Monday, 25 November 2013

Interior Design vs Real Homes

Lately, I've been thinking a lot about "Interior Design" and what it really means to me (I live in a real home with a lovely but untidy husband, a 2 year old with boundless energy and limited concentration and a dog with paws that are magnets for mud)

I guess when we say Interior Design these types of rooms spring to mind, a luxurious boutique hotel style bedroom or a large double height living space.


Both of which are gorgeous, don't get me wrong, but is it really possible for the majority of us to achieve this?  Of course it is for some people but for the majority, perhaps the dream and the reality are a little different. 

  
                The dream      vs       The reality 

There is absolutely nothing wrong with any property that you call home, but I feel like interior design magazines and some interior designers seem to think that large rooms with lovely high ceilings and endless budgets are the norm.  I'm confident that modern housing estates, with smaller rooms, standard low ceilings and small budgets are in fact much more usual.  

We don't and can't all live in period properties or New York style loft apartments.  So the challenge is to take these amazing designs for large grand rooms and translate them to smaller rooms without being overpowering.  I wish more 'interior design' magazines used real home examples - and I mean REAL homes, homes built in the last 20 years, with smaller proportions, of people who have children and pets and can't keep them showroom perfect all the time.  

It seems to me that this is like those size 8 mannequins in shops, where dresses look beautiful and drape perfectly - and then someone with a real figure puts in on and suddenly the dress is clinging unceremoniously to all the lumps and bumps.


Take this as an example, the first picture is a real living room in a modern house, but tidied (toys removed) and styled for a photograph.  The second picture is the tidiest version of reality, including children's toys.  

With this as reality, I like to focus my designs on clever and practical uses of space.  I believe functional does not equal ugly or boring, but functional is perhaps more important than beautiful in a real family home and a balance needs to be found.  




Saturday, 9 November 2013

Pinterest

It has taken me a while to get into Pinterest, but I have to say I am now totally addicted.  I just love that I can stick all the great ideas I see in one place.  I used to have to photograph or save and print them all into a book.  This is so much easier.

I divide my boards up into rooms mainly, plus one general ideas board for 'doesn't quite fit into any other category'.  I thought I would share some of my favourite finds here.  

As you can see from my examples, I mix up whole rooms with bits of ideas as well as wallpaper and paint samples.  All for future reference.  I first found this cobalt and cream bedroom image, which I loved, then I went in search of similar wallpaper and fabric (which I found at Scion).  Next time I fancy a cobalt bedroom I have all the details to hand - brilliant. 


  

Have a look at my Pinterest bedroom board here


Some ideas are things I have seen, some are things I would like to do and some are things I have done, like this frame, which was a quick and cheap solution when a client needed me to style a very plain bedroom.  The frame is from IKEA (£7) and the picture is actually wedding wrapping paper (50p).  I put 3 side by side and made a very simple but effective temporary focal point.



For me, the best thing about Pinterest is that I can access it on my phone or laptop and just dip in and out when I need an idea, inspiration or try to visually explain what I am talking about.  

If you want to nosy at the rest of my boards of ideas, please click here.  If you any of the images or ideas pin them to your idea boards or feel free to follow them.  I am adding new pictures and links all the time.



Friday, 8 November 2013

I always get excited about flooring day

So flooring day is a misleading title, it's flooring 3 weeks on this project.  With 3 types of flooring and 3 fitters, each with their own speciality.  We are doing carpet (too boring to talk about), Amtico and Flotex to suit the needs of the different rooms. 

The Amtico is now in progress and although I have often suggested it and lusted after it, I haven't used it on a project of mine before.  It is being used in the kitchen, utility and hallway.  

The kitchen was fairly simple, large tiles with a thin trim between (more about the thin trim later), which looks great and doesn't really show the fact that the room isn't completely square.

Kitchen (before plinths replaced)

The hall is proving much more difficult, it's a square(ish) hall with one small and one large corridor continuing from it. I have gone for an oak herringbone effect in here, as the impact in the wide hall will be great.  The problem is that, as with many older buildings (and some new builds to be honest) rooms aren't always square. It turns out in this one, no two walls are square.  Needless to say the fitter isn't delighted but doing a great job anyway with lots of maths and some slight adjustments to the alignment.


Hall in progress
So back to the kitchen and the thin trims, which are very fine slices of the same oak as the hall.  Its subtle but it does bring it all together.

The carpet fitter is also working some magic, no wastage here as all the excess pieces are sewn back together to carpet inside the  cupboards and one of the bathrooms.


Flotex is a product I hadn't come across before, if you've never heard of it before either I can only really describe it as furry vinyl, it actually reminds me of fuzzy felt (although that probably ages me). It's a really practical flooring, it is treated as carpet for cleaning so can be vacuumed as a regular carpet, or with a wet carpet cleaner (specific advice regarding detergents applies)as it's vinyl base make it waterproof.  I chose to use it because the room in question was cold, so the flotex was laid over a layer of insulated board.