Monday, June 23, 2014
A Lot of Pretty Things
One of the highest compliments that I can pay someone who has an attractively-decorated house is, "She (or he) has a lot of pretty things." It's not an especially deep or erudite compliment, but it does aptly describe someone who has a home filled with beautiful fabrics, collections, and furniture.
Take, for example, the homeowner whose Paris house is featured here. The anonymous woman converted a former garage into a house that was a repository for her pretty things. There were fetching fabrics (mostly Madeleine Castaing prints), dignified antique furniture, porcelain, and books, all of which lent an air of sophistication to the home's interiors. And yet, the prettiness of the rooms was tempered by Neoclassical-style pieces and motifs, which means that perhaps I should modify my compliment to read, "a lot of pretty and handsome things."
Finally, it's worth noting the year that these photos were shot: 1999. Now that's not ancient history or anything, but fifteen years is a long time in the world of interior design. And fifteen years from now, this house will likely look just as chic as it did when first decorated in 1999.
All photos from House & Garden, October 1999, Pieter Estersohn photographer.
It's official. I am by choice living inside your blog. Loved every pretty thing about this post.
ReplyDeleteHome, I'm joining you because I love everything about this house.
DeleteReally quite wonderful---how could I have forgotten the room with motifs taken from Robert Adam's Etruscan Room at Osterley Park?
ReplyDeleteThat was a daring thing to do---and the owner got away with it, making it something of her own.
Oh, I think it is far beyond pretty. It is drop-dead gorgeous and timeless. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMary
This is one of the most exquisite houses I've seen in a long time. Gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteLoved every single thing here. Including the fact that it was converted from a garage. I've always wanted to make an old warehouse into a palace.
ReplyDeleteYou are so right, Jennifer. This house is as beautiful and timeless today as it was when this magazine first published it. This is one's best argument for being careful not to become a slave of trends, but buy for investment and beauty.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this post, Jennifer! What a perfectly lovely house. Many beautiful things, beautifully put together. However, I beg to differ with you on your opening statement that 15 years is a long time in the world of interior design. These past ten days or so I have been throwing out or donating literally hundreds of interior design magazines (mainly House & Garden (UK), World of Interiors, Homes and Gardens (UK) and many French magazines, several of them dating from back to 1996. Of course, I haven't just thrown them out, but carefully selected stories I wanted to keep. And I have to say that I see very, very little change in this type of decoration in the past 18 years! Fifteen years ago, the classic interiors seemed to have been generally quite bare, and now the clutter seems to be creeping back - thank goodness - but there are the same soft, chalky colours, the same stripes and checks, florals and damasks, the same classic French furniture styles as we have now. I was quite astonished and wondered why I had bothered to keep all that paper for so long :-) Be that as it may, I love this house - and the funny thing is, it could have been done yesterday. Clever observation, Toby Worthington, about Osterley Park - now that's a wonderful place! And yes, I agree with Anonymous that we should NEVER become slave to trends...
ReplyDeleteStunning! I love it all Jennifer and it is definitely timeless!
ReplyDeletexoxo
Karena
The Arts by Karena
Those neo-gothic wood chairs are really fun. I am reminded of a quote by Nancy Mitford about her own home in Versailles, where she lived after she left England....it went something like, "I want to have my house filled with pretty, sometimes useless, things lying about." I think that is just so definitive of great taste...somehow, in my eyes pretty things will always be the hallmark of good taste and not clutter. The difficult thing is getting it all organized and realizing you can't have it all....I think some of us suffer from an "abundance of good taste..." or, I should say an abundance of appreciation of good taste. I am drooling over the use of the key motif in the pictures you showed..
ReplyDeleteHow I miss House & Garden. As you say, doesn't appear dated at all. I never understand why people are so afraid of 'pretty'. Pretty is a compliment as you say, not to be confused with trite!
ReplyDeleteVery chic. I prefer to think that it is not the taste of the stylish public that has changed, but that of the magazine editors.
ReplyDeleteThe decision to publish projects is based, for the most part, on 1). what will sell the magazine, and 2). what the advertisers want.
To my eye, there is nothing dated about the décor of this house.
I adore every single thing about this house! She is brave; and never hits a wrong note!
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