Vardo, the teal that Farrow & Ball never had…UNTIL NOW. If I wasn’t hung up on pink for my dining room, this would be the colour I would use. I find teal shades can be hard to get right. They are either too blue or too green or too bright. Vardo is the prefect mix of blue, green and grey. I may be obsessed with it. I would love to see it on a front door. So I went looking for some Vardo inspiration and here is what I found….
Dirk Jan Kinet via Architectectural Digest Spain
A loft renovation in Stockholm is stylish, relaxed and timeless, a bit like the inspiration pictures that informed the project – a brown cashmere coat, a pair of sand-colored sneakers and a plaza in Rome.
“When it was our turn to renew the the 200 square meter apartment our first step was to simplify everything we felt was too much, in terms of dimensions and materials. The task was to create a relaxed, soft environment and the main interior feature is a dark, low-lying base line that runs like a unifying horizon through the whole apartment. All walls and ceilings are painted in apricot pink and sandy beige tones which gives a soft, hazy atmosphere, creating a dynamic but gentle contrast to the blue-gray base. Nothing in the apartment is white!!”
Inner City Blue by Stockholm-based design studio Note.
Voluptuous. It’s the only word I can think of to describe this room. The punctuation of the rug, the curve of blue velvet disguised as a sofa, the mid century chairs and brutalist sconces all toy with the 19th century bones of the room, the ceiling, the gilded plaster, the wrought iron. And to top it all off a ridiculously large and “casually” arranged vase of elephant ears in a vase. Appartement Rue Jean Goujon, Paris by Karl Fournier and Olivier Marty, the design duo behind the architectural firm Studio KO.
I am dying a slow death over this total gem of an apartment. It is EVERYTHING a Paris apartment should be. AND MORE. Featured on The Socialite Family you can catch all the juicy details there. If you’re going to take over your grandmother’s apartment and keep the tradition alive THIS is how you do it – by working with all of the jaw-dropping original architecture and adding in vintage mixed with iconic modern elements (with help from architect friend Samantha Hauvette).
The Ploum sofa by the Bouroullec brothers is one of the coolest sofas of all time IMHO.
Up there with the Ploum is the Togo. YAAASSSS!
Also by the Bouroullec brothers are these Flos AIM pendants. I have one in my living room and I want a zillion more.
Can’t have a funky Paris apartment without some tumbling block tile. *SWOON*
In keeping with my beach theme for today, and because last night I booked my annual flight to Puerto Vallarta to get my arse to a beach instead of knee-deep in snow, here is another glimpse into a Chango & Co. project. This one is an East Hampton beach cottage with some beautiful shades of blue. (Photos: Ball & Albanese)