Tradition

“It is essential to know how to use volume, how to manipulate the space at your disposal.

A certain rhythm is necessary, a sense of balance,

an understanding of color.

I think a designer should know as much as possible about everything that has been made in the world, and about everything that is being made today.

Not that there is any question of copying someone else’s work, but a certain familiarity with all aspects of design and its history is basic.  This knowledge gives the designer a confidence that allows him to achieve a result so harmonious that it seems spontaneous and natural.”  Paco Munoz Cabrero
All images Munoz’s own home in Madrid, Architectural Digest Traditional Interiors, published 1979.  Photography, Jose Luis Perez.  And, yes, trellis.  I couldn’t resist.  
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Welcome to the Retail Revolution

Over Memorial Day weekend we were out in the Flint Hills with friends.  A guest at the party asked me what I considered the most intolerable trait, what was the one thing that would turn me off of someone immediately?  “Pretension,” I replied. “It makes me uncomfortable when people pretend they are something they are not.”

That weekend, the WSJ Magazine published a profile of Restoration Hardware and its co-CEO Gary Friedman.  (You can read the piece here.)  Friedman has stewarded the company to comeback.  From kitsch to something that reads success as sales are up.  Undoubtably, it has been a dramatic transformation from mass-consumer basics to Axel Vervoordt-land, though Friedman says he took no inspiration from the Belgian designer.

“We said, ‘Let’s forget about the customer for a minute,'” Friedman recounts as their philosophy for the makeover.  I find this an admirable start.  In tough times, “People need to be inspired to buy something.” So, with a clear go-ahead from the higher-ups, presumedly some capital to work with, Mr. Friedman preceded to copy Parisian chandeliers, 18th century Swedish and French chairs and Arne Jacobsen’s Egg Chair.

And it’s not as if I care, really.  I like Restoration Hardware.  I’ve bought cabinet hardware and lighting from them and have found them quality products.  It’s just disappointing when someone has the opportunity to really do something, to make an impact, and what he does is recreate the Sears & Roebuck catalogue.  For giants.  Or giants’ houses.  And call product designers “artisans.”

I agree that it is a good thing that if you are doing enough volume that you can offer linen that normally retails for $85/yd for $14/yd, that’s a nice service.  But to go on to say about your reproductions, “But is it better for the world if we make 50 or 500 of them, so there’s that many more people who get to enjoy it?” makes me think you have an inflated view of what you are actually doing.  Is it better for the world? I’d say it affects the world hardly at all.  It’s not changing the world; it’s making a buck.

Is it better for buyers?  Or “design?” Again, I don’t think it has an affect at all.  It’s just stuff.  And, no, I don’t think providing 500 of them (hundred?  thousands?) is better.  I would think creating really interesting, innovative product would be better.  Make something new.  Really create.  Craft something that someone will still want one hundred years from now.  That would be a genuine “transfer of happiness.”

Image of iconic Danish Modern chairs from Lars Bolander’s Scandinavian Design.

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Cross My Heart

A very thoughtful reader sent me the image, above, scanned from her tear sheet file.

This is exactly what I was thinking for the front hall.  The paper, St. James Trellis, was manufactured by Cole & Son (I believe it is discontinued) and I have another of their flawless diamonds taped to a wall as we speak.  (Write.  Read.)  I am waiting for one more and then I will pull the trigger.  It finally feels like things are coming together.

Images, Traditional Home, originally published April 2007, the home of Valerie and Anthony Evans, managing director of Cole & Son.  Currently on their site here.  Photography credit unavailable.
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The Simple Things

When I was little I drew on walls.  Intricate neighborhoods down staircase walls and animals and friends, but mostly I drew flowers.  I was an only child at the time and my mother’s nonsensical question, “Who did this?” resulted in the immediate and clever creation of an imaginary friend/scapegoat.  In the slightly unreliable landscape that is my memory, I recall that the flower garden, a mural really, over Krissy Livengood’s parents’ bed was the last straw.  Grounded?  It was before that was vogue.  Spanking? Tried and ineffective.  (It was a different time.)  No, my mother, who I think reveled in the concept, but resented the removal, relegated the inside of my closet free reign.  I could draw whatever I wanted there – as far as I could reach.

I know money can’t buy happiness.  I know things do not bring us joy.  But Lindsey Adams Adelman’s Blow light fixture above my dining table just might return me to the days before the pink and purple crayons stayed crisp and sharp in the box and stems were just one curving green line from earth to bloom.

Image, Elle Decor, June 2011 via their piece on Jason Miller and Roll & Hill.

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