Showing posts with label west elm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label west elm. Show all posts

For the home: Good design in the hood

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Let's hear it for the retail stores who are always creating better and more affordable design for the savvy and smart customers who want only the best in their homes but, perhaps don't want to pay a higher price tag for custom furniture.  A mixture of high and low furniture is ideal to create a more real and lived-in home so leave it to smarter chain stores to offer us better options on mass production.  Here is a list of my latest favorites in home furnishing.  Enjoy!
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Monday Meandering

Happy Civic Holiday to my fellow Canadians.  Hope everyone is having a beautiful long weekend!

1)  The latest issue of House of Fifty is out and I’m loving the cover - well the whole issue really.  My friend Christine wrote the most insightful article on How to Build an Eclectic Space.  If this doesn’t stop you from “buying the set",” I don’t know what will!  Click here to read.

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2) Recently stumbled upon this site. Love the photos pairing unlikely celebs like this one of Mick and Dolly.

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3) I’m loving some of the new pieces in West Elm’s Fall preview.  You can see them here.

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4)  Ikea will introduce some new products in mid-August.  Vibrant textiles, vintage boxes and magazine holders and life-size (to a toddler) fabric dolls which make me smile are just a few items that caught my eye.

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(told you, didn’t these dolls make you smile?)

5) This post on ottomans was one of my first and I need to write an updated one as I am still a huge fan.
Sneak peek:  I picked up this ottoman and stuffed all 60” of it into my car to deliver to a client (the things we do!)  Isn’t it beautiful?  I custom designed it using a Thom Felicia for Kravet fabric.  My upholsterer did an amazing job on the diamond tufting.  It softens all of the leather furniture my client has (and wants to keep) and means that everyone can put their feet up while watching the tele!

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Have a wonderful week!

If you need decorating help, I’m just an email away!  Please contact me at vanessa@vanessafrancis.com

Inspiration: Hand-blocked Textiles

Remember when I wrote this post and I was gushing over West Elm’s new hand-blocked quilts and shams? 
This West Elm produced short video of the hand-block printing process in India illustrates this art which has been practiced for centuries.
It’s fascinating to see how intricate patterns are carved in blocks of wood or metal (more prevalent today) and then dipped in vegetable dyes. The blocks are then repeatedly pressed upon cotton or silk fabric.  The result is beautiful fabric usually with a single colour motif on a neutral background.

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Of course the great price point and the volume required at West Elm indicates that the quilts aren’t hand-blocked individually – the pattern is a hand-block design but the bedding is factory-produced.
The following U.S. based companies create textiles using  the traditional hand-blocked process. I have only mentioned three but I’m sure there are more.

1)  Companies such as the environmentally conscious Les Indiennes, on the other hand, produce their linens entirely by hand.  You can read about the “kalamkari” process here.  They recently introduced curtains and light summer bedding to their collection.  I have coveted their indigo prints for too long.

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You can see the entire flip book here.

2) Sang and Serena import these beautiful 100% hand-stitched and hand-blocked quilts from India.  There are six designs available and I just adore the pink and green one.   And guess what? They ship to Canada!
Serena emailed to let me know that the particular designs shown online are limited in edition but they  are in the midst of working on new designs and will reflect this on their website in the near future. 
They also import handmade, inlaid furniture and accessories which you can see here

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3)  A favourite of designers, John Robshaw’s beautiful hand blocked fabrics have graced the pages of shelter magazines for years.  He applies his own updated, vibrant spin to traditional patterns.  He says "I redesign them and mix up the processes in ways no one has ever done before...what emerges is new and fresh, and yet retains that sense of tradition, of the handmade. When I need to hire someone to help, I pick the old printers. Their hands are shaky and their eyesight is poor, so the pattern comes out slightly off. I want to feel that human touch."

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Seriously, aren’t these the most beautiful fabrics you have ever seen? (Okay, maybe I’m exaggerating just a little.)  Robshaw’s Connecticut country home, featured in the October issue of Lonny, showcases some of his fabrics.

Do you have any hand-blocked beauties in your home? Email a photo if you have one – would love to see.

And, as always, if you require decorating advice, please contact me at vanessa@vanessafrancis.com.