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Wednesday, September 1, 2010

In Praise of 1950's Bathrooms

Women's Wear Austrailia 1951

In the Oakland area, we have no shortage of funky, cool mid-century bathrooms. It's a source of joy to see the colorful, sometimes wild combinations of tile and fixture colors. These bathrooms will wake you up in the morning before the coffee even hits your system! My own mid-century home retains the original features in only one of the three bathrooms and they are disappointingly muted and restrained. Although these colorful bathrooms sometimes inspire groans and “what were they thinking?” comments from their current owners, I have been itching to get in and work some color magic on one of these gems.


The opportunity came in the request from one of my friends to help her sort out new colors for most of her ranch home built in 1955. In the mix was her fabulous aqua/salmon mid-century bathroom!


Laura and the Post family are lucky enough to live in a little slice of rural heaven in the Oakland Hills. They are heavily into 4H and have goats, pigs, roosters, chickens, rabbits and, before Thanksgiving, turkeys on their property! Until they install their new master bath addition next year, this is their only bathroom. It has to work for not only Laura, but husband Ron, daughter Kendall and son Garrett. My marching orders were to “class it up”. Laura was tired of the wall colors and felt there needed to be something done to calm things down a bit. First off, I pointed her to blog site, Save the Pink Bathrooms.com, to reinforce a sense of pride in owning an original piece of history. She loved the site and came to a new appreciation of the aqua/salmon vision in her home! You can even take their pledge:

"I hereby pledge to prevent the pulverization of period perfect pink potties and to persevere over pressure to part with my practical pedestal where my pint size prince and princess piddle…I Promise!"

The bathroom currently had white cabinets under the vanity and pinkish walls. The direction we decided to go in was using a neutral gray on the walls to calm things down a bit, gray of course was huge in the 1950's as well. We looked at samples of cool gray that threw up too much purple or blue and ruled those out one by one. Then we eliminated ones that went towards warmer grays and gave off green undertones.

We finally settled on one of my favorites, Vapor Trials by Benjamin Moore. In looking at the vanity, we felt that uniting the unit with color would give it a more put together look. The two tone aqua with tiny crackle in the tile made using a custom blended color the best option as none of the aquas we looked at we just perfect. Remember, if you ever custom blend a color, get enough for touch ups as you will never be able to exactly duplicate it or have it duplicated (no matter what the paint stores tell you about matching.) Finally we just went two down the color strip from Vapor Trails and landed on Fieldstone for the window trim.


So how did these fabulous bathrooms come to be? Until World War II, most homes were happy to just have indoor plumbing and one bathroom. By 1950 only 64% of homes had complete plumbing in their bathrooms (hot/cold water, flush toilet, etc.)! However, with the post war sprawl into suburbs and the baby boom, the idea of the master bath and multiple bathrooms quickly became popular.


Some popular companies were American Standard, Kohler, Mott and Co, Eljer and Briggs. Wild combinations of yellows, orange, rusts, pastel blues and greens and especially pink were thrown together in unique ways.

Maybe the girl is saying "Gee, Jack, there sure are a lotta colors goin' on here!"

I fondly remember my grandparents mid-century bathroom with lots of bright yellow, chrome, gray specked Formica counters and an ice block glass window. Keep in mind that this was in rural Oregon so that tells you the latitude that these colors and styles reached across the country.

I think I found a cousin for Laura's bathroom!


Back in the day, when you gave children baths while wearing a dress........

By the mid-1950's, stylish advertising really took off and bathroom design advertising brought fresh, new ideas to homeowners.


Black/pink became a run away hit by the late 1950's, however, the black walls were quite daring here!


So what is the wildest mid-century bathroom combo you've ever seen?

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Santa Monica



Photo: Santa Monica Magazine

On a recent whirlwind trip to Santa Monica, I had a short list of things I wanted to do and see. Shopping on the third street promenade, check. Visit the Santa Monica pier, check. Bike ride along the beach to Venice and watch some world class skateboarding, done! Always at the top of my list when traveling is seeing the architectural landmarks and curiosities of the area. June gloom hung on well into July during our trip but we lucked out the day we visited #1 one my list, The Annenberg Beach House, which encompasses 5 gorgeous beach front acres!




Photo: Marie Brady

In 1929, William Randolph Hearst commissioned Julia Morgan to design a stunning 3 floor, 34 bedroom Georgian mansion, 3 guest houses tennis courts and 2 pools on the beach for his mistress, Marion Davies, For 17 years they threw elaborate parties with all of Hollywood's elite of the era. One docent told me many of these parties were often fundraising efforts to help during the great depression and WWII. She still has a children's wing at UCLA named for her.


Photo: Library of Moving Images

Photo: Library of Moving Images

Photo: Library of Moving Images

In 1947, after a property tax disputes arose, Davies sold the home for $600,000 to private investors and then to the State and finally the City of Santa Monica purchased the property. It had initially been turned into a hotel called Oceanhouse . There were not enough rooms to make a go of it as a hotel, however. The main mansion was demolished in 1956 while a private club called the Sand and Sea Club remained active until 1991. The city opened up the road in front of the club which had previously been closed to the public. Many scenes from the show, Beverley Hill 90210 were filmed there. After the Northridge quake in 1994, the property was further damaged red tagged . The city pondered what to do with this landmark and where the money would come from to bring it back to life. The price tag on the rehabilitation was put at 18 million dollars.


Remaining, restored guest house
Photo: Marie Brady


In stepped Wallis Annenberg, daughter of Walter Annenberg and member of one of the biggest philanthropic families in the country. Annenberg had been a member of the Sand and Sea Club for 30 years and had many wonderful memories of her days at the beach club. She wanted the club to be reborn as a place for the public to enjoy. She contributed 27 million of the 35 million dollars needed for the project.

The city and historic groups also rehabilitated the remaining guest house. The house was is open to the public for tours and has some really cool interactive features!

Photo: Marie Brady


Photo: Marie Brady

The upstairs rooms are available with WiFi for laptop users to hang out in.

Photo: Marie Brady

Original detail in one of the upstairs bathrooms.


Photo: Marie Brady

This original detail had been painted over at some point, requiring extensive restoration to uncover the metal inlay.

Photo: Marie Brady

The architects, Frederick Fisher and Partners, approached designing a modern set of buildings around the existing pool, rehabilitating the original pool tiles. 16 white columns stand in place to signify the ghost of an outline that was once the original mansion.The new additions host an event building for rotating exhibits, a gym, changing rooms, gardens, and snack bar. The project received a Gold LEED rating from the Green Building Council. Thanks to Ms. Annenberg, the pool club is the only public beach club in the US!

All photos below by Marie Brady









On the way out of town, I was finally able to locate and drive by architect rock star, Frank Gehry's house! Turned out it was just a few blocks from where we were staying near Wilshire Blvd. Never one to blend in to the crowd, this house is typical of his deconstructionist post modern design.

Photo: Marie Brady

The one that got away: We spent an embarrassing amount of time trying to locate this last minute find from our mobile phones. In some posts, it was misidentified as one of the libraries in Santa Monica! It is in fact, one of the nations first LEED parking structures (Oxymoron's aside) and is the 29 million dollar, solar powered Civic Center Parking Garage for city employees.

Maybe next visit! I'm sure we missed many other must see landmarks before we headed out to San Diego but that just means we'll have another excuse for visiting Santa Monica.


Friday, July 30, 2010

Color for Colorphobes and the Commitment Shy

Quite often, I run into a situation where I'm playing referee/marriage counselor and sometimes even parent/child counselor in the arena of color. Everyone has different tolerance and comfort levels for color and this comes to a head when it's time to paint. Strong opinions about color usually arise when one client feels the need for some fun, punched up color, whereas the other partner or family member feels uneasy outside of comforting neutrals.

I hate to draw predictable, clean lines down the sexes and single out the guys for color fear ( I've certainly experienced male clients who push for more adventurous color at the consternation of their partners!) but this is quite often the case, (sorry guys!) I for one, am married to a man who loves vivid, bright, might I even say, loud colors-so I know you're out there, men!



My job as a colorist is to bridge the desires of both and find solutions that they not only can live with, but love. Sometimes, choices can be ruled out based on furnishings, finishes or other elements in the room. Other times, compromises can be made in other ways. The first rooms I turn to for areas of adventurous color are the smaller, less used rooms in a home such as the laundry room (if you're lucky enough to have one!) and powder rooms or guest bathrooms. Tiffany Blue is a fun color I've seen and had requests for in laundry rooms.


Cottage living

Not only are these out the flow with the rest of the home, they are seldom occupied for long periods for time. Also, they don't require a great deal of paint and can easily be repainted if one tires of the color.


Some people are intrigued with the idea of color but have commitment issues when it comes to painting an entire room in an adventurous color. This is when a pop of color in a closet, cabinet or even a drawer may satisfy that need.


Apartment Therapy

Wow! A great way to embrace a little red!
I could see this in my dining room built in cabinets.


Domino

Martha Stewart

Color can fit in anywhere. Even a tiny medicine cabinet!
Also a great way to use wallpaper or contact paper.


Design Sponge

I love the concept of recapturing space in a home and using in new ways. A burst of color personalizes it.
Closet office anyone?


Country Living

What creative ways have you used to introduce color or use it in harmony with a color phobe in your home?

If you need a color referee or simply some color consulting done for your home or businesses - interior or exterior, please contact me: Marie@ColorMarie.com


Saturday, July 17, 2010

Guest Post for Hue Consulting-Car Color Trends




I was thrilled to write a guest post for my lovely colleague, Rachel Perls, who is enjoying her maternity leave. She has a fantastic blog, Hue, which enjoys a large following of devoted fans, including me! Since I have two car crazy boys, I thought it would be fun to explore the world of car color trends.


Hope you'll swing over and visit:
HUE

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Summer Design and Mantelscapes



Welcome to Summer 2010!
What fabulous plans do
YOU have?
Do you like to seasonally change things up in your home or bring out accessories to reflect summer? I have a large stash of seashells, old coral and other items collected on travels over the years. Careful editing means not all of them are hauled out of the basement anymore. Some end up on the dining room shelves and in apothecary jars around the house. I had fun putting together the mantel this year with a mix of blues, coral, starfish, shells and modern graphics.
Photo by me!

Did you know these are often referred to as "mantelscapes"? Definition: Mantelscapes are a unique blend of decorative accessories tastefully arranged on ones mantel, also known as mantel decor. I guess this is the cousin to the design term "tablescapes"? Kind of a silly word but I'll go with it.... Whatever your designs are for the summer, make every second count. Don't forget to go outside often and enjoy the actual landscapes awaiting you!


Here are some more inspiring summer mantels:
Look at this amazing DIY project from Georgia Peachez Blog! What a great idea for a beach house where it's seashells all years round:
Housedressing Company

Scale, color, variety and not too symmetrical groupings are key for getting that casual summer look
Jenny Sisney

Summer can also be more urban and understated
Kara Butterfield

......or whimsical and thrifty!

Apartment Therapy

Inspace

The summer season inspires more whimsical, carefree decorating. A great time to hit the thrift stores and garage sales! What are your favorite decorative items for the summer?

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Color Study Changes Devo's Iconic Hat

One of my favorite bands from back in the day, Devo, has finally put out a new album after 20 years. Never what you'd call a traditional band, Devo decided to employ focus groups and color studies to make many of the decisions for them. The album is aptly titled, "Something for Everybody". The biggest outcome was a change to their iconic red hats which have now changed to blue. Frontman, Mike Mothersbaugh, had this to say on the color study:


We've employed focus groups to help us choose a color. There are advantages and disadvantages we've found. We've gotten letters from people that said that they had problems with red hats. The color red, they felt, was unsafe. So the energy dome, I'm pretty certain it's going to change color.



The color study not only gives you your Devo color but asks such thought provoking questions as “Which color for the car makes you dislike this man more?” or "If you were a color, you'd mix yourself with which of the following colors?” You are sometimes given a choice of 6 colors and your choice is pasted into the picture.

Fans and the public also decided which tracks made it onto the album and gave costume decisions as well. On the idea of using focus groups, Mothersbaugh comments:


We always felt that we never got used to our full extent. We had ideas about TV programming before there was an MTV. We were creating products in that medium six or seven years before that, but we weren't marketing students, we sounded like crazy artists.

In the last four years, I've worked on films and I've watched focus groups and sat in on them. They've made decisions that made me change music, even if I didn't agree with it. But they allowed the directors and producers, who were hyper-focused on certain problems and couldn't see the bigger picture, to have a fresh view.

Warners allowed us to choose Mother to do the marketing, which was great, because record companies can have 200 bands and if half a dozen are successful, they high-five each other at the end of the year. Ad agencies, they have a few clients at a time and they can't let any of them not be a success.

It was a fun idea, poking fun, and it eliminated any arguments within the band, because we could all put up our choices for things like the album title and put them to a focus group. We let the public choose the title.


Take the Devo color study yourself if you need a few minutes of entertainment:



On the Colbert Report last week, Stephan Colbert donned one of their new hats and commented that he felt the new outfits had a certain Kim Jung Il look! But as always, what I love about Devo, whether band members are working on their own unique projects or working together, is they are still managing to evolve and keep us entertained after 30 years.