A Threenager's Retreat
Read MoreFarmhouse Glam
A few weeks back I was enlisted by a Laurel & Wolf client to finish designing her dining room and breakfast nook. The client is a popular blogger with about 100K Instagram followers and had been gifted the following pieces by Raymour & Flanagan in return for a home decor feature on her blog.
Although she does not mention it in her feature, she hired Laurel and Wolf behind the scenes to help design both rooms and "glam" them up a bit, with a budget of less than $5K.
Here is where I stepped in. Although I admit to you that I would have never specified these furniture pieces, I love a good challenge! Here are some before pictures of the spaces:
With super tight time, budget and vendor constraints, I got to work cozying up and styling the space. Here is what I came up with:
Although Laurel and Wolf and I didn't receive credit in the blog post for pulling this all together, it's still fun to see the results, photographed professionally! I will give us a little pat on the back for a job well done :-) Because if I don't, who will?
So, what do you think? Since we were on such a tight deadline, it looks like some of the pieces may not have arrived in time for the photoshoot, so I see that she improvised with similar, and it works well!
I really think the rug from NuLoom is my favorite - it brings it all together with the casual warmth, texture and pattern for a boho-chic-country feel.
Farmhouse Glam Slam.
~L.S.
PS- Have you ever had someone pass off your work as their own? How did it make you feel? Tell me in the comments below!
Covetable Conversions
I've been obsessed with the idea of a multi-purpose spare room for years now. So when we moved to the East Bay where we could actually maybe sort of possibly have an extra bedroom, I could not wait to get my designing paws on it and create the most stylish and efficient room possible!
If we were going to move across the country, we wanted to have a mi casa es su casa policy so that our family and friends could visit at any time and not have to worry about shelling out additional cash money on a hotel room. Airfare is expensive enough! So... who wants to come stay at the Saccullo Hotel?
Working from home, I am what they call "environmentally sensitive". (Read: I become listless and unresponsive without the proper amount of sunny sun coming through the windows at all times). Not only does working from a dark space make me die a little bit inside, but I also really cannot do my job in the dark. I need to see what paint colors and fabrics actually look like in order to properly design for my clients. Natural light is so imperative to my work that it led me to rent out an office space back in NYC due to dim conditions in our old apartment.
But dim no more! This naturally lit beauty of a third bedroom in our new home has allowed me to have a bright and airy yet cozy working set up. But wait! We'll get to that. Back to where it all began - the mood board.
I had to be strategic with this room. I wanted it to feel warm and welcoming as a guest room, but not too prim and proper. It also had to function on a daily basis as an office (we'll get to it) where I could spread out fabrics and samples along the floor, maybe take a little break from my creative crunch time with a nap on the daybed Don Draper style. Old Fashioned, anyone?
Also, if some day, one day, another little one came waddling into the picture and we hadn't found our forever home yet (real estate is cray-cray out here!), this room would need to easily convert to Miss Avery Etta's Big Girl Room. Every aspect of the room, from the paint color (Benjamin Moore White Wisp) to the furniture, to the playful, somewhat girly art above the bed was chosen with these potential conversions in mind. We could easily swap her adorable aztec style rug (see "I've Got the Blues Part 1 ) with this striped rug. Even the sheets in the guest room would work for her. We would just need to switch out the duvet cover and accessories for her own, maybe repurpose these vintage brass tables (two of my favorites, gifted to us by my in-laws) and poof! Big Girl room.
The bed (which converts easily into a king size bed - whaaa? IKEA - you are doing it righttt) and bookcases boast a total of six storage drawers. That's a six-drawer dresser right there! #spacesaving. I love that the two bookcases + daybed = the exact length of our wall, give it a "built-ins-for-less" feeling. It was a little nerve wracking, since it was literally down to the 1/4". But it fit! It fit! Good to know I actually know how to work a tape measure.
Here is a pic of the room recently converted for guests:
If you're even a tad bit observant you'll notice that not everything on the mood board ended up in the room, and not everything in the room was on the mood board. Totally okay, people! That's what a mood board is all about. It's just a starting point for an "evolving process", as I like to call it.
I created the mood board after visiting the house once in a whirlwind rainy weekend trip (blamed on El Nino). After we moved in, I was up late one night unpacking. By late I mean like 1 am. Sadly this is often when I do my best work! (Explains the coffee obsession). Everyone is sleeping, so I can finally hear myself think.
So, I was throwing stuff into the spare room which was acting more like a storage unit for those first few days. And a little lightbulb went off in my head. Ding! The walk-in closet off of the guest room had a window. A window! It already had shelves, and measured about 6'x6'. By NYC standards, this was nothing short of a Fourth Bedroom.
So, voila! It became my office:
I know, I know, it's taking away a closet. But it became evident to me that this was the room's purpose. As the Fourth Bedroom, it can be behind a closed door, completely separate from the guest room. Or not. Depending on the day, depending on the current needs.
But where do guests hang their fancy frocks, you might ask? And what if Avery moves to this room? She won't have a closet?! Oh, don't worry, I got it covered! There's a spot in the guest room where I'm going to put this mirrored wardrobe to allow for hanging and additional storage. Ikea, I love you! And I'm not above you.
Anyways, the room is almost complete. I'll share more updates with you as they come along. And that is my little story about our library convertible woman den convertible guest bedroom convertible office convertible big girl room. I just love packing a big punch into a small space!
Below, a round up some more of my favorite covetable conversions. What's your fav?
~L.S.