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Designer Monthly Preview

The woman who helped usher the interior design industry into full flower in the United States was prolific in putting out ideas that will help freshen up today's interior design business. Look at our latest Designer Monthly, Interior Design: Look Forward by Looking Back to Dorothy Draper.

Did you ever have a problem designing small spaces?  Take a look at how top interior designers solved this common problem in our latest Designer Monthly, How to Design Small Spaces at the Kips Bay Decorator Show House.

 

 

 

 

Tuesday
Feb122013

Jewelry Inspiration: Chicago Designer Loves Massive Scale Necklaces

 


Klimt02 is a website that provides an international forum for contemporary jewelry in a creative space that offers knowledge, information, debates, and exchanges - all within the artistic realm of jewelry. Based in Barcelona, Spain, Kilmt02 inspires everyone interested in the selection, quality, art, technology, and creation of art jewelry. Sheffield School has kindly been given permission to share works of global designers here on our website. Today's post focuses on a jewelry designer from Chicago, IL, Heejin Hwang, who crafts very large-scale necklaces that will surprise, intrigue, and inspire you. So often, we stick with the scale of most jewelry pieces - but why? Why not shift into a larger scale?

 

Heejin Hwang

 


Heejin Hwang
Necklace: Connection 2010
Steel, enamel, ground rock
93 x 45 x 10 cm



Heejin Hwang
Necklace: Connection 2010
Steel, enamel, ground rock
93 x 45 x 10 cm
Photograph: Jim Escalante


Heejin Hwang
Necklace: Connection 2010
Steel, enamel, ground rock
18 x 18 x 4 cm
Photograph: Jim Escalante



Heejin Hwang
Necklace: Sensation 2012
Steel wire
30 x 120 x 30 cm

Click to read more ...

Monday
Feb112013

Interior Design Advice from Judy Sheridan: Staying Within Your Budget

If you don't know about interior designer Judy Sheridan's invaluable book How to Work with an Interior Designer, I can assure you that you need to get hold of a copy and learn all about home decorating, from A to Z, and the unique perspective of what a professional designer can do. Sheffield School was fortunate to have Judy give our students advice on camera; she'll be one of many interior design industry experts we'll be featuring in our soon-to-debut updated DVDs for our Complete Course in Interior Design. Here are some of Judy's gems of wisdom on how to maintain control over an interior design budget - and we all know how important it is to stay within budget on any design project!

Project a figure that will be your budget. Add 20 percent at the outset to make it more realistic.

  • Decide the timing of your project.
  • Allocate your funds into percentages based on the scope of work.
  • Keep reviewing your documents and adding up the figures.
  • Be aware of any rapidly climbing expenditure.
  • Be prepared to make comprises (call them "executive decisions").
  • If you have to, revise the early percentages. An allocation for construction 40 pecent/furnishings 40 percent/accessories 20 percent may have to be changed to 50/40/10.
  • Do not let one area move beyond a 10 percent change without sitting down and rethinking your objectives.
  • Stop saying yes to changes, add-ons, and upgrades.

 

 

 Sheffield School began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter.
  • Friday
    Feb082013

    Feng Shui Homework: Attend to Details

    On February 10, we have the new moon and the Chinese New Year. Welcome to 2013, the year of the Black Snake!

    Depending on your own animal sign (click here to find out), the Year of the Snake will treat you differently. However, in general, it offers steady progress and the need to keep attention to the details. Having discipline and keeping focus this year will help you reach your goals.

    Here are a few feng shui comments about this new year period.

    • In the beginning of the year, you may not feel so grounded, because movement is on its way. It’s OK, just work with it.
    • Again, keep your eye on details. Make sure to read all the fine print before signing documents. And keep up with details in your living space.
    • Use the Snake’s sneaky energy to work on your behalf. When necessary, look for loopholes.
    • Wearing the color black more often through the year, can help honor the Snake.
    • If you're doing any construction or renovations around the house, it's best not to start a project in the South East part of your home. If it's must, however, then start work in the North West.
    • Take a look at the center of your home and the center of each of your rooms. Keep them clear, organized, and clutter-free - especially for this year.

     

    Your Feng Shui Homework

    On the actual day of the New Year, February 10, you may want to wear something red, eat oranges, write down your intentions for the upcoming year, and have fun. So, for your homework this month, I'd like you to enjoy the transition!

    Until next month,

    Be well, 

    Franca



     

    Franca is a Feng Shui Student Advisor and Instructor at Sheffield School; visit her website for more information. If you're interested in learning more about feng shui and interior design, then we encourage you to explore the Sheffield School, New York, NY. Sheffield began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

    Thursday
    Feb072013

    Wedding Favorites: I Love the Flower Girls

    Only a scrooge or a grinch wouldn't go, "Awwww!" at the sight of these photos of my favorite wedding princesses: the flower girls. In any wedding ceremony, one or more flower girls add a touch of levity to what can otherwise be a very formal ceremony. (We're not counting the parents of the flower girls; they're crossing their fingers that their little ones will carry out their job without tears, outbursts, or misbehavior - all of which greatly amuse wedding guests, of course.) Click on each photograph to see more about the wedding, as well as the photography credits (great job, photographers!).

    (I'm cheating here. The cutie on the left is an official bridesmaid!)

     

     




    Thanks to 
    100 Layer Cake for their beautiful photographs, posts, and wedding and event inspiration. 100 Layer Cake is a unique, comprehensive wedding and event planning resource for and by thoughtful, crafty modern women. Their vendors, projects, weddings, resources, sponsors, and marketplace are hand-picked and thoroughly researched with the hope that every single one is a truly unique addition to both your wedding and your planning process. Visit the 100 Layer Cake website today.


     Sheffield School began as an Interior Design school in 1985, and then expanded our course offerings to train people in other design-related fields, including Feng ShuiWedding and Event Planning, and Jewelry Design. With thousands of active students and more than 50,000 graduates, Sheffield has trained more design professionals than any school in the world.

  • Request a free Sheffield School catalog describing our distance education courses.
  • Subscribe to the Sheffield Designer newsletter.
  • Wednesday
    Feb062013

    mood board: Georgian style

    (BBC's Downton Abbey / Highclere Castle - Drawing Room)With the popularity of the British show, Downton Abbey, interest naturally sparked in English country estates and their beautiful interiors. Downton Abbey is the fictional setting of the very real Highclere Castle, home of the Earls of Carnarvon, in Hampshire, England. To pay homage to the incomparable English style and to continue our series of mood boards, we’re delving into one of their most popular styles:  the Georgian period

    The Georgian style was named of course for the reigning British monarchs of the 18th century, George I through George III.  The most famous cabinetmaker to emerge from this period was Thomas Chippendale.  The Early Georgian period was really an extension of the earlier Queen Anne style and their hallmark feature in furniture was the cabriole leg.  Cabinetmakers just added more sculptural detail to the leg, such as eagles, lions, and satyrs.  Chippendale then entered the scene and refined the furniture lines and gave Georgian furniture a more graceful form.

    In our Georgian mood board, we have fine examples of Chippendale furniture, such as the Chippendale settee from Agostino and an upholstered wing chair in mahogany from the Stanley Weiss Collection.  Both have the distinctive cabriole legs and ball and claw foot with scroll detail at the knee.

    Tea drinking also entered the English culture in the early 18th century and all kinds of furnishings devoted to this habit arose. On our board is an elegant mahogany Chippendale tea table from Clinton Howell Antiques. Beautiful ceramics in the form of teapots and teacups also became popular.  We have here an enameled teapot from Vandekar and a Royal Worcester teacup set.

    Chinese trade spurred the import of porcelain ware.  An English drawing room was not considered complete without some kind of exotic Chinese accessory.  Complementing our Georgian room is a turquoise glazed Mandarin Palette vase from the Qing Dynasty.  Cartouches depicting Chinese figures in a garden setting grace the front.  Handles in the shape of Rouge de Fer dragons add to the exotic detail.  The vase is available from Vallin Galleries

    Portraits were a popular form of art work during this time and the subjects usually stood in front of their estate or some kind of classical folly or ruin.  Our painting here is by artist John Lewis of Mrs. Yeats in front of a fantasy Greek temple. 

    In our photo above of the drawing room at Highclere Castle, there is a mixture of different styles – as each generation of the Carnarvon family changed and added to the furnishings. The sofa is most likely from the early 20th century but the armchairs may have been of the Georgian period but they could also just be reproductions. 

     

     

    Interested in learning how to create mood boards?  Take a look at Sheffield School's Complete Course in Interior Design.  At Sheffield, you will learn how to transform a space, create color schemes, and select furniture, lighting, and accessories.