Less is MORE: Curtains

Wednesday, 4. August 2010 7:28 | Author:Barbara

Our clients are often surprised when we suggest adding paneled curtains. They want light and an open, airy feeling in the room.

Exactly.

We rarely suggest curtains that actually open and close across a window. There has to be a privacy concern, or direct summer sun, or a streetlight right outside a bedroom window. Even rarer is a suggestion to add valances across the top of a window, which can weigh down the view and the entire wall.

But decorative curtain panels either side of a window are a wonderful way to add texture, color, and softness to a room. See what we mean:

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When is less MORE and more LESS?

Monday, 2. August 2010 7:46 | Author:Barbara

Shhh — don’t tell anyone — but we’re about to reveal one of Metamorefix’ best kept design secrets.

It’s this: sometimes less is more and other times, more is less.

Furniture pile

Does your home look like this?

Confused? Not to worry. Throughout the month of August, we’re going to share specific examples of what we mean and how you can use this design secret to create calm out of chaos in your own home.

Or this?

Look for regular postings every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at www.metamorefix.com/blog, Facebook, and Twitter. We’d love to hear from you as you explore the “less is more” idea, bringing space and comfort out of your clutter. Or perhaps your home is a candidate for “more is less” design, adding vibrancy and richness to a space that’s a little on the dull side. In either case, the end result is the same: your beautiful home!

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The Perfect Flush

Monday, 12. July 2010 8:34 | Author:Barbara

From one of my favorite design bloggers, Penny Bonda at interiordesign.net, comes the latest in green flushing:

Some things are sexy, others aren’t. Toilets usually fall into the latter category. But they can be fabulous, especially when they single flush 0.8 gallons – and do the job – if you get my drift.

Niagara Conservation’s new Stealth toilet is the first and only toilet available with the ability to achieve a powerful, quiet flush using just 0.8 gallons of water. That’s pretty remarkable considering that most current single flush toilets use 1.6 gallons per flush and older style models flush 3.5 gallons. That adds up to impressive savings – 77 percent less water per flush than the older style 3.5 gallon toilet, saving up to 20,000 gallons of water per year and as much as $150 in savings annually per household on water usage, depending on the wastewater rate. Even dual flush toilets don’t do s well.

More impressive stats from Niagara: the U.S. has an estimated 241 million toilets, which use an estimated 1.3 trillion gallons of water. If every household in America switched to Niagara’s Stealth toilet, we could save more than 914 billion gallons of water and $6 billion in utility bills.  Even if just 10 percent of American households converted to Niagara’s Stealth toilet, it could save 91 billion gallons of water per year and provide more than $640 million in savings on utility bills.
The Stealth toilet has earned the WaterSense label, the symbol for high-performing, water-efficient products. A labeling program run by EPA, WaterSense makes it easy to find water efficient products, which is important because, even though it may not seem so, water on Earth is in short supply. According to WaterSense, “less than 1 percent is available for human use. The rest is either salt water found in oceans, fresh water frozen in the polar ice caps, or too inaccessible for use. While the population and the demand on freshwater resources are increasing, supply remains constant.”

The new Stealth toilet is currently available online at www.itseasybeinggreen.com for a retail price of $308, and will be coming soon to local retailers, kitchen and bath showrooms, as well as plumbing wholesalers.

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Design Cruise Wrap-Up

Tuesday, 15. June 2010 15:31 | Author:Barbara

We’re home from our cruise! It took a good 10 days to get over the jet-lag, but I discovered that I can be very productive when I wake up at 4 AM. Too bad it didn’t last…

What continued to amaze us on the cruise, country after country,  is the continuity of ancient design influence throughout the Mediterranean rim.

You see the same stuff everywhere: the Greek key pattern, fluted columns, ram’s horn and acanthus, post and lintel, etc. We’ve seen it from Italy to the Greek islands, to ancient churches in Israel, and into Egypt. When we got home to Austin, we saw the Greek key pattern on the back of some guy’s Aloha shirt!

Good design is good design, no matter how old it is.

I thought of it all as Greek influence until we went to the Sphinx. But the temple ruins, over four thousand years old, have the post and lintel construction. Then we saw the same construction again, at a bus stop in Alexandria:

  

I kept thinking of Cleopatra taking Julius Caesar to see the Great Pyramids, how he must have stood there awestruck, thinking, “Damn, that’s old.”

And he was there in 55 BC. Now we think of Julius Caesar’s time as antiquity, and the pyramids are older still.

I bought 17 scarves on this trip, several from each country we visited. My current fave is one with the double blue “eye” design around the edge. That’s an ancient Turkish symbol for good luck. But I bought this particular scarf at Chico’s before we left on the trip.

Ancient design is everywhere. It was beautiful then, and it’s beautiful now.

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Ephesus for the Rest of Us

Monday, 31. May 2010 11:08 | Author:Barbara

Amazing things to be learned about design here. Lessons from 40 B.C. or thereabouts.

We toured Ephesus today, the largest port in Asian Minor during its heyday, now a treasured ruin in the beautiful hills near the pristine coastline of Turkey.

It’s unbelievable. Bas reliefs like the expensive reproductions we see at market in Dallas. Except these are marble, the real thing, and they’re just lying on the ground. Everywhere.

Bas reliefs are those chunky pieces of carved stone carved into a variety of patterns  and shapes. They are the forerunners of modern-day crown molding. You know the dentil shape that looks like teeth or the kind that looks like eggs?

They’re nothing new.

The earliest buildings around the Mediterranean were made of wood in a post and lintel style. Today we call it a doorway. That trim around your front door? Think Greek temple, baby. That’s where it began. Without the trim, it would just be another hole in the wall. The frame-out makes it a shape that we recognize as an entry. And that dentil molding? The “teeth” are a reproduction of the cuts made to fasten the pieces together. Now we buy it at Home Depot just to make our dining rooms look…Greek?

And I’m forever recommending fluted curtain rods for window treatments. Ancient Roman marble columns were fluted like the Greek stone columns they imitated, which in turn imitated the native eucalyptus trees with their peeling bark.

And I thought fluted curtain rods just *looked* classy. They look, and are, classic. And we humans still respond to the carefully thought-out symmetry of Greek lines.

Bas reliefs are also known as “lower reliefs”, meaning they’re not meant to be fancy. The carvings don’t even attempt to come out of the stone, like higher reliefs or sculpture. Bas reliefs (pronounced “bah”) are strictly decorative in nature. I love them.

You’re allowed to touch them in Turkey, a major no-no in Greece or Italy. I ran my hand over the cool marble again and again, trying to feel something reach out from the past. It didn’t, but it was amazing to touch something so very old.

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I Hear You Knocking

Tuesday, 25. May 2010 6:59 | Author:Barbara

Patmos is the best!

Loads of great design here with the marvelous simplistic combination of beauty and practicality that was the hallmark of the ancient world.

But I’m really talking about everyday design, where the regular people lived.  People like you and me. There’s archaeological proof that small concrete houses with domes roofs have been built around the Mediterranean Sea for 5000 years. That’s a lot of know-how from a time when we think people maybe didn’t know too much.

They knew plenty. Turns out they were plenty smart, lacking only the ability to plug something in to do it for them.

Their homes are a great example. There isn’t much wood around the rim of the Mediterranean, so homes were built within frames and filled with rubble, loose rock, whatever they could find. Then they bound everything together with cement, which hardened up beautifully. Plaster on the outsides and voila! A very sound home with a domed cement roof to provide natural air-conditioning. Examples about throughout this small island, particularly in churches. But word has it that local construction is returning to this style, which is much more energy-efficient.

Don’t you love when old things become new again?

I also love the Greek sense of playfulness, which you see everywhere. Take a look at this doorknocker:

It’s a little hand! We also saw the interior of one home, occupied by the same family for eight generations, that used family china in a decorative wall arrangement. You know how we love plates at Metamorefix.  But we never claimed to be the first to do so!

I’m sorry we don’t have pictures of that for you. No photography allowed in Signora’s house.

Turkey tomorrow…

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The Pint Hose on the Sheep

Thursday, 20. May 2010 13:55 | Author:Barbara

Wow, what a surprise when we got to the ship yesterday. We were upgraded to the Penthouse!

We had no idea it was coming. We got a message at our hotel in Rome from our travel agent, but it read, “The have a new cabin on the sheep. The pint hose.”

We pretty much understood that “sheep” was “ship” but the pint hose thing we didn’t get. I was thinking “pint-sized house” like maybe we were getting an even smaller cabin than usual. But no! Donna, our wonderful TA, got us da best place in da house!

You know, I’ve always hated reading travelogues and other stories about people getting upgraded. I thought they had connections, blah, blah, blah.

But now I know that it can happen to ordinary people who aren’t best friends with the cruise line president or any other president, for that matter. And now, when someone asks, how did you get upgraded like that? I can answer, truly,

“I don’t know.”

But here we are, and now I’m tempted to forego all those shore excursions we signed up for and just hang out on the balcony for the next twelve days. Just as soon as it stops raining…and warms up a bit. I didn’t know May in Italy could be so cold (it’s been around 60 with rain and wind. Mamma mia!)

All this room! I’m used to cabins with stand-up showers in the corner and a curtain that blows in on you unless you aim the shower head at it. This penthouse puppy has a Jacuzzi – it doesn’t seem to work but, hey, it’s still a big tub, right?

And it has a huge, four-door wardrobe closet instead of a big open spot with a pole and no hangers. But the seas were angry last night, my friend, and our ship rolled around like crazy. The wardrobe doors banged open and shut continually and nothing would keep them permanently closed no matter how many times I got up to try.

I swear I didn’t sleep more than twenty minutes at a time. But it’s the penthouse! So there’s definitely large gulps of lemonade along with the little tiny lemon slices. And I think the sun is trying to come out…

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Lost in Roma

Tuesday, 18. May 2010 10:42 | Author:Barbara

Today in Rome was all about churches. And walking. Walking, walking, walking.

The ancient Romans walked everywhere. The really rich ones were sometimes carried about in litters through the narrow streets, but even back then your average Roman loved to walk.

During our trip preparations, we read on thelonelyplanet.com that getting a cab in Rome was pretty regimented. You had to phone for a taxi or wait for one in designated taxi stands. Hailing a cab was out of the question.

So as we roamed from church to church, we waited patiently by one or two yellow “Taxi” signs to no avail. No taxis were present, and none seemed to come by.

So we walked.

Saw some pretty spectacular church innards, though. Take a look at this hand-inlaid marble floor. The detailing is unbelievable:

 

How’d you like that in your entry?

At Santa Maria Trastevere, the view from the pew was a row of paired columns in different marbles and granites. I couldn’t help but think how we stick this stuff in our kitchens and bathrooms, but here the materials were used to their very finest, hand-carved and polished, twenty feet high, each topped with a unique capitol, the workmanship non-paralleled.  Here’s an example:

I hope you can see it in person sometime. Truly, it takes your breath away.

Did I mention we got lost twice today? Hence the walking, walking, walking. The first time we got lost walking between churches, the second time after we walked down from the Janiculum hilltop, where we saw a great view of Rome that has scarcely changed since Renaissance times. Not a crane in sight! It blew my mind to think of the mansions that had graced this hill during Roman Republic times, and the people who enjoyed the view throughout the centuries. But we got lost among the narrow, winding streets at the bottom. Both times we managed to find our way to the river and then to a taxi. And it turns out you can hail a taxi easily when you have a lost, dumb-founded look on your face. All the taxi drivers have been delightful.

Day Three tomorrow. We signed up for an official tour. No more getting lost!

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The Roman Way of Life

Sunday, 16. May 2010 9:28 | Author:Barbara

Our first day in Rome was a shopping spree!

Not the kind where you actually buy stuff. This shopping spree was all about discovering what Roman home-owners see when *they* actually buy stuff for their homes.

The typical Roman in our ‘hood (near the Leonardo da Vinci hotel) lives in a high-ceiling, centuries-old apartment building with shutters on the windows and giant brass knockers on the main entry doors, which open into a courtyard and access to the elevator or stairs to the apartments. Here’s the building next door to us:

 

There’s a terrace, but we’re not sure if access is for everyone in the building or just the one lucky owner. One block over is the via Cola di Rienzo, a major shopping street with everything you could possibly want, all available in tiny mom-and-pop stores. We hadn’t walked two blocks before we saw this home furnishings store:

And here’s one of their display windows:

Notice anything? That’s right! It’s the 2008 Color of the Year! Seems like they’re into it here, too! And remember, the COTY always takes a year or two before it filters down into home furnishings and accessories, so they’re right on schedule here in Roma.

And across the street is a great lamp place:

 

Isn’t that delightful? A farmer’s market for home furnishings!

 A block or two further and we discovered a delightful kitchen and whimsy store a wonderful assortment of Valentino wall clocks, (105 Euros each — about $135).

Style for the home is alive and well in Italy. These shops were packed and not just with tourists. We haven’t heard nary a word of English all day. These shoppers were locals  buying armloads of linens, fine fabrics, and kitchenware left and right. Too bad we don’t have time for a Metamorefix or two while we’re here!

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Design Cruise

Saturday, 15. May 2010 3:44 | Author:Barbara

Our Holy Land/Mediterranean cruise is underway! We’re spending the first three days in Rome, then heading to the ship on Saturday. Here’s our itinerary on the Pacific Princess:

You’ve heard the expression “Getting there is half the fun?”  Don’t you believe it.

Our first flight left Austin almost two hours late due to weather in the Chicagoland area. This was no cause for concern because we already had a three-hour sit built in between flights. My former flight attendant memories are still fresh when it comes to stormy May months flying in and out of O’Hare.

So we landed in Chicago with plenty of time to spare. The plane taxied past the United Airlines stronghold at Terminal 1, our first time there since I stopped flying in 2001. Imagine my surprise when I saw that UAL still has not completed re-painting the fleet, a project begun at the end of the last century! So how they can afford to buy Continental when they can’t even afford to finishing painting their own planes? I guess they can say the painting only gets done during heavy maintenance rotation, but shouldn’t every aircraft have rotated in at least once since they re-designed the color scheme back in the 1990s? Very strange…

But we are travelling on American Airlines and, standardized fleet colors aside, I can report that their airplanes are not any better on the inside than I remember with the competition. The 767-300 we took from Chicago to Rome was beyond miserable. Interior by Marquis de Sade? Completely full with 200 or so very nice passengers and flight attendants, the flight was basically stinky lavs, torturously cramped seats, overhead lights that wouldn’t turn off during an all-night flight, etc.

But we’re here in Roma, jet-lagged but happy, and will spend three days trying to see interior design through Roman eyes (as soon as our tired red ones clear up a bit). Buon giorno e buona sera!

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