This eclectic Tudor home designed by Indiana-based design firm Haus Love has a modern aesthetic and a neutral colour palette with black accents that has me completely captivated. I could stare at this all day. Dark furnishings against a white backdrop is always soooo good.
If you would like to participate in the Monday’s pets on furniture series please send photos, your name, location and a brief description to kim[at]desiretoinspire[dot]net, or hashtag your photos on Instagram with #DTIpetsonfurniture. Thanks!
Jack the flame point on a wishbone
– Anne (Los Angeles CA)
From me: Lucky napping on my granny sofa
It’s Monday. There I said it, the dreaded “M” word. The end of the weekend and the start of another dreary working week. But wait! There is a way we can escape the drudgery of yet another Monday. Time for a virtual escape to Sydney’s Watson Bay, to a stylish house with an iconic view and just a few steps from one of the city’s best fish restaurants. What’s even better is that the house is part of the Contemporary Hotels‘ luxurious stable of vacation homes. Maybe we can book it for next Monday.
Friday I featured a must-have book and today I thought I would share a few others you may want to add to your Christmas list. The first one will get you wanting to have lots of get-togethers and get your craft on. Second Bloom: Cathy Graham’s Art of the Table is a book that is bound to start those creative juices flowing and you may just want to start heading to your nearest florist now.
It came in the cutest box wrapped in ribbon with a little notebook.
Cathy Graham is an entertaining guru and celebrated hostess and artist, and this book is all about her specialty of planning magical events. But it’s not just about fancying up your table for a dinner party the photos in this book are of gorgeous settings inside and outside, from mantels to gardens to tables decorated with the most beautiful flower arrangements.
Some favourites in this book: Cathy loves to make flower arrangements in individual vintage glass bottles interspersed with miniature replicas. She also makes the most charming watercolours and are featured throughout the book.
The photographs in the book are really pretty, thanks to photographers Quentin Bacon and Andrew Ingalls (and written by Alexis Clark). The books in this feature are all published by Vendome Press. This one you can find on Amazon here.
Next up is David Hicks scrapbooks, edited by his son Ashley Hicks. Of course anyone who is a fan of David Hicks should pick up a copy of this, and everyone else can pick up a copy because it has the coolest cover and well, for some of us that’s reason enough!
For those that don’t know him, Davis Hicks was a British interior designer that became an icon in the 1960’s with his glorious geometric prints, bold and unique colour combinations and his quirky design style where mixing antiques with modern furnishings was his signature.
For many years David documented everything going on in his life within scrapbooks, 24 in all. These scrapbooks included press clippings, photographs, sketches, party invitations, fabric swatches, magazine articles….and Ashley selected over 300 of his favourite pages from these scrapbooks, making this book a really special tribute to his very talented father. You can find this on Amazon here.
Next up is a real treat. Versailles: The Great and Hidden Splendors of the Sun King’s Palace by Catherine Pégard was made possible because four talented photographers (Christophe Fouin, Thomas Garnier, Christian Miles and Didier Saulnier) were given unlimited access to Versailles during a period of time when it was closed to visitors.
They were able to photograph the private suites of Louis XV, the boudoirs of Marie Antoinette and Madame de Pompadour, the celebrated Hall of Mirrors, the Royal Chapel, the charming Orangerie. The result is total eye candy. Elegance as its absolute finest. Versailles is truly a magical place filled with interiors you will never see anywhere else. You can find this one on Amazon here.
In Amsterdam no less. I’m stalking a stunning, zen-like apartment with roof terrace. Restrained yet luxurious, it is part of a redevelopment by the Collective Studio, a collaboration of developers, designers, artists and brokers. You can see more here including pictures of the space at night. (Thanks for the tip off Dave!)