Seeing Design Posts

Hoboken Furnished Apartment for RentTo walk away from your day-to-day life for 16-months, you need to tie up a lot of loose ends but we’re getting there. Quit job—check. Sell car—check. Find new health insurance—check. Rent apartment? This remains the one major missing piece before we take our honeymoon around the world. The hope is to rent our apartment fully furnished because 1. Putting stuff in storage is a pain. 2. Someone is bound to appreciate all my hard decorating work!

For anyone moving to the New York City area temporarily, who doesn’t want the typical box filled with industrial-grade furniture and craves an inviting, thoughtfully designed space, we want you to have this apartment. Everything in our home was chosen with great love and care (ex. we lived in camping chairs until we found our dream couch. When we couldn’t find the right kitchen island, we built it ourselves.) This furniture doesn’t deserve to be covered up with dropcloth; it deserves to someone who could love it as much as we do (or even be half as obsessed).

Condo Specs:
Three-story brownstone building, circa 1900
1,130 Square-foot condo
2 Bedrooms
1 Office/nursery
1 Full bathroom
Original wide-plank pine hardwood floors
Dine-in kitchen w/ large butcher block island
2 Decorative fireplaces
Backyard w/ patio, outdoor seating, grass, garden, trees, grill & fire pit
Dishwasher and stainless steel appliances
Washer and dryer in the building
For full details, see our apartment listing

Here is the abbreviated house tour but for more photos and full makeover backstory, just click on the room name.

The Living RoomHoboken Furnished Apartment for rentfurnished apartment for rent in Hoboken
The Kitchenfurnished apartment for rent in hoboken
The Master Bedroomfurnished apartment for rent in hoboken

The Bathroomhoboken apartment for rent

The Guest RoomSo if you know anyone—a visiting professor, a businessperson on a long-term project, a couple who’s moved across the country and left it all behind, or anyone who would just love our space, please email me at Anne@SeeingDesign.com

Etc

Seeing Design joins HoneyTrek.com At a fateful happy hour almost two years ago, friends of Mike and mine told us they were taking a honeymoon around the world. Our jaws dropped to the floor then stuttered out, “What do you mean? Is that even possible?” They were just going to quit their jobs and go. The concept seemed unfathomable but yet affixed itself to our brains from that moment on.

Mike and my love for travel runs deep. With a mother who was a flight attendant all through her 20s and Mike’s parents who were known for their spontaneous ski trips to the Alps, we were taught traveling is an essential part of living. In our five years of dating, we’ve been to nine countries and have constantly been thinking, where next? So when it came to picking a place for our honeymoon, we knew one exotic beach wasn’t going to satisfy this case of wanderlust.

So as of January 2012, Mike and I are starting our one and half year honeymoon around the globe. It’s crazy, we know -but if not now, when?

Around the World Honeymoon itinerary
We’ve since updated this map and extended our trip by six months. The world is a big place!

The Honeymoon Itinerary
The plan is to go the places too far to visit while we have a job and too rugged to do when we’re old. That means neighboring Central America and cushy Europe, we’ll see you at a later date. South America, Africa, Asia, Australia, New Zealand—here we come!

To be honest, our itinerary right now is very rough, though this is what we know: The first leg starts in Brazil for Carnival, then loops down to Uraguay, around Argentina, up Chile and ending in Peru to hike Machu Pichu in May. Then my sister is having her first baby and my best friend is getting married so we’ll be returning to the U.S.  for a couple weeks. By June we are off to South Africa, Zambia, Tanzania, Kenya, and Madagascar, followed by a slow tour through Asia to Tibet, Nepal, China, Japan, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, and ending in the South Pacific with Australia, New Zealand, then home by May of 2013.

Though we’ll be tightening up our plan over the next 40 days, we don’t want to let any one route bog us down. You never know what you’ll find out there so you need to keep a little wiggle room for spontaneous inspiration.

Around the World Honeymoon, switzerland SeeingDesign Abroad
When choosing names for this blog, SeeingDesign struck me for its global possibilities. The prospect of actually seeing and chronicling design around the world gave it potential that, when the time was right, I knew I would seize it. So akin to my past coverage of boutique hotels, design shops, architecture, chic finds around the U.S., it’s about to get a whole lot more interesting abroad.

A few SeeingDesign column ideas I’m scheming..
Design in Five: A round up of each country’s most unique, exquisite, exotic, bizarre, and charming products.
Architecture Tours: From huts to high-rises, a visual review of what’s home in farflung places.
Artisan Spotlight: Interviews with different local artisans about their lives and crafts.
Hotel Envy: The review of the best design hotels we stay in and the ones we would die to check-in to.
Market of the Month: A close look at the some of the coolest bazaars and flea markets around the world.

Luxury Hotels on SeeingDesign.comHoneyTrek.com
And for all non-design related adventures —hiking, beaching, dining, volunteering, etc.—Mike and I will be keeping a joint blog called HoneyTrek.com. Travel ideas, advice, mishaps, and musings will abound here. If this sounds like your kind of adventure, please head over to our blog and subscribe to the newsletter: http://HoneyTrek.com/Subscribe

It is going to be one heck of a journey—one of which we’d love you to participate in, from observing, commenting, to offering your suggestions, even requests!

We hope you can join us for the ride…

Places

boutique hotel ideasSo as some of you know, we have a big honeymoon trip coming up (full details soon) but to tide us over and recoup from the frenzy of wedding planning, a mini-moon was in order. Dreaming of a quick jaunt to Malibu, the Keys, or somewhere sunny, I was bit bummed when a family obligation left us with the ever-familar Pennsylvania as our best option. Visions of the Poconos’ 1970s champagne coup bathtubs and vibrating heart-shape beds were haunting me so I googled “Relais & Châteaux, PA” in hopes that this global boutique hotel network would freakishly have a location in the Keystone state. Lucky us, I found out they have two properties in the region and Milford’s Hotel Fauchère happens to be one of them.
Boutique Hotel FauchereThe recently renovated 16-room hotel was founded in 1852 by the master chef of New York City’s first and most famous restaurant, Delmonico’s, and takes its legendary reputation of fine food and hospitality very seriously. The service was beyond impeccable–it was unbelievably thoughtful and wrought with the most charming details.

Hotel Fauchere restaurant designThe wow-service began before we even arrived. We called to let them know we wouldn’t get in until 10pm and asked if they could recommend any places open for a bite. They called around, came up with nothing, but said they would stay open because they wanted the newlyweds to have a gourmet meal upon arrival. We had the entire restaurant to ourselves, enjoying a Delmonico steak and truffle fries, only to be greeted by the owners with a personal welcome and congrats. Wow is right.

hotel fauchere bedroom designAfter dinner, we went up to our minimalist but luxe room to find milk, cookies, and a bedtime story waiting for us on our nightstand. Beside it was a  card with the next day’s weather a hand-drawn with the sun, clouds, and temperature. The cute-factor was off the charts! And the bathroom with radiant floors and claw-foot tub, bedroom with Frette sheets, and Belgian linens weren’t bad either.

boutique hotel breakfast in bedThe next day we woke up and had breakfast delivered to our bedside. Continental breakfast usually means Cherrios and a fruit cup…oh no, not at the Hotel Fauchère. Homemade vanilla bean yogurt, fresh granola, warm croissants, and grapefruit with sugar blow-torched on top are the complimentary option.

hotel-design-fauchere-waterfallsFreakishly, March 18th was a 73-degree day so we asked them about taking a hike to the nearby Raymondskill Falls. They handed us a Picnic at Ascot backpack complete with Christofle hotel silver, plates, and champagne glasses and sent us to Fretta’s Italian food specialty shop (also adorable!) where we picked up olives and prosciutto to go with our bubbly.

Hotel Fauchere's dining roomOur last night wrapped up with total decadence: a five-course meal with the most delicious dishes like garden potatoes with roasted figs and local sour cherries , duck with herbs and nasturtiums and the perfect wines to match. To explain how attentive the wait staff was, when we asked our South African server a few questions about Cape Town, she gave us her email in case we ever needed any recommendations on a future trip.

Now if you are looking for a honeymoon spot, I wouldn’t try to sell you on Pennsylvania as the most romantic pick on the planet, but for a weekend getaway with full-service charm and pampering, you have to try Hotel Fauchére.

Places

vintage ski entrance designIt’s amazing what a production a wedding is and as much as people tell you that, you never really believe them until you are up to your eyeballs in escort cards and welcome bags. Truth be told, I love this stuff. From flower arrangements to place settings to lighting schemes, wedding design is a ton like home design but done in one big bang and in the prettiest dress you’ll ever own.

(Above) Entrance to Wonderland
Like a family crest, two crossed skis is the emblem of the Howard family—or has been ever since Mike found this slate sign at yard sale with their surname emblazoned on it. Planning a winter wedding, we knew this somehow had to be incorporated into our scheme. We ultimately glorified it by flanking two life-size antique skis and our framed initials on either side; this was the first thing guests saw when they entered the tent. There is nothing like the power of a little creativity and fishing line.
birch place card holdersPlace Card Craftiness
To keep with our winter woodland theme, we tucked our escort cards into homemade birch-log holders and laid them out on a bed of moss. The process of doing this was a little more than we bargained for but if you ever feel crazy enough to try this yourself—start with 6-8-foot long logs, cut them to the depth of your table, then cut slits at a 45-degree angle about six inches apart for a legible and eye-pleasing display.

table numbers as symbolsNon-Number Table Numbers
For table numbers, we figured 1-15 was a little expected, and giving each table some cutesy name was pretty played out too, so we had the bright idea (still proud of this one) to give each table a vintage winter icon (snowshoes, mitten, sled, goggles, ice skate, bota and more). So if your escort card had an old chair lift on it, you would look for the table that had the matching chair lift sign. No numbers or words needed. To do this, we worked with our amazing stationer Regas NY to create sketches with just the right old-school VT vibe.

wedding-tent-lightingCeiling of Chandeliers
Most people pick their wedding florist for their skill with flowers…ours we picked for her amazing collection of antiques. I always had this dream to bedeck a reception room with glittering vintage lanterns and chandeliers and Nancy Murray of A School House Garden had a whole barn-full of them to fulfill my bridal dreams. This is no easy feat in a canvas tent but under the lining she built an impressive network of cables to seamlessly string about 70 French-wire lanterns, five-arm crystal chandeliers, and glass beaded votive holders throughout the tent.

winter wedding floral designBudding Blooms
And not to downplay Nancy’s florist capabilities–she is beyond talented and achieved exactly what we were looking for: tons of texture, the perfect palette (crisp greens, rich purples, and winter whites) and arrangements that felt sophisticated yet completely natural.

-custom designed cookie wedding favorsMade with Love
I wouldn’t have thought to do this but the element of surprise and amazingly sweet (and delicious!) gesture made the cookie favors one of my favorite additions to our tables. Mike’s best friend Tushar and his wife Ana own the Hokulani Bake Shop in Hawaii and the night before their flight from Honolulu to Vermont they baked 175 cookies and decorated them with the same tree-carved heart motif from our invitations.

wedding-white-ski guest-bookSki Guest Book
Instead of having friends and family sign a guest book, we put out a pair of all-white skis we found at a backcountry ski shop in Rochester, VT. They were said to be military skis from WWII to help camouflage soldiers during snow combat. Without bindings or markings, this quirky clean slate had guest book written all over them. We put out a few Sharpies and friends wrote us well wishes on skis that we’ll put up on display–someday when we have a Vermont house of our own.

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