Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Living with Building an Extension

We see the results of renovations and extensions often, the lovely styled rooms all painted and pretty. Design Sponge posts regularly before and after photos of projects. But we don't see much of the process, the rubble and dust, the build site, the months of living in upheaval, the stress on families and relationships.

Since February there is a project that I have helped on the planning and design of an extension and new kitchen. Each month goes by and each step an achievement. Last week the kitchen was installed.



 This was the original kitchen, with the stove and the sink separated, the fridge around the corner, little surface for preparation, it was inefficient and unpleasant to work in. The building is a 1950's home built for military families. It is a solid piece of architecture, rooms with enough space and a window in each room. So it has good bones. It was efficient at the time for the way people lived then, but today with our preference for open plan for gathering of friends and family it became too congested.

We began the project with several discussions of how best to use the space, to make it more efficient, bring in more light and more accessible to the large garden.


Staying in budget was essential, so dashed were plans of going for planning permission. We worked within the limits of an extension of 3m x 3m, anything over meant we would have to apply for permission and would take that much longer and extend the costs.


It was a building extension of recycling and reusing, keeping the existing utility space, thoroughly insulating it, replacing and enlarging the doorway directly onto the garden. Reusing the windows which were replaced by doors helped stay in budget. Then adding the kitchen extension next to it with a glass roof. Changing a window to French doors leading from the living room to the garden helped to make the space flow and link to the outside.



When the back exterior wall was taken down after the extension with a glass roof was built, you can see how open plan makes a more agreeable space. But you also see the upheaval a family has to live with, for example all the kitchen equipment and food supplies have to be moved. You wind up living out of boxes when you are still feeding a family.



Just after the kitchen was installed, my builder, the best builder in the world, sent these photos:




Using an Ikea kitchen with hard wood Iroko worktops kept us in budget. Still lots more to do, finish the painting, install the lighting, the flooring, then the styling.... stay tuned!









Sunday, 21 July 2013

Yellow


There has been sunshine all week in London, we are all so cautiously pleased, suspecting the sky to cloud up anyday.... however, enjoying the light and warmth. Bring some yellow into your home, paint a door or window, put a yellow picture on the wall.

Plates and chair from Anthropologie

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Architecture + Angst









My last post was about reading blogs and coffee and a contest at Heart Home. We all read blogs now, we have our favorites and there are so many on so many topics and themes.

Most of the blogs I follow are about the design industry, like Design Hunter, Vosgeparis and my friend Carol at Dear Designer where they share news of new projects and products. Others I like just for the visual inspiration like {this is glamorous} or Greige Design. I like Holly at Decor8 because Holly's is conversational, fun and uplifting, she has a compelling story.

And there are many, many more that I am sure we all love to read and share the things that  fascinate us and engage us. My sister and I post on this blog about our conversations on food, an exhibition visited, new products or a space or images that feed my imagination.

But there is one blog about coffee and architecture, Coffee with an Architect, by Jodie Brown, that makes me laugh out loud and I shake my head in agreement of how he puts into words and images what the existential experience of being an architect or designer is like. He does this with humor and references to movies and always, as I said, making me laugh out loud. Much of the angst I have experienced as a designer..

Jodie is an architect standing in front of an ideology asking it to love him.

Here's looking at you kid, xx





Friday, 12 July 2013

Monday, 8 July 2013

Heart Home Summer Time











Still life, the arrangement of flowers, a book, a vase are enduring compositions for paintings and photographs. I love them, they are moments of beauty, a moment of contemplation.

These lovely compositions are from the latest issue of Heart Home Magazine, it was published last month. Full of great articles on picnics and recipes for the long summer days and an interview by one of my favorite designers, Ella Doran. Her photographic prints on home accessories and stationary. One item always appropriate is the photo of fresh summer leaves on wallpaper and blinds is a good solution for London flats.

Another article on how to dress your living room in the comfortable style we are accustomed to today by using dusky and chalky colors and very comfy sofas,  all very pretty.

But read it and see the beautiful homes of stylists and designers here.






Friday, 5 July 2013

Seated Nudes

 Picasso
 Egon Schiele


 Modigliani

Georgia O'Keefe




 Richard Diebenkorn


Henri Matisse


I was in a waiting room today and started to draw the people waiting, they were seated, impatient, trying to distract themselves, waiting for their number to be called.

Drawing from life is always a challenge, they move, they are impatient and can't sit still. Just had a look at seated nudes.


Thursday, 4 July 2013

4th of July

Jasper Johns  Map, Museum of Modern Art NYC.
Happy 4th of July