TABITHA’S ARTISTIC ROMANCE
Posted on 3-06-2012
 

A few months ago, we took a mini-tour of shoe designer Tabitha Simmons’s airy, elegant, and unique Manhattan townhouse via the glossy pages of Vogue. The feature left us wanting to see more. Lucky for us, Tabitha opened up her home once again for The Coveteur – this time, for a peek inside her closet, which can only be summed up in two words: McQueen & shoes. Lots of shoes . . .

(photos:Vogue,honestlywtf,thecoveteur)

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OCEAN MOODS AT MAVRIKI’S & CO INTERIOR WORLD
Posted on 21-05-2012
 

Imagine tropical turquoise waters teaming with colourful fish and exotic corals- that’s this trend in a nutshell. Mary Katrantzou,Peter Pilotto, Versace, Stella Mc Cartney showed dresses emblazoned with ocean prints.   Riccardo Tisci , the designer of Givenchy claimed surfers and mermaids  influences his summer collection.

At Mavriki’s & Co new stylish interior collection, we found this fresh trend straight from the catwalk to our homes.

Printed ikat in ocean colours at Mavriki’s & Co summer iterior collection

Stella Mc Cartney SS/2012

Mavriki & Co

Peter Pilotto SS/2012

Mavriki & Co

Mary Katrantzou SS/2012

Genevieve Levy’s cushion at Mavriki & Co shop

French designer Genevieve Levy’s amazing handpainted printed fabrics.

photos: style.com,pinterest,ALEXANDROS ANAGNOSTOPOYLOS

www.mavriki.net

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LOVELY FLOWERS AROUND YOU !!!
Posted on 1-05-2012
 


Choose the flowers you love,  make your life beautiful and enjoy every single moment!!!!!!!!!

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Tory Burch Entertains
Posted on 8-04-2012
 

Spring is filled with occasions for setting a beautiful table and of course there is Easter and Mother’s Day brunches to plan. I think that few people set a more beautiful table than Tory Burch. Her blue palettes and feminine details are the perfect inspiration for spring entertaining. Taking a cue from Tory Burch for a lovely springtime soiree.

all photos are from Tory Burch’s pinterest.

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The Luxury Boutique Hotel “De Witte Lelie”
Posted on 16-03-2012
 

Antwerp, Belgium boasts one of the largest diamond markets in the world, and, thanks to the Antwerp 6, a group of 6 fashion designers who graduated from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts over 20 years ago, it is also an incubator that sets the stage for European style. Antwerp is a mix of Renaissance, Baroque and contemporary design and The Hotel De Witte Lelie, ( White Lilly) which is in the center of town, just down the road from the Antwerp Market Square and Ann Demeulemeester’s fantastic flagship store, is the embodiment of the combination of these aesthetics. The hotel consists of three 17th century canal house’s joined together and completely restored in 1993 with eleven rooms and suites.  It is traditional in its bones; the white facade, high ceilings with gorgeous ornamental crown moldings, original marble fireplaces, hard wood floors…. and contemporary in its furnishings and art, Yves Klein blue massive sofa, giant abstract canvas’ on big wall areas, big white area rugs and of vases of the “fleur d’hôtel”, the white lilly are intermittently placed through out the premise. There is a beautiful courtyard which serves a delicious breakfast, not to be missed, and in the evening a cocktail in the Bronze Bar is also a must, a visual feast in this mono chromatic  highly decorated room.
Excellent personal service by an invisible staff gives one a private and intimate experience in a hotel built on the idea of uncomplicated sophistication.

(trendland)

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A LEMON TEA PARTY
Posted on 19-02-2012
 

A tea party invitation in lemon yellow and white, with a hint of the lightness and the elegancy of the afternoon tea party in an English garden. Just look at the rich and beautiful table, full of small little details: utensils, cups and sweets which fit perfectly to the simple furniture and the white peonies.

LOVE IT!!!!!

(photos:style me pretty)

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Dreaming of Summer…The Como Shambhala Hotel Resort in Bali
Posted on 2-02-2012
 

I love dreaming of Summer in the middle of Winter! This one here is the amazing COMO Shambhala Estate a residential health retreat with luxury villa-style accommodations near Ubud, Bali. With State-of-the-art facilities including a vitality pool, treatment areas beside the River Ayung, a gym, Pilates studio and yoga pavilion. The Suites and Villas can be booked from $535 for rooms & suites to $3,570 per night for private villas.

There are four standalone Private Villas featuring two or three bedrooms, assorted living space and private pools. They are designed by architect Cheong Yew Kuan in conjunction with interior designer Koichiro Ikebuchi.

The Estate’s Resident Experts include a Yoga Master, Ayurvedic Doctor and guides for outdoor activities while the holistic, 360-degree approach offers nutritional menus by COMO Shambhala Cuisine.

It’s a real heaven for the mind, the body and the soul!!! I have to close my eyes and dream dream dream…it’s perfection…

More information and booking at www.cse.como.bz

(photos:trendland)

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WONDERFUL NORWEGIAN CABIN IN HALLINGDAL
Posted on 1-02-2012
 

Sources: Kocham Wies
Photo: Dos Santos Solvi/ Hemis/ East news

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The prettiest palazzo of Coppola
Posted on 30-01-2012
 

With the help of legendary French interior designer Jacques Grange,Francis Ford Coppola has transformed a 19th-century palazzo in his family’s Italian hometown into a grand hotel with the romance and sophistication of the Belle Époque

There is something about waking up in Sofia Coppola’s bedroom at the Palazzo Margherita that makes one feel rather like a princess. The walls and high ceilings are painted with golden trompe l’oeil trellising and faux marble, tall doors with long white curtains open onto a terrace and a walled garden below, and the bed is enormous. It is even lovelier once the chambermaids have been through, leaving behind a haze of citrusy Acqua di Parma.

Located in the lively working town of Bernalda, in Southern Italy, the palazzo is the fifth and most luxurious in a collection of hotels owned by Francis Ford Coppola. It represents a homecoming, of sorts, for the multifaceted filmmaker, whose grandfather immigrated to America from there in 1904.

His first order of business was to enlist the expertise of feted Parisian interior designer Jacques Grange. Next, he asked members of his close-knit family if they would like to contribute to the design of their bedrooms. The result is a combination of Belle Époque grand hotel and comforting family home.

The palazzo’s entrance and central courtyard

AFTERNOON IN ITALY | Francis Ford Coppola’s suite at the Palazzo Margherita, which he designed with Jacques Grange, including an elaborately painted Moorish ceiling and Grange’s signature zigzag tiled floor

FEMININE BEAUTY | A corner of the room designed by Sofia Coppola with Grange and inspired by the Villa Favorita near Palermo, Italy
All of the bedrooms have hand-painted paneling on the walls and ceilings.
STRAIGHTENING UP | A chambermaid carries fresh linens to an upstairs bedroom. The chandelier is from Murano, and walls and columns are faux marble
CANDY STRIPES | The low furniture highlights the scale of the rooms.
The Sofia room, with a trompe l’oeil trellis that makes sleeping in the bed feel like lying under an arbor
GARDEN PARTY | A typical lunch: fresh pasta, salads, delicious flash-fried peppers and local wine
The Family Bar at breakfast, with Le Manach fabric-lined walls and café table.
For Coppola the Italian palazzo is about family, eating well and being together. By his own admission, the high point came with Sofia’s wedding this past summer to Thomas Mars, frontman for the French band Phoenix. “It was such a great setting,” Sofia says. “Our friends all gathered in the garden, and we had a small ceremony at the end of a trellis walk with rosé from my father-in-law’s winery, Chateau Thuerry, and prosecco at the bar after.” The food was prepared by Filomena in the kitchen on one side of the courtyard and by Frantoio, the restaurant next door, which still has a door on the other side.

The palazzo is also in striking contrast to the also beautiful, but very modern beach house at his Turtle inn Hotel in Belize. But this interior is so fresh, so fantastically indulgent, I immediately fell in love. Here is to hoping there are a couple of nights at Palazzo Margherita in my future.
(photographed by James Merrell for WSJ)

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Toile de Jouy
Posted on 29-01-2012
 

While i was watching Midnight in Paris, one of my favorite scenes from the movie took place on a toile-covered bed in Paris’ Le Bristol hotel. Toile de Jouy is the hotel’s signature pattern, with each room decorated in the traditional fabric +  beautiful 18th century-inspired furnishings.

I so loved digging into toile de jouy  {my bedroom it’s all covered} and i learned that marks the 252th anniversary of the founding of Oberkampf factory at Jouy-en-Josas in 1760, – we’ll begin with a little look at a well-known pattern – Toile de Jouy.

I’m actually completely blown away by the way that designers have made this historical 242 year-old pattern  feel completely fresh by pairing it with florals or by using it in an unexpected hue.

above: Les Traveaux de la Manufacture (The Activities of the Factory), 1783–84, designed by Jean-Baptiste Huet – 14 different scenes in this fabric depict the copperplate printing process via the Metropolitan Museum of Art]

[above: 18th century French cotton dress via the Metropolitan Museum of Art]

Cotton Banned in France
Before we can get into the nitty, gritty of the pattern, we really need to start with the fabric. When cotton was first imported from India to France in the 16th and 17th century, the light, colorful, and easily washable fabric was a wild success. It was used for everything from clothing to wall coverings, curtains and bedclothes. It was so much in demand, that the French government became concerned about the financial impact that this competition would have on French manufactures of silk, wool and cloth. So in 1686, all cotton was banned in France – production, importation and use. Even with the threat of arrest, the fashion continued – clandestinely. Finally in 1759, when the ban proved impossible to enforce, it was lifted and French factories sprung up to satisfy the demand for printed cotton.

[above: Oberkampf family by Louis Léopold Boilly, 1803]

Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf
- founder of the printed cotton manufacture in
Jouy-en-Josas
German-born Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf moved to Paris at the age of 20 in 1758. Both his father and grand-father had been in the cloth dyeing business and as a child, Christophe-Philippe accompanied his father on dyeing jobs. In Paris, Christophe-Philippe was rose quickly through the ranks. In 1759, after just a single year working in Paris, he formed a partnership with his former employer, who had advance warning that the cotton ban was about to be lifted and recognized the importance of Christophe-Philippe’s expertise – the two men decided to manufacture printed cotton.

[above: The factory at Jouy, 1807, by J.-B. Huet via the Le musée de la Toile de Jouy (the cloth is bleached by the sun in the meadow - the cloth was spread pattern-side down and sprinkled with water six to eight times a day for six days.)]

The factory in Jouy-en-Josas
Attracted by the clean water of the Bièvre river, the pair set up their factory in town of Jouy-en-Josas. In the early days of the business, Christophe-Philippe worked alone with his brother and the only item of furniture the pair possessed was the printing press – which he slept on at night. The demand for printed cotton was feverish and the company grew quickly. By 1805, the factory employed 1,322 workers. In 1770, after satisfying the 10 years residency requirements, Christophe-Philippe became a French citizen. In 1790, he became the first mayor of Jouy-en-Josas.

Les monuments d’Égypte designed by Jean-Baptiste Huet and inspired by eight engravings after drawings by the painter Louis-François Cassas via the Metropolitan Museum of Art]Copperplate Technology = Toile de Jouy!
The early printed cotton was produced using woodblocks. In 1770 Oberkampf began using copperplate printing at Jouy – the technique had been used abroad in England and Ireland for a number of years, but Oberkampf was the first cotton manufacturer to bring copperplate printing technology into France. Because the lines on the engraved copperplates are finer than those on wood blocks, one was able to introduce the effects of light and shade. The copperplates also allowed for a larger repeating pattern. This opened up the possibility for designs – no longer limited to florals or geometric designs – Oberkampf commissioned the best artists to design pastoral scenes with humans figures.  This new style allowed for the fabric to depict major events of the time period such as the first balloon flight (above) or the fascination with Egypt (above)

Midnight in Paris.

Fact to Know

  • In total, more than 30, 000 designs were created at the Jouy manufacture, many of them the work of renowned 18th-century artists such as Fragonard and Boucher.
  • Rue Oberkampf in the 11th arrondissement of Paris is named for Christophe-Philippe.
  • While the phrase toile de jouy literally translates as cloth from jouy, it has come to refer to the single-color print of a pastoral scene (usually) on a white ground

Books to Read

  • Toile de Jouy – This is my favorite of the two books listed here. Both had similar information – I just responded more to this organization.
  • Printed French Fabrics – Toiles de Jouy
  • The Age of Comfort – One of my all-time favorite books – the ins and outs of the fashion of comfort in 18th century France – it has a chapter on the advent of cotton in France.

(simply smitten,design&sponge,book toiles de jouy)

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