So since I moved recently, I’ve had decorating on the brain, as I decided to dip into my savings a bit in an attempt to de-Ikea my place and invest in some furniture I’d like to keep long-term. So in addition to poring over the Crate & Barrel, Room & Board, Design Within Reach (whose reach?!), etc. catalogs, I’ve been getting various home magazines and in general seeking out design resources on the web and in print to try and get inspiration for how to put my space together.
And as a result, I’ve become a bit more conversant with design trends and big names in the industry, specifically having to do with the mid-century modern aesthetic (think the Jetsons’ living room) that’s enjoying a powerful, pervasive resurgence these days. If you’d asked me a month ago who Charles and Ray Eames, Alexander Girard, George Nelson and Eero Saarinen were, I wouldn’t have had the faintest idea. Now, I not only know who they all are, I can also identify pieces they’re known for (the Eames molded plywood chair, the Saarinen Tulip table).
Now, I like mid-century modern, but I prefer a more timeless look in my own place, so what I’ve cobbled together, while it’s definitely modern in feel, has touches of mid-century modern, deco, and the nameless aesthetic popular in recent years that I will call American modern, which puts an emphasis on rich textures and colors combined with clean lines.
One unexpected outcome of all this research is that I have a new favorite magazine: dwell*. While it’s concerned less with interior design and more with architecture and trends in building technologies, it’s a very well put-together publication and holds my attention cover to cover. So now I have a subscription.
I have to say I really enjoy reading these more obscure magazines, the ones that assume a certain knowledge that laypeople may not have, because it opens up a whole new world of concepts I’d never previously thought about. Fascinating stuff!
*I would have said Blueprint, hands down the best lifestyle magazine I’ve ever read, but I found out after I picked up the January issue that it would be the last one ever published, as Martha Stewart Living (its parent company) was going to stop publication in order to focus more on their Weddings magazine. I think that sucks.
Andrew said:
Richa,
Good luck with your redeco – always fun!
Not sure how you are fixed for tableware, but I just launched a new company that creates objects for the table together with a team of 18 designers and artisans from around the world. It’s all handcrafted but super durable too. Check it out if you have a minute and let me know what you think.
http://www.teroforma.com
Again – best of luck with your project // Andrew
March 9th, 2008 at 3:08 am