Sunday, February 23, 2014

Decorating Tudor Style




The charm filled English Tudor is an eclectic mixture of early and Medieval English building traditions that create a picturesque, traditional appearance.With its storybook details and countryside charm , it is truly a rustic and romantic style.

Tudors—typically British-style homes with pitched gabled roofs, large chimneys, latticed windows and often, black-and-white facades, sprang up in England during the 16th-century reign of the Tudors and the style permeated all class levels. Tudor revival occurred in North America in the late 19th and early 20th century and it became thought of as a symbol of wealth, as affluent Wall Street executives built large Tudor homes. The style became a symbol of old money and conservatism. 

The key distinguishing characteristic of a Tudor style house is the use of decorative half timbering, which means that building timbers are partially exposed, surrounded with stucco, plaster, or brick. In the medieval era, these exposed timbers were actually a critical part of the structure, but the modern Tudor style house has other structural supports, making the timbers purely decorative.

Tudor homes range from elaborate mansions to modest suburban residences. If you yearn for medieval romance and want to incorporate Tudor architectural details into your home’s interior, consider the tips found on this site. There are images of authentic Tudor homes and new homes that have successfully brought the old world to their interiors. Hopefully you will get some ideas of things you too can do to create this look.








Thornewood Castle

The Tudor period marked an age of prosperity, money from expanding trade, and the gift of land to Royal favorites enabling them to build lavish houses.

Thornbury Castle


Ascott House

Castles gave way to the style we associate more with Tudor architecture.....the half timbered facade


Although brick and stone are the most common types, stucco wall cladding plays a significant role in the Tudor style as well.



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Medieval homes in Europe featured walls in which the spaces between the supporting timbers were filled, leaving the structure exposed. Adding decorative half-timbering is a simple, inexpensive way to get a Tudor look.

Warm colors abound in English Tudor interior design, with a few blues and greens used to create a cool-tone balance. Crimson, yellow and orange are almost always present somewhere.



Walls should be adorned with tapestries and embroideries. I have purchased several beautiful tapestries on Ebay. Go to the UK site....the best treasures are there.


Ann James Interior Design

The fireplace surround is center stage in this updated Tudor style living room. The design is Tudor and should be stone or tile.

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When decorating a home in in this style, use heavy, ornate wood furniture such as trestle tables, benches, heavy chests and carved four-poster beds.


When furnishing your Tudor home, look for sofas will bullion fringed skirts and also tufted furniture.


Another good sofa choice is the Chesterfield.


A typical Tudor hall. Notice the rustic style of the chandelier.

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This room is perfection and encompasses so many elements of Tudor design, from the ceiling to the window treatments.


Wightwick Manor, England

Stained glass with heraldic and ecclesiastical motifs are very much a part of Tudor decor.

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Old World Tudor manor banister with dark wood wainscot

Although some Tudor homes feature double-hung windows, they almost always have at least one set of casement windows. The windows also are usually tall and narrow, typically have multiple panes and are often clustered together.



Berkely Castle's wonderful timbered ceilings.


Many Tudor interiors featured linenfold paneling. It was thought to stiffly resemble folded linens.

Long galleries were used to display portraiture and taxidermy trophies.
If there are no exposed beams or rafters, install decorative ones. Flooring choices are Wide-plank floors , stone or brick, or even harlequin like this.


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Windows don't have to be enormous to give the Tudor look to your home.

The cupboard with the folding bed in the Oak Room at Wightwick Manor

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The one design feature that defines English Tudor decor is wood. From furniture to exposed beams, paneled walls to ornate carved mantels, an English Tudor-style home without wood simply doesn’t work.


Overall, Tudor interior decorating is a warmed-up, cozy mix of elements. These include classic English Tudor designs and even pieces from Gothic Europe, Italy and Asia.





In the interior of the home, warmer stained woods are most common. The wood has a slightly polished sheen yet it's still worn in appearance, giving the look of something that’s aged but well-kept.



Truly authentic Tudor houses usually feature at least one set of leaded glass windows, in which metal casings hold together the individual panes as in the window above. Usually there are large displays of glass in very large windows several feet long. Glass was expensive to make in this period and the richer one was, the more windows one could afford. Also there was the presence of rich oak paneling, plasterwork and fabulous ceilings.


Many ceilings and walls were hand painted. Decorative symbols of Tudor rose, thistle and fleur de lys were popular.

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Mantle pieces are heavily carved.

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A modern Tudor style kitchen.


All the beautiful decorative elements give Tudors their distinctive curb appeal.



The look is achieved by putting rough lumber on the outside of the home, then filling in the space between the timbers with stucco. This is a technique that can be added to an existing home.




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This blog post was published by Lisa Farmer


Monday, February 17, 2014

Decorating With Zuber Scenic Wallpaper

Here in Richmond they recently demolished an old home that I visited for a special fund raising event several years ago. The thing I remember most was the beautiful panoramic wall mural in the dining room which resembled the one below called Hindustan. I remember the elephants and the wonderful colors. I don't know for sure but would be willing to bet that a second thought was never given to saving that mural which I am convinced was a Zuber. I was not aware of the homes demolition until it was all over or I might have tried to obtain it. Oh well, you know what they say about crying over spilled milk.

Zuber & Cie, founded as Jean Zuber et Cie is a French Manufacture de Papier Peints et Tissus (French for: painted wallpaper and fabrics) company which claims to be the last factory in the world to produce woodblock printed wallpapers and furnishing fabrics. Still the crème de la crème of wallpaper makers, is especially known for their scenic wall panels.For its production, Zuber & Cie uses the original woodblocks (more than 100,000) engraved from the XVII and XIX century

Since its founding in 1797 by Jean Zuber, Zuber & Cie has maintained its headquarters at Rixheim, France. 
 Zuber & Cie has showrooms in Paris and Nice, New York, Los Angeles, London and Dubai and is still producing wallpaper using eighteenth-century techniques. 




Enjoy the music as you visit.



Hindustan, designed by Antoine Pierre Mongin in 1807


Headquarters in Rixheim France


Beautiful samples of wallpapers. Each design was hand carved from pear wood and made into wood blocks. They are kept in a controlled climate and allowed to rest for several years between printings.

Dorothy Draper Designs

The gorgeous Zuber mural at the Greenbrier in West Virginia.


After the French revolution and inspired by the large painted Chinese screens that were being imported, the wallpaper industry began to offer panoramic wallpaper. It provided an (almost) instant gigantic 360 degree mural painting of endless exotic vistas. This mural is called "Les Monuments de Paris".


As with many 18th century wallpapers, the panoramas are designed to be hung above a dado.

Palacio de las Garzas - Panama


The Dining Room of Palazzo Loredan

The same room


West side of the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House showing the panoramic Zuber & Cie wallpaper Scenes of North America.The four panels of wallpaper had been on the walls of a parlor in the Federal period Jones House in Maryland until 1961 when the house was demolished for a grocery store. Just before the demolition, the wallpaper was salvaged and sold to the Kennedy White House where the First lady had it installed in this room in 1961 at a cost of twelve thousand dollars.


This wall treatment was based on Jacques-Gerard Milberts engravings of 1820s American landscapes that were admired in Europe at the time. The sky is hand pre painted using watercolors before 767 wooden blocks printed the scene using 18 tempera paints. These blocks have been preserved and are registered as a French national heritage. This is one of the five scenes originally depicted in the series Views of North America. The Five are: New York Bay, Military Review at West Point, Boston Harbour, Natural Bridge and Niagara Falls.














The Frederick Post reported that Jean Zuber's wallpapers were so respected that King Louis Philippe honored him with the Legion of Honor in 1834, the year that Scenic America was printed,”.


A folding screen featuring Japanese Garden


Hall Monmouth, Natchez, Mississippi -- Zuber scenic wallpaper "Scenes of America"




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The Japanese Garden, designed by Victor Potterlet in 1861

I am not an expert but I believe this is Hindustan, designed by Antoine Pierre Mongin in 1807


Zuber Cie panoramic wallpaper scene was in the lobby of the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island

Jean Zuber et Cie - Hand-Blocked, Printed Scenic Wallpaper Screen


18th century English serpentine sideboard against Zuber Wallpaper


This section of a panoramic is from a huge set called “Eldorado” that was designed by Eugéne Ehrmann, Georges Zipélius and Joseph Fuchs for the Zuber company of Rixheim, Alsace, France, in 1849.


Hand block-printed pictorial friezes, such as this example from the 1860s attributed to Zuber



Zuber wallcovering "Les Monuments de Paris"


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Zuber & Cie's panoramic wallpapers include Vue de l'Amérique du Nord, Eldorado, Hindoustan, les Guerres d'Independence, and Isola Bella. Zuber & Cie also produces dado borders, friezes, and ceiling papers, some depicting faux representations of architectural details, drapery, fringe, and tassels.


Bedroom by Pierre Berge

This pattern I believe is Isola Bella, by Eugéne Ehrmann, Georges Zipélius and Joseph Fuchs. But again I am not an expert!


Tom Scheerer

Zuber manufactures lovely wallpaper murals en grisaille as well as coloured.

John Saladino

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Helpful information came from articlesandtexticles.co.uk


To help you truly appreciate the work that goes into creating these beautiful wallpaper panel visit this site and see a fascinating video of how they are made. It will be worth your time!!!


http://www.zuber.fr/video.html





Click here to see the previous post!


This blog post was published by Lisa Farmer

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