Tag Archives: Designers

Off the Rack – Down Home Cooking

While I adore Elle Decor, wonder at World of Interiors and greet House Beautiful like an old friend, I still miss some of the dearly departed.

Don’t get me started on HG. But Domino and Cottage Living both offered glimpses of, well, really great regular houses. Houses that looked like my friends’ houses. Where I might hang out in the kitchen and have a cup of coffee.
I just picked up a subscription to Country Living; their editorial content is filling the gap. That runner, oh my.
All images courtesy of Country Living, November 2009. Caroline Scheeler’s home photographed by Roger Davies.
rssrss      FacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail

Quite a Find

I can’t remember if I first saw the mention for Keith Johnson’s new show Man Shops Globe in Elle Decor or on Style Court, but when I did see it I thought, “I remember their (Johnson’s partner is Glen Senk) kitchen from House and Garden.” And, since I am a crazy person, I hunted and pecked and was giddy to discover that I still had the issue. The March ’06 issue, not the issue of the obsession with House & Garden, though I have that, too.

It’s a pretty jazzy job, Johnson’s, to find antiques and inspiration for Anthropologie, and I wondered what it’s like to shop for a living. Travel and shop. Seems if one were design obsessed, it would be a dream come true. “There are so many things that can go wrong. I have painfully discovered them all,” says Johnson. Like all dream jobs there are details and logistics the dreamer might not imagine. “Getting things back in one piece from far flung places is a big one. You may recognize when something looks good where you are, but correctly guessing if it will look good back in the States is a major challenge.”


Based on what I’ve seen, I’d say Johnson guesses pretty well. Keith Johnson and Glen Senk’s current New York apartment appeared in Elle Decor in October. In the article Johnson said everything in the apartment was found with the store in mind, but it seems it is a bit more chicken and egg than that, “I am always falling in love with things that end up in the store. I consider everything on a personal level at first. It’s the best way to know if it is truly worth buying. I just had an artist in Provence make a flock of antique fabric covered birds. I am sure when I see them next month I will be buying some for myself. I bought a school of fish a couple of years ago made from motorcycle gas tanks. I love to share my finds.”

While he shares them through the stores he also seems to hang on to things himself. You’ll notice that many of the pieces in the older HG images turn up again in Elle Decor including the lamp and sofa in the image above.

The mask in this image above rests on the base of a gothic cabinet whose shelves housed it in the earlier apartment.

I am in full-on frothy envy over the Alexander Calder curtains that Johnson found at a flea market in Manhattan. I’m a little light-headed just imagining uncovering such a treasure. Surely Johnson is more jaded as this kind of discovery must be quite routine for him. Not at all. “The rush when you find something truly great is still the reason I travel. It’s very addictive.”

This from a guy who met his partner when he was nine years old. He must know a good thing when he sees it.

I am not a fan of most design-related t.v., but this show is intriguing. Man Shops Globe premiers tomorrow at 9 CST on the Sundance Channel.
Top three images House & Garden, March, 2006; photography by James Merrell. Next three images Elle Decor, October, 2009; photography by William Waldron. Johnson and Senk image from Man Shops Globe premier, photograph by Sara Jaye Weiss. Series artwork borrowed from the Sundance Channel.
rssrss      FacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail

Meet Mel

When I was going to New York last November, George Terbovich said, “You should meet Mel Dwork.”

When I had the great pleasure of meeting Mitch Owens he said, “You must know Mel Dwork?” Mr. Dwork is a native Kansas Citian and one should suppose that we would know one another. That is how things work around here.

When I was ohhing and ahhing over the work of Roy Hamilton on the same trip he said, “I am good friends with Mel Dwork.” And I thought, “Why the heck am I not?”

So on this trip I was thrilled to meet this incredibly talented and recognized designer.

Melvin Dwork left Kansas City when he was 19. He had received a scholarship to the Kansas City Art Institute. “The Nelson was my classroom; it had a tremendous impact on me.” He moved to New York to attend Parsons. He still considers himself a Kansas Citian though he has spent sixty-seven of his eighty-six years in New York. I like that in a guy.

Dwork’s work has been featured in magazines including House & Garden, Architectural Digest, Interior Design and the New York Times.

On top of all that he’s incredibly lovely.


He is still working with select clients.

You can find out more about Mr. Dwork from his profile in the Interior Design Hall of Fame here and read an interview from the Times here.

Image, top, from House Beautiful, October, 1967 via the Peak of Chic; the following four images from Interior Design; the striped dining room is from House and Garden’s Complete Guide to Interior Decoration, 1970, the room with the Mondrian inspired rug is from House and Garden’s Complete Guide to Interior Decoration, 1960, the following two images are of Dwork’s Shelter Island Home and the final is his NYC apartment featured in the New York Times, photography by Michael Falco.
rssrss      FacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail

Jacques Grange Interiors, Pt. 2

Sometimes the blog gods smile. Sometimes they look down on a simple girl from the midwest and say, “What the heck?”

Word came from on high yesterday that I could, indeed, post these images.

Click on them. Revel in them. Because, truly, I can just see myself sitting in this chair, jazzy tunic over my swim suit, dashing off a note to a friend saying, “Please come if only for a day or two. It’s just delightful.”
All photos by Nicolas Matheus from Jacque Grange Interiors by Pierre Passebon (Paris: Flammarion, 2009.) I am reiterating here that I requested permission to use these images. I don’t know what would happen if you borrowed them, but it could be ugly. I’m just saying.
rssrss      FacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail