|
| |
| Home Decor to Suit your Home |
Buy Home Decor to Suit your Home's Character
by: Elisabeth Mcgill
For the first nineteen years of my life I lived in the same town in my
parents home. Whatever home decor there was interested me little, it was
just there. Then I went to Italy for a year and lived with an Italian
Duke and his family. They lived in a villa in Rome. There I noticed the
home decor. The rooms were huge. The Duchess had a penchant for
elaborate baroque wall mirrors. They were everywhere, with the rest of
the home decor to match. Most days the gardener cut arms full of fresh
flowers. I often helped to carry them because I liked to follow him
around so that I could look at the classical art statue sculptures and
fountains. They, and marble benches, strategically placed between the
trees and flowers, were the garden decor. Since I liked to do it, it
soon became my job to arrange the flowers in decorative vases. I had a
free hand in placing them on tables, cabinets and plant stands. It
wasn't exactly decorating, but it gave me a satisfying feeling to
contribute something to those marvelous rooms.
After one year I moved to Paris, France. Not much scope for home
decorating there. I lived in a tiny furnished room, where the home decor
consisted of a narrow bed, a pine wood chair, a wardrobe and a wood
cabinet with a washbowl. A bare light bulb hung from the ceiling. All I
added was a decorative mirror, a reading lamp and a crystal vase, which
I kept filled with fresh flowers from the market.
After that it was great to move into a house near Los Angeles,
California, which I shared with my sister. Without much planning, we
decided what we needed and went out to buy whatever appealed to us. As
nice as the furniture had looked in the showroom, somehow, in that house
it did not seem right. For one thing, it was much too massive and the
colors clashed with the paint colors and window coverings. We did not
have much time to stew over it since we both carried a full load of
courses at the college and worked four hours after class and eight on
Saturdays.
The day after I graduated, I got married and my wonderful husband and I
moved into an apartment near his work. At first I had fun buying new
furniture and making the place look nice, but soon I realized that
apartment living was not for me. I missed wandering between the flowers
and sitting on the garden bench under the open sky with that first cup
of coffee.
As soon as our lease was up, we moved into a house on a steep hillside.
We used the furniture we had, even though it looked somewhat out of
place. Going around to flea markets and buying items without thinking
whether they would fit in with what we had, did not help. At the same
time my husband inherited his uncle's collectible knives, swords and
sabers. They presented a real challenge for me. What was I to do with
home decor like that? Mother Nature soon took care of my dilemma. The
house and most of what we owned was burned in the Bel Air fire.
Of course I was very sad about the loss, yet I was excited.
Here was my chance to start all over again and this time I intended to
make the home decor match the house. We rented a bungalow with a
slanting roof, dark, exposed beams and lots of windows. We moved in with
just a few borrowed necessities and stacks of home decor magazines and
books. As I saw pictures of things that appealed to me, I would sit in
different corners of the empty room I wanted to furnish and envisioned
those things in place. It was a great method to decide on my selection.
Lime green and lemon yellow were very much in fashion then and probably
would have looked ghastly in any of the other dwellings we had had. But
in that house, with the dark beams, dark oak flooring and big windows
framed by citrus trees, I could envision that it would look nice. And it
did. It was a delightful home.
A year later my husband decided to go back to college for his Masters
Degree. We loaded what we could into our Volkswagen Bus, sold the rest
of our belongings and headed for Austin, Texas, accompanied by two
babies and a cat. Money was tight and home decor took a back seat to all
else. Like so many student accommodations, ours had a lot of make-do
furnishings. The bricks and boards book shelve, the milk crate and
plywood tables and second hand sofas and beds. Our newborn slept in what
used to be a packing box for toilet paper, nicely lined with colorful
fabric. It didn't seem to matter. I devoted my time to my children. My
husband devoted his time to his studies .
In less than twelve month he got his degree and was recommended by his
professor to a company in Pasadena, California.
We found a lovely cottage style home. Once again I was absolutely
thrilled to be able to start decorating from scratch, since we had
brought nothing with us. I went through the routine of sitting in
different corners of the empty rooms and envisioned what, of the things
I had seen in magazines and home decor stores, would look good in that
house. I settled on country cottage style home decor and in the end, of
all the homes we had lived in, this one, still today, was the one we
felt most comfortable and at home in.
Our bliss lasted for almost two years until my husband was transferred
to Atlanta, Georgia. Fortunately the company let us fly there ahead of
time to check the place out and I could see right away that in the
colonial style homes we looked at, country cottage home decor would
never do. My husband came to an agreement with his company, that instead
of paying for the movers to transport our furniture, they would give him
a lump sum.
With great pleasure I acquainted myself with colonial style home decor,
sat in the empty rooms envisioning what to put where and in the end came
up with a truly elegant period masterpiece. What a delight it was to
entertain in that house.
I should have known that it would not last but must admit that I said
yes faster than my husband when his boss offered him a job in Nepal.We
had no idea what to expect in that country. Things seemed primitive
compared to what we were used to but we loved it. We found a rather
grand looking house where the water pipes and electrical lines were all
outside the walls. The fuse boxes were right by the entrance so that
everybody could see that this house was modern enough to have such
luxuries. The floors were naked cement and there was no heating. Sitting
in corners of the empty rooms to envision them furnished did not do it
here either, since there were no stores where one could just go and buy
furniture. Simple beds, with hemp cords strung between the sides and
badly made whicker chairs were all one could buy ready made. Other
expatriates advised us to get pictures of home decor we would like to
have and take them to a carpenter who may or may not come up with
something similar. We did and also found a place in
the bazaar where we could order coir carpeting. It did not look like
much but felt invigoratingly rough under bare feet. Dishes, cutlery and
whatever else one needs in a home also were of ghastly quality, but it
did not matter, nobody else had anything better, except for embassy
staff, who got everything shipped in. Slowly the pieces of furniture we
had ordered were delivered and little by little the place started to
look like a home. Finally we could reciprocate for all the many
invitations we had accepted from ex pats and local people alike. We
might not have had the home decor we would have liked but since the
electricity often failed anyhow, by candlelight it did look delightful.
Besides, we had one of the best cooks in Katmandu and visitors told us
that they would have come to eat his food, had the house been empty.
We were supposed to go back to the United States after my husbands
contract was up but even before that, his boss wanted him to transfer to
Madras, India. By good fortune we found an almost new bungalow which had
been build on stilts so as to not disturb the roots of a huge holy tree
in front of it. The house was built in a square around a courtyard with
a mango tree in the middle and all rooms had big glass double doors
opening out to it. When I saw the place, I could immediately envision a
garden theme and was glad to find fabrics with a lattice and bamboo
design for the curtains and matching green upholstery for the sofas and
chairs we had made. Even though it took many trips to the bazaar, and
frequent reminders to the carpenters, eventually all the home decor
complimented the garden feeling I had wanted to achieve. It was like
living outdoors.
After that we moved fourteen more times, always to different countries,
all over the world, without ever bringing any furnishings with us. Each
time I went through the same process of sitting in the empty rooms,
envisioning the results I wanted to create, then finding the right home
decor. The look was always perfect for that particular house.
Few people move as much as I did. For them it is even more important,
right at the beginning, to decorate their home to suit it's character.
Having chosen what looks right then will still look right years later.
About The Author
Elisabeth Mcgill is now permanently living in Tucson, Arizona. To make
use of her expertise in home decorating and her knowledge of decorator
items from around the world, she is in the process of creating a home
and garden decor business.
http://www.buyhomeandgardendecor.com (not yet published)
|
|