Showing posts with label fabric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fabric. Show all posts
Monday, January 31, 2011
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Oscar Elegance at Lee Jofa
I had a very busy day yesterday which also included a meeting at the D&D Building. While I was there, I decided to see if the Oscar de la Renta room was finished at the Lee Jofa showroom. Every season Lee Jofa installs a fabulous room devoted to one of their fabric designers. I wasn't sure anything could top the lovely room by interior designer Eric Cohler but the new Oscar de la Renta room with its gorgeous green walls and luxurious bed definitely takes the cake. It reminds me a lot of the de la Renta's bedroom in their house in Connecticut that I posted a few months ago. Needless to say, I am as in love with the new Oscar fabrics as I am with the artwork in the room. I'm sure Oscar de la Renta Home creative director, Miles Redd, had a hand in this masterpiece and I thank him since it makes a dreaded trip to the D&D Building a whole lot more enjoyable!
Photos by Heather Clawson for Habitually Chic
at
10:55 AM
Labels:
fabric,
lee jofa,
oscar de la renta
Monday, June 21, 2010
Thom Filicia Fabrics
at
12:00 PM
Labels:
fabric,
kravet,
thom filicia
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Fashionable Fabrics: Oscar de la Renta for Lee Jofa
If you are a regular reader, then you know how much I love it when fashion and design collide and I can't think of a more perfect marriage than Oscar de la Renta and Lee Jofa. I had the pleasure of attending the Elle Decor sponsored launch party last evening at the Oscar de la Renta boutique and am already trying to figure out where I can use these fabulous fabrics. Lee Jofa Creative Director Stephen Elrod told us a wonderful story about how they went into Mrs. de la Renta's closet to find inspiration since there are no official Oscar archives. Her closet is the archive! Some fabrics were made by the same mill that made the fabrics for the clothing but in cotton instead of silk. Others had to be slightly reinterpreted to work for the home but just as with Oscar's fashions, some are even hand sewn! Amazing! Of course, everyone is already clamoring for the ball skirts made from the fabrics! They might end up auctioning them off for charity so start saving your pennies now ladies. Or you can always head over to Lee Jofa and make your own!
at
8:30 AM
Labels:
elle decor,
fabric,
lee jofa,
oscar de la renta
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Chairs Before and After
at
8:50 AM
Labels:
chair,
fabric,
lee industries,
my projects
Monday, April 12, 2010
A Single Headboard
I've been too busy decorating for others lately to spend any time on my own apartment but when a certain magazine asked to see photos of it, I thought that maybe I should finish all those nagging projects. One of which is a headboard. If you live in an apartment in New York, then you know the problem with the ever present bump out. It's an annoying little thing that allows the pipes to run up and down the corner of a building but always causes a decorating disaster. In my case, there is one at the foot of my bed that doesn't allow 4 inches for a normal headboard to sit behind the mattress. This means that I need to have one custom made that will attach to the wall and sit above the top of the mattress. See why I haven't dealt with this before. You're probably wondering why I've first posted a photo of a dining room if I am talking about headboards right? Well, I've been in love with the fabric on those chairs since they were first published in Domino in September 2008.
Then I saw it used for the headboard in A Single Man and thought that's the fabric I should use for my own headboard! The sample I have is Tilbury Lapis by Laura Ashley through Kravet. I usually remove the tag from any of the Laura Ashley fabrics before I show them to my clients since they usually associate them with unflattering floral dresses but the ikat of this fabric is perfect. The walls in my bedroom are robins egg blue and even though I plan to replace all my bedding, it should all coordinate nicely. I may have to find myself a blue phone to finish it off though!
Here's another photo of the chairs from the premier issue of Lonny magazine. I'm not really a prints person. I usually stick to textures and skins like shagreen but I think a headboard should make a statement and it's nice to have at least one patterned fabric in a room that pulls everything together.
Above is photo of Tilbury Lapis from Laura Ashley through Kravet and below is a photo of Tilbury Lapis from Calico Corners. Are they in cahoots or has Calico Corners copied their fabric from Laura Ashley? They look almost identical. I've ordered a sample of the Calico Corners since at $24.99 a yard, it's practically free! That's a joke but everyone likes a bargain, myself included. If this all works out, that would make one project down and fifty more to go so I'm off to get to work! Ciao!
at
11:45 AM
Labels:
a single man,
calico corners,
fabric,
kravet,
tilbury lapis
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Chic in LA: Kathryn Ireland and Ferrick Mason
at
5:30 PM
Labels:
almont yard,
fabric,
interior design,
kathryn ireland,
Los Angeles
Friday, February 12, 2010
Fabric Sources - Expand Your Options
I was reminded again yesterday of how much differently I shop for fabric than I used to. Before when I needed fabric I would automatically go to the fabric store, and there are many times when I still do. But I also keep an eye out for fabric in other places. I find myself looking at anything that's made from fabric and, rather thinking about what the item is, I focus more on type of fabric, color, pattern, and dimensions/yardage to see if there's enough for my project just as if it were fabric off the bolt. I'm especially interested when it's on sale or clearance or at a store like HomeGoods, TJ Maxx, etc. where I'm also likely to get it at a lower price.
When you shift your focus and view everything as fabric, it really expands your options. We've seen a flurry of drop cloth drapes throughout blogland (the ones shown below are Traci's from Beneath My Heart - click here to see her tutorial) and in this post we saw a pillow made from a beautiful rug. In this post, a lampshade made from silk drapes and a bathrobe!

Clothes are something to consider. Shirts can make cute pillows, cutting the pillow out with the shirt buttoned for maximum use and also so that the buttons become a decorative item on the front of the pillow. Since the sweater pillow craze, clearance sweaters are also constantly catching my eye. Skirts? What could I make from a skirt that I no longer wear? A pillow? Recover a lampshade?Fabric strips to embellish something else?
Sheets, duvet covers, tablecloths, fabric shower curtains, placemats, scarves, throws, towels, clothes/sweaters, drop cloths, rugs... you get the idea. Depending on your project, nothing is really off limits.
Furniture manufacturers routinely send furniture stores who carry their line a list of discontinued fabrics, which the furniture store then pulls from their display. Many, not all, furniture stores will give these away rather than throwing them. Definitely varies by store but it doesn't hurt to check. The fabric photos in this post are a hodge podge from my stash of furniture store discontinued samples that I've collected over the years. You don't get to choose, you get what you get, but some of these fabric samples can be great for smaller projects (pillows, art, etc.) and can be used for projects of a slightly larger scale if you collage a few fabrics together.
So how about you? Are you strictly a fabric store shopper or have you been known to use an unexpected source?
When you shift your focus and view everything as fabric, it really expands your options. We've seen a flurry of drop cloth drapes throughout blogland (the ones shown below are Traci's from Beneath My Heart - click here to see her tutorial) and in this post we saw a pillow made from a beautiful rug. In this post, a lampshade made from silk drapes and a bathrobe!
Clothes are something to consider. Shirts can make cute pillows, cutting the pillow out with the shirt buttoned for maximum use and also so that the buttons become a decorative item on the front of the pillow. Since the sweater pillow craze, clearance sweaters are also constantly catching my eye. Skirts? What could I make from a skirt that I no longer wear? A pillow? Recover a lampshade?Fabric strips to embellish something else?
Sheets, duvet covers, tablecloths, fabric shower curtains, placemats, scarves, throws, towels, clothes/sweaters, drop cloths, rugs... you get the idea. Depending on your project, nothing is really off limits.
Furniture manufacturers routinely send furniture stores who carry their line a list of discontinued fabrics, which the furniture store then pulls from their display. Many, not all, furniture stores will give these away rather than throwing them. Definitely varies by store but it doesn't hurt to check. The fabric photos in this post are a hodge podge from my stash of furniture store discontinued samples that I've collected over the years. You don't get to choose, you get what you get, but some of these fabric samples can be great for smaller projects (pillows, art, etc.) and can be used for projects of a slightly larger scale if you collage a few fabrics together.
So how about you? Are you strictly a fabric store shopper or have you been known to use an unexpected source?
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Design Your Own Fabric
Image: Spoonflower.comMy husband is always telling me that I should design my own fabric, furniture, rugs... pretty much whatever I'm looking for at the time. It could be because I'm always saying "Well, that would be perfect, if only..."
Absolutely no chance of me starting my own fabric or furniture line any time soon (ever) but it looks as if I could design my own fabric, if I so desire.
The two sites below give you the chance to design your own fabric. It doesn't appear to be an expensive process like I thought it would be, at first glance, especially for a one-time special project. I'm considering it. If I do it, I'll share the results.
Do you think you would use either of these resources for a project? If so, what?
Or have you already used them or a source like them? I would love to hear about it!
I'm linking this to Julia's HOOKED ON FRIDAYS. Check it out to see what others are hooked on!
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