Category: <span>Etc</span>

WScarpetballsl.jpgI know these ceramic balls from Williams-Sonoma Home may just look like decorative spheres but their original fate wasn’t just to sit in a bowl–it was to bowl. In the Victorian era, carpet bowling was all the rage. Refined ladies and gentleman would gather in the parlor and set up these carpet balls like pins across the rug for indoor bowling. The game is now a thing of the past but the original spheres are still circulating in auctions and antique stores while reproductions are popping up at retailers like William Sonoma Home. If you love the look of these smooth painted spheres, six for $38 at WSH is a fantastic deal but to me, it’s the antiques’ dents and marks of hard fought game that really make them appealing.

I first heard of carpet balls when I was profiling the home of Americana auctioneer, Jeff Jeffers. He uses the 19th century spheres as a center piece in his dining room.

carpetballred.jpgThis 19th century carpet ball looks like it took a pretty hard hit from a Victorian bowler, but that bit of character makes me love it even more. This carpet ball and a ton more available on Cyber Attic.

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If you love X benches say it in your upholstery. This checkered pattern is comprised of little Xs mirroring the leg design and its namesake. Its a slightly cheeky take but a totally sophisticated look. But if you want something more extravagant, this French-style seat only takes a yard so you can finally buy that fortune-by-the-foot fabric you wanted for your sofa and curtains. With crisscrossed white gold gilt legs, any pattern will look good.

The X bench, $2,900; Downtown20.net. To order email downtowninc@sbcglobal.net or call 310-652-7461.

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I don’t have a headboard above my bed for various reasons. I rent in New York City and that usually means: its small, its expensive, and you wont be there very long. So investing in a headboard (and schlepping it up my fifth floor walkup) just never seemed to be an option. But I recently found a few clever solutions that are changing my tune.

(Above) Window-Friendly Headboard
Another reason I don’t have a headboard is that I like my bed against the window. But when your bed looks at a brick wall, you need all the light you can get. To fix that, Andrew Muggleton’s bed head is made of sand-blasted glass and framed in maple.
Santiago Bed, $5,700 for a queen size; AndrewMuggleton.com

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Wall Mounted Headboard
If you are feeling a little commitment-phobic to buy an entire bed frame, Charles P. Rogers designed a leather headboard that you can take on and off your wall like a picture frame. Who says a headboard has to be connected to your bed? This gets you the look.
Poole Headboard in cream micro suede, $299; CharlesPRogers.com

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The Headboard Effect
Structurally we don’t need a headboard, but aesthetically we want it. So if you fancy the idea of it more than the actual hunk of wood, here it is: the Baroque decal.
Elegant Headboard wall decal, $50; UrbanOutfitters.com

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What do Josiah Wedgwood and Charles Darwin have in common? A daughter and a mother! Josiah Wedgwood was Charles Darwin’s grandfather! I discovered this interesting tidbit when I attended the UBS Art Gallery opening of “Josiah Wedgwood and His Circle.” The exhibit focuses on the family and friends of Wedgwood, the vertible grandfather of contemporary ceramics (and evolution, apparently). Fortunately for me, the exhibit was around the corner from my office so I spent my lunch hour leisurely strolling through the space. It was while admiring the Wedgwood founder’s incredible cream ware and jasper ware that I came across the name, Charles Darwin. I was lucky enough to spot it since there was no attempt to highlight the connection or draw attention to it. No bold, no italics, no anything … just a line or two signifying Wedgwood’s connection to the man who coined the term, “survival of the fittest”! I rushed over to the curator for confirmation. Lo and behold, the two greats were related!

(above) This Wedgwood pitcher looks like something Charles Darwin would have crafted, doesn’t it?

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Grandfather Josiah Wedgwood (left); Grandson Charles Darwin (right). I am sure Grandpa would have been proud of Charles' scientific advances but livid about the unruly facial hair.

Josiah Wedgwood and His Circle on view January 24 – April 18, 2008
At the UBS Art Gallery, 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY

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