Archive for March, 2010

WBIR Live at Five at Four

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Recently, I was asked by a local television station to do an interview about the latest features of my work in House Beautiful and Traditional Home magazines.  This was a fun interview by a gracious producer, Erin Donovan.  She came to my home, Casa Real, one afternoon and we talked about design, the future, and other topics for a couple of hours.  The atmosphere was relaxed, and she did a great job of capturing me at home on my own turf.  It all boiled down to 2.5 minutes of well edited footage, which you can view below. 

 

Click here to see video

Interior Design in Paradise

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Besame Mucho

Besame Mucho on Petronia Street

Ten years ago when we started to vacation in Key West, we never suspected it would become a favorite spot.  It has, and as we have come here more for both pleasure and work, we have discovered many secrets of the island.  One is that there is really great shopping. 

 

When installing our project here, we pre-planned very well, but there were still a few items missing that had to be purchased locally.  This was a great thing in my opinion because it gave us an opportunity to work things into the house that were really authentic to Key West.  The antique shopping in Key West is pretty limited, but we always manage to find trreasures to take home, as well as for our shop, Bobby Todd. 

 

Besame Mucho pictured above is one of the most beautifully displayed shops we have visited anywhere.  The owner is an artist with her vignettes, loves what she does, and it shows.  Her products are top quality, and the setting is totally charming.  She has an excellent assortment of home fragrance, even including the ever-so-hard-to-find Santa Maria Novella line from Florence.  She carries Kiehl’s cosmetics, beautiful candles, books, religious icons, jewelry, and is starting to carry some clothing.  There are always unique one of a kind pieces as well.  This time, a collection of vintage Chinese lanterns.  A few photos of the shop interior follow.

Besame Mucho Interior

Besame Mucho Interior

Besame Mucho interior

Besame Mucho interior

Another favorite spot is Duck and Dolphin Antiques at the corner of Fleming and Simonton.  The owners have been in the spot for years, and we continue to be amazed by the quality and rarity of their merchandise.  Priceless in Paradise could well be the name of their shop.  They carry beautiful French furniture and accessories from the 18th and 19th centuries, Continental accessories, incredible old silver and crystal, and are beginning to feature more and more antique items from Asia.  It was a surprise for us to find a shop with the quality of products they have on the island, but they continue to be one of our favorite stops.  You can’t judge the content of the shop from the exterior, so be sure you get close enough to peek in the windows. 

 

Duck and Dolphin Antiques

Duck and Dolphin Antiques

Window display at Duck and Dolphin

Window display at Duck and Dolphin

 

A few other favorites are Island Antiques on Fleming, and In One Era on White Street.  There is also an amazing men’s store which provides a great diversion from antiquing.  Located on Fleming, it is called Assortment, and should not be missed.  The owners hand select every item, and can tell you all about the designer, fit, and quality.

 

All that shopping tends to make us hungry, and there is no better spot to fix that problem than at Sarabeth’s.  You will find David, the owner, in front of the restaurant six days a week on the corner of Southard and Simonton waiting to escort you to a sunny or shady table of your choice.  The food is fresh, and among the best on the island.  Bobby loves the tuna salad and marinated tomatoes.  I love the crab and shrimp cakes.  All good. 

Sarabeth's

Sarabeth's

 

We are always charmed by the beautiful cottages, piercing blue sky, and sway of the palms.  That is reason enough to visit Key West; but, when you are ready to venture out, there is lots to be discovered.

Southernmost Before and After

Sunday, March 14th, 2010
Pinder Lane

Pinder Lane

 

A derelict cottage on an unassuming lane in the heart of Old Town Key West is the site of a new project.  Construction will start in less than a month converting this home into a beautiful new space in paradise.  The project will combine this house with a recently renovated adjacent house to make a wonderful vacation retreat.  The house shown will become in large part a “dining pavillion” for entertaining, and a new guest house will be attached to it.  The landscape will be redesigned to make both residences seem as though they were planned to work together.  Stay tuned for updates on the progress.  Tom Pope is the architect for the project, and the landscape design is being done by Craig Reynolds; both from Key West.  Remember, anything is possible!

The back of the Pinder Lane House

The back of the Pinder Lane House

Soon to be a beautiful garden

Soon to be a beautiful garden

Side view of Pinder Lane

Side view of Pinder Lane

Niche Design

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

A friend of mine shared this New York Times article and slide show with me today. Zach Motl follows some of my design philosophy which breaks conventional thought about space planning.  Zach also has a great color sense.

A Roomy 178 Square Feet

By: Penelope Green

Published: February 10, 2010

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Robert Wright for The New York Times

THE tins of seasoning on top of Zach Motl’s refrigerator — Old Bay, Hungarian paprika, Madras curry powder — are for show only, chosen for their graphic punch and nifty typefaces. Living in a room that’s only 178 square feet, you don’t want to cook much, Mr. Motl said; it’s just too odoriferous. He once made French onion soup, and the apartment smelled for four days. “It was gross,” he said.

But Mr. Motl, 25, has made the most of this studio apartment in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, which he rents for $944 a month, and has outfitted for about $2,500 in the three years since he moved to New York City. He has hewed to the old decorating dictum that says the more stuff you put in a room (albeit artfully arranged stuff), the bigger it seems. More really is more.

Mr. Motl, a theater major who also studied sculpture at the State University of New York at Geneseo, had planned to pursue a career in acting after graduating in 2007. Like so many before him, he had been testing the waters in New York City during his summers off from school, cobbling together a living and a career path by doing two or three jobs at a time, along with a handful of internships: waiting tables in Bellport, N.Y., his hometown, and in Brooklyn; teaching sailing at yacht clubs up and down Long Island; interning at P.S. 122 in New York, and for Miles Redd, the maximalist designer.

Pretty quickly, Mr. Motl began to realize he would much rather work in interior design than the theater. “Not that I knew anything about it,” he said. “I thought ikat” — a trendy textile — “was a piece of furniture.”

Still, he is an innately stylish guy. “I always knew what I liked and what I didn’t like,” he said.

And he has a sailor’s sense of thrift and handiness that has served him well in his new profession, and at home. When he moved into this apartment, a grubby white box, he removed all the window panes, scraped them clean and reattached each one so they wouldn’t bang or let the cold in (he keeps them sparkling clean).

He also chipped the mirrored tiles off the bathroom walls — “That’s when the love affair with my downstairs neighbor began,” he said dryly — and painted the room midnight blue. He built task lights with a steampunk aesthetic out of components he found at Canal Lighting for less than $200; he also put together a milk-glass shade ($12 on eBay), an Edison bulb ($18 at Canal Lighting) and an electric cord to make the fixture that hangs atmospherically over the beadboard breakfast counter/front hall table/cabinet he built himself.

Mr. Motl knows how to arrange furniture in groupings — an office “area,” sitting “room,” “bedroom” and so forth are clearly defined (though only a few inches apart). And he knows how to hit the sweet spot that turns a bunch of objects — like stacks of National Geographic magazines — into a collection, and how to array those objects so they look sculptural, instead of like a sign that he might be a candidate for A&E’s “Hoarders.”

Mr. Motl has been “collecting” since the age of 5 or 6, picking things up from the curb for his room, visiting yard sales when he had his own money. He recalled being kicked out of an antiques store at age 10, because the proprietor thought he was in there to steal something. “I remember, after running to my mother in tears from the confrontation,” Mr. Motl said, that the store owner defended herself “by saying, ‘What interest would a 10-year-old have in antiques?’ ”

When a professor at school culled his library of ’40s and ’50s Penguin paperbacks — mostly theater titles — Mr. Motl scooped them up. They’re jammed together on the shelf above his bed, books being one of the many multiples Mr. Motl has filled this tiny space with.

Wooden tennis rackets hang on the walls. “I bought one at an antiques store,” he said, “and then felt like an idiot because I kept finding them on the street.”

The blue Marc Jacobs Wellington boots were purchased on sale for $10.

Does he ever wear them?

“No, they’re just there.”

By November of 2008, Mr. Motl wanted just one (full-time) job. He was still waiting tables to support himself while he worked part time for Mr. Redd. A friend showed him a posting on Craigslist by Robert Couturier & Associates, the upscale architecture and design firm.

The ad was for a junior designer, with three years’ experience and knowledge of AutoCAD, the computer drafting program. Mr. Motl didn’t meet either of those requirements, but he did have pictures of this apartment. He got the job

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Robert Wright for The New York Times