cool spaces

scrabble tiles for kitchen or floor

welt als tastatur (1996), by thomas feuerstein

This surprising kitchen is the brainchild of Austrian conceptual artist Thomas Feuerstein. It is an artwork, but like many artworks we come across, it contains wonderful ideas to be had and used, like scrabble tiles on the walls.

Just for the hell of it, we started hunting down scrabble tiles. We didn’t find any ceramic ones, but found vinyl ones in Sweden at  Bokstavskakel…We thinking they’d make a fine floor.

via Uncopy

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space voyeurs: studios of 10 brilliant artists

Georgia O’Keefe’s studio in Abiquiu, New Mexico

photo: o’keeffe country

We recently stumbled on Flavorwire’s tour of 10 famous artist’s studios, a welcome break from cleaned-up interiors pictures that are everywhere. These spaces are interesting because they’re fluid, unconcerned with conventional notions of stylishness, yet uniquely beautiful in surprising ways. Often they reveal important elements of the work process —  like taping a nap, resting or hanging out  — as indicated by the lounge chair in Georgia O’Keefe’s studio in Abiquiu, New Mexico, Alexander Calder’s living room of a home studio in France…

read more…

marble tables with a rough, unfinished edge

Tillet's rough-edged marble table top

photo: courtesy of tillett and rauscher inc

We were instantly smitten with this kitchen, for its spareness and simplicity (on the upper East side of Manhattan no less), but especially for the marble slab table with a rough, unfinished edge. Such a simple detail to leave undone, yet the effect is bold and surprising. It could be done with any stone surface.

It is the vision of D.D. and Leslie Tillett, influential post-war textile designers whose townhouse on the Upper East side of Manhattan served both as family space and workspace for the textile design and printing. They are the subject of a retrospective that has  just opened at the Museum of the City of New York“D.D. liked surfaces to have broken edges. She had a ‘Wabi-sabi’ aesthetic,” says her son Seth in a recent New York Magazine interview.

We’re going to run over and see it as the house appears to be full of adventurous design ideas. In addition to rough-edged table tops… read more…

how would your decorate this blank slate space?

photo: william abranowicz

In this Sunday’s NY Times T magazine, we were happy to see the cover story on John Derian’s East Village apartment photographed by our old friend Bill Abranowicz (whose beauty of a book on Greece we featured some time ago.)It starts with a photo of the naked, as-is space, rife with possibilities. We realized we were relieved we were to see an undone, unslick, unmodern, messy space, tired as we are of clinically modern interiors-porn that are everywhere. Derian had the courage and vision to leave the essentials be.

We loved imagining how we would handle the space were it ours, and then looking at the photos of what Derian did (swell befores-and-afters here), and seeing how our sensibilities differed or grooved with his (we’d nix the dark armoire between the windows blocking all that light and sense of space…but yeah, what about storage?) read more…

color lessons from the homes of 10 famous architects

Architect Le Corbusier's Le Cabanon in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France

photo: city-furniture

Le Cabanon by Le Corbusier – Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France

Being weak (but learning) in the interior color department, we’ve loved Flavorwire’s recent round-up of the Surprisingly Colorful Homes of 10 Famous Architects. Although we’ve actually been inside Le Corbusier’s Le Cabanon in the south of France, we hadn’t quite realized just how much color he’d incorporated into his largely plywood interior. The slideshow covers a lot of territory, including the fabulous use of pink Luis Barragán made at Casa Barragán in Mexico City, the wonderful seemingly impromptu way Ray Kappe placed painting right next to the bed at his house in Los Angeles, and Albert Frey’s cool use of a corrugated metal ceiling in his house inPalm Springs.   We especially love Finn Juhl’s understated home in Ordrup, Denmark. read more…

design porn: industrial chic loft tour with good ideas

industrial chic loft tour

We recommend checking out Japanese Trash’s recent Industrial Chic loft tour. Though short but sweet, it’s full of good ideas using very simple elements. We especially love the 3 hanging globes above, which float upward, rather than loom as much lighting does these days. And the angled duct work over the window that we initially thought were mirrors. The reflections add and element of surprise.

via Japanese Trash

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tracy metro’s houseboat redesign

(Video link here.Tracy Metro is a designer and the host of I Live with My Mom on SpacesTV, where she makes over bedrooms of twenty- somethings who are still living at home with Mom. “I rid them of their soccer trophies, Legos and stuffed animals in favor of an adult launching pad for life.”

She’s applied her own small-space thinking to The Retro Metro, a houseboat she and her husband bought a few years ago. When we saw the before-and-after photos, we had to know the story.  So we interviewed Tracy and spliced-in pictures and plans to show you just how big a project it was.   read more…

glossy white tile wall as erasable white board

porcelain tiles as whiteboard

photo: mikko ryhänen

We love the glossy white wall tiles used as white board at Bar & Co. a bistro-style bar in Helsinki, a great idea for a kitchen wall. We’re suddenly viewing our oversized rectangular bathroom tiles in a new way: message boards (with the possibility for leaving little wash-off-able notes in a normally scriptless room).  read more…

copper pipe lust: inspirations from a chic dutch barber shop

copper pipe inspirations in Amsterdam barber shop

We love copper pipe and have blogged a fab diy table made of it as well as sculptural faucets. But this picture of this Amsterdam coffee shop took our copper imaginings to new heights: copper pipe light fixtures, copper pipe faucets, and copper pipe hooks, all in one space!! read more…

faye toogood’s intentional unfinished hole in the wall

rough hole in wall The Back Room  by Studio Toogood

photo: dezeen

After our friend Lisa Morphew took a shovel and demolished the wall separating our living room and bedroom of our soon-to-be-renovated space, we sent a photo of the newly-opened room to our friend Tom Fallon, an interior designer whose given us lots of great ideas over the years. He emailed back: It’s great. Why not keep it the way it is?

Well, we thought, the idea IS great, but practically speaking, we just wouldn’t be able to do all the things we needed to do in that space. We ended up demolishing the entire wall to open up the room, and finishing the walls in the usual manner i.e. sheetrocking and painting (all except one, that moves, but that’s another story).

Recently, we saw a wonderful iteration of Tom’s idea from designer Faye Toogood who cut a wall between rooms read more…

ever wonder what an orange floor would look like?

ever wonder what an orange linoleum floor would look like?

One of the big surprises in our renovation of ‘the improvised life’s laboratory was the floor. When we took up the funky carpeting, we didn’t find the concrete we expected but a soft gypsum compound that couldn’t be hardened. We had no budget for a floor so we started to look around at possibilities. We entertained the idea of linoleum, which we love, but found even it was too pricey and labor intensive (it needs sealing periodically). Still, we found ourselves fantasizing about an orange linoleum floor. We weren’t quite able to imagine it.

Well, long after the fact, we found a picture of what such a floor would look like. read more…

dig this swell red brick floor (like alexander calder’s)

red brick floors in a restored farmhouse

This lovely brick floor spotted at Style Files reminded us of the floor Alexander Calder installed in the huge windowed studio he added on to his Connecticut farmhouse. It eventually became his living room, with a giant hearth, and huge table for his friends to gather around. We visited once and remember looking down at that floor in surprise. It was made of the most ordinary of materials – sans morter or cement. read more…

color inspiration: pink, acid yellow + a blue geometry

We always have our eyes for ideas we could use at home, office, spaces we need to support us and lift our spirits. The right color can do that. Since we’re not being entirely comfortable picking colors on our own, we look to ways other people have done it for inspiration and guidance.

First we came across this deep pink wall…then we got this blast of acid yellow in Morocco. read more…

hubert le gall house tour: dig the fireplace!

Hubert Le Gall Fireplace

Interior space voyeurs, check out this satisfying tour of furniture designer Hubert Le Gall’s apartment from a 2002 Nest magazine. We especially love the ersatz fireplace, which appears to be made from molded plaster and paint, but would be still-swell just painted, (as the fire was for a mantle with no hearth we posted once). Check out Le Gall’s colorful sunburst bookshelf…

read more…

weekend retreat?: a house of giant tree stumps

This Vancouver house carved out of stumps in the early 1900′s is our idea of swell, the perfect eccentric, elemental, minimalist retreat:

“…3 rooms.The lower stump on right was the kitchen, the lower part of the highter stump on the left was the living room. The bedroom, doorless, was reached by a ladder removed in daytime to the kitchen…”

It reminds us a favorite young adult novel we’ve read a million times: read more…