Showing posts with label antiques. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antiques. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Decorating With Painted Headboards




I am a huge fan of faux finishes and exquisitely painted antique furniture. In fact I am scouring flea markets and antique malls as we speak for a four poster bed that I want to paint in the Italian style.This post is dedicated to the painted headboard which I believe immediately takes a bedroom to a different level of refinement. 

While the art of painted furniture can be traced back to the Egyptians,the art of lacquering was introduced to France beginning with the China trade to Europe in the late 17th century.By the 18th century, richly colored and detailed painted furniture created such a frenzy throughout the courts of Europe that it became a veritable catalyst for a new trend in the decorative arts: the art of painted furniture. By the late 18th century everyone was painting furniture and all across Europe, it became quite apparent that the art of painting furniture had reached the masses by penetrating the vast world of "popular art."

The antiques I show in these pictures are very expensive but you can buy lack luster headboards and give them new life through painting, decoupage, stenciling....just get creative. As you scroll down you will see examples of how others have duplicated the look of antique headboards. Do your homework, find a style to imitate and create your own family heirloom. 


With the Renaissance and exposure of oriental cultures, decorative painting began to transform. Most notably was the introduction to Chinese lacquer. Many beds and headboards were painted in Chinoiserie syle.


Handpainted baroque headboard

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18th c Austrian painted bed. The footboards are painted many times as well.


Spanish Gilded & Painted Bed


Metal beds are wonderful works of art as well.


These antiques will give depth and texture to a home's decor. They will gracefully balance the use of painted natural woods, while providing artistic interest, and they will catch the eye in a delightful way without overpowering the overall scheme


As the interior decorator Ruby Ross Wood wrote in 1917, Italian painted furniture is “the salvation of many a too-dark room.”


Italian painted headboards shares a sparkling character its unknown makers might have called briosità. They just seem to have the ability to cheer you up!

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Floral bouquets and fruit were often symbolic choices to use when painting the headboard.


A late Sheraton painted headboard


Italian (probably Venetian) carved and painted headboard mid-18th century. Crests and coat of arms  were popular motifs. Today a monogram is pretty when painted on a headboard.

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If you don't want to be overwhelmed, sometimes just a painted medallion is all you need.



Whether elegant or simple a painted headboard makes a huge statement in any bedroom



via pinterest

The Venetians had a fondness for pastels and most of their painted pieces crafted during this time were painted and decorated in soft pastel tones like this headboard.


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As the trend for neoclassic designs gained momentum, painted headboards took on a classic look with Roman and Greek motifs



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One painted headboard is a real treat but to have twins....fabulous!

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Headboards with black backgrounds were very popular and still are today as homeowners lend their hands to DIY projects.





Today an artist can customize any style you like. Or if you are creative....try it yourself.


MacKenzie-Childs style

Wisteria

These scenes on these modern headboards are wonderful!!

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Chesapeake twin headboard


Another beautiful style to duplicate is the more provincial American and northern European folk-art style headboards.



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Painted beds are perfect for children's rooms.

bhg.com




For more headboard ideas click Decorating With Tufted Headboards 


Click here to see the previous post!


This blog post was published by

Lisa Farmer

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Decorating With French Trumeau Mirrors



Trumeau mirrors were originally manufactured in France in the 18th century. A decorative art form of uncommon quality, French furniture crafted during the eighteenth century (Louis XIII – Louis XVI) has long been praised as the epitome of elegance and fine craftsmanship. A centerpiece of the eighteenth century interior was the trumeau – a long mirror set into paneling and topped with a painting or carved motif. This form was primarily decorative but it was also functional because of the mirror’s reflective quality.  

 Trumeau mirrors are  wall mirrors set in a decorative frame that often features a painted or carved panel under or above the mirror, were originally intended to hang on a wall between windows, providing a decorative element and bringing more light to the room. Most antique trumeau mirrors are highly ornate and often gilded.It takes its name from the French word trumeau. In architecture, a trumeau resided between two doorways as a structural support. Trumeau mirrors are something quite different.Their larger size can easily support the design of a room just fine on its own as well as over a piece of furniture.

The mirror is almost always rectangular and sometimes includes a decorative portion at the top, with the mirror below it. Those designed to be placed above a mantelpiece, rather than between windows, could have candles placed in front of the mirror to increase ambient light. Usually always hung on walls the trumeau is now seen in interiors in their free standing state. Leaned against a wall, they have become attractive additions to home decor. 




Many trumeau mirrors feature a French pastoral painting or cherubim similar to this one.

The word trumeau was first used to describe a mirror on that section of wall in the early 1700s.

The trumeau mirror gained popularity among the growing upper-middle class, who were looking to emulate the wall-paneled aristocracy.

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I have two trumeau mirrors, this one in my living room...........

eyefordesignlfd.blogspot.com

.....and  another painted trumeau mirror in my dining room.



mccormickinteriors.com

You can use a trumeau in so many places....over mantles, front halls, dining rooms, bedrooms, bathrooms, the list goes on. They add style and sophistication anywhere you choose to hang or lean them.



A trumeau mirror of Neoclassic form.

A trumeau mirror in the bath adds so much glamour!


lh3.ggpht.com

If you want your interior to scream FRENCH, invest in a beautiful trumeau mirror. 


Most antique trumeau mirrors are highly ornate and often painted and gilded.

Flip through almost any home decor magazine and chances are you'll see at least one trumeau mirror.

Fabulous trumeau mirror in a Charles Faudree interior.


Oil portraits can also be seen embedded into trumeau mirrors.



A trumeau mirror will definitely create a gorgeous, french-inspired look in your home without destroying your decorating budget.


Tone on tone painted trumeau mirrors are equally fabulous.



Antique French Louis XVI blue trumeau mirror


I have a tall narrow trumeau style mirror in a corner of my home that I bought in an antique store YEARS ago.


Classically-inspired motifs like acanthus leaves, scrolls and garlands, and ribbons were used to decorate trumeau mirrors in the late-18th and early-19th century.


Stunning French antique trumeau with floral oil painting.



I love the fluted pilasters featured prominently on this trumeau.

omalleyantiques.com

Every home benefits from a beautiful trumeau. They are great investments. 


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This blog post was published by
Lisa Farmer









































































































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