Showing posts with label re-de-sign. Show all posts
Showing posts with label re-de-sign. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2009

re-de-sign makes its debut


While it's not exactly Cinema Style, it is cinema style related...

My book re-de-sign: New Directions for Your Interior Design Career (Fairchild Books/Conde Nast) debuts today. The book surveys the field of interior design, providing a look at the newly expanded role of the interior designer, featuring a variety of areas from residential and contract design to product, furniture and lifestyle design. Designers of all walks of life are profiled from Martha Stewart and Michael Graves to Alexa Hampton, Hickory Chair, Sally Sirkin Lewis and many more. Sherri Donghia very graciously penned the book's foreword. 

I also feature the Designer in Hollywood, covering the world of Production Designers, Set Decorators and the interior designer on television. Profiles include Will and Grace's  Emmy Award winning production designer Glenda Rovello and 24's Set Decorator Cloudia Rebar (also an interior designer and on her ninth season of the heart pounding show). Design television hosts include  Constance Ramos of HGTV (and a veteran of ABC's Extreme Makoever) and Sarah Richardson of Fine Living Channel's Room Service and Design Inc. (an addictive reality show about the day in the life of a design firm).  The work of Set Decorators Andrew Baseman (also a designer in New York City) of The Nanny Diaries, Kinsey and the much anticipated Eat, Pray, Love and Bryan Scott Venegas of ABC's Brothers and Sisters are also showcased.





Baseman's Park Avenue interiors for The Nanny Diaries (Weinstein Company, 2007)
Actress Laura Linney above





Venegas decorates the sets for ABC's popular series Brothers and Sisters. Shown above are actresses Sally Fields and Rachel Griffiths in the Walker family kitchen
 and shot below,  living room.



Rebar's Oval Office for 24


...and the FBI offices from the past season



Sarah Richardson of Room Service and Design Inc.


Ramos and cast of ABC's Extreme Makeover

And while I wish I could take credit for the cover, the fabulous interior belongs to none other than Frank de Biasi of Frank de Biasi Interiors who informed me the Scavullo silkscreen of Gloria Vanderbilt is one of three. The former Manhattan apartment of de Biasi and Gene Mayer was featured in a ten page spread in the World of Interiors (October 2001) as well as New York Magazine (October 2000) and has generated alot of buzz. de Biasi was formerly head of Interior Design for Peter Marino and Mayer heads a product design company Doug and Gene Mayer. For more information, contact Frank de Biasi Interiors, 79 Mercer Street, New York, NY 10012. Phone 212-431-1222.

The book is targeted to both students and designers and is at textbook prices on Amazon. I plan to offer a reduced price to the trade and please contact me if you are interested.

Photo Credits: Cloudia Rebar, Sarah Richardson, ABC, Weinstein Company, Fairchild Books
Book Cover Photo: Corbis/Fernando Bengoehea


Sunday, May 24, 2009

A Style is Born: William Haines, Star Turned Designer



"Design is an opinion, not a profession." -- William Haines

The silver screen's loss in the thirties was the interior design industry's gain.

The year was 1930 and a young William "Billy" Haines was the country's top box office attraction and on contract with powerhouse Metro Goldwyn Mayer. He excelled as the attractive and athletic All American “smart alec” character (he was often coined the "wisecracker") and enjoyed leading man status to starlets such as Carole Lombard, Marion Davies, Constance Bennett and Joan Crawford who would become a lifelong friend and client for over fifty years.


Haines with his long time friend Joan Crawford

While films such as Tell it to the Marines, Show People and Brown of Harvard made him a popular actor, he found his true calling when he opened an antique store on Hollywood’s La Brea Avenue. Frequented by fellow co-stars and gossip columnist du jour Hedda Hopper, his innate style and passion for collecting did not go unnoticed and soon a decorator was born.


Joan Crawford became one of his very first clients (they starred together in three films at Metro) and he designed her Brentwood home through three divorces that represented special design challenges. “Cranberry” (as he affectionately called her) had a collection of over two hundred dolls and black velvet prints of dancing women that had to be gingerly disposed of. He also decorated the Manhattan penthouse she shared with husband and Pepsi President Alfred Steele. The 1800 square foot apartment was so luxe he nicknamed it “Taj Joan”.


Joan Crawford at home


Self taught as a decorator, Haines offered an alternative to the fashionable art deco interiors (made ever trendier by the films of the day) and virtually lifted the dark somber Spanish and Tudor bungalows into the sunlight, giving birth to the California style we know today.



Carole Lombard at home

The look became known as Hollywood Regency and represented a contrast to the decade’s stark minimal looks found in the modernist movement. With its roots in nineteenth century England, the style combined English, French Regency and Greek Revival with the grandeur and glamour of Old Hollywood. 


Haines at home

The centerpieces of a Haines interior are his custom collections. His iconic collection includes the biscuit tufted sofa, the popular perennial Seriah chair (Haines spelled backwards) and the charming Elbow chair (a smaller scale slipper chair which allows a woman in a ball gown to sit sideways!) Other Haines hallmarks included touches of Chinoiserie, museum mount lamps with objet d'art, one of kind lamps for each client and his use of distressed leather table surfaces.



Elbow Chair


Touches of Chinoiserie



Pedestal Floor Lamp

Before his death in l973, Haines passed the baton to associate Ted Graber who designed one of the firm's most important commissions, the private White House residence of Ronald and Nancy Reagan.

His legacy thankfully continues today through the efforts of designers Peter Schifando and J. Jonathon Josephs. Schifando (former associate of Graber) and Jean H. Mathison (former long time assistant to both Haines and Graber) wrote the visually stunning chronicle on the life and designs of Haines in  Class Act: Williams Haines, Legendary Hollywood Decorator (Pointed Leaf Press, 2005).



The firm boasts an archive of over two thousand original drawings plans and finishes from the collection. They have also reissued his furnishings using the same manufacturer of the past fifty years. Their Brentwood, Hostess and Elbow chairs remain some of the firm’s most popular items.



Brentwood Chair


Seniah Chair



Lobby of Beverly Hilton Hotel

For more on the William Haines collection, see their website www.williamhaines.com

Photo Credits: William Haines Designs, Margaret Herrick Library

Portions reprinted from A Style is Born, Traditional Home, June 2007 by Cathy Whitlock

Note: A special thanks to Heather Clawson of Habitually Chic for her post on my upcoming book re-de-sign: New Directions For Your Interior Design Career.