Inspiration

You can’t always get what you want

I’ve been wanting this exact faucet for our kitchen. Similar unlacquered brass faucets run about $1000 though. That’s a no-go here. But I did find this faucet from Kingston Brass on eBay for only $60. It’s pretty right? I like the knobs and the bridge a lot. I know it will be shinier than I…

I’ve been wanting this exact faucet for our kitchen. Similar unlacquered brass faucets run about $1000 though. That’s a no-go here.

But I did find this faucet from Kingston Brass on eBay for only $60. It’s pretty right? I like the knobs and the bridge a lot. I know it will be shinier than I want it to be (and cheaper looking), but I want to do concrete counters, which are really matte so I think the contrast might be just fine, at least for now.

A reader asked if I was going to mix all my finishes in the kitchen. YES! There’s going to be a little of everything in this kitchen – brass mixed with stainless, and some black thrown in there too. Fingers crossed it doesn’t look cheesy all together. :)
Did you mix the finishes in your house? The faucet in my inspiration kitchen is polished nickel and I think it looks great with the brass pulls.
Living Room

Hiding the Fireplace

Well, the walls and doors have all been painted! The workers finished over the weekend and we unpacked and did a few small projects. Mostly we recooped from a crazy couple weeks and enjoyed a little family time in our new neighborhood. It was a great couple days. I really loved coming home to my…

Well, the walls and doors have all been painted! The workers finished over the weekend and we unpacked and did a few small projects. Mostly we recooped from a crazy couple weeks and enjoyed a little family time in our new neighborhood. It was a great couple days.

I really loved coming home to my new Cabbage White walls and Pitch Black doors.

Here are a couple before shots from the east side of the living room and with the old green accent wall. The room has a barely working fireplace. I guess it smokes like crazy even after having it professionally serviced?

Between that weird nook/mantle situation and the ugly hearth and box, I have no problem with putting a sofa in front of the smoking fireplace and totally making the whole thing disappear, but the mantle nook is proving to be a little more of a challenge. I was thinking about patching the hole myself with drywall, but I worried that the patching job will be pretty obvious.

This photo below is the closest to the in-real-life new wall color. To the far right you can see the old cream that was on all the walls (but the green accent wall). The beige-y cream made the whole house look dirty and tired.

Last week we filled the walls on either side of the fireplace with bookshelves (more on that soon!) and I’m thinking a big mirror in the center between the bookshelf walls would be really pretty. I came across this photo from Better Homes and Gardens and thoughts I could maybe do something with mirror tiles and do an antiquing process to each one. I would install the tiles on a large piece of plywood and then hang and trim out the board over the gapping mantel nook. I think it could look really good!

Or do you think I could patch the nook with drywall seamlessly and just hang a large antique mirror?

Inspiration

Give Away: THREE Pairs of Shoes from Sole Society!

Here’s a fun weekend give away! Sole Society is a great new members-only designer shoe site, where new designs are released every single day. Most shoes are just $49.95 with free shipping and free, no-hassle returns. These flats have been my go-to date night shoes. They are incredibly comfortable and I get compliments every time I…

Here’s a fun weekend give away! Sole Society is a great new members-only designer shoe site, where new designs are released every single day. Most shoes are just $49.95 with free shipping and free, no-hassle returns.

These flats have been my go-to date night shoes. They are incredibly comfortable and I get compliments every time I wear them! They’re all business up front and party in back with blue snakeskin (see #13 below).

Here are some of my other favorites.

For a chance to win three pairs of shoes from Sole Society, go to www.solesociety.com and register to be a member (it’s quick, I promise) and find your favorites. Then just leave a comment here. Contest ends next Saturday at midnight. Good luck! xx

PS For $15 off your first purchase, use the code LGN15. Expires September 30th (US only).

Dining Room

Serenity Now

Oh boy! Things are starting to look good around here! The painters/workers left for good yesterday and some mad unpacking happened. I feel bad for the recycling and trash pick up guys. There’s about a million garbage bags and boxes and rolls of old carpeting waiting for them. :/ But the house is suddenly feeling…

Oh boy! Things are starting to look good around here! The painters/workers left for good yesterday and some mad unpacking happened. I feel bad for the recycling and trash pick up guys. There’s about a million garbage bags and boxes and rolls of old carpeting waiting for them. :/ But the house is suddenly feeling bigger and brighter and more clean! A great feeling after living in a box cave for two weeks.

Monday I’ll start sharing more befores of the new house. The projects have started and I feel better about sharing the ugly before shots when I know at least some progress photos are not too far behind.

Aren’t this pictures from our loft shoot peaceful? I’m missing that settled, content feeling that happens when your home is clean and decently decorated. While I’m ripping out disgusting old carpet on the garden level in between coats of paint on the kitchen cabinet frames, I’ll be thinking of the serenity that’s hopefully headed my way soon. :)

Happy weekend!

(Photos of our old dining room by Nicole Franzen. Styling by Kendra Smoot – who says sunflowers are making a comeback! Love these black ones she used. And how cool are the figs?)

Musings

Dreaming of My Garden

Brought to you by the Brita Bottle For Kids. Learn more. Claire and Evie have always been easy eaters, but Grace was picky from the get-go. We’ve worked with her to the point where we can usually talk her into at least trying everything we put in front of her, but that happened not without…

Brought to you by the Brita Bottle For Kids. Learn more.

Claire and Evie have always been easy eaters, but Grace was picky from the get-go. We’ve worked with her to the point where we can usually talk her into at least trying everything we put in front of her, but that happened not without effort!

This last year her class study at school was all about foods. For more than half of the year they took a weekly mini field trip just a couple stops down on the train to Battery Park. There is an Urban Garden in the park that overlooks the Statue of Liberty and the kids worked there for a few hours each trip. I started to notice over the year that Grace was getting more curious about veggies that she normally had zero interest in (basically anything green).

I started bringing Gracie and Claire with me to the farmers market in Union Square and I would let them pick the produce and sometimes cheeses. It was seriously amazing – if they helped me buy it, they would almost always be willing to eat it for dinner. It was like they were more invested in the meal. Also, it was just fun to have some alone time with my big girls each week.

Now that we’re in Brooklyn, all I can think about is getting some raised garden beds in our little yard. I’m imagining planning the plots with the girls and letting them chose what we plant. Over the weekend I started moving the old flagstone pavers and relaying them in a better pattern. The plan is for the beds to go along the back wall, which gets a range of different light in the twenty-foot stretch. I can’t wait to get this ready for next spring! Hopefully by this time next year we will be enjoying the fruits of our labor.

In the meantime, Grace has asked to take a cooking class as one of her after school activities. She loves to help me out when I cook or bake and I think it can only help her get more interested in trying new foods. I feel like if I can get her to eat swiss chard or kale without flinching, my work is done :) We’re getting there!

Do you have picky eaters? What do you do to get your kids to try new foods? I’m also trying to get my kids to enjoy drinking water more. They usually don’t mind drinking their water, but only after asking for juice (and getting turned down). :)  Ah, the joys of the battle!

Kitchen

A Direction for the Kitchen

I’m not usually someone whose feathers get easily ruffled, but I’ll admit that I’ve been a little flustered this week. Unpacking has been slow since the painters are still here. I feel like I live in a cave made of cardboard and superfluous sofas. Also work has been crazy, so when I do have a minute…

I’m not usually someone whose feathers get easily ruffled, but I’ll admit that I’ve been a little flustered this week. Unpacking has been slow since the painters are still here. I feel like I live in a cave made of cardboard and superfluous sofas. Also work has been crazy, so when I do have a minute to start a project, I mostly sit here and stare wide-eyed at the chaos that is this new home. Where to even begin?

We’re getting there though. I made a project timeline, and that is helping me feel like I have a little bit more control over the situation. The first focus will be on the backyard and the kitchen. These are probably the two spaces that need the most time and money, so I guess those are good places to start.

The kitchen is minuscule. We had a tiny kitchen in Cambridge, but this kitchen makes that one feel palatial. To make the space more usable, we’re adding a huge wall of cabinets in the dining room (which is just around the corner) to store dishes, pots and pans, and even some pantry items. So the kitchen itself will be mostly just a cooking and washing dishes space. I can work with it.

The original plan was to replace the oak cabinet doors with new shaker style mdf doors. I found some online for about $30 a door, unpainted. Not bad, but it was still going to be around $600, so now the plan is to just trim out and paint the old doors myself. I saw a video tutorial online for how to fill heavy graining and I ordered the products to do that. And yesterday I pulled off all the cabinet doors, so we’re on our way.

As far as colors go, my love affair with Farrow and Ball paint and colors continues. Inspired by this gorgeous kitchen, I’m going with a dark charcoal (Down Pipe) with brass pulls.

I really liked the look of the longer, more square bin pulls in this kitchen and thought something similar could work in mine. Thanks to twitter friends who alerted me to the price drop on these Martha Stewart pulls. They are less than $2 a pop, which is completely unbeatable, especially for unlacquered brass pulls.

I think they’ll be perfect on the dark gray cabinets too.

Today I’m starting to paint the cabinet interiors and frames. Hopefully the grain filler comes tomorrow so that I can get these cabinets up and running this week! Then on to other kitchen projects: a new floor treatment, backsplash, shelving, appliances, lighting, sink/faucet, countertops… yikes!

Inspiration

Kohler Contest

Here’s a message written by one of LGN’s sponsors, Kohler. Thanks for supporting the great companies that help me run LGN. :) Enter Kohler’s Tresham sweepstakes for a chance to win over $10,000 in prizes HERE.   New Kohler Contest Celebrates Traditional Americana and Modern Sensibility For many people – especially those in the design field – an…

Here’s a message written by one of LGN’s sponsors, Kohler. Thanks for supporting the great companies that help me run LGN. :) Enter Kohler’s Tresham sweepstakes for a chance to win over $10,000 in prizes HERE 

New Kohler Contest Celebrates Traditional Americana and Modern Sensibility

For many people – especially those in the design field – an inviting abode can spark creativity. That’s why Kohler, renowned for its bold kitchen and bath fixtures, is showcasing its classic designs on Facebook and offering a chance to win an amazing price package centered around travel, design, and free products.

Kohler’s Tresham collection offers a classic design with a hint of contemporary sleekness. It has the feel of blending the past with the present, hence the inspiration for this contest. (See for yourself on Pinterest, but don’t blame us if you lose an hour re-pinning!)

The details: Just enter your contact information on Kohler’s Facebook page to automatically earn a chance to win. The first prize is a trip for two to New York City to attendInside Design with VIP access and priority seating, a custom gift bag, and $500 worth of bath accessories from Traditional Home, Kohler products, and more. Second prize is an all-expenses-paid trip for two to the AD Oasis in Miami, and $500 worth of bath accessories from Martha Stewart.

View the complete collection now.

Uncategorized

Painting Over a Vintage Abstract

I picked up this mid-century abstract oil painting at the flea market a while back. I liked it enough but it definitely wasn’t love. I bought it for about $20, so I figured I could make something hang-worthy out of it. When I got it home, I knew it had to be changed. The colors…

I picked up this mid-century abstract oil painting at the flea market a while back. I liked it enough but it definitely wasn’t love. I bought it for about $20, so I figured I could make something hang-worthy out of it.

When I got it home, I knew it had to be changed. The colors looked so, so drab with my mustard rug and ivory sofa. So using just a couple tubes of oil paints, I mostly went right over the top of artist’s patterns and just brightened up the drab colors. So easy! And it looked like a brand new painting in just a couple minutes. :)

Top and bottom images were a part of the photo shoot we did last week at the loft. Photography by Nicole Franzen and styling by Kendra Smoot. I’m going to be showing more images from that shoot this week while we are getting unpacked at the brownstone.
Uncategorized

Loft Living: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Today’s content is presented by smartwater, live a life well hydrated. Click here to learn more. You know what’s a really weird experience? Walking through your home for the last time. Saying goodbye to the empty loft late Sunday night was a surprisingly hard moment for me. In a lot of ways the space was…



Today’s content is presented by smartwater, live a life well hydrated. Click here to learn more.

You know what’s a really weird experience? Walking through your home for the last time. Saying goodbye to the empty loft late Sunday night was a surprisingly hard moment for me. In a lot of ways the space was a challenge to live in, so I wasn’t expecting to feel that nostalgic as I stood there taking a million pictures of our old home.

The same day we were shown the loft two years ago, we also toured a really lovely two-bedroom in Battery Park City. It was in a nice luxury building with all sorts of amenities. The apartment was a good enough size, and the finishes were really nice, but the real selling point was a heart-stopping view of the Hudson River and the Statue of Liberty.

We went back and forth on which of the two apartments to rent. Each place represented two very different sets of trade offs. They were the opposites of each other in almost every way. What would life have been like there on the river?

When it came down to it, we decided open-concept living was a better fit for our family. It just felt more “us.” I wanted to live, eat, work, play all in the same space. It felt like a great opportunity to get in a lot of family time. And I think we actually achieved some of that dream over the two years we lived in our big white box. I know I’ll miss some of that. Some of the other things… not so much. Namely, the fashion photographer neighbor who would play loud house music for his shoots that would often last until 3 or 4 in the morning (!). Also, the less-than-awesome natural light situation that made it hard to photograph the windowless bedrooms and that probably gave us all SADD in the winter. Also…

Did I ever mention that we didn’t have walls that went all the way up to the ceiling? A law was passed the month we signed the lease that made landlords super liable for accidents involving pressurized walls (commonly used to divide up apartment spaces here in New York). So when we signed the lease, we thought we were going to be able to divide up the space with semi-permanent, insulated walls, and that ended up not being the case. We were too close to moving in when we heard the news, so we just had to roll with it and make eight-foot tall ‘bookshelf walls’ instead. We stacked old trunks on top of the shelves to fill the two-foot gap and give us more privacy, but I think you can figure out on your own that the wall situation was not super ideal.

And now our house in Brooklyn has very separate spaces for separate functions, which I’m thinking might feel a little lonely at first! But, the exciting news is all of us have real rooms, with real walls. We have more than one bathroom (hallelujah!). And my office is two full floors away from my kids room (which will make business calls sound a lot more professional than they’ve been the last two years! ha!).

In my experiences working with clients in all sorts of home and apartments, and also with all the places I’ve lived (my move-count is up to 22!), I’ve had the chance to think a lot about how to make spaces work despite/while embracing challenges. The reality is, we can never have it all and there are always tradeoffs. I wonder how soon I’ll miss the tradeoffs that were unique to the loft.

How many times have you moved in your life? (It’s actually a fun exercise – try it! Can anyone beat my 22?) Also, am I the only one that slowly walks through the empty house after packing up, saying goodbye to each room? So many memories (sniff, sniff). But here’s to many new ones!

Uncategorized

Copy Cat Design: Raul Martins' Library

Here’s the lovely and talented Colleen with our next installment of Copy Cat Design. And it’s a good one! This little library by Raul Martins is chock full of great design ideas, so let’s get started! 1. Antique Brass Reed Small Chandelier; Bellacor, $420 Replace the shades on this chandelier with black shades, to repeat the black…

Here’s the lovely and talented Colleen with our next installment of Copy Cat Design. And it’s a good one!

This little library by Raul Martins is chock full of great design ideas, so let’s get started!
Replace the shades on this chandelier with black shades, to repeat the black and gold motif.
A grouping of crystal balls on a bookshelf looks ever so chic.
Look closely and you’ll notice these shelves are industrial shelving units, topped with a black marble slab. Such an excellent storage solution!
Framed architectural sketches are so fitting for a library. Botanical diagrams would be lovely too.
More intriguing objects for a grouping!
I firmly believe a library shouldn’t have too-comfy chairs, otherwise you end up snoozing more than reading. It’s for your own good!
A book on which to place an obelisk.
You could buy a Tulip Table with a black marble top, but I actually prefer the contrast of the white table.
Here’s another brilliant design trick: the wallpaper pattern mimics the one on the rug, but it’s low contrast, allowing the rug to take center stage. Repetition: your design friend.
A high contrast geometric rug punctuates the repetition of black throughout the space.

PS More Copy Cat post here.

Office

Copy Cat Design: Raul Martins’ Library

Here’s the lovely and talented Colleen with our next installment of Copy Cat Design. And it’s a good one! This little library by Raul Martins is chock full of great design ideas, so let’s get started! 1. Antique Brass Reed Small Chandelier; Bellacor, $420 Replace the shades on this chandelier with black shades, to repeat the black…

Here’s the lovely and talented Colleen with our next installment of Copy Cat Design. And it’s a good one!

This little library by Raul Martins is chock full of great design ideas, so let’s get started!
Replace the shades on this chandelier with black shades, to repeat the black and gold motif.
A grouping of crystal balls on a bookshelf looks ever so chic.
Look closely and you’ll notice these shelves are industrial shelving units, topped with a black marble slab. Such an excellent storage solution!
Framed architectural sketches are so fitting for a library. Botanical diagrams would be lovely too.
More intriguing objects for a grouping!
I firmly believe a library shouldn’t have too-comfy chairs, otherwise you end up snoozing more than reading. It’s for your own good!
A book on which to place an obelisk.
You could buy a Tulip Table with a black marble top, but I actually prefer the contrast of the white table.
Here’s another brilliant design trick: the wallpaper pattern mimics the one on the rug, but it’s low contrast, allowing the rug to take center stage. Repetition: your design friend.
A high contrast geometric rug punctuates the repetition of black throughout the space.

PS More Copy Cat post here.

Inspiration

20×200 Give Away – With Six Winners!!

I get emails all the time from people in their late 20s and 30s who are regretting the furniture purchases they invested in before they had time to figure out their style. They all are wishing they had mixed in some more modern pieces with their traditional ones. I tell them to not start over and just…

I get emails all the time from people in their late 20s and 30s who are regretting the furniture purchases they invested in before they had time to figure out their style. They all are wishing they had mixed in some more modern pieces with their traditional ones. I tell them to not start over and just to change their art. You can have the most traditional sofa from Pottery Barn or Restoration Hardware and if you have the right pillows and very modern art, the mix will be perfect.

I like the furniture and fabrics to be pretty, and the art to be arresting. Even a little bit quirky.

And, good news! One of my favorite art sources, 20×200, is offer up SIX gift certificates for grabs! They have an amazing collection of limited edition prints from a curated group of world-famous and up-and-coming artists. The best part is the art is super affordable. 8×10 prints starts at just over $20.

Here’s what I would buy for the brownstone:

LIVING ROOM

DINING ROOM

These are two different pieces, but I like the way they look together.

here and here

MASTER BEDROOM

HEATHER’S ROOM

KIDS’ ROOM

BATHROOMS

Would you like to win some free art from 20×200? A $200 gift certificate and five additional $20 gift certificates are up for grabs! For a chance to win, simply find your favorite art on 20×200 and copy/paste the link into the comments below.

The winner will be chosen at random on Sunday at midnight. Good luck!

This contest is closed. Winners have been emailed. Thanks to all those that entered!

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