Thursday, March 20, 2014

Decorating White Interiors With Bright Colored Accents......Trendy For 2019


Brightly colored accents in white interiors is one of the top decorating trends for 2019. This white room is not classic but is alive with color. A white interior is completely versatile and it's decor can be very refreshing and relaxing but, at the same time, can also become monotonous. That’s why it’s good to have some color as well. You can either create a modern sophisticated feeling or make a energetic, colorful, artistic impact. Your white walls can be your canvas for wonderful pops of bright color and texture. Think "art museum" with you as the painter. New York’s museums and galleries, from The Met to The Whitney, and The Museum of Modern Art still remain, for the most part, stark white so the wonderful bright colors and artwork can be spotlighted. 

As much as I love white, we all need a little color in our lives. This is why I love the idea of white interiors adorned with accents of a bright color or "islands of eccentricity" to quote Cat Weaver from Gallery Intell. Usually, the pop of color that is introduced in a white room becomes the focal point of that area. So think carefully before you get to work.


One of my favorite interiors is a classic white room with bright colored accents. It is a great way to mix modern with antique.

via Pinterest

My home is old world and I am an antique collector. However a home with white walls and bright accents, artwork, and antiques would be my second choice.



Gorgeous space by Jeffrey Bilhuber with white walls and bright accents. I like to call these rooms "crayon box whites".

Don’t think white walls have to be boring, they give you the opportunity to add bright color in different ways with colorful and busy rugs, patterns, pillows, accessories, furniture, etc. If you want to liven up a neutral room ASAP, one of the ways is to add brightly colored artwork.


If you have a room that is predominately white, one of the neatest and most unique ways to decorate is through a pop of color. That’s because this decorating idea will draw the eye, create impact, and add something attractive to the space. 


Black is such a good accent when using pops of bright color in an all white room.


Adding bright color through accents is a really fun way to liven and brighten a very neutral color palette........



especially since there are so many brightly colored accent pieces out there to choose from.

You can start with hanging colorful art on your white walls. Then bring the colors off the walls and onto your furnishings and floors.

via pinterest

Even vintage interiors with white walls are becoming more colorful through pretty accents and art.


Paint some mismatched colored chairs and add lots of interesting brightly colored pillows to your all white room. These accents will certainly breath life into the room.


On the white flooring you can throw down some bright color rugs and again add some well place pillows. This will create an airy, spacious and cheerful space.


Bright color patterns add surprise and a twist to white interiors because it is so unexpected.

Kate and Andy Spade

If you want to do something dramatic and beautiful in a white room,  make sure you always incorporate colorful artwork. I love the art gallery style of this room.


Rooms can look fresh and modern with just the right amount of colorful accents. A few smart pops of color make all the difference in a neutral room.

Kenzo Takada

Remember it doesn't have to be just one pop. A variety of bright, primary colors can really liven up a room. See how pretty a white or cream classically designed room can look with color. The French style room doesn't have to be tone on tone !


I can't stress enough that art is one of the best ways to make the space pop with color whether it is the only splash in the room or it works with other pieces of decor.

Your brights can be solid.....


.....or patterned like this sofa.


White kitchens with bright accents are becoming trendy. It's a fun place to try out some color. Yours can be modern.....


or vintage. White walls with color is a great look for any style kitchen.



I love the open shelves with the variety of colored glassware.


via pinterest
Accessories like books and other collectibles can provide all the color a white room needs.

via pinterest

Pink and yellow your favorite colors this year? Next year it might be orchid and orange. The beauty of bringing color into your white interiors through pillows is that you can just swap them out for other colors anytime you want.


Current and brightly colored mix of antiques and modern furniture give this white space a stylish and lighthearted feel.

source unknown

The geometric patterns and bright pops of color in this white space are so energetic and attractive.

via pinterest

This is definitely a style to have fun with.


Fun splashes of color that work so well on the white backdrop, are softened by the beautiful wooden bench.

via Pinterest

If you like the look of white walls and bright accents you are right on trend for 2019. Throw in some French antiques and you will have a very a sophisticated look. Have fun !!




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This blog post was published by Lisa Farmer



Saturday, March 15, 2014

Vizcaya.....James Deering's Florida Villa



Named for the mythical explorer "Bel Vizcaya", and with the Spanish caravel (a boat associated with past explorers as it's emblem), Vizcaya was the winter residence of James Deering, industrialist executive in the family Deering Harvester Company and subsequent International Harvester, a socialite, and an antiquities collector.




It was built between 1914 and 1922 in the Coconut Grove area of Miami and was entirely surrounded by subtropical forest, during a time that the area was predominantly rural and unspoiled and Vizcaya was literally located at the "end of the world". 
Vizcaya was conceived as a tropical interpretation of an eighteenth-century Italian villa, in particular the country estates of the Veneto region of northern Italy. Deering wanted the look of an antique Italian estate, and he and Vizcaya's designer    travelled throughout Europe to obtain both ideas and materials for the home. The architecture is primarily Mediterranean Revival, with Baroque elements.



Deering wanted Vizcaya to be approached and seen from the sea, and the east façade on the bay is the most monumental and the only symmetrical one. It opens onto a wide terrace that descends toward the waters of Biscayne Bay.The main house consists of 34 decorated rooms organized around a central courtyard. The more public spaces—such as the library, living room and dining room—are on the ground floor, while above are the bedrooms. All of the interiors are extremely creative, combining historic art and furnishings that Deering bought in Europe with those made especially for the estate.


James Deering


Vizcaya was the first major commission for architect Burrall Hoffman, left. Designer and artistic director, Paul Chalfin, right. Chalfin was an expert in Italian furniture and interiors, and the rooms in the Main House reflect his interest in different periods of history. The eighteenth century was the main inspiration for Vizcaya, ranging from the asymmetrical and highly inventive Rococo to the more linear and austere Neoclassical style.




Enjoy the music as you tour the Villa



Vizcaya could of course be reached by automobile.



However, the grandest entrance and the one Mr. Deering preferred guests use, was through the waters of Biscayne Bay


Can you imagine how it felt to see your guests arrive this way. It was like living on the Grand Canal in Venice.


The stone barge was a planted floating garden and used for entertaining. 


The Entrance Loggia with it's 3 blue curtain lined arches. It has a  groin vaulted ceiling and patterned marble floor.


The Entrance Hall where James Deering's guests would have waited for their host to greet them.


Vizcaya’s Main House and gardens are furnished with a collection that represents many cultures and periods of art including ancient Roman sculptures, Renaissance tapestries and architectural elements, seventeenth and eighteenth century statues and garden decorations, Chinese ceramics, Rococo and Neoclassical furniture and early twentieth-century sculptures and paintings.


The Tea Room (or Enclosed Loggia as it was originally known)  is decorated in an early Neoclassical style from the 18th century.

source -Cristina Lei Rodriguez

The fabulous stained glass doors look out onto the garden.

The Courtyard




The East Loggia overlooking Biscayne Bay. The highlight of the space is a 5' long model of a Spanish caravel. This ship was Vizcaya's emblem.


The marble floors at Vizcaya in East Loggia are of the best quality.


The Living Room at Vizcaya. On the right is an Italian altarpiece that conceals the pipes of Deering's Weltemignon player organ. The ceilings are imported from a 16th century Venetian Palazzo but are modified to fit the room.


The Living Room's French Renaissance fireplace chimney of Caen stone from theChateau de Regneville.  This is the most expensive item bought for the house at $12,000. Keep in mind these are 1915 dollars! 

The Library

The great majority of Vizcaya’s collection was acquired in Italy between 1912 and 1914, while the estate was still being planned.

The Music Room

The interiors of Vizcaya were meant to suggest the passing of time and the layered accumulation of artifacts and memories. The rooms were designed around objects acquired in Italy and assembled into new compositions by Chalfin.



Reception Room

French Rococo styled salon featuring a bust of Marie Antoinette on the mantle.

Breakfast Room

Decorated in Chinosiserie style, this room features 18th century French wall paintings depicting harbor scenes. Also of interest are the four corner chandeliers as opposed to the traditional center of the room installation.



The Chinoisere fireplace in the Breakfast Room


The Banquet Hall was used for formal dining at Vizcaya. James Deering preferred to entertain guests at lunchtime.


An angle that shows off the lovely tapestries.




Regardless of its Baroque appearance, Vizcaya was a very modern house. Many are surprised to learn that it was built largely of reinforced concrete, with the latest technology of the period, such as generators and a water filtration system. Vizcaya was also equipped with heating and ventilation, two elevators, a dumbwaiter, a central vacuum-cleaning system and a partly automated laundry room.


Mr. Deering's private upstairs Sitting Room

Mr. Deering's Bedroom

The bedroom of the owner himself stands at the center of the museum’s east side, and is complete with lavish oriental carpet, French-inspired green silk wallpaper, and a wonderful Adams fireplace. According to Chalfin, the bed came from Chateau de Malmaison and belonged to Maria Louisa, Napoleon's second wife.


Mr. Deering's Bath. He could take in the view of his kingdom as he shaved every morning. The tented ceiling was draped in embroidered linen.


Each guest bedroom at Vizcaya is named for a famous person, style, or place that its design evokes. Vizcaya's Cathay Bedroom is inspired by China, and is famous for once having housed silent movie star Lilian Gish.




The regal “Espagnolette” room, named for a decorative motif derived from ladies’ fancy lace collars.


The Galleon Guest Suite

The Grotto byampangmarin on Flickr

The Grotto is an example of the character of fantasy that so distinguishes Vizcaya from all other houses.

The Gazebo


Diego Suarez pictured  at Vizcaya in 1969, designed the house's main gardens.
Vizcaya’s European-inspired gardens are among the most elaborate in the United States. Reminiscent of gardens created in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Italy and France, the overall landscape design is conceived as a series of rooms.


The Main House and the formal gardens  appeared as a dreamlike vision in the midst of the jungle on the shores of Biscayne Bay. T

www.insideflorida.com

The Casino on Vizcaya's south side


Interior of the Casino

Rand-McNally

The gardens are characterized by an abundance of architectural structures and details, elaborate fountains, and antique and commissioned sculptures.






Most images via Pinterest and Vizcaya Museum & Gardens





Click here to see the previous post!


This blog post was published by Lisa Farmer



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