Entries from April 1, 2009 - April 30, 2009
Design snapshot: Blossoming color combo
Click on this photo to see it in the note cards/prints gallery.Look to nature to augment your paint scheme or to inspire it. This white blossoming fruit tree beautifully compliments the navy blue and white Victorian it embellishes. For breathtaking spring impact, pair a white flowering tree with a strong siding color, offset by crisp, white trim. A white blossoming: dogwood, magnolia, pear, crabapple, or cherry would all look great against a striking house color accented with white trim.
by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast
Web tour: Grey Gardens 2.0
I nearly missed last week’s New York Times article by Julie Scelfo about the transformation of the Grey Gardens property. Sally Quinn, the writer, and her husband Benjamin C. Bradlee, former executive editor of The Washington Post, acquired the derelict East Hampton, NY manse and overgrown grounds in 1979. Today, the surrounding lush gardens by Victoria Fensterer are breathtaking, as both the Times article and images will attest. Unfortunately, pictures of the resuscitated 10-bedroom dwelling (c. 1897) are not featured, but exquisite black and white before shots set the scene for what must have been a Herculean home-improvement project.
You may have noticed Grey Gardens much in the news lately, thanks to the recent airing of a new HBO Films production titled Grey Gardens based on the 1975 Maysles brothers’ documentary also titled Grey Gardens. There’s even a Grey Gardens book coming out in May, 2009, and there was a 2006-2007 acclaimed Broadway musical inspired by the same story. Both films, the musical, and the book feature Edith Bouvier Beale, known as Big Edie, and her daughter Little Edie who were, respectively, aunt and cousin to Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis. Despite lives among New York’s high society in the late 30’s, by the 70's the Beales were isolated on their East Hampton estate, living in squalor among cats and raccoons. It’s this bizarre later phase that the Maylses captured with cinéma-vérité. In 1976 the Times published an interesting review of the uncomfortable documentary. The story of Grey Gardens has what Malcolm Gladwell might call the stickiness factor. It continues to capture our attention and imagination.
The re-imagined gardens further tap into the property's mystique. In the Times recent piece, Nora Ephron, a friend to Quinn and Bradlee, says of the grounds, “…I’ve never seen a picture of it that ever conveyed how amazing it is because, in some way, it’s a sort of a distant cousin to the wildness that was there when the Bradlees bought the house.” It sounds and looks like it’s full of enticing, exuberant vignettes. There’s even a little thatched-roof vintage cottage out back. How I’d love to see that featured in detail.
by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast
Design snapshot: Japanese waiting shelter
Every once in a while this house enthusiast ventures beyond New England to make other discoveries. Sometimes similarities are more striking than differences. Such was the case with this diminutive waiting shelter in the Tea Garden of the Portland Japanese Garden in Oregon. It reminded me of the little waiting hut at Mytoi on Chappaquiddick off Martha’s Vineyard which I wrote about here one Memorial Day.
Both structures have a nearly visceral appeal. The Portland Japanese waiting shelter has a simpler roof than the Mytoi hut, and it incorporates bamboo as well as earth-tone stucco, which the Mytoi hut does not. Despite subtle differences, both are assembled with sophisticated attention to detail, and both demonstrate a refined simplicity of purpose and material. They are pint-sized delights that display a nuanced range of variation within a rich ceremonial tradition. Whether in New England or out West, a Japanese tea garden is to be savored.
by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast
Gone vacationin'
Be back soon