/modern classic

How To Design A Kid’s Room With Personality | Mastering The Art of The Mix

I can’t tell you how stoked I was to see Noah’s room featured on MyDomaine last week! As a deft curator of cool, MyDomaine is one of my benchmarks for rockstar design status, so the feature was definitely a design career highlight. It also never hurts to be described as an interior designer with “an incredible sense of style and an amazing ability to balance the old, new, bold, restrained, and playful” while being given the title of “coolest mom around.” Hey, I’ll take it!

PHOTO by ASHLEY CAPP

This bedroom was definitely all about the art of the mix. Noah’s a pretty sophisticated kid, so I knew it needed to reflect his passion for design and his love of details while having a vibrant, modern vibe and a hefty dose of vintage mixed in for good measure.

If you’re looking to create an eclectic space of your own – whether for a kid or a grown-up – here are some tips you can take to the bank.

No.1: TAKE YOUR CUES FROM THE BRIDE

PHOTO by ASHLEY CAPP

You know the old wedding superstition that a bride should always wear something old and new, something borrowed and blue? Well it totally applies to good design…at least, the first half does!

NEW: We totally fell in love the moment we laid eyes on the bold and vibrant duvet cover and shams from Aura Home {now available at The Bay for all my fellow Canadian design lovahs}. We knew they were the perfect choice to function as our modern centrepiece {OK, and our something blue *wink*}

OLD: Old can also mean traditional, or an older style, and I knew we needed to juxtapose those modern bed linens with some traditional touches. Enter a traditionally tufted headboard {covered in luscious black velvet from Kravet and beautifully upholstered by Barrymore}, and a gorgeous traditional rug from Kaarma. Hello lovelies!

VINTAGE: There’s old and then there’s antique, and nothing can take the place of the personality and style that real antiques add to a space. Would you believe I found these vintage French Art Deco side tables on eBay? Seriously the score of the century!

QUIRK-FEST: The whimsical deer head from Cardboard Safari {his name is Bucky} is the perfectly quirky mascot for the space, and he plays so nicely against the traditionally panelled feature wall.

Add some modern table lamps from West Elm and a naturally shed antler we picked up antiquing for an added dollop of quirk, and we can officially dub ourselves design mixologists!

The mix-master recipe? MODERN + TRADITIONAL + VINTAGE + QUIRK = PERFECTION.

No. 2: YOU’VE GOT SOUL BUT YOU’RE NOT A SOLDIER

PHOTOS by ASHLEY CAPP

If you’ve been following me for very long, you’ll know I’m a passionate believer in original art. As I always say, it’s the soul of the space. When it comes to kids’ rooms, though, that can be a scary investment for some as you know your kids’ interests and tastes will change. If that’s you, I have three suggestions for you:

ONE, start with smalls, like the two canvases you see on Noah’s dresser above. The outdoor hockey scene is by one of my favourite figurative artists, Elizabeth Lennie, and the piece on the left by Kelly Grace depicts an evening at the fair, complete with ferris wheel and food vendors. Not only are they fun and story-filled pieces full of life, but they are totally timeless and I’ll be happy to reabsorb them into my own collection should Noah ever tire of them.

TWO, art doesn’t just belong on walls. I love styling bookshelves and the tops of dressers with art to bring soul to every corner of a space. I also love the silver easel from Indigo as the perfect way to vary the heights of a grouping without hanging a single thing.

THREE, create a gallery wall with pieces that aren’t too precious so that it can evolve over time. Noah’s gallery wall is made up of vintage postcards of New York City bridges that I picked up at the Williamsburg Flea a few years ago, a mysterious moustached man from Mitchell Black, an inspiring quote/art print from Lisa Congdon, a stunning photograph of icebergs from Canadian photographer Irene Suchocki, and a reproduction vintage blueprint of a bridge I picked up from Touch of Modern. The grouping tells a story of Noah’s current interest in architecture and travel and our hope that he’ll always stay curious. The quote on the Lisa Congdon piece is by Thoreau and reads:

It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.


No. 3: NEVER UNDERESTIMATE THE MAGIC OF A GOOD WARDROBE
PHOTOS by ASHLEY CAPP
When it came time to plan out the storage for Noah’s space, we had some pretty big hurdles to overcome. There was just one very small closet shoved into the right-hand corner of the closet wall. It was totally awkward to the room layout and even worse, it just didn’t leave us enough space for all of Noah’s cool threads. Even moreso, the remaining wall space – which would typically be the right place for a dresser – came so far into the room that there wouldn’t have been any clearance to open his drawers.
Gratefully, there was another under-utilized closet on the other side of that wall facing into the hallway that connects Noah’s bedroom to his bathroom. Remember this hallway with the gorgeous chevron floors and dove grey panelled walls?
PHOTOS by ASHLEY CAPP
Well, we grabbed the closet from the hallway and flipped it into Noah’s room and – with one move of stealthy designer ju-jitsu floor planning – we tripled his storage space with two closets the size of his original and room for his dresser to sit in between. Yes, it required filling in the hardwood underneath his dresser {which was no small DIY feat} but it was totally worth it.
In actually fact, we more than tripled his storage space. The closets themselves are IKEA cabinets with all of the awesome organizational “guts” that they offer – think customized pants hangers and the like – and we broke both closets up into half-hanging which means double the storage per closet. So I guess we quintupled his storage? Awesome.
You’d never guess they were IKEA cabinets from the outside, and that’s because we customized them in three ways:
ONE, end gables. The end gables had to be super slim in this case to leave enough room for the dresser, so we just used some super-thin masonite and painted it out the room colour for a very simple fix to the non-paintable sides of the melamine cabinet’s exterior.
TWO, custom doors. MDF slabs + panel moulding + paint + an awesome hubby = modern classic custom doors to drool over! #winning
THREE, interesting door hardware. Finish off the gorgeous DIY doors with texturally interesting faux bone door pulls from Anthropologie and the finished product screams Paris apartment. Totally my vibe. The hardware on the dresser is also from Anthro. Paint It Like New! sprayed out his existing, yawn-worthy espresso stained dresser in Para Paints’ Jet Black, and the contrasting cream and brass pulls totally elevate the sophistication level from “so yesterday” to “on point” in a wink. 
So, are you ready to master the art of the mix? Which room are you tackling next? I’ve got my sights set on another space in our home and am just itching to get started. Soon I hope!
xx
s.
By |July 28th, 2015|0 Comments

Project: Kitchen Refresh | Lighting Option #4

Well friends, I think I’ve found the winner. My delightful sponsor Lamps Plus truly has endless options from which to choose, but I love Option #4 for all sorts of reasons, and I’d love it if you could weigh in!

{image via Decor Pad}

Made out of mouth-blown mercury glass, this Jamie Young St. Charles pendant has a classic, even slightly vintage charm but with a clean and modern edge. Rather perfect for the mix of modern and vintage that I’m after in my kitchen, and it’s trĂ©s reasonable making it even more appealing!

I do love the warm, vintage brass of Option #2 – it is sexy and chic, but I don’t want to break the bank restyling the kitchen to make it look right at home with all of my existing white metal. Option #1 is definitely sophisticated, but a bit too pricey for this little refresh project. And Option #3 is modern and graphic and to-the-point which I love. So what do you think? 1, 2, 3 or 4?

Can’t wait to hear your thoughts!

xo
s.

By |February 7th, 2013|2 Comments