Showing posts with label new england home magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new england home magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Urban Sophistication


Featured Designer
Patrick Baglino
Washington DC

Patrick J. Baglino Jr., ASID, has ten years of experience planning and designing residential interiors for clientele up and down the East Coast. He has developed a reputation for his harmonious blending of classic and contemporary elements and is recognized by House Beautiful Magazine as one of America's Top Young Designers.



There’s just nothing like throwing open the doors and windows for the first time each spring to bring all that fresh air and light indoors. It’s a feeling you want to capture all summer long, especially in the hot, turgid days of July and August. Washington D.C.-based interior designer Patrick J. Baglino, Jr., ASID, (www.pbaglino.com) welcomes the change of seasons as the perfect opportunity to bring changes into your home, whether it’s de-cluttering or simply exchanging dark accessories for light. Baglino, who as a child used to change his bedspread and curtains with the seasons, was recently voted one of America’s top young designers by House Beautiful. Here, his tips and trends for decorating this summer:


Outdoor rooms
I love eclectic design, but I also believe it’s very important to have a harmonious design statement. You don’t want to go from a home that’s traditional with contemporary accents to a very minimal Italian design porch that sort of comes out of left field. Even though an outdoor room is an extension of the home, it should still convey the feel and look of what’s happening inside. However, it can be set apart from the feel of the house by the use of different fabrics, maybe something a little livelier than what you’d have in your living room. Accessories are huge in terms of creating interest and flair. Bring in a really cool lamp or some beautiful indoor/outdoor rugs. (I love the plynl floor coverings by Chilewich.) Whereas in the past you’d go into a home and garden store and see a basic patio set with two choices for cushions, now you can have an outdoor sofa upholstered with fabric you choose, and add floor coverings and other details that will make an outdoor room really feel like a room.


Trend: I’m seeing a lot of bright colors. They’re not my first choice; I tend to go with tone-on-tone neutrals. I love earthen tones, especially in a room that’s going to create a bridge between the inside of the house and the outdoors. But there’s a definite trend toward brighter colors and stronger patterns. If your outdoor room is a screened-in porch, remember those things are going to be there pretty much year round, so be sure you can live with them that long.


A summer look for indoor rooms
As a kid, I used to change the look of my room with the season, just like my mother did in our living room. She had draperies in silk linen blends and then in the fall and winter she went to velvet and satin, with more trim. They were heavier and had more impact, and were definitely congruent with the time and season.


You can easily bring the summer months into your home simply by changing things like throw pillows in the living room. Instead of dark burgundy velvet pillows, maybe get beige linen with a crewel stitch of burgundy flowers, something that’s just lighter. In the bedroom instead of dark paisley bed linens get something fresh like white Frette hotel linens with a single blue stripe. Just lighten it up! And get rid of clutter. I’m really, really big on the clutter thing. Use going into a new season as an opportunity to go into drawers, closets and countertops and remove those things that are collecting dust and taking up space. It definitely gives you a fresh, light sense of relief.


Trend: Bring outdoor fabrics inside. Many manufacturers are creating beautiful fabrics made by Sunbrella that can be used to upholster furniture for either inside or out. I had a client with small children who wanted to have attractive fabrics for their family room and chose outdoor fabrics because of their stain resistance. Just last week I received a collection of Ralph Lauren fabrics done in Sunbrella.


Sunny inspiration
If you’re going to a summer home, you’ve got to turn to the surrounding environment for inspiration and bring that in. I just finished a condo in Bal Harbour, Florida. That client has a very formal home here with a crystal chandelier and silk drapery and cornices. In Bal Harbour I did a colorful glass table with a steel base and a light lilac and tangerine color scheme. It’s not something I would do in Washington, but in Miami it worked very well.


I’m really big on borrowing from our surroundings and seeking inspiration from what’s around us. I always believe first and foremost that in design it’s very much about who we are—what makes us comfortable and happy, what we need in order to function. But our environment has an impact on what we create for ourselves. What kind of home is it? Is it in the suburbs, or an urban dwelling, or on a beach or in the mountains?


Tip: I love to have clients get away from picking up a catalogue and saying, "Wow, a ready-made room. I’ll take that." It doesn’t allow you to express yourself. You may feel you don’t know how to put a room together and figure out where this goes and where that goes, but most people know what they like and what they don’t like. Put together a style file with paint colors, a lamp from a magazine ad, rooms or furniture that you like, then look at all those elements as the beginning of your personal style. This is what you respond to.




"HOME" magazine, "House Beautiful" magazine, HGTV, The Washington Post, "DC Modern Luxury" magazine, The Washington Blade, Houstonvoice. com, spokesmanreview. com, dezignare. com, TheSpec. com, savvyinsider. com, The Connecticut Post, ASID Metro Designline, staugustine. com, linkedin. com, The Other Pages, Facebook, PointClickHome. com




Dupont Circle Penthouse


Friendship Heights Sun room


Chevy Chase Bathroom
Chevy Chase Dining Room

Chevy Chase Kitchen





Patrick J. Baglino, Jr. Interior Design is a boutique design firm located in Washington, DC's trendy and vibrant Dupont Circle neighborhood. Since March 1998, Mr. Patrick Baglino, Jr. has gained notoriety and a reputation for creating interiors that are innovative, eclectic and traditional with a contemporary twist, a style he brands as "Urban Sophisticated". In conjunction with the designers professional know-how, available resources, and lengthy design experience, a successful design reflects the needs and personal style of the client. A strong client-designer professional relationship is the sound foundation for a tasteful, functional, and beautiful result.

Areas Served:

Primarily East Coast, United States of America
Affiliations: ASID, NCIDQ Certificate #017212
Awards: October 2004, "House Beautiful" Magazine, One of America's Top Young Designers.



Community Involvement:

Whitman Walker Clinic Volunteer
Current Projects: Projects throughout Northern Virginia, Southern Maryland and The District of Columbia. Prior projects in Miami, Florida.

It has been my pleasure introducing you to Patrick and his creative talents as One of America's Top Young Designers. View more about Patrick on HGTV .

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Vintage Modern

My Featured Designer today is Suzanne Meyer-Pistorious

Choose custom designed fabrics for any area in your home or an original designer gown creating excitement wherever it is worn.While Suzanne will showcase some of her custom designs as apparel, she does not make or sell apparel, the fabrics are draped to give a suggestion of how they can be used to make your one of a kind designer gown.

In recent articles, I have featured clothing designers such as Armani and Coco Chanel, whose clothing line inspired their home decor creations. I believe Suzanne is following in their footsteps, in the reverse, displaying her fabulous hand painted fabrics for, furniture, pillows and art, while introducing the idea for lovely designer gowns. As a designer, I can see making a wood frame to your own dimensions and framing it with your choice of one of her hand-painted prints to make a dramatic statement on any wall as an actual piece of art.

Any of her designs can be used for various applications in the home from upholstery to drapes and cushions.


Eco - friendly chairs with an uncommon flair; fun and funky with style!!


This Fabulous Victorian lady has been modernized yet retains a classic look with a poppy circle paint job on the seat and an abstract floral print on the back. Paints are metallic blues, brown and bronze with flat black accent swirls. Finished with 1/8 double welt trim.
The dings and dents of their history have been intentionally left behind. While not trying to produce new furniture, she is giving new life to old vintage while recycling.
With a content of 60 % hemp and 40% silk. This fabric has a subtle sheen and a silky smooth finish.




You don't always have to hang your art on the wall.
Like choosing clothes that suit your own unique taste.. functional household items can be stunning works of art that are part of your everyday life.
Blugirl Art where fabric becomes fabulous;
Born out of a desire to create something new out of something old, her chairs are one of a kind original pieces of ART that will create a sophisticated statement in your home or office. Destined to become collectors items.
Art
Featuring Artwork by Max Rudolph, original collage's created from recycled paper products and found objects. Read more about him on her website.




Suzanne Meyer-Pistorious believes in reincarnation, at least where furniture is concerned. The Springfield, Massachusetts based artist rescues antique chairs, giving them new life by dressing them up in her hand-painted fabrics. These centuries old pieces may once have led lives of quiet refinement, gracing parlors swathed in velvet and brocade, but today, outfitted in Meyer-Pistorius's vibrant fabrics, they're at home in both traditional and contemporary settings. Among her favorites is Alabaster Rouge, a Louis XIV-style chair with a glazed finish. Meyer-Pistorius salvaged the chair, complete with its original horsehair, and re-covered it with a silk-and-hemp blend in vivid terracotta with accents of black and burnished gold. The chrysanthemum- trellis design is "grandiose" says Meyer-Pistorius-an appropriate look, I think, for a chair named for a king".

While visiting her site, don't miss a thing, plan to stay awhile to appreciate this talented designer's style.

http://blugirlart.com