finish is more colorfast. They are less likely to fade and are more durable. Meaning you will not have to re-paint as often. They also dry faster and have little to no odor. Meaning you will no longer have to move out of your bedroom for a for a couple of days.
From a green perspective, less product equals less manufacturing and less transport, saving on water, power, and the production of greenhouse gases. Which makes choosing Aura and Natura not only good for the planet but also plain common sense.
Article from Benjamin Moore
www.BenjaminMoore.com
Friday, November 5, 2010
Give your Kitchen A Facelift
When it comes to starting the face lift process for your kitchen, start with De-cluttering those nooks and crannies. It should not stop with the counter tops. The counter tops used for old newspapers and magazines can now be used for a small office area or a small bar. Make sure you give your items breathing room, that way you will more likely to use them. Don’t forget about those drawers that get so jammed you can never open them anymore. Perhaps donate items that you know have not been used in the past year. It is so nice to be able to grab utensils when your unwanted clutter has been cleared away.
A great way to utilize your empty space once it has been cleared is to add a small bookcase in a narrow niche to store place mats or extra lines, or even your cook books. And when you are all done, add a small table and chairs right under a window to enjoy the weather with a cup of coffee.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
What color is your Kitchen?
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You are ready to break away from white, but what color should you choose for your kitchen? And which color is your favorite to use?
There are many different things you can do to a kitchen and many different colors you can use to give it the homey feel right. Well here are a few colors that might spark interest and land on your favorite color wheel.
You might as well make any kitchen cozy. Everyone goes in it anyways. You could not even beat them out with a spoon if you wanted to. Plates would look great with Warm Sienna. Contrasting with teak countertops, or even cork on the floor. Very soft and warm to the foot.
Kitchens often have so little space you have to make the color count. This is sunshine in a can, with Golden Honey, like a yellow with a little bit of brown in it, As opposed to a yellow with green and it looks wonderful with wood.
Many designers are so tired of all of those off-white cabinets. Many like to paint them dark. And this Wolf Gray, a Swedish gray-blue, will make the whole room very Gustavian, with chalky white walls and Carerra Marble counter-tops.
You are taking a chance if you go orange, but it can be fabulous. Try Spring Squash. It is playful during the day for kids and at night with lamps on it, it will just glow. Start with only one wall. You never know that just may be enough.
Now tell me and everyone else what color is your kitchen? If you love the color tell us why and how it makes you feel. If you do not like the color tell us why and then let us know what color you would like to change it to
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
How do you want your room to feel?
How do you want your room to feel?
Could you fall asleep in a red bedroom? Would you look your best in a blue dining room? It is not enough just to like a color. You need to think of how it will affect you. Every color has the power to make you feel calmer, livelier, prettier, younger, happier, healthier.
Color is sexy, fun, the most important part of decorating. But it is also the most psychological and elusive.
Three things guide us to the perfect color: The people who live there, the space themselves, and geography. The white you would use in California is not the same white you would use in New York. If we succeed, color is not the first thing people notice when they walk into a room. It is just part of a total realization and gets absorbed into the atmosphere and emotion of the space.- Donald Kaufman www.donaldkaufmancolor.com
With this said, please reply to this blog and let everyone know how you would like to feel when you walk into a room and what colors are you seeing in that room to make you feel that way? How would you like your clients to feel if they walked into that same room?