Restrained Exuberance - when you visit various blogs about the home will find a lot of interesting house designs and also certainly convenient, and blogs Home Design Inspiration there is one of these blogs that discuss dengn very complete, we have thousands of ready information you get with less free :) okay now we will discuss Restrained Exuberance please read through:
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Restrained Exuberance
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I painted the floor of my oldest's nursery almost nineteen years ago. It was white with a Wedgwoody blue border. I have longed to paint another floor since and have measured and sketched meanders and hexagons, but have not again taken brush to wood.
The first thing I did to my current house was rescue her from the troubling orange cast of the light stain of her floors. (Who thinks that color is a good idea? It should be illegal.) Having invested a good little bit in the no-red-not-too-black-just-rich-brown shade that runs throughout, I can't come to terms with painting over it.
But, oh, that blue in Christopher Spitzmiller's country house! Bold, yet grounding (no pun intended - okay, maybe a bit) this floor made my pulse jump and fingers itch for a brush the second I saw it. This is one of those great rooms that if someone were to describe it to you - "Under the eave, snappy red and white chrysanthemum wallpaper, painted furniture, bright blue floor." - might make you say, "Hmmm." And yet, on sight, it's perfection.
I still can't cover my floors; there were too dear. But my porch floor, she who was cracking and peeling not one but three layers of paint, was recently stripped. The poor darling, I had planned on leaving her bare, to recover and breathe a little bit. I'm not going to break it to her yet, but I have a colorful future planned.
Image, Christopher Spitzmiller's farmhouse in Architectural Digest, July 2015. Photography William Waldron; produced by Anita Sarsidi. Spitzmiller's spool bed once belonged to Albert Hadley. If you can find one with similar pedigree, I say, do. But I run across these beds pretty regularly and they do look awfully swell painted.
This seems the perfect image to kick off the holiday weekend! Enjoy!
I painted the floor of my oldest's nursery almost nineteen years ago. It was white with a Wedgwoody blue border. I have longed to paint another floor since and have measured and sketched meanders and hexagons, but have not again taken brush to wood.
The first thing I did to my current house was rescue her from the troubling orange cast of the light stain of her floors. (Who thinks that color is a good idea? It should be illegal.) Having invested a good little bit in the no-red-not-too-black-just-rich-brown shade that runs throughout, I can't come to terms with painting over it.
But, oh, that blue in Christopher Spitzmiller's country house! Bold, yet grounding (no pun intended - okay, maybe a bit) this floor made my pulse jump and fingers itch for a brush the second I saw it. This is one of those great rooms that if someone were to describe it to you - "Under the eave, snappy red and white chrysanthemum wallpaper, painted furniture, bright blue floor." - might make you say, "Hmmm." And yet, on sight, it's perfection.
I still can't cover my floors; there were too dear. But my porch floor, she who was cracking and peeling not one but three layers of paint, was recently stripped. The poor darling, I had planned on leaving her bare, to recover and breathe a little bit. I'm not going to break it to her yet, but I have a colorful future planned.
Image, Christopher Spitzmiller's farmhouse in Architectural Digest, July 2015. Photography William Waldron; produced by Anita Sarsidi. Spitzmiller's spool bed once belonged to Albert Hadley. If you can find one with similar pedigree, I say, do. But I run across these beds pretty regularly and they do look awfully swell painted.
This seems the perfect image to kick off the holiday weekend! Enjoy!
after lengthy discuss the design of the house, is reached when an article about Restrained Exuberance ends, but there are many other article that discusses this, but with a different type, simply walking around the other page, if you feel this article helpful, you can book mark or share with a link http://poopypantsmcgee.blogspot.com/2015/07/restrained-exuberance.html