Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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You are here: Home / Archives for Claudia

Decorating is Not a Competitive Sport

November 4, 2013 at 10:20 am by Claudia

It isn’t.

With all the decorating and DIY blogs out there, with all the beautiful, pristine photos of perfect rooms, with all the concentration on trends, with all the stainless steel and chevrons and faux animal heads (yuck) and things made from pallets, it would be very easy to fall into that trap. To see your decorating style as ‘less than.’ To think you can never keep up because you can’t afford new appliances or a white slipcovered sofa or a big house with high ceilings.

I love looking at pretty pictures with the best of ’em. They are inspiring. I’ve poured over decorating magazines since I was 12 years old. I love seeing how others decorate, what choices they make, how color can change a space, how texture can change the feel of a room. It’s eye candy, whether on the pages of a magazine or on a computer screen.

But with the coming of the internet and, even more, the emergence of decorating and DIY blogs, there is an overabundance of eye candy. Much of what I see is a variation on a theme. It’s basically the same on-trend look with a tweak here and there. That’s okay. There will always be trends in decorating, just as there are trends in clothing design.

cups

These are from Anthropologie, so I suppose they’re trendy. But I bought them because I fell in love with them, not because they are ‘in.’

Here’s the thing I always keep in mind: I am not competing with anyone. I know my style. What is right for someone else is not necessarily right for me.

Decorating is not a competitive sport.

This post came about because of your comments on my recent Cottage Tour. Some of you lamented that you don’t seem to have a decorating style. Some of you asked for advice, while others commented on my eye for decorating and pulling a room together.

Yes, I have a good eye. I say this in all modesty. I’ve always had an eye for pulling a room together. I’m very visual.

But more importantly, I know what I like. And what I like isn’t necessarily what’s on trend or what I see on decorating blogs. Far from it. And, I might add, what I like at this stage of my life is not what I liked when I was younger. My tastes have evolved. That happens to all of us.

I subscribe to very few decorating rules. As you might have noticed if you read this blog with any regularity, I tend to break rules. By that I mean rules that some expert tells me I must follow. Excuse me? Why? Who made you an authority as to how I should decorate my personal space?

No, thank you.

I’m absolutely sure that my decorating choices are not everyone’s cup of tea. In fact, some professional decorators might throw up their hands in horror when they see pictures of my home.

I don’t care.

Decorate with the things you love

My home is full of things I love that tell a story. That story cannot be told by a professional decorator. It can only be told by Don and me. If you love something, you’ll find a way to make it work in your home. If your eye can light on something that has meaning to you, I guarantee it will make a difference in the way you see your space. And in the way others will see your space.

Use what you love.

Use colors that make you smile.

What colors do you tend to gravitate to? At one time, my colors would have been in the brown family. I loved taupe and deep chestnut brown and rust. There are remnants of that in my den, but for the most part, my color palette has changed due, in great part, to the colors of the McCoy pottery that I collect. Those colors spoke to me. They made me happy. And so it goes.

Your preferred color palette may be very different from mine. Good for you. Go for it. Go for what makes you happy. Who cares whether gray or orange or lime green seem to be in? Your home is for you.

lamp

Take your time

If you’ve read any of the Cottage Tour posts, you know that I have gathered the furniture and accessories in my home over time. This is partly out of necessity, since my funds for this sort of thing are modest and sometimes non-existent. I can’t afford to run out and buy the newest thing. I’ve come to view that as a blessing. It keeps me from falling into that trap I spoke of earlier, the trap of keeping up with the latest thing. I get exhausted just thinking about it.

I gather, I tweak, I take something I’ve had for a long time and renew it, perhaps with paint or a slipcover. I make what I have work in this space.

Be realistic about what works in your space

I live in a tiny cottage. Except for in the kitchen, the ceilings are low. There are a lot of windows that break up available wall space. I have to take all that into account when I make decorating decisions. What looks good out there in decorating blogland or in a magazine might not work in this cottage.

We have lots of windows and lots of light. I chose not to overwhelm the windows with heavy draperies. I like light. I need it. So the windows have become one of the key features of our space.

Your living space will be different from mine. Maybe you have high ceilings. Maybe your home has some quirky things you have to work around. Or, better yet, enhance. Take all this into account and let those things that make your space different be positives. Use them. Celebrate them.

Edit

This, to me, is key. I have a lot of stuff. I don’t have an attic. I don’t have a basement. Lots of it is packed away in boxes in the shed. When we first moved out East and rented an even tinier cottage than this one, we put a lot of our stuff in storage. There was no way we could use everything. It would have overwhelmed our living space.

Everything you own does not have to be on display. Take, for instance, our walls. I carefully edit what I hang on those walls. Too much is too much. If you could peek under our bed and the bed in the guest room, you would see lots of framed artwork that has been covered and stored away.

We simply cannot hang everything we own and love in this space. Why? Because the eye needs someplace to rest. If there is too much visual stimulation, whether it is with tchotchkes or things on walls or furniture, your eye has no place to land. You cannot take in everything because everything is too much.

Since I don’t have a spare room or an attic or a basement where I can stash things in order to rotate them in and out of rooms, I edit. I take that into account and think long and hard about what I buy. And I sell things. We sold several pieces on Craig’s List about a year ago that we knew we had outgrown and that were taking up valuable real estate in the cottage.

Edit.

Be fearless

If you want to try using an old cart as a coffee table, go for it. If you want to hang a lamp made out of an old frame and cover that frame with vintage crochet pieces, do it. If you want to hang a canoe paddle from the ceiling because you love the look of it or because you love to canoe, go for it. What’s the worst that could happen? You might end up not liking it. That’s okay. Now you know.

minis

Eclectic is good & have fun

Everything does not have to look like you bought it at the same store. You can have a mix of modern and vintage. You can mix wood pieces with painted pieces. You can have a hutch made in the thirties in the same room as a contemporary sofa. If you love it, you will make it work. Too much of one style, whether it is country or mid-century modern, tends to look less than personal.

Most everything in my home is vintage, but not everything. And the vintage pieces are from different eras.

Avoid matchy-matchy. My favorite spaces are those that aren’t perfect but are eclectic and fun. Have fun. Be whimsical.

Your home is a reflection of you.

Remember that your home is your space. It should reflect you, your family, your interests, your taste. Everything in it should speak of you.

I feel the same way about my home as I do about my blog. I want this blog and what I write and share here to be such a pure reflection of me that if you were to meet me face-to-face, you would say “She’s exactly how I thought she would be.” Nothing less.

Same with my home. Nothing makes me happier than when someone walks in the door and says “This is so you.” That’s the way it should be. My home tells a story – about me and Don and Scout and Riley and our past and present. Your home needs to tell your story.

I’m not an expert, that’s for sure. I just know what works for me.

Happy Monday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: decorating, life 107 Comments

Cottage Tour: Bathroom Art

November 3, 2013 at 9:55 am by Claudia

Provocative title, right?

Of course, I’m talking about what’s hanging on the wall of our tiny half bath – a room so tiny that one can hardly move more than a couple of inches in any direction. I painted it green not long after we moved in here and it’s become a mini-gallery of sorts.

sunb&B

Let me just say that taking these shots requires a level of limberness that is no longer as readily available as it used to be.

The Marvelous Football Dogs print was a gift from our friends, Lynne and Sean. The colorful vintage circus poster style is irresistible and the subject matter is dogs, so it’s a win-win. Let’s get a closer look at the framed print below.

sunpostie

This is a card that Don gave me one year entitled “Waiting for Postie.” Very British and very charming. But he bought it because the two dogs look like Scout and Riley, if Scout had black spots. We tried several times to recreate this pose with our dogs but they wouldn’t cooperate. Darn them. Isn’t this print adorable?

sunrockwell

This is one of our favorite finds. We found this period Norman Rockwell calendar print when we visited the Berkshires many years ago. It came in this vintage frame and I think it might have been part of a calendar, but I’m not sure. It’s entitled “It’s Your Turn.” I’m not necessarily a fan of the circus, nevertheless, that makes two circus-themed prints in the bathroom. I absolutely love this print and I could look at it for hours, as I can with all of Rockwell’s work.

sundaylittlekids

This print is under the window and above the toilet. We found this in San Diego many years ago and snapped it up. Another no brainer for us: a vintage print of kids outside a bakery and need I say more? The frame. The frame is to die for.

On the other wall:

suntrustin

A vintage print of kids dressed as toy soldiers playing with a hose and the framed print below that was my grandmother’s. I think it hung in her guest bedroom. The frame is fragile and I kept it tucked away for years until I decided to hang it in the bathroom.

sunkidshose

A close-up of the kids and the hose. This was also a San Diego find. I love vintage illustrations, especially when children are the subject matter.

sundayquilt

Since I’m not showing you the spare bedroom/office/Don’s studio, I thought I’d at least share a photo of this quilt, which is hanging on the wall there. It belongs to Don. After his father, Lee, died a few years ago, Don’s stepmother and half sister asked a quilter to make one of these for all of the children. It’s made out of Lee’s shirts.

Needless to say, it’s priceless.

Tomorrow, I’ll share a few of my thoughts on decorating a home: how I put my own individual stamp on my home, why I avoid trends like the plague, and what rules I think are worth following and what rules I ignore. Modestly, of course, because I am certainly no expert.

Oh, one more thing. I’ve had a daily photo blog for about 3 years. Unfortunately, with daily posting on this blog I had let it fall by the wayside over the past year and a half. I’d been thinking about it lately and then my friend Dawn did a post about her new photo blog (she’s a great photographer) and I thought to myself, “Claudia, that’s a message from the universe. Start posting on that darned blog again.” So I have. I want to better my photography skills. The link is on my sidebar, if you’re at all interested. It’s called Through a Lens Daily.

Happy Sunday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: antiques, decorating, vintage 40 Comments

Cottage Tour: Studio & Bedroom

November 2, 2013 at 9:05 am by Claudia

We watched one of my favorite movies last night, It Happened One Night. Perfection. Frank Capra, Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert, a wonderful supporting cast of great character actors – what more could you ask for? Personally, I think this is Gable’s finest performance. Funny, romantic, brazen, outrageous, serious; he nails it all.

Can you tell that I’m still basking in the glow of a brilliant black and white comedy straight out of the Thirties? If I could have managed it, I would have stayed up all night because there were four Screwball Comedies on the docket on TCM. Heaven.

Today? We’re touring the bedroom (which is small) and getting a brief glimpse of the studio (which is even smaller.) By the way, I call it a studio, but it’s really just my little creative area. I’m thinking more and more that studio sounds a bit grandiose.

bedroombottomofstairs

We’ll have to head up the stairs, but first a view of the desk from above.

And my sneakers.

bedroomstairway

The stairs were slippery for our dogs, so I had to come up with a solution. We couldn’t afford to carpet them when we first moved in, so I went to either Home Depot or Lowe’s (can’t remember now) and bought these pieces of carpet that are designed for stairs. Since I like things a little offbeat, I alternated blue and red for what I hoped would be a more interesting look. Eight years later, they’re still here.

That’s a Christie Repasy canvas at the bottom of the stairs and our vintage “Use Other Stair” sign is to the right. When I finish hand quilting my newest quilt, it will hang on that wall.

studio1

A quick peek at the sewing niche at the top of the stairs. That skylight makes a big difference in the space. I’ve blogged about this creative space a lot over the years, so I’m only going to show a bit of it now.

studiobookshelf

To the right of the sewing niche is a little bookshelf. And Lambchop (my muse).

studiocabinet

To the right of the bookcase is the door to the bathroom, then the door to the bedroom, then this cabinet. I snagged it for $75 on Craig’s List and eventually painted it this pale pink, which I had on hand from another project. Letitia, my vintage dress form is on the left.

That’s all for the studio. There are plenty of photos on this blog of the details – just search for “studio.”

The bedroom. Oy. We have cottagey eaves in both bedrooms, so we constantly wrestle with furniture placement. The fact is that there is very little wall space and a lot of eaves.

bedroombed2

Looking in from the studio.

bedroombed1

You can see how we’ve had to place the bed up against the slanted ceiling. I made the headboard when we were living in our rental after we’d first moved out East. A couple of years ago, I recovered it with this vintage fabric. Then I finished the quilt. Lots of pattern here, but the rest of the room is pattern-less, so it works. Don has the lamp I bought in Hartford on his bedside table because he really likes it.

That’s an oak blanket chest under the window that I repainted last year. With Chalk Paint. Turns out, I’m not a fan. There’s a post all about it here. That post also shows a closeup of the blanket chest. The two framed items on Don’s side of the bed are beautiful Chinese watercolors with bamboo frames. Don bought them years ago. And to the right you can see my favorite canvas:

bedroomcherubs

My cherubs. I saw this painting in Vignettes when I was working in San Diego about 4 years ago. It was hanging near the front counter. I fell in love with it. I went back home after my gig. The next year, I went back to San Diego for another gig. And the painting was still there. Lori, the owner of Vignettes, would see me gazing at it every time I came into the shop. Finally, I asked about it. It was expensive for this girl who buys everything at a deep discount – more money than I felt comfortable spending. But I loved it. I took a picture of it and sent it to Don. I imagine he didn’t care one way or the other but he heard that tone in my voice that said I had fallen hard for this painting. Then one day I went back to the store and Lori told me that she had been thinking of me. A couple had decided to buy the painting and had paid for it and had it wrapped when, at the last minute, they decided to buy something else. All Lori could think was “Claudia is going to be so disappointed when she finds out the painting was sold.”

That did it. I bought it and I’ve never regretted it. I also knew immediately where I would hang it. It has influenced the color scheme of the room, for sure.

bedroombedsidetable

My side of the bed. The bedside table is an old typing table. That’s an Expedit shelf unit from IKEA in the background, filled with books.

bedroomshelves

See what I mean? And you wonder why I want built-in bookshelves in the den. (Let’s not even discuss the boxes full of books out in the shed.) That’s a photo of my sister Meredith and me. Behind it is a photo of Riley and Scout and behind that is a framed photo of a beautiful double rainbow over the cottage.

bedroomdresser

The other side of the room. Our wicker rocker is to the left. That dresser has been with me a long time, since the days I lived in Cambridge, MA and found it on the street, whereupon I enlisted the help of my friend to carry it for three blocks and then up three flights of stairs to my apartment. It’s been painted gray, then pale yellow, and last year I painted it in aqua and cream. (If I had a dollar for every time I’ve hit my head against the ceiling when using the dresser drawers, I’d be a wealthy woman.)

The piece next to it is a mini-sideboard that I use for sweater storage. It holds our behemoth of a television. Hey, it works and I’m not about to toss it while it’s still going strong.

bedroombedfromfoot

The bedroom, tucked under the eaves, has smallish windows but it gets a lot of light. I’d kill for one large standard wall, but what can you do? In an old house that has very little closet space, I have to make do with storage. So I store our luggage in the space between the headboard and the wall.

There you have it. Tomorrow I’ll share some of the framed artwork we have hanging in the upstairs half-bath.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: cottage, decorating 66 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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