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By Stacy Kunstel

A few weeks ago I attended the Greenwich chapter of the American Red Cross’s annual Red and White Ball. This event provides immediate aid to those in need, including food, shelter, medical assistance and emergency supplies.

It also provides an evening of beautiful tablescapes for ticket holders. Thirty-odd tables were decorated by local interior designers, some of whom were on hand to discuss their themes. Here’s a peek at a few of those designs.

I’m not sure how designer Moshe Aelyon got the only rectangular table of the evening (all the others were round), but he carried the red and white theme through with cans of Campbell’s soup, all of which were donated after the party.

Interior designer Olga Adler used the word “help” in a dozen languages on the chair backs of her red-and-white themed table.

Soon-to-be-graduating seniors in design at Fairfield University and ASID members Bethany Armstrong and Jennifer Orr played out the spring blockbuster, The Hunger Games, in their tablescape.

The table by Stark Carpet, designed by Christopher Matson, was a frenzy of color and aluminum.

Olley Court, a home store in Ridgefield, pulled together an amazing wire sculpture of a horse that appeared to be grazing among the potted herbs on the table.

A rotating Buddha served as the centerpiece for Lynn Garelick’s tablescape.

Carey Karlan spent hours covering a plain lampshade with decorative flowers for her red-and-white centerpiece.

Marti Easton of Marti Easton Interiors teamed with Greenwich Orchids to create her pink and green spring-like table.

The only garden pavilion in the house was by Mia Schipani of RMS Residential, who teamed with Amy Andrews from Katherine Cowdin Interiors.

A stunning spray of tulips topped the table done by Carmiña Roth Interiors.

The surprise of the night came from Catherine Cleare, who created the gala’s first biker-inspired tablescape.

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Bringing art outside to the garden makes a lasting impression. The result can be sublime and inspiring, and in an ideal situation it can even touch our souls.

Dan Kiley’s iconic mid-century Miller Garden. Photo courtesy of The Cultural Landscape Foundation

As a landscape designer, I am spellbound when I encounter a garden that has a direct connection to the art in it. When art and landscape are fused together, their dialogue creates a unique narrative that would not exist otherwise. It also provides a powerful interaction that transforms us from viewers into participants, who must confront the significance of our surroundings, their connection to the work, and our own involvement in the scene.

Our team at the landscape firm where I work, Doyle Herman Design Associates, has been fortunate to experience some magical places in our travels over the years. For example, this large-scale installation intricately patterned with shiny steel rods conveys a sense of duality. It is set in this location as a sharp contrast against soft, dense, verdant surroundings up close, and from a distance reflects a more organic and delicate quality within its naturalistic setting.

Julian Wild: System No 19, at the Cass Sculpture Foundation in West Sussex, England. Photo by Doyle Herman Design Associates

At the Jupiter Artland sculpture garden outside Edinburgh, Scotland, Weeping Girls by Laura Ford was sited to introduce drama in a melancholic atmosphere. Five little girls animate a woodsy meadow and occupy it with youthful intensity, some gesturing in the meadow and others leaning on trees.

Laura Ford: Weeping Girls (detail). Photo by Doyle Herman Design Associates

The same artist has another site-specific installation closer to us, at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in Lincoln, Mass.

Laura Ford: Armour Boys. Photo courtesy of deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum

At this private home, landscape and sculpture make a strong statement together. An allée of flowering cherry trees pulls us forward across an expansive canal overlooking a misty panorama. Inside the canal stands a mysterious, larger-than-life bronze statue that is about to step out into the unknown.

Bronze sculpture by Hanneke Beaumont at a private residence in Waccabuc, N.Y. Landscape design by Doyle Herman Design Asssociates; photo by Neil Landino, Jr.

In this garden, water repeats itself on axis. It murmurs in a sunken garden, ripples in a pool area, and gently overflows from a gleaming triangular steel tower at the center of a circular garden of sheared hedges. In the cold season, the water turns off and the reflective properties of the sculpture intensify while it continues to punctuate the space.

Stainless steel and water sculpture by Alan Wilson at a private residence in Greenwich, Conn. Landscape design by Doyle Herman Design Asssociates; photo by Neil Landino, Jr.

Here, tunnels of wisteria play back and forth with the form and texture of an abstract sculpture by Chakaia Booker while also framing a formal parterre garden and separating it from the garden room that houses this artwork.

Rubber and tire sculpture by Chakaia Booker at a private residence in Waccabuc, N.Y. Landscape design by Doyle Herman Design Asssociates; photo by Neil Landino, Jr.

This early 1900s garden in Sorrento, Italy, was composed with antiquities and connects us to the legacy of the classical world. A mythological stone figure sits at an arched window overlooking the awe-inspiring bay and Mt. Vesuvius, which they say during the same 79 A.D. eruption that buried Pompeii also damaged the original Imperial Roman villa sited here.

Villa Astor. Photo from “Gardens of the Roman World” by Patrick Bowe, courtesy of Getty Publications

I used to drive by this street art daily on my way home from work, and it always excited me. The installation sits at the US 101 freeway entrance in San Francisco, where an urban industrial area gives way to a maze of highways, bridges and gridlock. For a second, the viewer could easily assume it is a big one-way sign for the on ramp, until the beautiful scene comes into focus. This one lone gum tree is just about the only thing alive right there, and this artwork does not let us ignore it.

Rigo 23: One Tree. Photo by Kenny Trice from The New York Times

—Rosalia Sanni

Rosalia Sanni is a senior landscape designer at Doyle Herman Design Associates, an award-winning landscape design firm based in Greenwich, Conn., that undertakes projects throughout the United States and overseas. Rosalia herself is currently located in Boston, and you can also find her on Twitter at @rosaliasanni.

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Corner Chandelier by Michael McHale, Long Island City, NY. Photo courtesy of Koo de Monde

We at New England Home spend a lot of time, especially for our printed magazine issues, searching out the most elegant home products and resources created right here in New England. But it’s fun, sometimes, to cast a wider net and consider beautiful things from all over.

Curtain Console Table by Jason Phillips Design, High Point, NC. Photo courtesy of Koo de Monde

A quickening proliferation of sales websites devoted to high-end home design is bringing more and more potential purchases straight to our computer or iPad screens. Many of these sites (Dering Hall, One Kings Lane and Joss & Main, for example) are national or international in scope. Some, such as Market 27, lean toward more local connections.

Lilly vase from Sama Gallery, Bangkok, Thailand. Photo courtesy of Koo de Monde

In today’s blog post, though, we have a rare opportunity to loosen up a bit and stay true to our core mission at the same time. Koo de Monde, pet project of partners John Altobello, Curtis Chen, Philip Clendaniel and Betsy Sweat, although based in Boston, extends tendrils of curiosity in all directions to reel in luxury pieces from artisans, artists and designers around the world.

24KKM (Kate Moss in gold) by Jeremy Penn, New York, NY

Members of the trade can always visit their physical digs at the Boston Design Center, but really the journey from Hartford or Burlington or Portland to workshops in Cambodia or studios in Chicago is no longer than a click of screen or trackpad.

Spice Dust carpet from Silk Road Weaves by Barbara Jacobs, Medfield, MA

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By Kyle Hoepner

Continuing my tour of images that could have made it into the pages of New England Home, but somehow didn’t. Sharing them here is a welcome opportunity, since they deserve to be seen. When possible, a link is included to the story that did run.

Designer Claire Maestroni’s Greenwich dining room: how many textures can you spot?

Photo by Björn Wallander; click to see full story

A tablescape from Cynthia Mason Hernandez’s dining room vignette at West Hartford’s Designer Spaces and Market Places in the autumn of 2010.

Photo by Michael Partenio

A long, low house by Rhode Island architect James Estes sits calmly in the dusk.

Photo by Warren Jagger; click to see full story

Hanging pots of flowers on the Vermont porch of designer Wendy Valliere.

Photo by Michael Partenio; click to see full story

More flowers made their way inside, to another porch used as a casual dining room.

Photo by Michael Partenio

A bedroom symphony in black and white, also from Wendy Valliere’s house.

Photo by Michael Partenio

Sun-gilded clouds crown an evocative landscape by Scot Indermuehle of Sudbury Design Group.

Photo by Michael J. Lee; click to see full story

The dramatic geometry of a house by TruexCullins nestles in the woods by Lake Champlain.

Photo by Jim Westphalen; click to see full story

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By Paula M. Bodah

The Veronica table lamp that Kristine Mullaney chose as a favorite for our May/June 2012 issue Perspectives section made an impression on readers. Kristine told me that in the week the magazine hit mailboxes she had several calls from people who wanted the table lamp it in their homes. The table lamp—designed by Matthew Studios and available at Webster & Company in the Boston Design Center—has a chunky base of sparkly quartz; Kristine noted that she’s been using quartz and other natural elements in her work lately because the texture and sparkle add an interesting, unexpected touch. “Some people don’t like a lot of shine or to have things really blinged-out,” she says. “But natural stone is a great way to introduce a bit of sparkle in a way that’s more modern.”

In case you missed it in the magazine, this is the Veronica table lamp Kristine likes so much. It’s both glamorous and down-to-earth.

Photo courtesy of Matthew Studios

While natural stone takes its shine straight from nature, Kristine also relies on a bit of manmade glimmer at times. For a man’s apartment in Boston’s Back Bay, she outfitted the foyer walls in Mica Fleck wallcovering from F. Schumacher. The walls bring warmth and drama to the home’s modern interior.

Photo by Michael J. Lee

In the same Back Bay apartment, Kristine introduced stone as a decorative accessory, topping the console with a glass box that showcases amethyst and quartz.

Photo by Michael J. Lee

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Visiting a trade show of any size can be a daunting and utterly overwhelming experience. For an interior designer, however, it is as fundamental to performing your job as appearing in court is for lawyers, or as the sleepless nights of a residency are on one’s way to becoming a doctor. It is how we, as designers, fill our visual memory banks with contacts, products, and pricing.

But, just as any great chef will tell you, it is 90% about the presentation!

Currey & Company at High Point Market, Spring 2012: a design scheme with some of their new Moroccan-inspired line.

It isn’t enough nowadays simply to have great product and hope that you are going to catch everyone’s attention and fill hundreds of orders. You need to be able to sell your dream…and, most important, sell how your lighting, furniture and accessories can help attain that dream.

This is what sets High Point Market apart from the rest. It is our equivalent of Fashion Week in the couture world, with 180 buildings and 10 million square feet of amazingly designed showrooms.

Sarreid, where antiques and contemporary pieces have been thoughtfully displayed.

Two’s Company, presenting their new collection with Dransfield & Ross. Here a large portion of the stand has been dedicated to the “Artist’s Studio,” which introduces the theme of this new collection rather than displaying the product.

These showrooms have the luxury of space, but there is also more attention placed on setting the mood and tone rather than simply piling a mountain of product on shelves. Each market has been carefully planned and designed, just as any interior designer would plan a project for their client.

Halo, with a strong theme and the strongest attention to detail. This showroom had wonderful music playing and all the candles were lit, adding another layer to the experience.

So if you are on the hunt for pieces that fit a warmer palette, a strong nautical theme or rustic country style…

Four Hands: the walls in this very large showroom were creatively styled with posters, paint cans and spools of colored thread, adding an element of flair to their products, which are more classical in design, and instantly lending every piece an entirely new level of sophistication.

Or perhaps you are a fan of a richer palette, filled with color and pattern and layer upon layer of exquisite detailing…

The Tony Duquette room at Baker. Here they have used the most classical elements from their Stately Homes collection mixed in with these very eclectic statement pieces, showing how the two can be used in harmony to create unique looks.

Century Furniture. Every piece can be seen in various finishes throughout the many vignettes in the showroom. No detail has been left out, with wall coverings, fabric and paint selections made to enhance the presentation.

Visiting High Point Market is not only about the experience of coming face to face with each vendor’s product in every finish and size. It also leaves us energized and inspired about how those product lines can help create the rooms that will fulfill our clients’ dreams.

Hickory Chair: unconventional layouts creatively enhance every piece without clutter and with the utmost care given to color and design sensibility.

—Jennifer Mehditash

Interior designer Jennifer Mehditash shares the things that inspire her via the style blog Dec-a-Porter, which was recently chosen as a finalist for Best New Design Blog at the 2012 Design Bloggers Hall of Fame.

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Kyle Hoepner, Editor-in-Chief
Do you ever check out the books that adorn various horizontal surfaces in interiors magazines? I do, and am often curious what they say about the owners of the space—or the folks who styled the photographs. Over the past few weeks, I’ve made several sightings of books by Dutch designer Piet Boon. Not necessarily a household name among most homeowners, I suspect. But Boon’s work does appeal greatly to architects and interior designers of a certain calm, spare cast of mind, and that cast of mind seems to be increasingly popular in New England these days.

Vacation house on a golf course in South Africa. Photo courtesy of Piet Boon.

Villa on the south coast of Portugal. Photo courtesy of Piet Boon.

Can you find the relevant book in this interior by Hacin + Associates, soon to appear in our May/June 2012 issue? Photo by Trent Bell for New England Home.

Paula M. Bodah, Senior Editor
Michael Aram’s Skeleton chair, crafted of polished aluminum and steel, is from the artist’s Flights of Fancy collection. “The shape of the human body is a great source of inspiration,” Aram says. “Stripped of its skin it becomes an arresting and unexpected natural form.” Indeed, it is unexpected and dramatic, and it just makes me smile every time I look at it. Find it at Shor, in Provincetown, Massachusetts.

Skeleton Chair, by Michael Aram

Karin Lidbeck Brent, Contributing Editor
One can never have enough blankets for wrapping, snuggling, getting cozy or taking naps. Even in the summer months, blankets are an indulgent necessity. Being draped in a luxurious soft, organic cotton or linen on a cool, breezy summer night or after a cool shower seems like a perfect summer indulgence to me.

I fell in love with Brahms Mount blankets while shopping at J. Seitz & Company in New Preston, Connecticut. These soft, natural blankets are hand-loomed with a weighty texture that shouts quality and longevity.

Of course Joanne’s sense of layering and styling is equally intoxicating. I love the luxurious mix of textures with the Brahms Mount blankets and the Bella Notte bedding on this superb reproduction bed.

Photo courtesy of J. Seitz & Company

Photo courtesy of J. Seitz & Company

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By Kyle Hoepner

Westport, Connecticut, photographer Stacy Bass has a new book coming out in May, with essays by style journalist Suzanne Gannon, called In The Garden. I thought a brief preview would be the perfect thing to share this week, as we move farther and farther into legitimate spring (as opposed to the very welcome, but oddly premature spring that started hanging around back in February).

Let Stacy lead you on a casual ramble through the greenery (and pinkery and blue-ery and…) of eighteen very individual New England landscapes, and experience the returns nature will make on a dedicated gardener’s love and care.

A pair of garden stools tucked beneath pines in New Canaan. All photos courtesy of Stacy Bass and Melcher Media.

Musk roses adorn a picket fence.

A stone wall encloses architect Dinyar Wadia’s hidden garden (click to see our own 2010 story on the house to which it’s attached).

Red-speckled foxglove.

Foxglove in another form.

How can you resist a blue globe thistle?

A tiny, secluded dell in Old Greenwich, complete with fountain, waterfall, and koi.

And for the more formally minded, a different kind of fountain…

…and a boxwood parterre.

In The Garden is available from Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, and at bookstores across New England.

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By Kyle Hoepner

Hopping the Acela to New York City recently for the Architectural Digest Home Design Show, I expected to see lots of exhibitors who needed only to make a quick jaunt to Pier 94 from downtown Manhattan or Brooklyn. And they were certainly there in force. Wandering the show’s design-packed aisles, though, I was happily surprised by the number of booths whose occupants hailed from my home turf. Literally dozens of New England–based artists, artisans, designers and producers of home goods were in evidence, proving that proximity to Williamsburg isn’t the only gauge of aesthetic interest. A few notable encounters? Read on…

Audrey Sterk
This Nantucket-based decorative painter also produces collections of wall coverings, floor cloths, trays and tables based on her mural designs.

Coastal Grasses floor cloth; photo courtesy of Audrey Sterk

Koo de Monde
John Altobello of Boston-based Koo de Monde had a large booth featuring many of the designers and artists represented in his international online collection

A coffee table by JG Custom Design; photo courtesy of Koo de Monde

Dominic Fusco Studios
Connecticut Venetian-plaster artisan Dominic Fusco displayed some unique modular paneled wall finishes, alternating textured plaster with sleek aluminum channels.

Dominic Fusco’s booth at the 2012 Arch Digest show; photo courtesy of Dominic Fusco Studios

O&G Studio
I was happy, too, to see former RISD-ites Sara Ossana and Jonathan Glatt, who make a line of deliciously candy-colored, Windsor-inspired furniture at their Warren, Rhode Island, studio.

Atlantic low-back armchair; photo courtesy of O&G Studio

bius
Mary Little and Peter Wheeler create some of the coolest custom seating—extremely custom, given their intensively personal working method—you’ve ever seen.

Luna stool; photo courtesy of bius

dbO Home
Dana Brandwein Oates and husband Daniel Oates were also on hand, showing both custom-crafted wood furniture and Dana’s signature ceramics.

Chunky little bud vases with elegant floral motifs; photo courtesy of dbO Home

Fordham Architectural Products
A Connecticut company I had formerly known as Fordham Marble now also carries a really interesting recycled aluminum product called Alulife. Tough enough for use on floors, it can also add a contemporary sheen to walls and furniture.

Alulife recycled aluminum paving tiles; photo courtesy of Alulife

Studio Borealis
This partnership from Vermont was showing sculpted glass by Devin Burgess and ceramic pieces by Jerilyn Virden.

Devin Burgess: Black Wheel Cut Asymmetries, blown glass with wheel-cut surface. Photo courtesy of Studio Borealis

Jerilyn Virden: Aperture, handbuilt earthenware (2010). Photo courtesy of Studio Borealis

Rock River Studio
Christine Triebert of Rock River Studio was represented by a wonderful series of botanical photograms (camera-less pictures made by setting objects directly on photographic paper and then exposing it to light).

Photogram by Christine Triebert; image courtesy of Rock River Studio

Cabinetry and Millwork
I came across no less than three different New England companies that produce highly-crafted kitchens and other built-ins.

The Kennebec Company

Kochman, Reidt + Haigh Cabinetmakers

Crown Point Cabinetry

People
And, of course, no trip to New York would be complete without running into many friends and associates from out of town. In addition to tête-à-têtes expected in advance (photographer Eric Roth and interior designer Frank Roop, for example, were at the Koo de Monde booth for a signing of Frank’s book, The New Bespoke), there were many tap-tap-on-the-back encounters.

New England designers Yvonne Blacker, Roseanne Palazola and Katherine Hawkins

A final pleasure for the weekend: designer Dwayne Clark of RDYC Interior Design + Architectural Development invited me to sit at his gorgeous table for DIFFA’s Dining By Design benefit. Isn’t it great when business and pleasure coincide?

Hosts Bob Gaynor and Dwayne Clark of RDYC Interior Design + Architectural Development flank fellow table-guest, choreographer Jerry Mitchell

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By Kyle Hoepner

Not long ago, photographer Michael J. Lee posted on his Facebook page a series of pictures he had taken that, for one reason or another, had never been seen by the public. Michael’s idea got me thinking about the similar occasional fate of photos here at New England Home. There are unfortunately times when we have beautiful images from our talented roster of photographers that don’t make it into print—not because they’re in any way undeserving, but because other factors such as space constraints or editorial focus require the sacrifice.

So I’ve decided to share, from time to time, a few of those previously hidden gems. Here’s a first batch for your enjoyment; when possible I’ve also linked to the story that was published.

A tranquil porch overlooking Noroton Harbor in Connecticut. Architecture by McKee Patterson; interiors by Nancé J. Vigneau.

Photo by Laura Moss; click to see more.

The guest bedroom of designer Tony Cappoli’s South Boston condo, with wall sculptures by Tristan Govignon.

Photo by Keller + Keller; click to see more.

A rich vignette from a Greenwich, Connecticut, interior by Cindy Rinfret.

Photo by Michael Partenio; click to see more.

Architect Bernard Wharton and designer Nannette Lewis collaborated to create this Brookline, Massachusetts, wine cellar.

Photo by Scott Frances; click to see more.

An exercise in sheer drama, this house by architect Peter Forbes looms in the mist above a Mt. Desert Island bluff.

Photo by Trent Bell; click to see more.

The house and its setting are married in a unique and intimate way.

Photo by Trent Bell; click to see more.

 

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