Tag: <span>decorating</span>

christmas treeIn my hometown of Hollywood, Christmas trees come from parking lots. My family and I would go to Home Depot every holiday but now that I live in the East and am in love with a man from the Poconos, cut-your-own is the only option.

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Because I'm the city girl, my Pocono counterparts made me cut down the tree.
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We got a 14' tree for Mike's mom (we nearly broke the bale on that one) and an eight-foot tree for our Hoboken apartment.

The Neola Christmas Tree Farm turned out to be fantastic all-around. Not only was it a bargain at $25 a tree, but they let us have all the branches and logs we wanted for my various decorating schemes.

christmas tree
As quick solution for the front door, we hung a single branch with an ornament and it turned out to be a pretty cute alternative to a wreath.
christmas tree
Mike and I are getting ready for our house warming this weekend and decided to create a swag over the door with the rest of the branches.

treeThe tree is up (smelling better than any Home Depot pine) and ready for decoration. Since we only have a small smattering of ornaments, we’ve decided to lay out craft supplies at the party and fold ornament-making into the festivities. I’m sure it will be hysterically kitschy but in exchange for personal touches and genuine character, I wouldn’t want our first tree to be any other way.

Places Projects

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Is this the Met Home of the Year?

In past years the winners of the Met Home of the Year Contest have run in the pages of the magazine but this year, the battleground for the modernist accolade, the luxe prizes, and the public praising is on PointClickHome. And it could all be yours if you enter your home by November 18th.

To give you a little taste of the competition we dug into our metcontest inbox and pulled out a house worth a mention: Trowbridge Farm. House is an understatement considering that we are talking about a 9,000-square-foot former hotel from the 1930s. When this couple first saw this Catskills behemoth in 1994, even in its state of disrepair with mushrooms growing on the living room floor and vines coming in the windows, they knew they had to have it. It took eight years to gut the 50-bedroom and ten-bathroom hotel, put on a new roof and plan the final renovation. We have to commend this labor of love and adore the historic and modern mix but the question is, is this:

MetHomeContest_Dining1.jpgThe Met Home Dining Room of the Year?

MetHomeContest_Living-room1.jpgThe Met Home Living Room of the Year?

MetHomeContest_Kitchen1.jpgThe Met Home Kitchen of the Year?

Help us decide if think this house or its individual rooms have what it takes…and if you think so, let us know with a comment, but if not, maybe you should put your home into the running.

To enter email methomecontest@hfmus.com and include photographs of your room/s and a short story of your home’s design. The best part of this contest is that in addition to whole house submissions, any space within your home is a viable entry (a mosaic tile floor, shaped like a zebra rug, is in the running right now, if that tells you anything). And for a $5,000 shopping spree to Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams or the great chance to win one of the 13 prizes for the Editor’s Favorite rooms–it’s worth an easy email entry.

Last call for submissions is November 18th, so be bold, be house proud, and send those pictures in to methomecontest@hfmus.com!

Projects

Refinishing_BuffetLeg.jpgI tend to fall in love with run-down objects. I look right past the chipping paint and wobbly frame and see (with rose-colored glasses) a decorating project. Last week I mentioned how we went on an antique furniture spree at the Old Country Store outside Rhinebeck, NY—and this weekend was the restoration aftermath. Mike and I attempted to refinish 13 pieces of furniture in two days. Crazy, but doable. We staked out the common backyard in our shared brownstone with a 20’x15′ tarp, cans of paint, stripper, thinner, saws, drills, tons of sandpaper and set to work. I wish I had all the finished pieces to show you, trust me, but they are still drying in a scattered heap behind our house.

Here is a bit of this work in progress and pieces that inspired a paint-covered weekend:

Refinishing_Desk_before.jpgI adore this desk! I was told it is early Stickley but the clean lines and open sides (they’re bookshelves!) are what sold me. This piece was in pretty good condition, all we had to do to doctor it up was give it a sand down and a new coat of white.

Refinishing_BuffetBefore.jpgThe wood veneers were peeling from all sides of this buffet but I took one look at those legs, the original hardware, and the embossed detailing (see above) and I had to have it. If you sense a theme, I adore French flair in my furniture.

Refinishing_Windows.jpgMike is a fantastic photographer so knowing that photos will be big part of our wall decoration, we had to think of different ways to display them. We saw these 1940s windows and decided to turn them into 12-image picture frames. We bought two, painted them white, and have plans to hang one on each side of our living room-to-kitchen archway.

Refiniishing_MirrorWhite.jpgThe lattice work makes this regal piece light and chic. It will go nicely in our living and it only needs a few paint touch-ups.

Refinishing_Mirrorsmall.jpgThis mirror originally had a decorative wood overlay along the top but when we found it, only a chunk remained. So we pried off what was left, sanded the mirror frame down and painted it a rich red to match the flowers in our guest bedroom wallpaper.

Repainting_overall.jpgThis was the state of my backyard last night as we waited for the paint to dry. Hopefully in a few blogs all the drawers will be back in place and the furniture will be adorning my apartment with as few scuffs as possible.

Projects

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This week we fully launched our coverage of Metropolitan Homes Showtime House: behind-the-scenes videos, house tours, room galleries, decadent decor, designer secrets, sweepstakes and virtual mood boards that’ll help you recreate the featured rooms. But when you have a four-story townhouse designed by 12 top designers using six of the edgiest, wittiest shows on television for their inspiration–it’s almost too big, too amazing to begin to capture it all. The house is packed with stories on innovative color, texture and materials–it is basically a novel on good design–but if there was one thing that makes these rooms sing, its the lighting.

(Above) Paper Clip Chandelier by Gary Ponzo featured in Jamie Drakes Californication Writers Study
Meticulously handmade from over 4,000 little clips, this chandelier casts a prism-like pattern onto ceiling and walls when illuminated by its half-silvered bulb.

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Flos Sky Garden by Marcel Wanders featured in Laura Kirars Tudors Living Room

Inspired by an antique decorated plaster ceiling in his former home, the Dutch designer created these architectural spheres with laser-cut leaves, flowers and branches in a chalk plaster relief.When grouped together, they fill the room with an illusionary garden.

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Drink Another Chandelier by Gregoire Abrial featured in Amy Laus Dexter Dining Room

Repurposed wine glasses dipped in white latex, then strung amidst wood, cables, light bulbs, wires, wax rope and ribbon form the aptly named “Drink Another.”

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Light Fixture by David Weeks featured in White Webb's Weeds Lounge

This nine-globe triple-tier fixture hovers like a mobile. Weeks slices away portions of generic cone shapes until a new, sensual form emerges which then can be added to the lamp base.

This is just a scratch on surface of great design, so click here for more from the Showtime House.

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