Love this room.
After various product and project posts this week, I thought this little blog might need some inspiration in the form of an awesome room. Luckily, my latest batch of passed-along magazines came from my mother in law not too long ago, and with the start of swim lessons for the girls comes a nice little 20 minute pocket of time to myself for sitting and flipping the pages. (And peeking in on their progress now and again.)
Chicago Home and Gardens put out a Color issue in September, the perfect treat for a color hound like me. I can't seem to get over this quirky living room, decorated by the homeowner, and full of risks that somehow look completely natural. Check it.
This picture reminds me that:
- I want to paint the office built in shelves a deep, saturated color (or stain them dark, like these)
- I'm still down with orange, green, and blue
- A velvet couch goes to the top of my "someday" list
- Paired chairs can mismatch in every possible way and still work.
Let's talk about those chairs a bit more. With all the balance and symmetry on the couch side of the room, I love the mismatched pair to throw things off a little, but not many people would take a tall skinny leggy midcentury piece with an overscale bold pattern and sidle it up to a squat barrel-back intricate wood frame chair in solid upholstery and call it a day.
I think it also helps that this pair of chairs sits off to the side.
So the room gets its symmetry after all.
Have you seen a room lately that you wanted to just move into?
Chicago Home and Gardens put out a Color issue in September, the perfect treat for a color hound like me. I can't seem to get over this quirky living room, decorated by the homeowner, and full of risks that somehow look completely natural. Check it.
This picture reminds me that:
- I want to paint the office built in shelves a deep, saturated color (or stain them dark, like these)
- I'm still down with orange, green, and blue
- A velvet couch goes to the top of my "someday" list
- Paired chairs can mismatch in every possible way and still work.
Let's talk about those chairs a bit more. With all the balance and symmetry on the couch side of the room, I love the mismatched pair to throw things off a little, but not many people would take a tall skinny leggy midcentury piece with an overscale bold pattern and sidle it up to a squat barrel-back intricate wood frame chair in solid upholstery and call it a day.
I think it also helps that this pair of chairs sits off to the side.
So the room gets its symmetry after all.
Have you seen a room lately that you wanted to just move into?