The Prettiest Paper

Portraits, InteriorsWalking in the door on Church Street, one of the first things people ever ask me about is the wallpaper in the front hall. And I am often surprised when I tell people that it is Meg Braff Designs, and they had no idea that the designer had a line of wallpaper. Launched in 2011, Meg Braff Designs includes both wallpaper and fabrics. When midcentury wallpaper company Philip Graf put their archives up for sale, which included paper from the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s, Braff purchased every single roll. These timeless patterns have now been updated in new color ways, and look as fresh today as they did in the ’60s.  Portraits, InteriorsThe wallpaper in our front hall is called “Ferns.” DSC_0009The wallpaper in the powder room is called “Grille of Kells”IMG_2695I visited Meg Braff’s shop in Locust Valley, NY last summer, and felt like a kid in a candy store standing at a table covered in beautiful wallpaper samples. One of the best things about Meg Braff Designs wallpaper is that you can customize the colors. So if you like a certain pattern, but wish it could be blue instead of green, you can have it in blue.Meg BraffMeg Braff Designs just put some new patterns up on their website and I am already in love with a number of them. There are so many beautiful papers to choose from, it is almost impossible to pick just one … which is why the two wallpapers in my house are both Meg Braff Designs.

Visit Meg Braff Designs online here, or if you’re in the NYC/Long Island area I would highly recommend a trip to her shop in Locust Valley.

Front hall and close up photos by Francesco Lagnese all other photos by the author

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For the Love of Linens

IMG_3975Last week when I was in New Orleans, Lindsay of The Pursuit of Style recommended that I go to visit the Leontine Linens showroom. I was not disappointed. The space was beautiful, and the product? Well let’s just say I was in heaven. Between coverlets and shams, napkins and placemats, it was a full linen sensory overload. We had just come from an amazing lunch at Lilette, and ending our lunch outing ogling over beautiful linens was the perfect accompaniment. IMG_3969We had the pleasure of meeting Jane Scott Hodges, the woman behind Leontine Linens, and she couldn’t have been more fun, welcoming, and happy to chat, despite the fact that her book, Linens for Every Room and Occasion, hits stores today. The book is being published by Rizzoli, and has a foreword by Charlotte Moss. I was lucky enough to check out a preview copy at the shop, and I cannot wait to get my hands on one of my own. The book is available through Amazon here and Barnes & Noble here.  IMG_3974IMG_3982IMG_3987IMG_3989IMG_3986IMG_3978IMG_3985IMG_3977IMG_3990After an experience like this, I will be hard pressed not to be ordering some napkins and a coverlet! The question is, how do I choose? Jane Scott and I have similar taste in china, she loves Herend Fish Scale like I do, and we agreed that the chopstick font (shown in the second picture) in green might be a great accompaniment to our Herend Fish Scale and Meissen Ming Dragon II. Any thoughts?

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History Repeating

hbHave you seen the April issue of House Beautiful yet? I love the Southampton home on the cover. As you all know, my love of chintz stems from Schumacher’s Pyne Hollyhock chintz, but Colefax & Fowler’s Bowood Chintz is a close second. What struck me the most about the house, was the designer Justine Cushing’s use of the fabric throughout. Other than white duck, the Bowood Chintz is the only pattern in the house. Cushing painted the walls Linen White and  re-used the homeowners furniture, and reupholstered pieces in Bowood Chintz when they needed an update.Tory kitchenTypically when we see a fabric repeated, it is repeated within a single room and one more than one surface. The use of a single fabric in the design of a room is a very traditional decorating technique that has come back into popularity of late, as seen in this popular photo of Tory Burch’s NYC kitchen.Romuldez vogueDaniel Romualdez, the architect/designer who has helped Burch with her homes, also likes to employ a singular fabric in his decorating schemes, as shown by the bedroom in his Connecticut home. Vreeland LRLike I said, the use of a single fabric or pattern is a very traditional decorating technique that is regaining popularity. There are some very famous rooms that employ the singular pattern technique … case in point, Diana Vreeland’s “Garden in Hell,” designed for her by Billy Baldwin. Paley 2A favorite of mine is Babe and William Paley’s apartment at 820 Fifth Avenue. These photos, taken in the 1980s, show the dining room, decorated by Sister Parish & Albert Hadley. This room, other than being absolutely fabulous, is where the dinner took place prior to Truman Capote’s Black & White ball. Wish I could have been there.
Paley 1I think my next project might have to include a room with some repeating patterns … don’t you think?

Photos via The Wall Street Journal, Vogue, House Beautiful, & Elle Decor

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