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NATURAL COLORS

From the colors of nature. What you see when you go to the beach, the mountains, the dessert – these hues, Obviously, lots of neutrals tones

USEFUL AND PRETTY, IN BALANCE

 

LIGHT

Embracing and enhancing as much natural light as possible. I leave the lights off until it’s dark outside, which saves on our electricity bill but also I feel better working near the windows and keeping my home very light and bright. In rooms where privacy is essential, I have natural linen drapes and shapes. But out of the 10+ rooms in my home, only 3 rooms have linen drapes, the rest of shades or nothing at all. I find this daily connection to the outside world really helpful – it is great for depression because you don’t feel isolated and alone when you see people and homes and are forced to be part of the daily routines of others – you can’t draw the thick velvet drapes and stay cocooned in – and I like this.

 

 

 

NO FUSS

You don’t need to press the linen drapes or the tablecloth, no need to hem the curtains, no worries if the floor has some scuff marks or the linen sofa is wrinkled and worn in a bit. As long as things are clean and fresh looking, no fuss, casual, simple – this is wabi-sabi and in a modern home, isn’t this refreshing to live like this vs. having the perfectly pressed drapes and the tablecloth without a crease?

 

This is one of our favorite things about decorating but also where I’m at in my own decorating timeline, which is, the importance of a good, strong edit. You hear this a lot in fashion but it applies as much in design for the home and styling overall. It’s fine to curate and collect, but you need to have a real editor’s eye and give a good edit before calling your vignette, room or even the home, “done” (at least for this week, no one ever finishes the on-going art project that is decorating). A strong edit is essential in the style of wabi-sabi because humility is, to me, a fundamental characteristic of this Japanese aesthetic