Showing posts with label AVA Designers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AVA Designers. Show all posts

Friday, September 24, 2010

Designer Finds/Pottery Barn Accessories


Woven Metal Bowl

I love home accessories and I found these great pieces at Pottery Barn. Classical proportions and a distressed finish give this decorative bowl its style. Use it to display botanicals or natural items you discover yourself.

17" diameter, 13.5" high
Made of iron with a gray painted finish.
Indoor use only.

Mirrors reflect the vintage Victorian ceiling tiles that inspired them. Mirrors, especially in great frames, add so much to a room. I totally love these, the frames add a lot of character!!!!

17" square
Made of intricately embossed iron.
Features a rustic whitewashed finish that’s edge-rubbed for a vintage patina.

Inspired by the elaborate, pressed-iron ceiling tiles of Victorian homes.
Each mirror in the set has a unique finish.

Set of 3.
Catalog / Internet only.



LOVE, LOVE, LOVE it!!! This has tuscan written all over it. Each terra cotta piece is hand thrown and hand glazed in white with a rustic crackle finish.


Unfinished areas provide textural contrast.
All are watertight; urns feature side handles.
Medium double-handled urn, cachepot and small double-handled urn are shown. via

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Mixing it Up

David Iatesta's Danish Cabinet adds a dash of old-world Euro-style with its restoration glass and gray finish. Lorts' slate-finish alder chair achieves a weathered look that belies its subtle, metallic undertones. It sits atop Bausman's Iron Console Table, which combines a rust-finish base with a natural oak barrel top. Pearson hand-planes its mahogany side table with bamboo-style legs to create a worn look in distressed gesso. PierceMartin's Oyster Cluster Lamp was inspired by a cluster on discarded rebar. Designer Stephen Woods adds a limestone base and burlap shade but stays true to nature's intent.
Allan Knight expands on his acrylic oeuvre with the Gonzalo Cocktail Table. Its acrylic base is topped with cerused oak. Above it is BoBo Intriguing Objects' Bluestone Side Table. Made of Belgian stone, it is paired with a waxed, rust-iron base. Boyd Lighting's Kyoto encloses white glass in an architecturally styled, solid brass casing. A maestro of minimalism, Dakota Jackson updates the stacking chair with his Vik-ter II Series, composed of solid maple with matte black finish steel legs. McGuire updates the classic rattan table with its 54" Heritage Pedestal table—a mix of glass, polished nickel and leather.


The Spectrum Limited Collectio offers its own acrylic jewels. Its Grill Bench conjures the nostalgia of outdoor cookouts. Its adjacent Portofino Dining Table has a sculpted acrylic base with a 54" glass top. On the table sits Lewis Mittman's Cairoli Lucite Table topped with glass. Behind it, the Cameron Collection's Hilton Pedestal has an Asian sensibility. Above, Metropolitan Lighting molds a shapely crystal lamp for its Walt Disney Collection.


Sunday, September 5, 2010

Dining Room Styles

Energizing Palette


Designer Troy Beasley adds vibrant pops of red, orange and blue to this streamlined, contemporary dining room. Neutral gray walls allow the colorful accents to shine. LOVE the color pop!!! Works well with any neutral basics.

Tonal Stripes


Designer Genevieve Gorder creates a bright backdrop with a creamy tone-on-tone paint treatment. A modern, oversized drum pendant and traditional table and chairs painted charcoal gray give this dining room a modern twist.

Warm and Family Friendly


Designer Angelo Surmelis creates a warm and inviting space for entertaining with a soft yellow paint color on both the walls and ceiling. Enlarged black-and-white family photos add graphic punch while a dark-stained table and upholstered chairs create an elegant and comfortable place to linger over a home-cooked meal.


Designer Troy Beasley opts for a pair of oversized, modern pendants to illuminate this lofty dining room filled with soft grays, warm tans and a fresh pop of pear green.

A Taste for the Exotic


Designer Angelo Surmelis brings Indian flair to this space with the addition of intricately carved and painted wood panels. He adds interest to the tabletop by layering plates, napkins and chargers in varying colors and patterns.

I love the idea of mixing patterns in the dinnerware.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Designer Appreciation Day

Designer Appreciation Day Set for Sept. 8


Thought I would display my own family room in honor of this tribute. The High Point Design Center has planned a Designer Appreciation Day for Wednesday, Sept. 8. Events include a complimentary lunch by E. Ellingtons at The Atrium on Main, 430 South Main Street, in High Point, N.C., and a presentation by Terri Maurer, ASID National Past President and co-author of Interior Design in Practice. All High Point Design Center Showrooms will be open for shopping throughout the day, including Swaim, Christopher Guy, and The Atrium showrooms. Host showrooms include Bernard Christianson, Christopher Guy, Swaim, and Durham Furniture. For more information, go to http://www.highpointdesigncenter.com/



Thursday, April 1, 2010

Home Life



Featured Designer
Rose Ann Humphrey

Home Life by Rose Ann Humphrey combines a full service Interior Design Studio with fine home furnishing resources as well as an exclusive line of Custom Built Cabinetry for all areas of the home. Home Life helps their clients Love How They Live. Home Life's goal is to assist in the process of creating homes that truly reflect who their clients are and allows them to Discover Their Own Visual Voices. Home Life has been building lasting relationships with Interior Design clients for over 20 years.

Originally based in Manchester, Vermont working on many Design projects in the Southern part of Vermont and Stratton Mountain, Home Life is known for quality interior design and excellence in design concept and execution.


Home Life showcases vendors from around the world. Their new and exclusive Custom Built Cabinetry for all areas of the home is sought after by home owners around the country.

Beyond her experience designing home interiors, Rose Ann Humphrey has completed noted projects in New England. The Point at Saranac Lake recognized by Relais and Chateaux as the Best Country Inn in the world was completed by Rose Ann. Projects in Sugarbush, Vermont, Stowe, Vermont and Stratton Mountain, Vermont are the resorts Home Life has worked extensively in.


Rose Ann Humphrey, Home Life's primary designer, has devoted more that 25 years to interior design, catering to clientele in New York, Boston, Los Angeles, New Mexico, Montreal and around the globe from her base in Vermont. Using her New York roots design sensibility, Rose Ann creates homes that offer rejuvenation and retreat.
 
I dicovered Rose Humphrey after she was featured in an article on Ava Living where I am also a member.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Urban Sophistication


Featured Designer
Patrick Baglino
Washington DC

Patrick J. Baglino Jr., ASID, has ten years of experience planning and designing residential interiors for clientele up and down the East Coast. He has developed a reputation for his harmonious blending of classic and contemporary elements and is recognized by House Beautiful Magazine as one of America's Top Young Designers.



There’s just nothing like throwing open the doors and windows for the first time each spring to bring all that fresh air and light indoors. It’s a feeling you want to capture all summer long, especially in the hot, turgid days of July and August. Washington D.C.-based interior designer Patrick J. Baglino, Jr., ASID, (www.pbaglino.com) welcomes the change of seasons as the perfect opportunity to bring changes into your home, whether it’s de-cluttering or simply exchanging dark accessories for light. Baglino, who as a child used to change his bedspread and curtains with the seasons, was recently voted one of America’s top young designers by House Beautiful. Here, his tips and trends for decorating this summer:


Outdoor rooms
I love eclectic design, but I also believe it’s very important to have a harmonious design statement. You don’t want to go from a home that’s traditional with contemporary accents to a very minimal Italian design porch that sort of comes out of left field. Even though an outdoor room is an extension of the home, it should still convey the feel and look of what’s happening inside. However, it can be set apart from the feel of the house by the use of different fabrics, maybe something a little livelier than what you’d have in your living room. Accessories are huge in terms of creating interest and flair. Bring in a really cool lamp or some beautiful indoor/outdoor rugs. (I love the plynl floor coverings by Chilewich.) Whereas in the past you’d go into a home and garden store and see a basic patio set with two choices for cushions, now you can have an outdoor sofa upholstered with fabric you choose, and add floor coverings and other details that will make an outdoor room really feel like a room.


Trend: I’m seeing a lot of bright colors. They’re not my first choice; I tend to go with tone-on-tone neutrals. I love earthen tones, especially in a room that’s going to create a bridge between the inside of the house and the outdoors. But there’s a definite trend toward brighter colors and stronger patterns. If your outdoor room is a screened-in porch, remember those things are going to be there pretty much year round, so be sure you can live with them that long.


A summer look for indoor rooms
As a kid, I used to change the look of my room with the season, just like my mother did in our living room. She had draperies in silk linen blends and then in the fall and winter she went to velvet and satin, with more trim. They were heavier and had more impact, and were definitely congruent with the time and season.


You can easily bring the summer months into your home simply by changing things like throw pillows in the living room. Instead of dark burgundy velvet pillows, maybe get beige linen with a crewel stitch of burgundy flowers, something that’s just lighter. In the bedroom instead of dark paisley bed linens get something fresh like white Frette hotel linens with a single blue stripe. Just lighten it up! And get rid of clutter. I’m really, really big on the clutter thing. Use going into a new season as an opportunity to go into drawers, closets and countertops and remove those things that are collecting dust and taking up space. It definitely gives you a fresh, light sense of relief.


Trend: Bring outdoor fabrics inside. Many manufacturers are creating beautiful fabrics made by Sunbrella that can be used to upholster furniture for either inside or out. I had a client with small children who wanted to have attractive fabrics for their family room and chose outdoor fabrics because of their stain resistance. Just last week I received a collection of Ralph Lauren fabrics done in Sunbrella.


Sunny inspiration
If you’re going to a summer home, you’ve got to turn to the surrounding environment for inspiration and bring that in. I just finished a condo in Bal Harbour, Florida. That client has a very formal home here with a crystal chandelier and silk drapery and cornices. In Bal Harbour I did a colorful glass table with a steel base and a light lilac and tangerine color scheme. It’s not something I would do in Washington, but in Miami it worked very well.


I’m really big on borrowing from our surroundings and seeking inspiration from what’s around us. I always believe first and foremost that in design it’s very much about who we are—what makes us comfortable and happy, what we need in order to function. But our environment has an impact on what we create for ourselves. What kind of home is it? Is it in the suburbs, or an urban dwelling, or on a beach or in the mountains?


Tip: I love to have clients get away from picking up a catalogue and saying, "Wow, a ready-made room. I’ll take that." It doesn’t allow you to express yourself. You may feel you don’t know how to put a room together and figure out where this goes and where that goes, but most people know what they like and what they don’t like. Put together a style file with paint colors, a lamp from a magazine ad, rooms or furniture that you like, then look at all those elements as the beginning of your personal style. This is what you respond to.




"HOME" magazine, "House Beautiful" magazine, HGTV, The Washington Post, "DC Modern Luxury" magazine, The Washington Blade, Houstonvoice. com, spokesmanreview. com, dezignare. com, TheSpec. com, savvyinsider. com, The Connecticut Post, ASID Metro Designline, staugustine. com, linkedin. com, The Other Pages, Facebook, PointClickHome. com




Dupont Circle Penthouse


Friendship Heights Sun room


Chevy Chase Bathroom
Chevy Chase Dining Room

Chevy Chase Kitchen





Patrick J. Baglino, Jr. Interior Design is a boutique design firm located in Washington, DC's trendy and vibrant Dupont Circle neighborhood. Since March 1998, Mr. Patrick Baglino, Jr. has gained notoriety and a reputation for creating interiors that are innovative, eclectic and traditional with a contemporary twist, a style he brands as "Urban Sophisticated". In conjunction with the designers professional know-how, available resources, and lengthy design experience, a successful design reflects the needs and personal style of the client. A strong client-designer professional relationship is the sound foundation for a tasteful, functional, and beautiful result.

Areas Served:

Primarily East Coast, United States of America
Affiliations: ASID, NCIDQ Certificate #017212
Awards: October 2004, "House Beautiful" Magazine, One of America's Top Young Designers.



Community Involvement:

Whitman Walker Clinic Volunteer
Current Projects: Projects throughout Northern Virginia, Southern Maryland and The District of Columbia. Prior projects in Miami, Florida.

It has been my pleasure introducing you to Patrick and his creative talents as One of America's Top Young Designers. View more about Patrick on HGTV .

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Sophistication and Serenity

Feature Architect/Designer/Real Estate DeveloperJANNA BULLOCK
NY


Janna Bullock is the Founder and Chief Executive of RIGroup, a real estate development company that focuses on residential, commercial, and hotel properties in the United States, Europe, and Russia.



Bullock arranged the “Russian House,” which displays modern Russian art and 19th-century furniture loaned by the Hermitage Museum. And the “Eco-House” by Alhadeff showcases river-stone walls in the bathrooms and cork dining chairs by the French designer Martin Szekely.



“Janna introduces a different concept of luxury, “Right now, luxury means a pompous style with a lot of gilt, bronze and decoration. We think being environment friendly is the most important: building with wood and stone, using recycled water and trying to use alternative energy sources even though it’s not easy in our climate.”



Ms. Bullock completed graduate work in comparative philosophy at St. Petersburg State University and received an MBA from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University.

A native of Moscow, Bullock founded her company in 2003 and has become an advocate for sustainable design and energy-efficient technologies in her building projects. Bullock is known for her commitment to excellence in the preservation and restoration of landmark architecture. One of few female real estate developers in New York City, Bullock has restored a number of historic townhouses in the City’s Upper East Side and the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius, an important Russian monastery located outside Moscow and a UNESCO World Heritage site. Bullock is also recognized for her support of contemporary design, both as an avid collector and committed patron of the arts, but also for innovative projects like the 2007 Russian Design Show at Ecoestate Pavlovskaya sloboda, a sustainable community in Russia featuring exemplary homes furnished with objects designed by David Adjaye, Frank Gehry, Gio Ponti, the Campana Brothers, Aranda & Lasch and others.

A passionate art collector, Ms. Bullock has assembled more than 4000 works by Russian artists from the late 19th century to the present day. Additionally, her collection includes 400 works by Western contemporary artists.
Affiliations/Honors/Awards

"Name Dropping"

December 6, 2007 -- THE Art Basel convention in Miami has drawn planeloads of hard-partying New Yorkers. Condé Nast and jeans company 7 for All Mankind co-host an event at the Ice House, while Cartier serves dinner at the Botanical Gardens and Jimmy Choo pours for the fashionistas at the Raleigh. Dennis Hopper will be at the Russia Miami exhibit organized by Jana Bullock and Hugo Boss. Tomorrow, Vanity Fair and MoMA hold a bash at the Shore Club, while Linda Evangelista hosts a dance party with Visionaire at the Florida Room. On Saturday, the event's closing night, Russell Simmons and Allison Weiss Brady throw a benefit for the Rush Philanthropic Organization at Intermix, as Adidas stages a Y3 event in the design district. But the big invites are the private dinners at Paul Wilmot's home and the soiree for Julian Schnabel and Lou Reed's flick "Berlin" at Set.

Recipient, 2008 Design Commendation, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Awards
Trustee, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Chairwoman, Jaze Art Foundation
International Leadership Chairwoman, Russian National Orchestra�s New York gala

Sophistication and Serenity is Janna's signature style for design, how appropriate for me to introduce her to you on my design site.