How has your mother's interior style influenced you?
Vanessa Walker
6 years ago
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POLL: Tell us your Christmas style!
Comments (68)Being Danish, but having lived in the UK for many many years, and now living and running a small B&B in beautiful Provence, France - we have always celebrated the 24th December Danish style and the 25th English style, so getting the best of both worlds! On The 1st of December our house will be ready and decorated in many delicate, often handmade, bought or made by me, decorations. Flickering candles everywhere. On the first Sunday in December, ie the 2nd Sunday in advent, in the afternoon...until often late, our house would be full of friends and family, young and old, for our traditional Danish Gløgg Party, where everybody brings a little red Wine (for har gløgg) and a little something yo eat. We would make lots if gløgg and lots og æbleskiver, the twi bring served in private or in public places all over Denmark from the 1st of December! The tree itself will always be a real one, you will never ever find an artificial in any colour in our house! We get the fresh tree inside normally on the 22nd December, and it is decorated firstly by putting the brass George Jensen star on the top (always a star never an Angel), then the strings of warm white electric lights are spread around the tree. Then the serious decorating of the tree takes place, often accompanied by us eating some of the Danish Christmas nibbles I have made and drinking some Gløgg. The tree dekorations are all in gold, white, red and green. It takes quite some time to decorate, and finsly we hang the candle holders safely and not below any decorations, as c60 live candles are lit on Christmas Eve after our traditional Danish Christmas dinner and as we sit down around the beautiful tree and just before we open most of our presents. We open the rest of our presents just a few, sometime in the morning on the 25th either before or after a very nice brunch! The live candles are all safe as the tree is fresh, and because of the design of the Danish candle tree holders, and it us soooo beautiful, and we would absolutely have it any other way! On the 6th January sadly like all good things, the decorations cone down...and Christmas is another c 11 months away, and we'll do it all over again! Hope you all have a blessed, nice and quiet Christmas, and how lucky those if us are, who can say just that, and for us this will be our first proper Christmas in la belle Provence, and our Gløgg Party has moved to just before Christmas for varietes reasons! ;)...See MorePOLL: Has your style changed?
Comments (12)Totally agree with Stebonheath. Our parents and grandparents had lots of things in their rooms; a hangover from the Victorian age. Today we demand brighter lighter interiors and large dark furniture and porcelein ladies are totally out of fashion. Whilst I am not a fan of totally open plan layouts, it does make rooms appear much larger than they are. My parents house faced a park with mature trees and we had lace curtains totally covering the windows then heavy lined velvet curtain on top, to be closed after dinner. My windows only have the light curtains closed when dark. It makes a huge difference....See MoreWin an iPad Mini - Vote for your favourite film-inspired interior 2016
Comments (185)Thanks everybody for voting - the competition is now over! And the winner is... Something's Gotta Give! A frontrunner and favourite from the start, you guys didn't hide your adoration for Nancy Meyers Hamptons styled home. The winner will be emailed today confirming their prize so keep an eye on your inbox! Thank you all again for taking part, and we hope you all enjoyed the real ceremony too - all we'll say on that is at last!...See MoreHow do you and your partner decide on styling?
Comments (16)Working for others can be a challenge but working together on our own home, both outspoken and strongheaded, well... that's another story but still... When my (now) wife and I were moving in together we both had our own place and very different furniture tastes / preferences. My wife coming from years of working in a very strict Bauhaus-ideal based interior design consultancy had spent many months pay on design classics. My tastes were, as she put it, 'underdeveloped'. I didn't agree of course but they were just very different and mainly through experience, not so much 'Bildung' (education). My idea of a good couch consisted of, first can you sit on it very comfortably and second does it look okay. Apart from that I had collected and salvaged quite a few quirky heirlooms from my immediate family, mainly Art Deco style and age. Seems like a clash, right? Well NO. We both agreed when we bought our home that we would look for what worked best for the house and for ourselves. Starting at two key pieces we arranged our styles and combined them. For our dining room we had one key piece we agreed upon. An antique oak synagogue bench was what started us off. Everything else was coordinated with the 'very present' wooden bench. The rest, we agreed, had to be calmer and be able to appose the bench. For our living room we started with a rug we both loved, our real first purchase together, a Persian rug with a different colour set, ranging from bright green to light blue instead of the regular dark reds and yellows. As long as you both have something you love to start you off you will both see which of your existing furniture will work together and which ones don't. Starting with agreement is a golden rule. The old bench was combined with Fritz Hansen, Arne Jacobsen chairs. A vintage industrial lamp she already had, over the dining room table I designed myself (stainless steel frame with solid oak top, treated with a whitewash and hardwax, similar to our oak flooring)....See More
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