EVERY year dozens of beautifully rendered design and style books hit the shelves. They are often perused for the pictures or used to create a tableau in a reading nook, but the real value is between the covers. There you will find inspiration, encouragement and a sense of what is possible in any space with some imagination and desire.
Here are a few worth owning:
Decorating in the Grand Manor by Carleton Varney, Rooster Books for Shannongrove Press
Nobody understands heritage like Carleton Varney. He owns the oldest design firm in the country, Dorothy Draper & Co. Inc. He has been with the firm since 1962 working with Draper on numerous projects. The first room he did from top to bottom at the Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, was the Crystal Room. It remains today as it was then. He continues the legacy of Draper at the Greenbrier, at The Grand on Mackinac Island, and at The Colony in Palm Beach, where he has incorporated a blend of his style and hers.
The author of 27 books on decorating, plus several others, including the official biography of Dorothy Draper, this book is a design memoir taking the reader on a colorful journey through his public and personal spaces.
Robert Couturier: Designing Paradises by Robert Couturier, Rizzoli
Many try, but not all succeed when it comes to blending eras in a sophisticated not stagey manner. This is an arena where French-born Robert Couturier is king. In Designing Paradises, he shows off his love of luxury and expertise as an architect and interior designer.
He offers readers a look at his country home in Connecticut complete with early American guesthouses as well as properties he has designed here and abroad. His work translates well from England to Mexico to the US and beyond.
It’s the language of elegance and it is evident in the 250 color illustrations. He established his design firm in 1987 the same year he was commissioned by Sir James Goldsmith to transform his 20,000-acre Mexican estate. From neutral whites to a room with Hermes orange paneling, this timeless tome can be enjoyed for the contrasts and fabulous photos, as well as the way it will stir your own creativity.
Artfully Modern by Richard Mishaan, Monacelli Press
The essential role art combined with design play in today’s environments is explored in the projects taken on by Richard Mishaam. From the living room he did for the 2011 Kips Bay Decorator Show House to the presidential suite at the Saint Regis Hotel in New York City. It’s a compilation of his best work since 2009. His interiors are described as “sumptuous style mash-ups” because of his fearless pairings of seemingly incongruent periods with art from a variety of eras and styles. However, his first order of business when doing a residential space is to understand how his clients live and what their lifestyles will accommodate.
Decorating the Way I See It by Markham Roberts, Vendome Press
This is a book of beautiful diverse interiors that actually seem attainable partly because the book is divided into informational style chapters, such as Floor Plan, Background, Scheme, Furniture, etc. Readers can actually learn something from Roberts, who worked for the renowned decorator Mark Hampton before branching out on his own. Like others of his ilk, he meshes traditional and contemporary in seamless ways. He says in the book, “I’m happy when clients come to me with great art.” He enjoys the challenge of working existing art and photographs into a new design scheme. Unlike other books, he includes a section on architecture. This is a tome you will want to revisit again and again as a reference tool for your own projects.
Rowing Blazers by Jack Carlson, Vendome
Not exactly an interior design book, nevertheless Boston native Jack Carlson manages to demonstrate the importance of heritage, a hallmark of great style, whether in decor or fashion.
This author, a former member of Georgetown University’s eight-man crew team, also illustrates how passion can be translated into beauty. It’s old school style at its best, something Carlson has embraced, having won in 2013 at one of rowing’s most prestigious venues, the Royal Regatta at Henley, England.
He is currently a Clarendon Scholar at Oxford University. His book goes beyond the story of the iconic blazer to what these particular jackets signify. If you have a preppy bent, you will love this book. If you row, you will love this book. If you are a fan of all things classic, you will want to own this book.
Heart and Home: Rooms That Tell Stories by Linda O’Keeffe, Rizzoli
As a writer involved in the design world it was only natural for Linda O’Keeffe to observe that rooms, like people, have a story to tell. She chooses rooms from the most complex to playful and refined to emotionally charged. The book offers a peek into the space occupied by connoisseurs in the worlds of art, design, fashion and more. Among them are renowned interior designer Kelly Wearstler, fashion designer Wolfgang Joop and architect Lee Ledbetter. Heart and Home circles the globe going from a New York loft all the way to a haveli in Udaipur, India. As O’Keeffe notes in the introduction, “A home is much more than a dwelling, place of birth, or primary residence. It’s wherever we feel creative or relaxed enough to permanently loosen our stays.” It’s the kind of book that should give readers the courage to make their home tell their story.
Beyond Chic: Great Fashion Designers at Home by Ivan Terestchenko, Vendome Press
Christian Louboutin and Giorgio Armani are only two of the fashion icons whose homes Terestchenko explores. Getting a look at the environments great designers choose to live in offers a kind of voyeuristic thrill as the reader is taken on a journey from lovers of minimal to champions of maximum embellishment. The private personas of the occupants are evident in the photo essays that unveil one designer’s Moroccan riad and another’s Swiss chalet. Although the book was published a while ago, it is worth a mention since lovers of fashion and decor can experience a rare glimpse at both in this well done compilation.
Patricia Sheridan / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette