Tuesday, December 4, 2012

5Ws of…2012 Gift Guide, Part Two


We’re pleased to present the second in our three-part gift guide.  From a complete history of furniture to a behind-the-scenes look at some very chic lives, these cover some of the most engaging aspects of interior design.  Please see the previous post for great videos for design buffs, and please check in next week for gifts that give back to the design community.


What: Stylish and substantive lives, cataloged beautifully… “A Visual Life: Scrapbooks, Collages, and Inspirations”
Interior designer Charlotte Moss has spent years collecting as well as creating scrapbooks—a pastime both meditative and instructive about her own ideas regarding design and style. In this unique book, Moss brings together her own scrapbooks along with those of notable women, both contemporary and historical, whose flair for style inspires us, including interior designer Elsie de Wolfe and society doyenne Gloria Vanderbilt—all never before published. Organized by theme—home, garden, travel, entertaining, and fashion—each chapter includes examples of Moss’s signature style mingled with excerpts from the scrapbooks of these great women.


Who: Designer, starlet, socialite – mystery woman… “Florence Broadhurst: Her Secret and Extraordinary Lives”
Florence Broadhurst founded one of the most influential wallpaper studios of the Twentieth Century.  Her brightly-colored geometric and nature-inspired oversized designs were all hand printed. Technical advances made in her studio included printing onto metallic surfaces, the development of a washable, vinyl-coating finish and a drying rack system that allowed her wallpapers to be produced in large quantities.  Her wallpapers reportedly contained around 800 designs in eighty different colors.  In addition to being a prolific and legendary designer, Broadhurst was a starlet, a socialite… and the victim of a murder that remains a mystery 35 years later. 


Where: Home office or corner office…  “Habitually Chic: Creativity at Work”
Habitually Chic is author Heather Clawson's wildly popular blog about the finer things in life—high fashion, fine art, interior design, and arresting architecture. For Habitually Chic: Creativity at Work, Ms. Clawson has narrowed her vision and using the good will generated by her blog has found her way into the workspaces of the world's foremost cultural generators. The studios, workshops, offices, and creative sanctuaries of top designers, artists, editors, architects, and more are captured and presented in detail.

 
When: From colonial to contemporary…  “The Encyclopedia of Furniture”
It looks like it’s about 100 years old and some of the photos look like they were printed from slides, but this is hands-down the greatest desk reference for furniture styles and history. Not to judge a book by its cover but this one pretty much says it all: “Covering: Every period and development to the present, the designers and makers, the woods and other materials, the architecture and decoration.”


Why: Because there’s nothing like the original… “The Decoration of Houses”
One of America’s most important novelists, Edith Wharton was a refined, relentless chronicler of the Gilded Age and its social mores. Along with close friends Henry James, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Jack London, she helped define literature at the turn of the Twentieth Century, even as she wrote classic nonfiction on travel, decorating and her own life. Her best known works include The Age of Innocence (which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1921), The House of Mirth and Ethan Frome. The Decoration of Houses, her first book, is of special interest to designers.  House Beautiful declared, “Edith Wharton laid down the rules for decorating in her first book.  The Decoration of Houses was the law of the land, and it led to the birth of a new profession.”

Images and information courtesy bn.com, except Who, When and Why (via previous posts); image for Who via eviekemp.com.

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