Product Details
Interior Transformations

Interior Transformations
By Anne Grafton, Jane Churchill

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Product Description

Homeowners have never demanded so much from their residences—not only must they satisfy the myriad practical needs of modern life, but they must also express our tastes and personal style. Paint and fabrics do not simply cover and protect, they must evoke the right atmosphere, creating a feeling of relaxation or activity or comfort. This book discusses the vital decisions that need to be made about space, light, color, surfaces, fabrics, and furniture, not just looking at the different materials and techniques but also at the effects they create. These lessons are then applied to every area of the home, from hallways to bathrooms, and explanations of how to create a range of fresh and achievable interior styles are provided. In the final chapter, clever ideas for revitalizing rooms are offered without the need for a complete redesign.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #596495 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 192 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
Dozens (if not hundreds) of decorating books line library shelves, most with similar advice and frameworks. Designer-authors start with considerations of space, light, color, and room intentions, then cover the architecture, furniture and arrangement, and accessories. The inevitable color wheel appears, as do an introduction to styles, types of furniture, and tips about personalizing space. What makes English fabric designer Grafton and her coauthor Chislett’s book so different? Certainly, the very continental collection of homes and rooms, infused with soft sophistication and slightly worn style, screams to be paged through. The very unusual spin on color codes, that is, those combinations of shades that produce a variety of moods, are categorized mainly in terms of six adjectives: calm, seaside, sunny, pretty, cozy, and smart. And her practical ideas for transforming one room or an entire house, such as the making of an inspiration board, will jump-start the creative process for novice and professional alike. More than window dressing here. --Barbara Jacobs

Review

"Will jump-start the creative process for novice and professional alike."  —Booklist

About the Author

Ann Grafton is the creative director of international decorating company Colefax Group. Jane Churchill runs her own decorating firm. Simon Upton is a photographer specializing in interiors and portrait photography. His other books include Ancient + Modern, Great Escapes, and The New Decorating with Pictures.


Customer Reviews

write a book to pay for your home redo3
was drawn in by the lovely living room on the cover. after going through book, found that most rooms and ideas were of the author's new home, which limited the number of ideas offered for those of us with different style homes. also,on closer inspection, curtain details, etc. were not especially orginial or inspirational. in all, the cover photo is the best thing about this book.

Classic Simplicity5
This interior design book has a much lighter palette of colors, than say, Colefax & Fowler's Interior Inspirations (dark woods, old english country style).

While the images seem deceptively simple, the juxtaposition of colors, neutrals and contrasts of textures packs a punch. There are lots of plaids, stripes, assorted ticking fabrics and some toile presented in this beautiful full color book (my favorite is the photograph of a blue and white eiderdown made from a contemporary print fabric, but bordered in an antique floral remnant, p.94).

For anyone familiar with Katrin Cargill's books on swedish style and fabric decorating (Cargill's Fabrications book is the *perfect* companion to this volume - the use of fabrics are almost identical; Cargill's book is closer to a sewing sourcebook), Grafton and Cargill share the same design sensibilities; that style is inherently english. The book is also faintly reminiscent of the current Laura Ashley look. Perfect if you're looking to decorate your living quarters for the summer, or even year-round.

NOT for those interested in English Country House Decoration2
This book was surprisingly disappointing to me, a big fan of "English Country House" decorating, as illustrated in books by other Colefax and Fowler associates (Chester Jones, Roger Banks Pye). I bought the book on the strength of the author's Colefax and Fowler connection, only to find that the author is a designer at one of a number of subsidiaries of the corporate Colefax and Fowler Group, and apparently has never worked for the Colefax and Fowler design firm. As a result, her style is nothing at all like traditional Colefax and Fowler, with its period furniture, lush fabrics and liberal use of trimmings, antique accessories, paintings and engravings. If that is what you are looking for, don't buy this book. Instead, look for "Colefax and Fowler" by Chester Jones or "Interior Inspirations" by Roger Banks Pye.