{tische + that}
tische, tische! or for all the english speakers, table, table! i'm currently on the hunt for this beauty for my living/dining room. i found it in the danish interiors magazine boligliv and learned from decor8 readers today that it is indeed an antique that was lacquered in white. there is a good chance i will never find anything like it but i hope so. i don't care what color i find it in, i want to paint it white exactly like this one. it is 100% my style, in fact i never found a single piece of furniture that clicked with more and that is the truth.
it is part timeless and clean and modern and another part feminine and curvy and playful. but not all practical or all whimsical because there has to be a perfect balance of both for me. i may wear jeans but i balance it out with a feminine shirt with either a ruffle detail, crochet, or some embellishment or pattern. if i could own two homes of my exact taste, one would be a 2-level townhouse in a jugenstil building dating the mid to late 1800's with soaring ceilings and architecture details galore in northern european city, and the other would be an extremely modern and clean home (think of the house in the recent iron man movie) perched atop a mountain overlooking the coast directly on a beach in either australia or southern california. ha, don't we all, right?
since i doubt i will ever live in australia or california, there just may be a chance that someday i will end up in a jugenstil building in germany (fingers crossed). but for now since none of these places exist except in my head, i try to bring them together in my interiors so that i can play pretend. merging these two very distinct styles and periods together, pre-war and this modern/slightly futuristic design into a single apartment is a real challenge because although one can make this delicate balance work, it is quite difficult because it can be easy to add a piece that can prove to be the tipping point in the design making the space look quite out of whack, even sloppy or in bad taste. i've been inside homes where nothing matched that looked great, and i've been inside homes where nothing matched and it was a nightmare. and it wasn't just about personal taste, it was truly a nightmare. there is a method to the madness and i think that the scandinavians mastered this years ago and continue to amaze me with just how well they do it.
i often look at american interiors and shake my head. not that i think i'm so stylish or better, please, more because i cannot believe how sometimes inconsistent mainstream design is in comparison to some of the tiniest countries that churn out killer looks. designers that are placed on pedestals here are often laughed at in other parts of the world for being tasteless and tacky. including some designers i actually like. outside of domino and the martha stewart empire, most people i meet in northern europe comment that rooms they see in american magazines truly make their eyes sore. my stockholm friend confessed to canceling her subscriptions to such design magazines because she considered them to be some of the ugliest "rubbish" she'd ever known. ouch.
although i do understand how we can be laughed at for our government (lately), i don't always think what we are doing in our interiors is so bad that the eyes would burn. i like lots of what i see and think improvements have been made over the years. plus design is pretty subjective. but for the sake of being fair, i do understand why our reputations for interiors sometimes make those on the outside second guess our level of taste. the whole 60/70s throw back, zebra rugs, obsession with chocolate and robin's egg blue combined, and the mismatched patterns and cultures and why we see buddhas in bathrooms (which i heard is quite offensive to an actual buddist). so many homes featured on design blogs are starting to look like the homes of all the other blog readers out there. mine included as i'm buying lots of the same things that i write about. do we also eat the same food and drink the same milk and listen to the same hipster bands? like there is some mass cult of 'like forever' poster owners out there? if so, that's cool because i think we learn a lot from blogs. it's okay to admit that before design blogs, most of our homes were one big hot mess.
i don't always understand the cult following for the same iconic pieces and fixation on arranging books by the color of the spine though. and what's up with the mid century modern madness out there? i like mid century pieces, i own some, but lots of people had a stained futon in their apartment with a guitar mounted on the wall and a tiny television delicately balanced on crates before they started reading (or authoring) blogs. and while it's completely fine to make changes and show your home online, that is what haus maus is all about, i don't know why some apt/home owners feel scared to admit that they didn't always have this level of style. no need to front.
if you had a stained cream futon back in say, 2004 and now you have a fancy sofa, that is great. don't pretend that you've always had this impeccable style and that before this sofa and your mid century modern apartment, you had some posh apartment that was inspired by say, the designs of kelly wearstler. it's totally cool to admit you had no or little taste at one time if you truly didn't. no one cares how you once decorated anyway.
case in point. i design interiors for a living. i write about it. it's all i know right now. i have been decorating and moving around furniture since i was a child, but it wasn't all good all the time. i went from a strawberry shortcake bedspread in the 80's with a crochet throw combined with white cane furniture to everything shabby chic/parisian flea market phase in my early 20s. i've stenciled ridiculous animal silhouettes in my kitchen (age 22) only to paint over them a month later because they were hideous no matter how 'trendy' back then. i even had a pink fridge from the 1950's in a kitchen with HUGE flower wallpaper that, if you stayed in the kitchen to long, you'd lose your mind and start speaking in tongues.
i did the whole sponge painting thing on so many walls i can't begin to tell you, i've taken faux finishing classes, and i use to be all into sponge painting the sides of vintage clawfoot bathtubs using silver or gold metallic paint against a white tub. i once had black lacquered bedroom furniture with a black and and mauve orchid wallpaper border along the ceiling in my bedroom (age 18) and a matching bedspread and shams in the bag set. i thought i was freaking awesome back then, my taste could not get any better (i was quite the confident jr. decorator). i liked to shop from weird catalogs like popular club and speigel. i hit flea markets with my decorator mother. wicker tables topped with glass and vinyl-esque shower curtains did not escape me, owned 'em. but I can admit to it. hey it's cool.
i often read the occasional snooty magazine article featuring an amazing home, or blogs doing the same, and as i read the owner's take on their taste and style i think, yeah right. you are like 35 and grew up in the 80s, we both know your style most likely came later in life, not sooner. and that's okay.
okay i'm done talking. :) your turn.
p.s. a few anons left comments that i have removed. conflicting opinions are to be expected and are totally fine by me, but rudeness will not be tolerated -- especially when left under an anoymous id or a false identity.
Comments
Part of our problem, as Americans, in terms of design, is the cultural melting pot. I read so many articles about newlyweds combining their spaces and how difficult it is. With design magazines, especially the national ones, they try to attract a wide variety of people from various backgrounds living in vastly different environments. In many foreign countries (not all), there is more likely a chance of more similar backgrounds and environments within the country. I know this is not true of everywhere and I know many northern germans style is very different from southern german/bavaria, but I'm just giving an example.
I have noticed that these international design magazines (and clothing magazines) are so much better than what we have going on in our country. I never would have thought that it could be due to the fact that maybe we're just not so good at the whole design thing. (On a side note, what's strange about the clothing is when I'm in Europe I have trouble finding clotheshops selling stuff as nice as what's in the european clothing magazines.)
And we definitely do front. How often are our purchases because we truly love it, or because we truly love the person who blogged about it, or because we know someone reading our own blog will love it? Maybe we should challenge people to show something they love about their home, that just might not be the norm.
I have to admit I get pretty sick of seeing the same mid-century modern furniture over and over. I'm sure half those people would get something else if it wasn't so trendy. And don't get me started on the Philippe Starck Ghost chair!
The problem I have with all that "decoration stuff" is, that it very often looks like a cataloque picture. Very unpersonal, but clean and stylish. I rather prefer an interior that is gathered from here and there and if it doesn't fit 100% I think it still tells more about the person living there as if one starts with a blank canvas and matching things.
First, because I think this is the first time I've commented on Haus Maus, I just want to say that I am LOVING this new blog. Your rants are a trip, and I find myself agreeing with just about everything you say. I try not to get too verbose on my blog (mainly because I get freaked out when people start thinking they "know" me -- this was a huge problem with my old blog, which I eventually had to shut down -- but I digress), so it's a great relief to see you saying a lot of things I'm thinking.
These two quotes alone have me choking with laughter:
"obsession with chocolate and robin's egg blue combined"
"some mass cult of 'like forever' poster owners "
...DEAD. I am on the FLOOR.
I'm going to TRY to keep this brief...
OK, keep in mind that this is coming from someone who is the child of a Swedish immigrant (with Danish parents) and lifelong New Yorker, the former being a graphic designer and the latter being an abstract modernist painter -- not exactly the typical American household! My take on the "problem" (if it is one) with design in the US is that, for a variety of reasons (a lot of which have to do with the age of this country, the Great Depression, and the second World War), much of what Americans strive for in life is centered around the concept of LUXURY rather than BEAUTY. As I'm sure you've noticed, the two things are not always synonymous!
I did not grow up in a home with anything that could be considered "luxurious" by American standards, but I did grow up surrounded by extreme beauty. That beauty took the form of the architecture of a house built in 1820, of chairs my Danish grandfather built when my mother was a child, of music, of art, of design, of HUMOR, of books, of food, of the clothes my mother sewed -- everything, really. The emphasis was always on beauty, practicality, necessity, quality and longevity. This is a very European way of thinking, and it's something that translates to the kind of "good" design you're talking about. It does not, however, translate to Cadillac Escalades and tumbled travertine bathrooms.
Now, I like to think that I don't "front" too much. I grew up with a lot of the furniture I have now (not the actual pieces, but the same styles), and I started formally studying modernist architecture and design 15 years ago. Yes, I have a lot of mid-century-era furniture, but I also have a lot of contemporary stuff -- and all of it is contained within a Victorian house. And I love it. I feel like I have a style that is uniquely mine, and while I do (OF COURSE) look to blogs and magazines for inspiration, I've really never felt like I've gone through a taste conversion or had some kind of design awakening. I have no problem showing you what my apartment looked like ten years ago! (Note the lack of a stained cream futon!) Naturally, with the advent of INCOME in my life, I have since invested in a lot of pretty great furniture, nearly all of which I fully expect to own and enjoy for the rest of my life. I still like the living room of my 22-year-old self, but my 32-year-old self has taken down the Louise Brooks posters, stopped keeping books on a trash-find ladder, and discovered that colors and patterns can work well in a neutral setting. (And I didn't need Domino to tell me that! But maybe I did need Terrence Conran...) That's normal growth! My taste and style didn't come to me sooner OR later in life, I just feel like I've been developing and experimenting and honing ever since I bought a zebra-print duvet and black satin sheets when I was 13 years old! I'm not embarrassed by that, and I don't expect to be embarrassed by my current living space in another 20 years (though I suspect I will have bought a nicer coffee table by then, and maybe I will have finally finished renovating my bathroom).
Was that brief? Believe me, I could keep going!
Anna
p.s. That is a fabulous table. I'm sure it's an antique, but I'm also sure that if you keep your eyes open, you'll eventually find another one that will speak to you almost as much. I'm also pretty sure those aren't real Jacobsen chairs. ;)
diana - wohnwand? is that another nutty german design accessory for the home? i've not heard of it. i'll visit your link. :)
ann - i love your last sentence, "Maybe we should challenge people to show something they love about their home, that just might not be the norm." sounds like something for a future decor8 article! :)
I have to admit, I am European and an architect, who also studied architecture in the States. I love mid-century modern, but I would never live in a pure mid-century setting.
I live in a 6 years old house that is still not perfectly finished, considering the funrniture and interior design. We first brought over furniture from my husbands old appartement, those were those horrible fake colonnial kind *yikes*. I did not like them, but we went buying new ones, one by one. Only buying a new item if I found the the perfect one, that is my dream and matches our house.
Interiors are like a metamorphose for me. It is an ever changing and never ending project. I still have my white childhood furniture from IKEA (and you can still buy BILLY series today!) I still like plain and simple pieces. They can be easily rearranged and well decorated.
I was a furniture moving kind of child and I am still moving, rearranging things in our house. Like I did today in the living room.
And one more last thing. I love design and other blogs they are great, they inspire me, BUT I thing we all have to find our own style, our own beauty, where it feels good to live. I think my house is great, when it feels good to sit down on the couch with a book and a cup of tea! When you feel the beauty in the air. For me beauty is very important. It is important for me personally and it is important, since we have three kids. My idea if they grow up beauty around them, considering the house, their clothing and everything that surrounds them, they will understand it ans look for it all their life!
Zsuzsi
You just have to be creative about it!
Many of the issues you mentioned are the reasons that I try not to talk about my own home too much on my blog. If I do it is usually to talk about a DIY project and my experience with it. It is about being 'real'. I am not a designy architect with a totally together and designy home. I am not a candidate for a house tour. I create pretty things for my rich clients but the reality is that most architects and designers can't afford homes and interiors that their clients can and I don't pretend to.
I was going to keep this short but these are issues that are dear to me. I think your average person is just plain overwhelmed by what they see in magazine and blogs sometimes and never feels that they can live up to everyone else. I blog because I want to encourage everyone to like what they like. If having a house filled with Boyd's Bears makes you happy, then you should go with it. (I actually know this person.) It's not my 'thing' but who I am to dictate to anyone what their home should look and feel like?
Authenticity. That is what I desire in life. Both for myself and others. Sometimes it is hard with all the 'noise'.
I've always thought of myself as creative, but my design sense is still a work in progress. I'm definitely loving the freshness of Scandinavian style, and my Dutch heritage makes me especially partial to Dutch design.
I sometimes feel like I'm not very cool, not owning a single piece of mid-century modern furniture and having no orange or bright green walls anywhere in my house (although I am in the process of making green curtains-which I love, but am not too sure anyone else will find tasteful). But I'm working hard on my living room right now, and I like it, and it feels like home to me, and it will probably never be featured in a magazine or design blog (except my own little craft blog, of course).
When a dear friend came to visit, with her almost 3-year-old daughter, her daughter told me "your room is simply lovely". I just need to remember her words of wisdom, in her sweet little voice when I look through the design magazines and feel decidedly un-hip.
Viva la differences!
That, and that most of the stuff is ridiculuously expensive and no mere mortal could afford it. But that's a problem of German design blogs and magazines too. "A cheap kitchen makeover for 2000 Euros"? Dude, my whole kitchen cost less than that. :-p
I think the Euro/Scandinavian envy (which I have as well, let's not lie) derives from the fact that they often have a more homogeneous palate to work with, one cultural inspiration. In America, our melting pot culture can bring in so much noise, it's hard to choose and you either end up with a "hot mess" with too much thrown in and no unifying concept, or "giving up" and choosing the easy, bland template we all seem to be deploring here.
I'm a many generation-American living with my Indonesian fiancee in a small NYC apt, and I struggle to avoid the hot mess dilemma when trying to mix his fabulous Balinese art with my New England leanings in our little space and smaller budget. I've resigned myself to an eclectic style, but at least I stick to my guns and include only what we like… and I want to thank all you design folks out there putting up your fabulous advice free on world wide web - maybe my progress won't be as fast as it would if I could afford to hire one of you, but at least there is progress just the same. Good old American persistence and individualism to save the day!
i'm takling about the average people. in all countries, including the united states, the sophisicated people are always going to have better interior design.
i don't think that the US has any fewer of these people per capita than other countries
I've been reading decor8 for almost 2 years now, but I somehow missed that you had started this blog! Well I just found it today, and I am so excited, as I am moving to Germany in August.
I absolutely love what you had to say on this topic, and the follow up comments are great, too! I am in my early 20's and currently trying to find my own style, simultaneously loving the look of painted furniture and listening to the voice of my father (a woodworker) telling me that painting wooden furniture is a crime against humanity! No matter what I end up choosing, I'm sure I'll look back and laugh in the future.
Thanks for writing such great posts!
Since I have new custom made kitchen, new office, new living room, it is pritty sure I won't refurnish in next 2-3 years, but over blogs i dicovered da wanda and etsy or many great shops with house deco and this is for sure big help. But basic were mine, I deserve credit for that, my style didn't change si much in last 15 years.
From design I like swedish, italian, american not that much, I prefer more bauhaus stil.