It could be difficult to decide what type of window treatment to use in our homes. When confronted with countless possibilities of window treatments, the feeling could be overwhelming, to say the least. Some windows call for shades, some call for curtain panels, some even for indoor shutters and others beg to let be bare. It would be exceptionally easy if within those previously mentioned categories, weren’t a bunch of other subcategories to choose from. Under shades along, for instance, we have the Roman shade, balloon shades, roller shade, scalloped shade and so on. Under curtain panels, we have different types of pleats to pick and whether or not use a balance or a cornice on top of the curtain. You see where I’m going… I’m amazed at how some people still wonder why there is a reason to hire an Interior Designer… Spoiler alert, because we make things easier.
Read More…I always wanted to be an Architect. As a matter of fact, I registered under architectural studies in Collage. For reasons I can’t even understand today, I decided to switch careers and went into international business and eventually interior design instead. My dream was to design, build, and oversee constructions of buildings. The most magical thing about design is that it allows us to build the life we always dreamt of. This latter, award-winning architect Gil Schafer does effortlessly. He designs new homes that look as if they were old, but classic and well-designed old houses.
“I design houses to be comfortable, gracious, and understated, and to stand the test of time,” architect Gil Schafer told AD. Good design runs in his family, Gil Schafer is the grandson and great, great-grandson of architects, so Gil grew up experiencing first hand what a well-built, thoughtfully-designed home feels like and what it takes to build it. He’s been designing beautiful homes for the past thirty years. Following undergraduate studies in Growth & Structure of Cities at Haverford College and its sister institution Bryn Mawr, Gil graduated from Yale School of Architecture with a Master’s Degree in 1988. While at Yale, Gil studied under several noted practitioners including Thomas Beeby, Robert Venturi, Josef Kleihues, Frank Gehry, and Benard Tschumi and was the recipient of the H. I. Feldman Prize, Yale’s highest honor for studio work, in his final semester. Gil Schafer served as the President and then Chairman of the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art from 1999-2006 as well as in many other nonprofit boards.
This Nashville home was restored by Gil and decorated by David Netto. This entryway has everything I believe in, classic architecture, a beautiful graphic floor that adds a modern touch, ornate furniture and modern expressionist art by Jean-Michel Basquiat. I love everything in this entryway.
A Fashionable Life will be another regular post of this blog, which I’ll try to post every Friday. For this initial post, we are all super lucky since we get a glimpse into Lauren Santo Domingo’s Southampton home currently featured in the September issue of Vogue. I love Lauren’s style in fashion and interiors, and her Southampton home is like a perfect new home that feels old, classic old indeed. Lauren worked with the distinguished classicist architect Gil Schafer. Unfortunately, Vogue article only shows the beautiful and magical garden designed by Miranda Brooks and the interiors of the barn decorated by Virginia Tupker.
The facade of the colonial-style home.
Yesterday I went into Miles Redd’s website and was more than happy to find more and new images of this amazing Atlanta home designed by him and featured in Town and Country a few months ago. The home belongs to Danielle Rollins, Veranda contributor editor. Danielle Rollins’s home is what dreams are made of. The house was restored by Gil Schafer and decorated by the very talented Miles Redd. What seems to be a girl’s vanity (down below) is just adorable. I could say so much about Miles Redd, for instance, that I dig his style. His signature style, Cozy Glamour translates itself flawlessly into any home he designs. I love how he plays with drama, philosophy, grandeur, and reality to create his one of a kind incredible interiors. He relies on innovation and imagination to re-create classic and elegant interiors that express the client’s personality. The many often use of stacked books in his projects make me also define his style as a “Modern Intellectual” approach in the actual world. Miles Redd began working for antique dealer John Rosselli, later working for decorator Bunny Williams. After making his apartment a statement of his signature “Cozy Glamour” and clients arising encouraged him to open his own office in NYC in 1998. Since then his career has skyrocketed. In 2003 Miles Redd was named the creative director of Oscar de la Renta Home. Who could ask for more? To see how Redd designed his mom’s house go here. But first, let’s feast our eyes.
Lovely sophisticated combination of blue and brow in the living room. An extraordinary mixture of fabrics and patterns in Miles’s hands is magic.