HGTV stopped airing both Room Service and Design, Inc. a while ago (however, they’re still on HGTV Canada and Design Inc is starting to show on Fine Living, a channel I don’t get). Regardless, I still find myself checking Sarah’s website to see if her portfolio has been updated. And I’m usually not disappointed.
Side story:
Last summer, when we lived in Washington D.C., I stopped by a Restoration Hardware outlet and saw a gorgeous, green, tufted ottoman very similar to the one in this picture. Price? Just $150 (for Restoration Hardware!!) I stepped out of the store for a minute to call Michael to convince him that we needed it and that there *would* be a way to make it fit in the car when we moved back to Boston. He finally succeeded to my persuasive powers (poor guy, the things he puts up with!), and I walked back into the store to buy that gorgeous ottoman. My heart sank when I saw an empty spot on the floor where it had been. Someone had purchased it in the 2.3 minutes it was out of my sight. The salesperson said it had only been on the floor for sale for about 5 minutes total. Lesson learned: Never (NEVER!) let a good deal out of your sights. I haven’t stopped thinking about that ottoman. It was so beautiful.
Other side story:
Did you know that if there is a Restoration Hardware item or piece of furniture that you love, you can call your closest RH outlet and they will put you on a waiting list for your specified item? I read about it on this great blog. For example, if you love these dining chairs, dial up your outlet, tell them you want 6 or whatever, and they’ll call you as soon as they come in.
Now back to Sarah Richardson. Sorry for the digression.
I can’t even handle those drapes. GORGEOUS. And I love the soft colors of the furniture and pillows (which my kids would destroy in about 3 seconds flat).
For some serious eye candy, head over here and be sure to open the links for more pictures of the rooms. I love that they include the sources of all items used in each of the rooms. Not that I cold afford any of it…
Hope you enjoy her work as much as I do.
thanks very much for the shout!! Love Sarah Richardson – her rooms are always such an inspiration. Now if only I could get a team of designers working for me :)
Water clocks did not depend on the observation of the sky or the thomas sabo sun. The earliest water clock was discovered in the tomb of Amenhotep I who was buried around thomas sabo online shop deutschland 1500 B.C. Greeks called them clepsydras ; they were stone boxes with sloped sides that allowed water to drip thomas sabo anhänger at an almost unceasing rate from a small hole in the bottom.Other clepsydras were cylinders or thomas sabo charm club anhänger bowl formed engineered to slowly fill up with water coming in at a near sustained pace. Markings on the thomas sabo anhänger günstigangebote thomas sabo anhänger at night, it is thought they were utilized in the day hours too. A metal bowl with a hole the bottom was placed in a bigger bowl crammed thomas sabo charm with water.It would fill and then sink in a certain quantity of time.Since water flow was not exactly predictable sabo charms and difficult to control the flow accurately, timepieces that depended on water were very inadequate. People sabo charm were drawn to develop more accurate ways of measuring and telling time.The development of quartz crystal clocks and timepiecesthomas sabo anhänger sale depended on the crystal size, shape, and temperature to create a frequency.