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Archive for April, 2007

Top Design For Your Home

Posted by DécorDrama on April 30, 2007

April 29, 2007

If your home is in desperate need of some “Top Design,” don’t fret. These websites offer excellent ideas, from cool products and buy to easy do-it-yourself craft projects to the skinny on local design events and the random recipe to cook in that finally-lovely kitchen.

Apartment Therapy: Chicago
Prepare to get addicted to this daily blog focused on “helping people to make their apartments better places to live.” The Chicago portal keeps you up-to-date on local design-related events, scavenges sites like Craigslist and posts the best furniture, linen and accessory finds, and compiles Top Ten lists on everything from bedside clocks to design magazines. Its annual smallest, coolest apartment contest proves that tiny spaces don’t have to stink.

design*sponge
This site is a favorite among editors of design mags ranging from Metropolis to Domino to The Oprah Magazine, and it’s easy to see why. Sneak peeks take you into the most creatively decorated homes you can imagine (prepare to drool), and plenty of product spotlights offer a tiny bit of hope that your home can become as beautiful.

shelterrific
The site “where people who love their homes click” makes for great daily reading in the vein of Apartment Therapy. Written by contributors who have worked at Budget Living magazine, the site houses advice on decorating dilemmas, showcases neat products and highlights other great blogs and sites. But it cuts all that design stuff with other fun topics, with recipe (along with cool aprons to cook them in) and craft project posts.

Martha Stewart: Home & Decorating
If you dream of the day when you can whip up cupcakes like Martha in your oh-so-perfect home, a stop at her site is a smart first step. Bypass the cupcakes section and focus on your interior, where you’ll learn how to dress a window, hang wallpaper and paint your ceiling. Photo galleries, message boards and videos make for an interactive experience.

HGTV: Design
Considering HGTV brings you everything from “Design on a Dime” to “Room by Room,” it’s only natural that its website would offer helpful design advice. You’ll find plenty of color advice, tips on small spaces and decorative paint techniques, enhanced by a ton of illustrative photos (check out the photo-heavy 25 decorating mistakes section for an easy way to learn what not to do).

Inhabitat
A green-focused blog devoted to the future of design, this is the place to go to learn about the next big thing—in regards to technology, practices and materials. You’ll find everything from the practical (a post on recycled billboard birdhouses will make you want to buy one of the hip creations) to the simply interested (a post on a Finnish-designed inhabitable cardboard room).

Style Chicago
Another site that keeps it close to home, Style Chicago is light on the design advice—you’ll find a small Design Trends & Tips section—and heavy on the where to buy. It feels pretty advertising-driven, but that doesn’t mean it’s not helpful: You’ll find listings of antique fairs, floor and sample sales and listings of events like a talk about the roots of Mission-style furniture. Join the free VIP list to get the skinny on private sales and events.

PLiNTH & CHiNTZ
If you’re a) considering a career in interior design b) part-way through studying for said career or c) neck-deep in the professional world of ID, check out this spunky site determined to “demystify the industry.” Expect a collection of student and professional “close-ups,” advice on landing your dream job, business etiquette tips and product spotlights.

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Decorating on a Budget Is Top Priority for Many Renters

Posted by DécorDrama on April 26, 2007

RISMEDIA – A recent survey conducted by Apartments.com indicates interior design and home decor is a hot topic for renters. According to the survey, ninety percent of renters will decorate when moving to a new apartment; of these renters, eighty-one percent will decorate within the first three months of their move.

The biggest decorating challenge facing thirty-eight percent of survey respondents is staying within a budget. Other renter decorating challenges include: not having enough space (23%), need help with organization (12%) and unsure of what colors to use (12%).

The Apartments.com survey found that the majority of renters, 65%, plan to spend $500 or less on their decorating budget while 18% of respondents will spend between $500 and $1000.

But decorating does not have to break the bank, as Eva the Shopping Diva, shopping expert and blogger from ShopLocal, gives this shopping advice for renters decorating on a budget:

- First try a small yet important room, like the bathroom. Simply hanging a new shower curtain with a gorgeous pattern can really change the look of the room. Add a great bath mat that compliments the pattern and a new look is born.

- Re-covering old dining room chairs or a worn-out ottoman are easy ways to subtly change the style of a room. Select a fabulous fabric and use a staple gun to give old furniture a new life.

- Wall decals are a snap to apply and if you get tired of them you can easily peel them off. You can get very creative with this great alternative to wallpaper.

For more information, visit http://living.apartments.com and/or http://www.shoplocal.com.

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Going to Interior Decorating School in L.A.

Posted by DécorDrama on April 25, 2007

by Kate McIntyre
Posted on April 25, 2007

Los Angeles is best known for its huge film industry, but other creative arts thrive here as well. The performing arts, fine arts, architecture, music, and interior design are all important parts of the cultural life of the city. The Getty Museum, the LACMA, and the MOCA offer a wide range of classical through modern art. In West Hollywood, the Pacific Design Center has a 14-acre campus featuring 130 design showrooms. The largest chapter of the American Society of Interior Designers is located in Los Angeles. Los Angeles’s rich culture makes the city the perfect spot for an aspiring interior designer to get an education.

Los Angeles Museums Offer Stellar Interior Design
The Museum of Contemporary Arts, Los Angeles, features art from the 1940’s to the present. It has a collection of 5,000 works spread over three facilities: MOCA Grand Avenue, the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, and MOCA Pacific Design Center. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art describes itself as “the largest encyclopedic museum west of Chicago,” a claim that is easy to back up with its huge collection of 100,000 works. In 2006, the Getty Museum augmented its collection of European and American art with the opening of a museum at the Getty Villa. This second museum’s focus is on ancient art from Greece, Rome, and Etruria.

The Pacific Design Center a Decorator’s Haven
It is no coincidence that “Top Design,” Bravo Network’s reality show about interior designers, sends its contestants to the Pacific Design Center to shop for their rooms’ furnishings. The 30-year-old Center offers 2,100 product lines for interior designers to choose from, and it serves as a great source of inspiration for anyone who dreams of a career in interior decorating.

If you are considering attending an interior decorating school, you should carefully consider you options in Los Angeles. It is fertile ground for any course of study in interior decorating.

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Stainless Still?

Posted by DécorDrama on April 23, 2007

Kitchen designers doubt reports the finish is on its way out
By Rosalie Earle
22 April 2007

It was a news release that brought the bad news. Stainless steel’s dominance as the “in” metal is over.

The list of top 10 trends for 2007 was picked up by newspapers, kitchen and design newsletters and interior decorating Web sites.

“Warm-toned, oil-rubbed bronze and copper will become more prevalent in hardware, plumbing and lighting fixtures, and will also take center stage in both large and small appliances,” proclaimed a big-city architect in the release.

Charleston kitchen designers aren’t buying that.

“Stainless steel is here for a while,” said Darin Fisher of Darin Fisher Kitchen Designs in Kanawha City.

According to Mike Stockett at Warden’s Kitchen and Appliance Gallery in Spring Hill, “In the West Virginia market, normally the trends are slower getting here and in leaving here. I don’t see a slowdown in stainless steel.”

Alice Atkins McCoy of Alice Designs pointed out that as long as stainless steel is used for professional ranges, others will want it.

Still that most venerable of professional ranges, Viking, is adding more colors to its line, a Viking range representative told McCoy.

“Color is making a big comeback with Viking rolling out 10 new colors at the Kitchen and Bath Industry Show in Las Vegas in May. They have at least eight colors in their current offerings and the new colors are more pastel shades,” e-mailed McCoy, who has a studio in Jacksonville, Fla., as well as Charleston.

For Viking appliances, though, graphite gray and stainless steel are the most popular finishes, McCoy reported.

She did agree with the criticism of stainless steel — it shows fingerprints.

Manufacturers are using an imitation stainless steel, however, that doesn’t show fingerprints, Fisher said, adding, “All appliances have handles.”

“Stainless steel is a neutral; it’s not fighting with anything else,” he said. And it runs the spectrum of pricing. “You can spend $300 on a dishwasher or $1,500 … You don’t have to spend $40,000 to have the look.”

And that’s a good thing. Many homeowners who want to update their kitchens don’t have a budget big enough for wood panels to disguise their appliances.

Besides, what’s wrong with seeing appliances? After all, they are in a kitchen.

It’s personal preference, Fisher said. Because the refrigerator is such a large piece, it’s one of the first things you notice in a kitchen. A homeowner may want to integrate the fridge with a cover to match the cabinetry in order to make a decorative range hood or colorful tile backsplash the focal point.

One South Hills woman went with customized wood panels because she didn’t like the fact that the dishwasher could be seen from the foyer.

Souped-up stoves

Although stoves can’t be disguised, Fisher said there are different models that are more flush with countertops than the typical standalone. Viking and other high-end manufacturers make a designer series that’s sleeker, more curved, a little softer, said Fisher.

“A lot of people are hanging out in their kitchen and they are cooking.”

Viking and other high-end stoves with gas burners are popular for their power, which provides faster and higher heat.

McCoy said some of her younger clients who have never cooked with gas want a Viking stove. “I tell them to cook a meal with gas before they invest $6,000 in a stove.”

In their new house in Teays Valley, homebuilder Jason Steorts and his wife, Sara, have a GE Mangum stove with professional griddle and grill on top. The burners are gas; the oven is electric.

Sara Steorts’ favorite feature is the warming light that keeps the pizza warm. Delivered pizza? She just laughed.

Drawers to heat and to cool

When asked what else was trendy in kitchens, all three local designers mentioned warming drawers.

“People are learning how to use them,” McCoy said.

Fisher said, “They’re great to warm plates up in. You can make dishes ahead of time. I have one and use it all the time.”

Stockett said he’s designing more refrigeration outside of the main work area — smaller ones to hold children’s beverages or as a supplement to a larger refrigerator.

In new construction, additional under-the-counter refrigeration is often necessary, Fisher said, because there isn’t as much wall space as in traditional kitchens. “People are taking down wall space to open up the kitchen … They are using more windows,” he said. “There may be one wall for the stove and the refrigerator.”

So storage for food and dishes is going beneath the counter space and kitchen islands. Even microwaves are being installed below countertops.

Multitasking ovens

As for ovens, McCoy said, “Speed-cook ovens are so neat. They’re like Easy-Bake Ovens on steroids.”

Although they’ve been used for years in commercial kitchens, she said new technology has added the feature to quickly switch the heat quickly to a higher temperature.

“They serve a secondary oven as well as a microwave,” said Fisher, estimating they start at about $1,000.

The GE Wall Oven with Advantium 120 Speedcook Technology boasts that its “Halogen-light system speed cooks your favorite foods to delicious perfection in minutes with no preheating.”

Cooking up to four times faster than a conventional oven, GE says its wall oven is four ovens in one: it speed-cooks, microwaves, warms and is a true European convection oven.

“They’re meant to be a companion with another oven,” said Stockett, who said one version comes with more than 100 programmed recipes.

New technology has also merged the microwave with convection cooking.

Once used mainly in restaurants, the convection oven has a fan that circulates heat from the heating elements above and below.

“You don’t have the hot spots,” explained Fisher, allowing multiple racks of food to be cooked at the same time.

The cooking times and temperatures for a convection oven don’t necessarily correspond to those of a conventional oven. But some models have made the conversion automatically, “so you don’t have to learn a new way to cook,” Stockett said.

One GE convection over-the-range microwave oven sells in the range of $750.

Fridges don’t just

cool anymore

Cutting-edge products for the kitchen were displayed in February at the International Builders Show in Orlando, Fla., that attracted 1,900 exhibitors.

News reports on the show cited the trend of separating freezers and refrigerators. Bosch has three different widths and styles, including an 18-inch-wide freezer.

Gaggenau has introduced the Lift Oven, whereby the bottom of the oven drops down to counter level for easy removal. The oven will be available in the U.S. this summer for about $3,300.

Whereas the Steortses have a small television attached to the bottom of an upper cabinet, the LG Electronics refrigerator has a 15-inch high-definition LCD TV screen on its door, according to a Chicago Tribune story on the international show.

“The refrigerator also has a 4-inch screen that displays a five-day weather forecast, a recipe bank from the Culinary Institute of America and digital photos uploaded from a USB port. It will be available this spring for about $3,500,” the newspaper said.

A new product by Kitchen Aid is a two-drawer dishwasher that allows for smaller loads to be washed and to save energy. Together, a 10-place setting can be cleaned. Cost is $1,349.

Stockett said Fisher Paykel manufactures the two-drawer dishwasher under its own name and for other brands. Although the Australian company may have revamped its two-drawer dishwasher, Stockett said “out of the first six we sold, we had to take back five.”

The top-of-the-line appliances like the GE Mangum Collection, Viking, Subzero, Wolfe and others aren’t just finding a home in new and upscale houses. A recent survey by the Architect Association of American reports, “Upper end appliances are becoming more popular even for homes that are not in the upper end of the price range.”

Fisher said homeowners “may go upscale because they may want to resell in a couple of years. Kitchens really do sell the house … it’s the wow factor.”

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Eco-Chic Interior Design

Posted by DécorDrama on April 21, 2007

An interior designer from Cherry Hill, NJ finds a way to bring the art of recycling to the Internet.
Written by Michael L. Brachman, Ph.D.

Eco-Chic Interior Designer from Cherry Hill, NJ launches UsedFurnitureFindex.com, a web site to sell and buy home furnishings, once loved.

Philadelphia, PA – Apr 19, 2007 — /prbuzz/ — UsedFurnitureFindex.com is an ecologically conscientious web site designed to make it easy for buyers and sellers of used furniture to find each other and help do it Green by recycling home furnishings. It is essentially a set of online classified ads but with pictures and a unique super-fast search engine designed specifically for furniture. The web site launched in June of 2006 and is a delight to all.

While there is nothing exactly like it out there, many ask how the web site differs from Ebay and Craigslist. Unlike Ebay, UsedFurnitureFindex.com takes no commission. The business model is very honest and straightforward. For sellers, it costs just $5.00 for a single listing and is free for buyers to find. The buyer and seller work out the delivery details just like a classified ad. The fantastic feature of zooming into each photo posted solves another problem of having to drive all over town, just to look at a piece of furniture saving precious time and gas.

Unlike Craigslist, UsedFurnitureFindex.com has a unique and super-fast search engine designed specifically for home furnishings. Users can search by keyword, condition, dimension, distance, quality level, price and more. The most powerful aspect of this search engine is its ability to search by dimension which allows users to find exactly the right size meeting the requirements of wherever it is going to be lovingly placed. Sellers can include up to four pictures. Buyers can zoom in and examine the furniture up close, almost like being there. Navigation is simple, easy and effective

When compared to classified ads, UsedFurnitureFindex.com offers a number of compelling advantages to sellers. Sellers can avoid the hassle normally associated with classified ads; dealing with the phone calls, having strangers wander through their house and the high cost of black & white three-line want ads. The web site is both regional and national. Built upon ZIP code, users can search locally or across the country.

Buyers include:

• First-time homeowners
• Young professionals
• Second home owners
• Newly separated or divorced people
• College students arriving at school or going off on their own
• Interior designers and their clients
• Businesses
•Charities

Sellers include:

• Empty nesters
• Estate liquidators
• Storage facilities
• Furniture stores
• College students leaving their furniture behind
• Manufacturers
• Spring cleaners
• Redecorators

New features are constantly being added to UsedFurnitureFindex.com; the latest being My Findex. Here users can add items to a watch list, create a wish list, manage their listings and their account information. Also included on the web site is the Home Improvement and Services Directory, listed by ZIP code. Users can find home-related services locally or regionally.

Denise H. Cooperman, the inventor of UsedFurnitureFindex.com, has been in the home furnishings industry for over 25 years and during those years, each client has questioned what to do with belongings no longer needed. Most do not want to list in the paper or even attempt using eBay. UsedFurnitureFindex.com answers all these needs. Denise herself practices the art of “reinventing” which is giving a piece of old furniture, once loved, a brand new life with a refurbishing or new function. Her catchphrase is “Do it Green, but let’s make it Aqua” to show that recycling can be both eco-chic and magnificent. So go to UsedFurnitureFindex.com and find that special piece that was once loved, give it a new home and keep our world green.

For more information contact:

Denise H. Cooperman
URL: http://www.UsedFurnitureFindex.com
Email: dcooperman@furniturefindex.comThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
Ph: 1-609-314-9668
Fax: 1-856-489-6281

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Posted in Decorating Trends, Décor News, Eco Decor | 1 Comment »

Let There Be Light

Posted by DécorDrama on April 18, 2007

Architects Let Light in at Former School, Industrial Building
By JIM SCHLOSSER
2007-04-09

Someone must have said, “Let there be light” and “let it shine abundantly.”

Presto! A former wholesale produce building that could have been mistaken for the city’s arsenal now has plenty of windows with more to come.

Architect Bruce Cantrell, of J. Hyatt Hammond Associates, and Lomax Construction Co. are redoing the 82–year–old downtown industrial building, which most recently housed the Imani Institute.

The law firm of Purrington Moody Weil will occupy the second floor, and the executive search firm Wyndham Mills will use half of the first floor, leaving about 6,000 square feet available for leasing.

The building dates to about 1925 when whole produce company W.I. Anderson Co. —- which, according to the late historian Ethel Arnett was the first to import citrus fruits and frozen fruits and vegetables to the area —- paid $60,000 for property at what’s now North Church Street and East Friendly Avenue.

The location, two blocks east of Elm Street, had been residential for decades, but downtown was creeping that way. The Anderson firm tore down three houses to make way for its square building with two floors .

Seemingly, a simple structure would have sufficed for a wholesaler located on downtown’s back side.

But Anderson added architectural touches. The most noticeable is the cast iron entrance that remains one of downtown’s eye– catchers.

It contains engravings of fruit baskets and other items and the words “Fruits & Produce” at the top. Centered above the doorway is a scale, with both sides in balance. The scale is a representation of those once common in grocery stores.

John King, project manager for Lomax Construction, says the entrance will remain unchanged.

The scales fit beautifully with building’s new purpose. In the American judicial system, balanced scales symbolize equal justice for all.

But law firm members will spend plenty of time explaining why “Fruits & Produce” is over the doorway. The answer: The words are vital to the building’s history and worth preserving.

“That is a magnificent piece of architecture,” King said of the entrance.

What’s more, the entrance will again become the building’s main passage, as it was during the Anderson era, which ended in the late 1960s.

Photographs from the 1930s or early 1940s by Greensboro photographer Carol Martin show a building with abundant windows. After Anderson left, a furniture and interior design firm that used the building briefly as a warehouse began bricking up windows.

Architect Cantrell pleads guilty to being an accessory to the building becoming a fortress. As a young architect years ago, he vaguely recalls sealing a few windows while the building was being renovated for Duke Power as a local headquarters, appliance center and bill payment office.

Pity students at Imani Institute, the charter school that was the most recent tenant, from 1998 to mid–2006. The only daylight students saw was when they passed through the lobby. Duke Power had turned former truck loading bays into a lobby with windows to make its appliances visible from Church Street.

Cantrell says historical correctness is a goal of the restoration. But changes are being made.

The building will be even more airy than Anderson built it. Anderson left the rear wall of the structure windowless.

Now, along the same wall, 14 windows are being cut into the second floor, 13 on the first.

Huge new windows also are being cut on one side of the decorative entrance on East Friendly. This is being done to match the big windows Lomax unsealed on the entrance’s opposite side.

On Church Street, bricked–up windows are also being reopened, and others are being added along the former loading dock on the north side.

The railroad siding that served the loading dock and the nearby former News & Record building (now the Greensboro Cultural Center) won’t return, to the relief of Norfolk Southern. A locomotive derailed crossing Church headed for the loading dock. While resurfacing Church, the city inadvertently paved over the tracks.

Cantrell says efforts will be made to get the Anderson Building, which should be completed in June, listed on the National Register of Historical Places. The state has indicated age makes the structure eligible for consideration.

And the fact that W.I. Anderson Co. added beauty to an industrial building in a then–out–of–the–way place also makes for historical worthiness.

There’s precedent. Cantrell says several warehouselike buildings in south Charlotte, resembling the Anderson building, are on the register.

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Spring Cleaning

Posted by DécorDrama on April 17, 2007

Organize Your Home For Spring
Newscanada.com
Apr 17, 2007

(NC) — Consider the following checklist from The Home Depot Canada to help you tidy up and get organized for spring.

• Spotless windows can brighten up your interior décor, allowing natural light in and framing the outside view to perfection.

• Cleaning out the ducts will improve air quality and circulation by helping keep the air dust and allergen free.

• Scrub away at dirt and stains with old-school brushes and sponges. For those small, hard to reach areas, an old toothbrush does the trick, especially on sharp corners.

• To mask garbage or laundry room odours, consider plug-in air fresheners, room sprays and candles.

• Consider using eco-friendly cleaning products when mopping and scrubbing the home.

• Leaf through the closet to select items and clothes you can either donate or store until next winter. If you haven’t already, think beyond the closet rod and install a closet organizer to create more space.

For more do-it-yourself cleaning and organizational tips, visit www.homedepot.ca or the Home Depot store in your community.

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HGTV’s Buy Me Series

Posted by DécorDrama on April 14, 2007

Well Dress Homes Tapes Segment for HGTV’s Buy Me Series
04-13-2007

RALEIGH, N.C. – Raleigh-based Home Staging and interior decorating business, Well Dressed Homes, LLC recently completed taping a segment for the HGTV series Buy Me. The segment is scheduled to nationally at a future date after completion of editing.

Janine Varney, Accredited Staging Professional and owner of Well Dress Homes, LLC met with Realtor® Sharyn Fuller of Fonville Morrisey and homeowners Bob and Marji Maarschalkerweerd to evaluate the home’s interior and exterior and determine what areas would benefit from Staging strategies.

“My role is to help homeowners understand that living in a home and selling a home are two different things,” explains Varney. “Not every buyer is able to envision how to make every room inviting. The 3,400 square foot house was full of personal mementos and treasures from the couples’ interesting lifestyle, including a history of their life in South Africa, but it needed to be neutralized to create broader appeal.”

Varney dedicated over 30 hours to the project, and was proud to share her accomplishment with the HGTV producers of Buy Me. The first step was to de-clutter the house to get it ready for the hands-on Staging. The owners invested in new granite and fixtures for their kitchen, had the interior and exterior painted and enhanced the landscaping—all recommendations made by their Stager Janine Varney. In addition, Varney glazed a dining room wall; rearranged furniture, pictures and accessories; and added finishing touches to create a “model home” effect.

“We used what the homeowner had to accessorize and Stage the rooms showing them to their best advantage. Then we purchased small items like new towels and rugs for the bathroom—little things that make a big difference.”

Within 48 hours of being on the listed in the local market, the owners had received an offer. The final sales price was over $20,000 of the realtors’ estimated market value, based on the average appreciation rate of comparable homes in the area. According to Varney, national statistics show that Staged homes show a substantial return on investment. Staged homes have a “days on market” range of about 65% less than a non-staged home and that the sale price is anywhere from 5% to 20% higher than a non-staged home. Simply stated, ASP staged homes sell faster for more money than those that aren’t staged. Real Estate Agent Fuller is convinced Varney’s Staging expertise was “key to the success this sale. I am not exaggerating when I say I was blown away by the transformation. She turned my client’s tasteful but highly personal (and very cluttered) home into a beautiful MODEL “.

The first segment of filming in Raleigh was so successful that HGTV has already begun working with Varney on filming a second segment of Buy Me.

Varney is an active member of the International Association of Home Staging Professionals, and she currently serves on the Board of Directors as Ambassador of the Raleigh Chapter. For information, visit www.welldressedhomes.com email j9varney@nc.rr.com, or call (919) 624-3460.

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Designer Rugs

Posted by DécorDrama on April 11, 2007

Designers Focus Their Stylish Ideas On Rugs
The Associated Press
11 April 2007

You admired hip designer Nanette Lepore’s peacock-patterned dresses, but they were so three years ago. Now you can resurrect the pattern for your floor.

Lepore has joined a growing list of fashion designers — Calvin Klein and Liz Claiborne (with Nourison), Oscar de la Renta (with elson & co.), Vivienne Westwood, Paul Smith, Diane Von Furstenberg, Lulu Guinness (with The RUG Company) — all translating their passion for fashion design to floor coverings.

Lepore recently introduced a bold-patterned area rug with her peacock design for the Doris Leslie Blau carpet gallery in New York. The gallery also in early March unveiled two nautically-inspired rugs designed by Tommy Hilfiger (one blue with white anchors, the other navy with a red chain-link pattern).

In a phone interview, Lepore said she was approached by the carpet folks and is happy she did the project, especially since she now has one of her rugs in her own living room.

“The way it transformed my living room with color and a bold pattern, it would be fun to do more of that,” the designer said. In fact, she’s considering designing another rug for her pool table area that the public may see in stores some day.

What do those in the world of interior design think about fashionistas stepping in?

“I believe good design is good design and a good designer is a good designer,” said Thom Filicia, best known as the design expert on the television series “Queer Eye For The Straight Guy.”

Filicia, who has also designed for celebrity clients including Jennifer Lopez and Marc Antony through his New York firm, Thom Filicia, Inc., said the important thing in interior design is understanding people’s lifestyles, something fashion designers do well.

“A good designer can transcend from the area they are focused on into other areas and do it very successfully,” Filicia said.

But would he recommend consumers start buying area rugs based on what’s in their wardrobes?

Filicia said he wouldn’t go that far. Still, he has a new show on the Style Network called “Dress My Nest” in which he will use fashion as a springboard to help folks figure out interiors.

“I do think there’s a relationship. Saying you want to match your house to your clothes is too literal but clothes do indicate your point of view, your aesthetic,” he said.

“Young and hip or traditional or conservative, you can tell when you see someone,” Filicia added. “And you get color from people’s wardrobes.”

Filicia will also soon launch a series of seminars in U.S. cities as spokesperson for Karastan carpets. His big advice: Designing from the floor up is a good start.

“When they (his clients) don’t know where to begin I tell them to start from the rug, in terms of colors and what sets the tone whether classical or modern, or whatever.”

And yes, he foresees having his own rug line (in addition to furniture and bedding), but not for a year or too.

Designer Lepore said what was appealing to her about designing rugs was that rug patterns have a longer shelf life.

“People don’t change their homes as much as they change their closets,” she said.

As for the trend of fashion designers stepping into rug design, she said, it brings “a fresh eye” and new brands that will create more interest.

Julie Rosenblum, brand manager for Nourison, the manufacturer of the Calvin Klein and Liz Claiborn carpets, agreed.

“In this day and age people associate certain looks and concepts with fashion designers,” Rosenblum said. “It’s reaffirming to the consumer that the product has a point of view and they understand that point of few.”

Rosenblum said she suspects more fashion designers will introduce area rugs, and that’s a good thing. “It brings rugs to the forefront. They (the consumer) may not know who the manufacturer is. What they know is there’s a line by that designer. It takes the business to a whole new level.”

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Christopher Lowell Brings His Seven Layers of Design to DirectBuy

Posted by DécorDrama on April 10, 2007

March 26, 2007
Interior Design News

(PRLEAP.COM) MERRILLVILLE, Ind., March 26, 2007 — DirectBuy, the leading members-only showroom and home design center that offers merchandise at manufacturer-direct prices, and Christopher Lowell Enterprises announced that renowned interior designer, author and Emmy Award winning television host Christopher Lowell will design a line of full kitchens, bedrooms and bathrooms especially for DirectBuy members. These exclusive designs will add another level of service to DirectBuy’s members across North America.

Lowell will create a total of twelve room settings using his Seven Layers of Design that will be showcased at more than 130 DirectBuy locations throughout the United States and Canada. He created The Seven Layers of Design to keep homeowners on budget and from feeling overwhelmed. It has since become a proven, world-renowned approach to home decor.

“I share DirectBuy’s passion for helping people improve their homes without emptying their bank accounts,” said Christopher Lowell. “DirectBuy’s philosophy of offering such a wide range of home furnishings, home improvement items and appliances at such low prices gave me so many options to work with. With the flexibility to design twelve different rooms with DirectBuy’s unmatched array of merchandise, I was able to create design solutions that will appeal to almost any homeowner.”

Since the Fall 1996 launch of “Interior Motives with Christopher Lowell,” Lowell’s engaging personality and attractive, cost-effective decorating solutions have made him one of the country’s most prominent designers. Lowell is the Emmy Award winning host of “It’s Christopher Lowell!” and “The Christopher Lowell Show.” He is also the author of The Seven Layers of Design; Fearless, Fabulous Decorating, If You Can Dream It, You Can Do It!; Dream Decor on a Budget; and other interior decorating books.

“We are very excited about working with Christopher Lowell. For the last decade, he has delivered outstanding creativity and expertise to give the public attractive and affordable design solutions,” said Bart Fesperman, vice president of sales & marketing for DirectBuy. “DirectBuy constantly strives to provide its members with outstanding value, selection and service through a simplified shopping experience. We can now bring Christopher Lowell directly to our members to help them create and enjoy the home of their dreams.”

In addition to the new Christopher Lowell Collection, DirectBuy members receive on-site interior design consultation at select locations; delivery and installation services; access to an easy-to-use computerized shopping assistant — the DirectBuy Virtual Showroom; an automatic subscription to DirectBuy’s “Direction” catalog, which has limited-time offers and price reductions; and access to showroom product specialists who assist members through their shopping experience.

Members of DirectBuy have access to thousands of items from more than 700 top manufacturers at showrooms in the United States and 500 top manufacturers at showrooms in Canada. Since DirectBuy offers an extraordinary selection of brand-name merchandise with no traditional retail markup, members can purchase merchandise directly from manufacturers and their authorized suppliers, including specialty and custom products.

About DirectBuy

For more than 35 years, DirectBuy has been showing thousands of consumers unparalleled ways to save as they shop for virtually everything for in and around their homes — from furniture, carpet and flooring, and custom window treatments, to kitchen and bath cabinets and fixtures, appliances and much, much more.

DirectBuy enables members to purchase most every product offering from more than 700 top manufacturers at showrooms in the United States and 500 top manufacturers at showrooms in Canada at over 130 locations across North America. To request a “Free Insider’s Guide to Buying Direct” and a Visitor’s Pass to learn more about the superior value and benefits of a DirectBuy membership, call 800-DIRECTBUY or visit www.directbuy.com

About Christopher Lowell Enterprises

Christopher Lowell Enterprises, LLC serves as the parent company for two specialized divisions: Christopher Lowell Productions Co. and Christopher Lowell, Inc., the design, licensing and marketing arm of his consumer product division. The latter launched in Fall 2000 with the debut of a designer paint line and more recently extended into office furniture and accessories. In keeping with his concept of “stress-free, pre-coordinated solutions for the home,” each product is a licensed collection and is complementary in style, scale and color to one another, all fitting into Lowell’s four lifestyle categories: Town, Country, City and Shore.

Christopher Lowell Collection licensee partners to date include, among others:
— 3 Day Blinds – In 2002 a new partnership was formed with America’s
largest retailer and manufacturer of custom window coverings. Under
the aegis of the Christopher Lowell Collection, options include solid
ash blinds, honeycomb shades, mini-blinds, and sheer vertical blinds.

— Catalina Lighting – The largest manufacturer of consumer lighting in
the country, Catalina Lighting launched its
Christopher Lowell Lighting Collection in October 2002, featuring a
variety of table and floor lamps.

— Office Depot – One of the world’s largest sellers of office products
and an industry leader, Office Depot introduced the Christopher Lowell
Collection in November 2003. Office Depot now offers a
theme-coordinated office furniture and accessories system: from desks,
credenzas and chairs to lamps and clocks.

— Jo-Ann Stores – The nation’s largest fabric and craft retailer
launched The Christopher Lowell Collection in May 2006. This industry
first home design solution offers pre-coordinated elegant and
timeless fabrics, textured trim options, educational tools, in store
classes and more all under one roof.

Contact Information
Sara Shragal
DirectBuy
Email DirectBuy
219-736-1000

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