Top Tools, Tips & Trends
The latest must-haves for your home.
By: Steve Slack
Where in the World Is Your Living Room?
You almost need a passport to enter your local
furniture store these days. Designers are borrowing
ideas from ports of call ranging from Bangkok to
Boston. From Australia comes a collection called
Matilda Bay by Century® Furniture. The pieces
have a hybrid French/Dutch country look. Thomasville
Furniture showcases Visaya—brown leather seating paired
with banana-bark tables.
Broyhill® debuts Eastwinds Tapestry, Asian-inspired
motifs; and Lane® Home Furnishings teamed with
the National Geographic Society to produce Cote d’Azur,
a collection based on decades of photos documenting
the style of the French Riviera.
African blackwood accents give foreign flair to
this sideboard from the L. and J.G. Stickley® Pasadena
Bungalow Blacker House collection.
Flat-Screen Solutions
The hottest must-have home technology, the flat-screen
TV, presents a challenge for home decorators. Up
to now, the slim-profile TV seemed perfectly suited
for flush-mounting to a wall like a painting. But
the heavy screen needs special hardware to hold it
securely in place, and finding a suitable viewing
wall sometimes makes for awkward room arrangements.
Homeowners need help integrating the TV into more
traditional design schemes. Lane Home Furnishings
presents several traditional cases made for a flat-screen
TV.
Another creative way to decorate around the new
technology is with the Reversica Gyre,
right. When mounted in a custom cabinet, it allows
the TV to rotate 180 degrees. “You can have
bookshelves, a wine rack or DVD storage on the reverse
side,” says Darren Alt, senior sales representative
for the company. The Gyre accommodates screens from
42 to 65 inches wide, reversica.com
Bejeweled Baths
All that glitters is not gold but glass, at least
when it comes to trendy wall treatments. Glass mosaic
tiles in sparkling jewel tones rival the once wildly
popular tumbled-stone look for baths, entries and
even pool linings. Glass seems especially appropriate
for the more contemporary statements made by today’s
high-end baths, according to bath designers surveyed
at the 2007 Kitchen and Bath Show. Florida Tile’s® Dimensions
Glass Mosaics product line is one example. The variations
in each tile’s color, shade and size are part
of the charm.
You also can get the sparkling-glass look in textured
wallpaper from Maya Romanoff. Beadazzled™ is
a glass-beaded wall surface that, at $200 a linear
yard, may not glitter like gold but costs almost
as much, mayaromanoff.com
Gadgets for Comfort and Convenience
Just can’t bear to part with your vinyl records?
Hammacher Schlemmer has the answer:a stereo
system that records LPs onto CDs. The company
also markets a turntable that plugs into your computer
and converts vinyl to MP3 format for playback on
an MP3 device; $399.95, hammacher.com
Comfortably read or work on your laptop in a chair
or in bed with a rolling reading table from
Brookstone®. The tabletop tilts and locks in
place, and the height adjusts from 28 to 38 inches;
$149.95, brookstone.com
Who needs an old-fashioned ice bucket when you
can have an electronic ice bucket that
keeps champagne or any chilled wine at the peak of
perfection. The bucket has 10 presets ranging from
37 to 122 degrees (mulled cider, anyone?). A blinking
LCD indicates that the wine is chilling, and the
bucket stops when the beverage is ready to serve;
$59.95, sharperimage.com
Nature’s Color Palette
Kermit the Frog would be proud that his favorite
color, moss, is making a comeback. This year’s
key colors are coming down to earth. According to
Color Marketing Group (CMG), an international association
of more than 1,000 color designers, nature rules
the palette for home decor. “The mainstreaming
of environmentalism is the key to next year’s
colors,” says the group’s executive director,
Jaime Stephens.
Specifically look for four basic color groups,
green being the most predominant. Soft, botanical
greens, such as fern, moss, seafoam and avocado,
will take the lead. Sky blue, ocean blue and azure
shades (true blues from nature) will abound. Brown
is the new beige, but not just any brown. Think rich
latte brown, chocolate brown, scrumptious brown.
Lighter shades will take on the flat tones of stone
and soil. The accent colors will come from the spice
bazaars of north Africa and the sun-rusted roofs
of the Caribbean. Look for deep, rich ethnic reds
and burnt oranges.
ECO Hits Home
Green is more than the go-to color for decorators
this year. Home decor focused on earth-friendly furnishings
and sustainable materials (a.k.a. “green design”)
has finally come into its own. More than just pretty,
this design revolution figures to be part of a new
lifestyle and attitude.
From wall coverings to case goods, from upholstery
to flooring, furnishings made from recycled, renewable
or sustainably harvested materials have taken hold.
Interior fabrics woven from starch-based plants,
like corn, rice and beets (bio-based materials),
in fashion-forward designs
boosted Carnegie Fabrics into showrooms around the
country.
Cheryl Terrace, whose design company, Vital Design
Ltd., is one of New York’s premier green interior
design firms, also cites an exciting new collection
of bamboo-based chintz from Beacon Hill Design. “Up
to now, bamboo fabric has been in rough textures,
like a terry cloth, but this has a finish and a ‘hand’ that
feels like linen,” she said. “It’s
glorious.”
Leading green furniture suppliers include Branch,
where designer Daniel Michalik conceives contemporary
designs in cork, and Verde Design, a Chicago-based
company that produces upholstered pieces using natural
latex foam.
Stylish and contemporary case goods from Vivavi
also generated lots of showroom buzz. The company’s
philosophy is “live modern + tread lightly,” and
it specializes in a line of children’s furnishings
that are as artful as they are eco-friendly.
Autumn Turf Quiz
So you think you’re all done with your lawn
just because it’s fall? Think again. Here’s
a turf-tips quiz about prewinter lawn care, as devised
by the Soil Sciences Department at Michigan State
University. See how much you know—or don’t
know!
1. When is the best time to get control
of broadleaf weeds?
a. summer
b. spring
c. autumn
d. it doesn’t matter
Answer: c. October is the ideal
time to control broadleaf weeds because they are
storing carbohydrates in their root systems and are
more susceptible to herbicide applications.
2. When do you apply herbicides?
a. cool days after a rain
b. sunny days
c. cloudy but dry days
Answer: b. Apply herbicides on
a sunny day when rain is not in the forecast for
24 hours. You want the herbicide to stay on the leaf
surfaces and not be immediately washed off.
3. Which is best?
a. rake off all the leaves that have fallen on
the lawn
b. mulch leaves into the lawn with a mower
c. leave them alone; the turf needs the winter “cover”
Answer: b. Mulching leaves returns
nutrients and organic matter to your lawn. Make sure
your lawn mower blade is still sharp after a summer
of mowing. Go slowly to allow the leaves to be “churned” into
minute particles. Try to mow the leaves when they
are moist from the morning dew. This will prevent
the leaves from flowing all over the place and hold
down “leaf dust.”
4. Lowering the mower height for the final
cutting of the season is:
a. a good idea
b. a terrible idea
c. neither good nor bad
d. too much trouble
Answer: a. When you get past the
leaf-mulching period in the fall and the turf has
essentially stopped its top growth, it’s OK
to lower the mowing height and give the lawn a nice
short cut for the winter months. Don’t scalp
it, though. Usually lowering one notch (about a half
inch) is sufficient.