Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Mirror Magic - Part 1

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Laurel 8525kitchen1Laurel 8448B

Not much has been written about the merits and sheer magic of using mirrors as focal points and works of art in rooms. So I would like to dedicate this post to the beauty, genius, and magic of mirrors. Everyone has either seen or heard of the famous Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles, built by Louis XIV in 1678. The principal feature of this famous hall is the seventeen mirror-clad arches that reflect the seventeen arcaded windows that overlook the gardens. Each arch contains twenty-one mirrors for a total of 357. In the 17th century, mirrors were among the most expensive items to possess and at the time, the Venetian Republic held the monopoly on the manufacture of mirrors. In order to maintain the integrity of the French philosophy of mercantilism, which required that all items used in the decoration of Versailles be made in France, several workers from Venice were enticed to make mirrors at the Gobelins Factory in France. The expense in manufacture of mirrors has come a long way since those days, and now mirrors have become a staple in every home.

Versailles - Hall of Mirrors

Mirrors over fireplaces:

One of the places in a home most adorned with a mirror (other than the bathroom) is over the fireplace. It is the perfect focal point in a room to strategically place a mirror. Depending on the room and the orientation of the fireplace, a mirror hung over the fireplace can reflect other important areas of the room and create drama and atmosphere. In the picture below I used a "laser" cut mirror above the fireplace, which echoes the filigree pattern in the framed wallpaper panels on either side of the fireplace. I painted the wall behind the mirror a deep chocolate brown to further define the edges of the mirror. The curtains are the same rich chocolate brown color and are made of silk taffeta which further adds to the shimmery effect at night. You can see more pictures of this home
here.

Laurel 8566
Patricia Gray

jkplace com florence

The picture above and below I took on my recent trip to Florence in the wonderful Hotel: JK Place. (You can read my Posts on this City here and here). If you ever go to Florence I highly recommend this Hotel. It has style and class oozing out of every crevice, and the staff are very friendly and accommodating. I love the way the mirrors flank the fireplace in the picture above. Notice the interesting corner detail on these mirrors. In the picture below the mirror frame is covered in Zebra skin.

jkplace com florence1

Mirrors in Bathrooms:

Bathroom mirrors come in every size and configuration. In my designs I try to come up with something unique, while still being very functional. The picture below is a bathroom I designed for a client. The mirror on the right is a 3 panel - 3 Way mirror. So handy if you want to get a 360 degree view of yourself. The mirror over the vanity is double sided circle, that echoes the shape of the matching back to back sinks. The mirror is attached to the ceiling and to the vanity at the top and bottom with clear glass. You can see more pictures of this home here.

louie2
Patricia Gray

Louie 18
Patricia Gray

The picture below is of my own bathroom. What do you do if you have a window in front of your vanity? For window coverings, I love the look and feel of California shutters. I designed the room so that the sink was centered on the length of the window. I had the stile of the shutters made to line up perfectly with the center of the sink, then I had my glazier design a special mounting that would allow the mirror to be attached to the stile, while still allowing the shutters enough space behind the mirror to open and close. The mirror appears to be floating in front of the shutters. The end wall of the bathroom is also mirrored. The floors are quarter cut travertine, the vanity and ceiling light box is espresso stained rift oak, plumbing fixtures are Dornbracht, the toilet is designed by Phillipe Starck. The mirror reflects the wall of tile in my shower, which is made of pieces of glass tile and Crema Marfil marble

image

Patricia Gray

hanging mirror

I had also considered hanging my mirror from the ceiling from rods as in the photo above, but I think that attaching the mirror the way I did with no visible mountings is a more effective treatment.

Mirrors in Dining Rooms:

This is a picture of the breakfast area in my own home. The mirror helps to enlarge this small space and bring in the view of the garden. By placing a lamp on the table in front of the mirror it creates the illusion that the room continues. The lamp also creates some drama and makes it a cozy spot to sit and linger in the evenings. You can read more here, where I talk about my Lucite lamp and mix of chairs.

kitchen1
Patricia Gray


Patricia Gray

The mirror in the picture below I designed and had built for my client's dining room. It perfectly reflects the magnificent Murano glass chandelier hanging over the custom built large square dining table. It also captures views of the adjoining living room for people that are sitting with their backs to it. When you are making mirrors this large make sure that they will fit through the front door. I made that mistake once and that was enough to learn a very valuable lesson: check and double check every detail!! The draperies are made of chocolate brown silk taffeta with a padded valance, the ceiling inset is lit around the perimeter and painted with gold leaf, the chairs are white ultra-leather with chrome nail studs just on the corners of the legs.

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Patricia Gray

In the same home (as shown in the picture above) I placed a large mirror in the breakfast area: 1. To bring in views of the garden outside 2. To highlight the Phillipe Starck Ghost chairs around the table 3. To mirror and highlight the Italian designed lighting fixture hanging above the table. In small spaces mirrors can virtually double the existing space and create interesting vistas.

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Patricia Gray

In the picture below I placed a mirror on the wall of the dining room to reflect the spectacular city skyline. When the clients dine in the evening, they don't need candles as the lights of the city sparkle and are reflected in the mirror.

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Patricia Gray

Mirrors in Bedrooms:

In the bedroom below I placed a full height mirror for the client that she uses for a dressing mirror.

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Patricia Gray

Mirrors over Desks:

My Desk - I have a vintage gold frame, that I have had forever, propped up against the wall. The arrangement in front of the mirror constantly changes, depending on my mood, the season, the flowers, the projects that I am working on. Right now I have branches from the garden with leaves that are just starting to turn that beautiful autumn color. I have stood one of my antique Thai dancer statues in front. The crystal chandelier is a new addition and I love the way that it is reflected in the mirror. The Picasso book is my cool new mouse pad. The picture below is from the spring with lovely orange Parrot tulips being reflected in the mirror. The picture below that is my desk piled up with samples and items that fill my desk on a daily basis.

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Tulips Patricia Gray Feb 08

Patricia Gray - The Color Orange


Patricia Gray - Current Project

thedevilwearspradapic

This picture is from one of my all time favourite movies - The Devil wears Prada

Araby Mirror by Ironies beach dwelling com z gallerie

Oly 30 by 47 Oly 31.5 dia patent frame mirror vivre

Top row left to right: Araby Mirror by Ironies, www.beachdwelling.com, Z Gallerie
Second row left to right: Oly, Oly, Patent Mirror frame Vivre

Stay tuned for more in my on going series on "Mirror Magic"

Patricia Gray writes about Interior Design inspirations, emerging trends, and the world of Design. 
While you're here, subscribe to this feed so you don't miss out.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Big Bar Lake

My Associate Interior Designer and CAD Technician extrodinaire, Carole Root, has just come back from a fishing weekend at a cabin set on Big Bar Lake.  Big Bar Lake is situated in the High Country Region (or as it is commonly referred to as "The Cariboo") of British Columbia and is located north of Clinton and west of 70 Mile House.  It is some of the most beautiful countryside I have set my eyes on. The weather was perfect autumn days when the colors are magnificent, crisp and clear.  I can almost smell the lake and the freshness of the air when I look at these pictures.  How wonderful to be out in nature, truly away from it all.  Below are some of the pictures Carole took with her new camera, a  Canon Rebel XSI.  I hope these pictures are as much a feast for your eyes as they are for mine.  Thanks Carole.  Enjoy..........

BigBarLk Sunrise
Big Bar Lake Sunrise (that is the moon still visible in the sky)

BigBarCreek
Big Bar Creek

Aspen
Aspen

BullRush
Bull Rush

Bush
Bush

Grass
Grass

GreyBird
Gray Bird
Post Script Oct 30 2008   Gray bird photo is actually a Gray Jay otherwise known as a Whiskey Jack. What's in a name? Well our First Nations people knew this creature as "wiss-ka-tjon" or "wis-ka-chon". In the old-time lumbering days the Jay would visit the lumberjacks in the northern forests of Canada. In turn, the lumberjacks shared their grub with it and came to call it "Whiskey-Jack". Now the bird's modern "common" name is "Gray Jay" or "Canada Jay"(and its scientific name is Perisoreus Canadensis).

JackPine
Jack Pine

trout&rod
Trout & Rod

BigBarLk Sunset
Big Bar Lake Sunset

Patricia Gray writes about Interior Design inspirations, emerging trends, and the world of Design. 
While you're here, subscribe to this feed so you don't miss out.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

In Conversation with Patricia Gray

Meade Design Group - The Blog

The following interview was graciously done by Ivan Meade who is an Interior Designer in Victoria BC.  He writes the 
Blog Meade Design Group.  I was so pleased and surprised when a beautiful orchid arrived by special delivery at my door
following Ivan's posting of his interview with me.  The note on the orchid said "Thank-you so much for the Interview" Ivan Meade. 
I am so honored to be interviewed by Ivan.  He has done interviews with other Designers that I admire.  Some of the interviews
you can read on his Blog are with:
Barbara Barry
Vicente Wolf
Thomas O'Brien
Kenneth Brown


In Conversation with Patricia Gray

Patricia Gray

Patricia Gray is an award winning, highly recognized interior designer from Vancouver, Canada, who finds time in her
busy schedule to update her interior design blog almost daily! and I know how hard this is. Her blog features her inspiration,
including other designers and architects that she admires not to mention sneak peeks of her stunning work. She has been
published in Architectural Digest, House and Home, Style at Home, Western Living along with other notable magazines.

Iván Meade - What was your first experience with design?
Patricia Gray - When I was 5 years old I remember rearranging the furniture in the Living Room.

Laurel Residence

Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván – A client of mine sent me a link of your blog a couple of days after I launched my own blog last November – I have
to say that I still have a lot to learn . What does it mean for you to blog your ideas in design, your travel experiences and
basically open your personal life to the web?
Patricia – I started Blogging basically as a personal journal to record and catalog my inspirations. I thought it would be a
good forum to express myself outside of my professional practice as an Interior Designer. It has now taken on a life of its own.

Iván - What has been the best experience of being a design blogger?
Patricia – The other bloggers I have met all over the world. It is quite a network. I have made friends in Morocco, Houston,
New York. My readers are from all over the world and are very sophisticated and savvy. They keep me on my toes.
ash street bedSketch by Patricia Gray

Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván – Your interiors definitely celebrate restraint and order. To what/whom do you owe this influence?
Patricia – My Professor, Terry Kutcher ,when I was a student in Design School inspired in me a love for design.
He was meticulous in criticizing all my designs and floor plans. I learn to edit, to be selective, and to create rooms that had
a focal point and were unique.  I was also very influenced in my formative years of study by the fabulous Michael Taylor, who
was at the time creating designs that were new and innovative and were totally suited to the times.

Gastown Project
Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván – There is an European influence in your timeless interiors, they are not just beautiful and contemporary, but they are
also very livable. How do you archive that?
Patricia – Part of the European influence I think comes from the time I spent studying Interior Design in Paris. It is very
important for me to create spaces that are comfortable, functional, and beautiful. I make sure that when you enter a room
you feel comfortable, when you sit down you have an experience with the space you are in and that you have beautiful things
to feast your eyes on.  Editing is an important part of the process for me, because if you have too many things in a room, you
don’t appreciate any one thing in particular. Also important in editing is the details. They have to be executed to perfection.

Gastown Project
Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván - It’s the big installation day. What could have gone wrong did go wrong. How does Patricia Gray deal with that?
Patricia - You deal with one thing at a time. It is also important to work with a good team that are each experts in their
field.

Gastown Project
Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván – The popularity of the design shows on TV has brought interior design into homes all across our country. If you had a
show, how would you educate the viewers about interior design?
Patricia - That’s a big question. Design is a process and involves many steps to get to the end. I think that a lot of the detail
of this process is left out in the current shows. In a 30 minute show a home is completely finished. I think it would be educational
to follow a project week by week to completion.

Laurel Residence
Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

IvánA decor fad you hope never to see again?
Patricia – Well, I hoped that I would not see a revival of the 80’s, but it is upon us now. I am now really starting to appreciate
it again in a fresh new way. For example the resurgence we are seeing in the use of wallpaper. I still have clients that cringe
when I say the word wallpaper because they lived through it and the horrors of having to remove it from walls that were not
properly prepared for it.  We go through phases in design and I think we become saturated, so we change and move on, then
a new generation comes along and loves the things of the past and breathes a new life into it.

South Granville Project
Project Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván – You recently returned from a design course in Italy, what was that experience like and what is next on your design
journey ?
Patricia – I spent a month in Italy studying Contemporary Italian Architecture. It was an amazing experience. I lived in a dorm
and rode a bicycle to classes in the most Beautiful Medieval walled city. The Italians have an appreciation for Design that is in
their blood. It permeates everything in their lives. For my next experience I want to spend some time in Belgium. Some of the
top design in the world right now is coming from this country.

Laurel Residence
Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván - Any words of wisdom?
Patricia – Take your time to make purchase decisions for your home. Buy fewer thing of better quality. Have only things
around you that you love!!

Yaletown Project
Photograph courtesy of Patricia Gray

Iván - Lastly, you have already created a stunning body of work with many mediums and styles, what would you like your
legacy to be?
Patricia – That I created spaces that were memorable, stimulating to be in, and stand the test of time.

To see more work of Patricia Gray please visit:

www.patriciagrayinc.com
www.patriciagrayinc.blogspot.com

Posted by MEADE DESIGN GROUP