10 WAYS TO STYLE A COFFEE TABLE IN YOUR GUEST ROOM
Regardless of whether it’s a family legacy or an earthenware that you’ve prized for quite a long time, fusing a wistful component into your foot stool stylistic theme includes an exceptional touch. In addition, it’s the ideal friendly exchange, which is vital for each inside.
Include AN AIR OF MYSTERY
COFFEE TABLE A metal cloche is the particular (and fairly puzzling) bit of end table stylistic layout in the front room of planner Shawn Anderson’s nation meets-Gothic farmhouse in Memphis.
Adhere TO A SINGLE COLOR
The around 1950 Sphere mixed drink table and light in this Buenos Aires lounge room are by Jean Royère. A straightforward white bowl and blossoms add to the room’s monochromatic palette.
LIGHT IT UP
A team of candelabras tie this family room’s gold components together in fabulous agreement. The couch from fashioner Jean-Louis Deniot’s gathering for Baker is in a Martyn Thompson Studio texture, the 1930s Jindrich Halabala seats are in a JAB Anstoetz texture, the vintage mixed drink table is by Paul Frankl, and the gold side table is by Hervé Van der Straeten; the 1920s bronze-and-alabaster crystal fixture once hung in the Villa Kerylos in France, the indoor-open air floor covering is by Galerie Diurne, the craftsmanship is by Franz Kline, and the rack holds a Roger Desserprit design (focus) and a French 1940s light.
GO MINIMALIST WHEN FURNITURE’S HEAVY
Originator Shawn Henderson pared down the foot stool stylistic layout in the lounge room of this Montana mountain home. The custom couch, in a JAB Anstoetz texture, is by Dune, the 1950s seat (left) is in a Dedar texture, and the custom rocker is shrouded in Arabel textures; the 1930s orange lacquer– and-shagreen sideboard is French, the 1950s Murano glass table light is by Seguso, the 1955 ceiling fixture is by FontanaArte, the custom mat is by Beauvais, and the Venetian mortar dividers are in Benjamin Moore’s Stonington Gray.
Show YOUR ART
A bust sits on the foot stool from India in the family room of architect John Robshaw’s Connecticut home. The front room couch and its texture are by John Robshaw for Duralee; the rocker, custom banquettes, and bone-decorate side table are all Robshaw plans.