View allAll Photos Tagged interiordesigner
Mandeville Canyon (Los Angeles) bungalow dining room designed by Windsor Smith.
Photo by Miguel Flores-Vianna, Domino, Aug. 2007.
Walls are painted Off-Black, Estate Emulsion, by Farrow & Ball. Photo from Homes and Gardens, Jan. 2006.
Details about furniture and accessories:
Nicholas armchair, £1,842 plus 5 m fabric, Beaumont & Fletche.
Nelson oak side table, £395, Benchmark Furniture, www.benchmark-furniture.com.
Frank oak desk, £1,995, Julian Chichester, www.julianchichester.com.
Manilla chair, £215, The Conran Shop, www.conran.com. Armchair covered in Adam's Eden, linen mix, 132 cm wide, £67 m, Lewis & Wood, www.lewisandwood.co.uk.
Curtain in Escale 8696/81, linen, 139 cm wide, £59 m, Nobilis, www.nobilis.fr
Edged in Austen in Charcoal, linen, 137 cm wide, £15 m, Laura Ashley, www.lauraashley.com.
Lamp, £1,765, Soane, www.soane.co.uk
Cup and saucer, £117·50 for six, Ma Maison, www.mamaison.uk.com
Throw, £295, Atelier, www.atelierliving.com
Popular grate, £259; slate slips, from £112 each; Chesney's, www.chesneys.co.uk
Elm vessels, from £210 each, Ray Key at Linley, www.davidlinley.com
Silver pear candle, £24·20 for set with apple; pencils, from 95p each, Green & Stone, www.greenandstone.com
Framed prints, £270 each, Quintessa, www.quintessa-art.com. Journals, from £19·50 each, Papyrus, www.papyrusuk.com.
Aubade 28 carpet, wool, £39·99 sq m, Kersaint Cobb, www.kersaintcobb.com.
In the 1960s, David Hicks lacquered the walls of his Chelsea living room in a color he called "Coca-Cola." The woodwork and ceiling are a bright white. Designer Peter Dunham: "This room sealed it — David Hicks was the James Bond of interior design. Wow! It's a great bold, sexy statement, and — much like somebody wearing a black dress — extremely flattering to the architecture and the things you put up against it. I would do it in Farrow & Ball Mahogany, a very dark brown, in a full gloss finish as he did, so it becomes luminous."
Photo courtesy of the David Hicks Estate, published in House Beautiful.
5-B1-F1-1900-17..Berlin, Stadtschloss, Galerie..Berlin-Mitte,.Berliner Schloss (Stadtschloss),.Paradekammern, 2. Obergeschoss,.Galerie.(Arch.: Eosander v.Goethe, Stuckplastik:.Charles Claude Dubut)..- Blick nach Westen. -.Photochrom, vor 1914..
Our room for 3 nights at the Pearl Beach Resort on a secluded coral reef near the small island of Tikehau. I am always thrilled by the Polynesian architecture and interior design. The rooms utilize native materials such as bamboo, woven fibers, driftwood, and various varnished hardwoods. There is no sheetrock or paint to be found anywhere. The overwater rooms are designed with space between the top of the wall and the roof so the trade winds can naturally cool the room. Invariably they have a glass panel or two in the floor and a light below the room so you can view and feed the sea life from inside. At night you are lulled to sleep by the gentle waves below and the tropical breeze blowing through the thatched roof above.
Outside, there is always a generous deck with lounge chairs and stairs down to a lower level deck and access to a shallow water lagoon. Tossing a morsel of food off the deck creates a feeding frenzy from the fish that hang out in the coral below the room. During midday schools of various types of fish crowd under every square inch of the room shadows because as it turns out fish prefer shade and this is about all the shade there is.
Walls are painted Sun Shower #A14-4 by Olympic Paints. Photo by Dittie Isager, from Domino, May 2007.
Learn more about Frank Roop and see lots more photos of his interiors at roomlust.blogspot.com.
I love the confident mix of color and geometry here -- note the spherical repetition, and the diversity of scale and height.
Photo from Roop's website: frankroop.com/.
The living room of screenwriter Adam Herz’s Hollywood Hills home, designed by Peter Dunham. The California pottery is vintage; Dunham designed the ikat cushions and sectional sofa, which is upholstered in a Henry Calvin cotton, and the vintage suzani pillow is from Hollywood at Home. Photo by Grey Crawford, Elle Décor, November 2008.
The library at Totier Creek Farm, a Virginia farmhouse built in 1760. Walls are glazed in Calke Green by Farrow & Ball. Sofas upholstered in gold and cream figured velvet. Lounge chair and ottoman covered in an overscaled Federal green chenille damask by Watts of Westminster. Linen curtains from Raoul Textiles.
Photo by Edward Addeo, from Barry Dixon Interiors.
London townhouse bedroom interior designed by David Oliver. Photo by Bill Batten, from Paint and Paper in Decoration, by David Oliver.
For the entrance hall of a Pennsylvania farmhouse, designer Jeffrey Bilhuber chose a regal blue (Benjamin Moore's Van Deusen Blue), which he based on a color he had seen at Mount Vernon. A 1920s settee is covered in Le Gracieux’s hand-blocked 'Kirachi' damask.
Photo by Julian Wass, House Beautiful.
Whether he’s designing for himself or for a client, Thomas Pheasant is interested in creating a flow from room to room. For his own residence, in a quiet neighborhood in Washington, D.C., he gutted the 12-year-old structure and crafted spaces with a classical inflection. Flexibility was key in the kitchen. “I usually entertain family and small groups, so having the ability to enlarge the room by opening the mahogany doors is great,” he says.
Pheasant designed all the cabinetry. The chairs are from his collection for Baker. The mosaic tile on the walls and floors is from Waterworks, as are the marble countertops and the faucet. The range is from Wolf, at Abt.com. Sub-Zero refrigerator. Nanz cabinet hardware. Pheasant, who often works on his laptop at the round table, loves the radiant-heated floors. “It’s wonderful to get up in the morning and go down to a kitchen with a warm floor, coffee and a newspaper.”
Photo by Gordon Beall, architecturaldigest.com.
In an open-plan room, designer Frank Roop says there should be at least two feet between every piece of furniture, except the sofa and coffee table, which should be 12 to 16 inches apart.
Photo by Francesco Lagnese, House Beautiful, April 2008.
Blogged about on roomlust.blogspot.com/.
I was thrilled to be able to go to Alaska for some extended backpacking! A good buddy of mine and myself spent 17 days backing and traveling throughout different parks in Alaska. From ridge trails and Denali National Park (formerly McKinley National Park) to Kennicot and Wrangel-St. Elias, we covered a lot of ground in a short time!
I took this photo of Mount Denali at the top of the first steep climb on the Kesugi Ridge Trail! This trail is located in Denali State Park which is just an hour or two south of Denali National Park! This trail offered some fantastic views of Mt. Denali and the surrounding mountains, forests and meadows! We spent 2 nights on this trail and it was a lot of fun! The landscape was always changing as we hiked up the mountain, onto the ridge and back down again! www.joeboylephotography.com/alaska-denali-mckinley-nation...
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In the kitchen of this Boston condo, Roop created the horizontally striped accent wall in the dining area with hand-cut strips of paper-backed silk. He also designed the stools, which are upholstered with Liaigre leather from Holly Hunt.
Blogged about on roomlust.wordpress.com/.
Photo by Bill Jacobson, Metropolitan Home.
If only Frank, Sammy, and Dean were able to stop by.... ::sigh:: I designed this music room to have a contemporary, sleek vibe and unexpected color palette. The leaning mirror in the corner enables you to see the pianist's reflection as he/she tickles the ivories... :)
A bedroom in Colleen Bell's Malibu house, designed by Windsor Smith. Smith also designed the bamboo bed, which is inlaid with nautical maps.
Photo by Lisa Romerein, from California Style magazine, June 2007.
In designer Frank Roop’s Boston duplex, a midcentury Eugène Printz desk, a stool designed by Roop, and a vintage resin lamp by Marie-Claude de Fouquières stand in the bay window; the curtains are made of Pollack’s Chambray Challis with a deep border of Edelman suede.
Photo by Eric Roth, Elle Décor, November 2007.
Blogged about on roomlust.blogspot.com/.
For more of my kitchen and interior design photos, click www.flickr.com/photos/12172464@N06/collections/7215760178...
This photo is currently featured on the HGTV.com website in the "Kitchens" section, highlighting black cabinetry. Cruise by HGTV on Flickr, also at www.flickr.com/groups/hgtv/
In this rural Massachusetts house, designer Thad Hayes chose clean, modern neutral furnishings that wouldn't compete with the stunning views of the surrounding landscape. "The guest bedroom has the same bed, the same side tables and the same rugs as the master bedroom.," he says. "It was a very democratic approach.” The gouache is Sol LeWitt’s 1998 Irregular Form.
Photo by Scott Frances, Architectural Digest, June 2007.
Design by Michael S. Smith; photo by Simon Upton, from Houses, by Michael Smith and Christine Pittel.
This coastal guest room has a secret bookcase door! This door leads to a large playroom and living area... surprise!!
Dunbar Beck (1903-1986) was a muralist, teacher, interior designer and painter. His works included mosaics and murals in New York`s Rockefeller Center and the World`s Fair in New York. He also created gold-leaf paintings with a folk dance theme on the sides of a grand piano in the East Room of the White House. Some of his paintings and portraits hang at Smith College and in churches in Sacramento; Astoria, N.Y.; Germantown, Pa.; and in Texas.
During his career, Beck was an art instructor at Yale University, an interior decorator and architectural designer.
Learn more about Frank Roop and see lots more photos of his interiors at roomlust.blogspot.com.
Photo from his website: frankroop.com/.