Tuesday, September 10, 2013

A Visit to the Early Nancy Braithwaite

Atlantan Nancy Braithwaite's design spoke to me 25 years ago - she is why I kept many early magazine issues.  And her design still speaks to me today - her pale walls and ceilings, her spare furnishings and her southern antiques.  Her work was a change for me from the more cluttered, cozy New England rooms I had been admiring.  See if you see what I mean as you browse the following images.

I saved this issue of Early American Life from 1985...

because of the following image of the Braithwaite living room with a white quilt behind an antique sawback table.  Burl bowl atop is perfect.  Everything's perfect here.

Early Nantucket baskets sit atop her pine mantel gleaned from an early Georgian house.

And the three legged table in hallway.  She mixes her plain white walls with beautiful antiques. I loved this mixture then and and still do.  This kind of mixture reminds me of Hugh Newell Jacobsen's design on a Nantucket house.  (See my "Hugh Newell Jacobsen in Nantucket" post - wish I knew how to link it.)


The following images were saved by a friend of mine.  She very graciously gave them to me because she has moved on from Braithwaite's early style, but they serve to clearly show the designer's later change.

Sorry for the folds which have been in place for 25 years.  Note the burl bowl below - same as above -

and the mantel with Nantucket baskets.

We'll see this blue fabric changed to white in a few years.

Daughters referred to in the text below are now married with children of their own.

Always liked her darkish dining room.

But I have never seen many pictures of her kitchen in any early articles.  Guess I must accept that not everyone loves kitchens as much as yours truly does.


Bedroom looks so dated compared to her later bedroom as you will see.  Not loving the green here.


In 1993, things did indeed change.  Her dining room on the cover of House Beautiful looks a bit like a Restoration Hardware room today.  Gone are the wicker chairs and the quilt-covered table we saw above.  Now we see white chairs, a plain table and a very neat chandelier.

Gone is all that blue fabric.  As the caption reads, she really "distilled and pared".

How "today" her living room looks in 1993 with its clean spareness.

Love these interior shutters absent during the blue period.

The wicker chairs seem to have now found their way to the kitchen (still being ignored).  The sitting room almost has a Belgian feel, doesn't it?

To the bedrooms...


I really liked the checkerboard effect in the bedroom below.  Because I liked these walls so much, I "checkerboard-ed" the walls in our mudroom.  (It's probably dated today, but the room retains its checkerboard walls.  I will try to take photos of the room and post them next time along with an anecdote about the day it was painted.)

Nancy Braithwaite had burlap bed hangings.  I sewed a burlap shower curtain.  Dated or not I still like both her hangings and my shower curtain.  The interior shutters are beautiful in this room too.  And the sisal rug is so "today" for 1993.



In 1994, the British edition of House and Garden featured the same rooms but with some interesting additions.  Take a peek.

The now familiar sitting room replete with Nantucket baskets, and same antique sawbuck table used as coffee table.


Again, too brief a view of the kitchen.

Veranda and staircase not seen before.

Included this narrow slice of whole sitting room for its text.


The now familiar bedrooms.


I love her "natural textures"and "muted colors".

And finally, because these magazine editors above chose not to show much of the Braithwaite kitchen, I'll end with two kitchens I have loved chosen from my pinterest board.  Both kitchens seem to have the "muted colors and natural textures" Nancy Braithewaite used years ago.  She was so ahead of her time in many ways. 


And just a quick nod to fruit of the season paired with basic toasted cheese.

Much more of Braithwaite to come and maybe even a Henninger mudroom - so stay tuned.  And stay cool - brutally hot here today.
b

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Atlanta 

Yes, it seems I have had many digressions in my posts, but not today.  Today I am on target and visiting a much respected southern designer based in Atlanta - Jackye Lanham.  Her design work is very English, often very antique, and always very beautiful.

Susan Sully wrote a book entitled Charleston.  I bought it and loved it, so knew I would enjoy her newest book on southern style.  Jackye Lanham's rooms are always full of charm so let's take a look at the ones Sully chooses to include in her Houses with Charm.

Where possible, Sully's own words will explain the images below.



The owners of this home also use their entryway as a dining space when needed - such a great use of an oft neglected space.


As Sully writes above, southerners respect family traditions and include heirlooms in their decor.  The two homes I posted about earlier had this same respect.  The room below is reminiscent of the earlier libraries in Charleston and Kiawah.  All so pretty.

Don't you just love niches like this one?




Atlanta Homes and Lifestyles also featured this home in July of 2012.  Below are its images which reveal further details and rooms.





Library.

Beautiful antiques displayed so well in front of the white paneled wall and oval window which even opens.



I know, I know, it's August and no one even wants to think about snow and Christmas now, but by Christmas, I will be on another topic and will have misplaced this magazine.  So, bear with me and see how nicely Lanham does Christmas.  (Did you notice this issue mentions its "showhouse tour"? Apropos of nothing,  I find show houses and decorator houses annoying.  Different designers do each room so there is no continuity, and I like continuity.  Just one of my idiosyncrasies.)  Lanham has continuity always.


I much prefer Lanham's colors below to Southern Accent's cover colors.

Love how Lanham arranges her tablescapes. 

The only time I was in Atlanta, my husband and I went to Ryan Gainey's shop and toured his garden.  A real inspiration for this gardener.

Thought you might be interested in her tips.  I was.  (Am I a shallow person?  Perhaps I should do volunteer work and not worry about tips and tablescapes.)



Onto another Southern Accents issue.  This time from Christmas 2006, it covered Jackye's home in Charleston  Even though this series is about Atlanta, I had to include Jackye's beautiful Charleston home.  Don't you love the poinsettias in the bike's basket?

And it is such a "gem".

While making trips to Charleston for a client, Atlanta-based Lanham "began to dream about finding a little pied-a-terre to call her own."

She found one and filled it with her beautiful antiques and fine taste.


Discussion of this room is atop next image.


This has always been one of the "kitchens I have loved".  It's so compact and perfect.  "Lanham made the kitchen/dining room feel less kitchenlike by choosing a sophisticated deep gray-brown paint and creating a streamlined galley kitchen on just one wall.  The open shelves show off the white ironstone pitchers and tureens Lanham collects." (It really is so fun to revisit some of my favorite homes in this blog.  My dilemma, as I've said before, is that I like so many different styles, and I have only one house.)







And I'll end today's post with another of the Lanham-designed kitchens I have loved.

Hope you liked reading this one as much as I enjoyed posting it.

Till next time onto another Atlanta designer.
b