mettawa I believe that this was the "Camden Spool" style bed once sold by Restoration Hardware several years ago. I also really like this bed and have been trying to figure out who RH used to manufacture this bed under their name. RH has discontinued selling it. If anyone else knows who now sells this style bed, please post. If you Google "RH Camden Spool Bed," you'll see some photos of it.
Cunningham and Foster worked with artist Victoria Molinelli to design a wallpaper that uses the Tilton Fenwick logo for the guest bedroom. The peacock print is echoed with a bold metal peacock above the bed — a lucky find at the flea market. "We're biased," says Foster, "but we think it turned out beautifully!"
Bed: Restoration Hardware
Duvet: Jon Robshaw
Lamps: Marjorie Lamps by Christopher Spitzmiller
Side table: Fyn table with shagreen top from Hickory Chair
In honor of the bird with a big ego, celebrate with a double dose of peacock motifs. Printed wallpaper, layered with bold metal wall décor, emphasizes the admiration of this phenomenal fowl.Browse: 10 More Highlights From High Point Market16 Favorite Chairs From Fall 2011 High PointPeacock-inspired home accessories
Here, four different patterns make a harmonious bedroom, from the spring-box cover to the custom hand-blocked wallpaper. The secret in balancing the elements of the room lies in keeping the same colorway and making sure the scale and space of each pattern is different.
PatternNot all Indian textiles are bright or blingy. This room is subtle, airy, modern and definitely inspired by India. This is what judicious but still exuberant use of pattern can do. I love this room.
If you'd like to update your bedroom with a few spring pieces, invest in luxurious batik-inspired bedding, which takes a room from winter blah to spring beautiful in minutes. Although not as intricate or delicate as Indonesian hand-drawn batik, this John Robshaw block-printed set inspired by his travels in India shows how your bedding can be a colorful, painterly canvas.
Add a small rug next to your bed. There's nothing worse than dragging yourself from underneath your warm covers and having to step onto a cold floor. Add a soft area rug, like this sheepskin throw, so that you'll look forward to that first fuzzy step out of bed.
On a fourposter bed, I like to see the side stretchers. They're a nice design detail, so I prefer not to hide them with a skirt. This is one of my favorite looks, because it's so versatile. The bed style looks great with a crisp coverlet tucked in to expose the frame and a duvet layered at the foot of the bed for those extra-cold nights.
Black became the color of mourning in the Roman Empire, and many Western cultures still hold that symbolism. It is frequently associated with magic and is still used with orange on Halloween.Far from somber or spooky, the marriage of black and orange is used here to great affect.
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added by jillpeters83 to Connecticut (2 hours ago)
August Renoir often used luminous black in his painted portraits. When someone told him black was not a color, he supposedly replied, "What makes you think that? Black is the queen of colors."
The black walls in this room serve as an elegant backdrop for some beautiful pieces of art.
added by Hannah Tunnicliffe to Bedroom Ideas (30 hours ago)