Kamis, 08 Oktober 2015

The Birds: 7 Rooms with Avian Accents - Remodelista 10/08/15

Remodelista: Sourcebook for the Considered Home logo

In Today's Remodelista Daily

Find what you are looking for on Remodelista.com
Become a Fan on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Follow us on Pinterest
Follow us on Instagram


 

Home Inspiration With Julie Carlson

The Birds: 7 Rooms with Avian Accents

A roundup of rooms animated by avian visitors, black bird edition.

Matt Gustafson Kitchen in Sweden | Remodelista

Above: The Stockholm kitchen/dining room of NYC-based artist Mats Gustafson. Photograph by Magnus Marding for T Magazine

Eames Birds in Interiors | Remodelista

Above: A pair of Eames House Birds ($250 each from DWR) in a project by Texas-based designer Barbara Hill. Photograph by Gregory Miller via Dwell.

Black Bird in Japanese House | Remodelista

Above: A high-ceilinged bedroom in the Shed by Sydney-based Richard Peters Associations is anchored by an Eames House Bird. 

Johannes Norlander House with Eames Bird | Remodelista

Above: In a house on the archipelago of Sweden by Johannes Norlander, an Eames House Bird stands sentinel.

Sonia Rayos in Valencia | Remodelista

Above: A renovated flat in Valencia, Spain, by architect Sonia Rayos, via Divisare.

In Praise of Shadows House with Black Bird | Remodelista

Above: A house in Sweden with a blackbird perch by In Praise of Shadows

Black Bird Scandi Kitchen | Remodelista

Above: In a restored farmhouse in the Netherlands, an inky black bird presides over the kitchen; via Planete Deco.

 

More Stories from Remodelista

Forward to a friend  |   Share on Facebook   |   Share on Twitter
 

Advertisement

Architecture & Interiors With Christine Chang Hanway

American Gothic: A Hudson Valley Home Reborn

The Scenario: Designers Megan Sommerville and Matt Ensner decide to leave Brooklyn to escape rising rents and resettle in the Hudson Valley to launch their furniture and lighting company Materia Designs.

The Solution: After looking at more than 40 properties, they buy a dilapidated 1940s Cape Cod–style bungalow in Ulster County with good bones and 13 acres of land (bluestone cliffs, a waterfall, and a crumbling outbuilding included). They sink their savings into the house, so the only way forward is to renovate it themselves. That means taking the house down to the studs and rebuilding it (yes, all electrical and plumbing, as well as walls, windows, and a back porch).

The Result: After a few rounds of "drywall parties" with friends from Brooklyn and three years of ongoing intensive work, they achieve a homestead that reflects their commitment to time-tested design.

The Couple's Top Three Tips: 1.) If you plan to live onsite during the renovation, focus on finishing a space that's clean and separate, so you can maintain your sanity. 2.) Spread out the large purchases—doing this allowed us to buy things that are made to last. 3.) Have a detailed plan. Knowing what you want to do and how you're going to do it is very helpful in avoiding costly and time-consuming mistakes.

Join us for a tour. Photography by Poul Ober (unless otherwise noted).

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: The couple moved into the 1,900-square-foot house immediately after purchasing it. "We renovated the upstairs master suite so that we would have somewhere to live while we continued the downstairs renovation, as time and budget would allow," Megan says.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: The front door leads directly into the main living space, which is warmed by an Oslo Woodstove from Norwegian company Jøtul; it was one of the first things Matt and Megan installed. "We paid close attention to being 'green' wherever possible and have reaped the benefits: Since installing our Jøtul stove six years ago, we've used only a single tank of heating oil to heat the house," Megan says. The couple removed layers of varnish from the original Douglas fir floors and treated them with their own custom gray-washed Driftwood Finish

The room is furnished with their Materia Designs Ulmus Coffee Table and Cubo Sofa of black walnut, linen, and calfskin. Vintage black walnut chairs are reupholstered in black cotton velvet and linen. The couple used painted plumbing pipes throughout as curtain rods for simple linen sheers.

Gray Bar Code Cushion, Vintage gray drafting lamp, Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County | Remodelista

Above: Throughout the house, the designers mix their own designs and prototypes with antiques and accessories they've collected over the years. A lamp from Ikea hovers over a Barcode Cushion printed on Belgian linen from the couple's new textile collection. The painting came from a local flea market, and they discovered the horns during a walk on their property. Photograph by Materia Designs.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Portrait in Dining Room | Remodelista

Above: The dining area, which is near the kitchen at the opposite end of the living space, includes a steel Parsons table that the couple found on the street in Brooklyn. It's paired with 1940s black and brass dining chairs reupholstered in burlap and a Tibula Stool from Materia Designs. The oil portrait, painted in 1947, is of Megan's great aunt, and the two small intaglio etchings are by Joe Owczarek, an architect and artist whom the couple represent in their Hudson Valley showroom. Photograph by Materia Designs.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: The U-shaped kitchen occupies half the back wall of the house and is open to the main living space. "We didn't want it to look too 'kitchen-y,' " Megan says. "We used darker materials to provide contrast with the light walls and chose finishes that we might use in our furniture, such as walnut and leather." The butcher block countertops were custom built from a black walnut tree that came from a neighbor's property. "They're finished with a natural oil and are super forgiving; we just have them wet-sanded from time to time." Vintage glass factory pendant fixtures hang over the counter; two Reed Lamps from Rejuvenation provide task lighting for the prep area by the stove; and the Cape Pendant above the sink is by Materia Designs.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: Forgoing upper cabinets was easy with the U-shaped kitchen configuration, which provides ample storage. The double-sided sink was discovered in the basement of an old farmhouse nearby and the industrial faucet came from Fisher, a restaurant supply company that makes its fixtures in the US using responsible manufacturing practices. 

The couple decided to expose the Douglas fir rafters and ceiling joists in the kitchen and plan to eventually carry that through to the living room too. "Instead of leaving the original ceiling joists raw, we opted to paint them in several coats of Super White by Benjamin Moore, which made our eight-foot-high ceilings feel much higher and brighter," Megan says.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Gray cabinets with Wood Counter | Remodelista

Above: The designers made the kitchen cabinets from several inexpensive architectural salvage units, which they disassembled and then reconfigured and refinished. They created the hardware from steel plumbing parts and calfskin from Pergamena, a family-owned local tannery. Photograph by Materia Designs.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: Megan and Matt built a small bar into a cedar-shingled wall outside the kitchen. The bar's exposed brick is chimney facing. 

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County | Remodelista

Above: Off the kitchen is a sitting room with a daybed that the couple built for sleeping and watching TV. The flat files underneath are used for storing drawings and paperwork. Matt's great grandmother passed down the antique gilt mirror to the couple as a wedding present. The beveled weathered cedar shingle siding that lines the hall is repurposed from an outbuilding on the premises. Photograph by Materia Designs.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: In the sitting room, a roll-up vintage school map hides the TV. The stairs lead to a second-floor master bedroom suite, and the ladder provides access to a sleeping loft used for overflow guests.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: The antique steel chairs are reupholstered in gray goatskin. 

Black Stair Ladder in Materia Design Remodel in Ulster County | Remodelista

Above: Painted plumbing pipe was used to create a handrail and ladder hold. 

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: In the downstairs hall, large-scale Kimura wallpaper from Romo contrasts with the raw, linear cedar shingles. "We think a lot about texture and scale in both our furniture and interiors projects," Megan says. "We wanted one moment of bold color and added it here because it's visible from all the downstairs rooms." The guest room is at the end of the hall; the sitting room and living area open to the right, and there's a bath on the left.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Dark Bedroom | Remodelista

Above: "We chose charcoal chalkboard paint for the guest room because it's on the north side of the house and is always dark," says Megan. "We painted the room white at first, but it felt dead, so we decided to embrace the lack of light and envelop the room in a dark veil."

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: The couple displays rotating groupings of objects around the house, usually based on a color story or contrasting textures. In the guest room, the cut paper silhouette is by artist and friend Jenny Lee Fowler, the bird-shaped marble bookends are from Matt's mother, who is an antiques dealer, and the paper car came from Muji in Paris. 

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: "The black-and-white print is by our friend Halsey Chait, whose work we represent in our showroom," Megan says. "I have a thing about foxes, so a friend gave me this photo on one of her visits. We found the playing card on a trip to Paris, and the feathers and rocks are natural objects that we're always dragging in from the property."

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: The subway tiles in the bathroom are rough-tumbled Turkish marble, sourced from a discount wholesaler in New Jersey. Because the tiles have an uneven surface, they were double glazed with a matte sealant to protect them from the light gray grout application. The bathtub is vintage; the exterior is painted in Elephant's Breath by Farrow & Ball, and the Rigid Riser Shower Kit is from Hudson Reed. Turkish towels hang on vintage hooks. "We decided to leave them different because we always like something to be slightly off in our spaces," says Megan. "We're not fans of things that are too symmetrical or perfect." The wooden "beads" by the bath are offcuts of African hardwoods that the designers found in a dumpster in Brooklyn and use as side tables.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Photographs by Poul Ober | Remodelista

Above: Megan and Matt painted the exterior of the house in Trout Gray with Witching Hour on the trim, both by Benjamin Moore.

Before

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Before Images | Remodelista

Above L: The couple replaced the windows with Marvin Integrity double-hung units, making the house significantly more energy efficient. Matt, a self-taught woodworker, became a master of all trades; he's shown here installing the large window over what is now the kitchen stove. "We did all the work on the house ourselves, so in the beginning, we often wound up working all hours of the days, nights, and weekends." Above R: A view of the kitchen before the wall between the living room and kitchen was removed.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Before Images | Remodelista

Above L: The living room with the original Douglas fir flooring covered in layers of varnish. Above R: The staircase before the designers ripped out the the overhead wall, carpet, and paneling and replaced the door at the bottom right with a large window.

Materia Designs Remodel in Ulster County, Before Image | Remodelista

Above: The house that Megan and Matt bought, pre-renovation.

The Materia Designs showroom in Kerhonkson, New York, is open by appointment only. Looking to overhaul your own place? Have a look at Reader Rehab: Danielle's DIY Kitchen Remodel for Under $500 and Back from Black: Repainting the Bath from Dark to Light. And for inspiration, see another north-of–New York City renovation, An Architect's One-Room Family House.

On Gardenista, take a look at a 186-square-foot garage transformed into a guest cottage, aka The Grottage.

N.B.: This post is an update; the original story ran on October 20, 2014, as part of our Dark Shadows issue.

More Stories from Remodelista

Forward to a friend  |   Share on Facebook   |   Share on Twitter
 

Advertisement

Living Rooms With Alexa Hotz

10 Easy Pieces: Distressed Furniture in Black

Blackened wood is having a moment, be it lacquered, stained, charred, or oxidized, and we're all in. For those who dare to join us, here's a roundup of our favorite noirish pieces.

Charred Bron Table from BDDW | Remodelista

Above: BDDW's large and low Bron Table is available in a burned, charred finish as seen here. Contact BDDW for more information.

Sawkille Nomad Chair | Remodelista

Above: From Sawkille in Rhinebeck, New York, the Nomad Chair in oxidized black walnut has shaker proportions. Contact Sawkille for pricing and availability.

Materia Designs Incendo Bench | Remodelista

Above: Materia Design's Incendo Bench is blacked via shou sugi ban and constructed with traditional joinery technique; prices start at $1,774.

Charred Shou Sugi Ban Wood Credenza 1 from reSAWN Timber Co. | Remodelista

Above: From charred wood experts ReSawn Timber Co., the Credenza 1 has a case of shou sugi ban treated wood with pale maple doors and oxidized maple accents. Contact ReSawn Timber Co. for more information.

Blackcreek Mercantile Low Table | Remodelista

Above: The Low Table from Blackcreek Mercantile & Trading Co. in Upstate New York is naturally dyed in black; $4,500 for the 53-inch-long table.

Charred Bench from CB2 | Remodelista

Above: CB2's Charred Bench is a pine wood top, charred and set onto lacquered steel legs; $299.

Charred Wood Pub Table by Fermata Woodworks | Remodelista

Above: The Pub Table from Fermata Woodworks is a tall bar table charred in the traditional shou sugi ban style and hand waxed. Contact Fermata Woodworks for pricing and availability.

Sawyer Black Bench from Fern New York | Remodelista

Above: The Sawyer Bench from Fern in New York is available in lengths up to 12 feet and is shown here in ebonized ash wood. Contact Fern for more information.

Nao Tamura Artek Stool 60 | Remodelista  

Above: Designer Nao Tamura created a special edition of the classic Alvar Aalto Stool 60 by lacquering the birch stool in black and printing the top with a white pattern like the rings of a tree trunk. The stool is $390 at Artek.

Oxidized Cherry Bench from Sawkille | Remodelista

Above: Also from Sawkille in Rhineback, the 119-Inch Oxidized Cherry Bench is $5,800 at March.

For more on black furniture and the shou sugi ban technique visit:

More Stories from Remodelista

Forward to a friend  |   Share on Facebook   |   Share on Twitter
 

Advertisement

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar