Friday, September 24, 2010

Choosing a Rug by Marlena Leonard



Marlena Leonard has been and Interior Design at Paul Rich in Sons since 1999. Her education is in Architectural and Interior Design. She is also an accomplished painter and artist.


When it comes to bringing richness to a room – adding an area rug is a quick and easy solution. However, purchasing an oriental is very subjective, since it will be a long term commitment – buying what is in vogue at the moment will not work in the long run. It has to express the owner’s individuality and style.

A hand-woven rug will enhance the interior in many ways

  • It brings focus to the room

  • In an open space lay out it plays the role of room divider

  • It adds richness of color and pattern to neutral furniture

By selecting the right size it will visually enlarge a small space or bring focus to a large room with high ceilings. It simply brings beauty to any space and enjoyment to a customer that will last for years

As a designer I will assist you with your choices making sure the colors and patterns flow and the end result will be an original rug that will and define your taste and bring style and elegance to your home for years to come.



The picture above picture illustrates how an intricate pattern on a traditional style rug compliments the contemporary sofa and neutral color scheme.





Here we have a more eclectic theme in the living room. The traditional style of the furniture is contrasted by an antique kilim rug with a simple geometric pattern.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Changing Seasons: A Storage Saga

I hear faint rustle. There's a breeze. My nose twitches at fresh crisp air. My senses flood my brain with warnings. Flashing yellow lights, lights the color of falling leaves. Red sirens, sirens that sound like ripe apples falling from trees. Warning: Fall is moving in.

What was just warm, humid and still, is now cool, dry, on the move. Like the changing landscape outside, life in our homes begin to move too. Children pack off to school, sweaters come out of closets, boots march towards the front door. It seems as though the house shrinks during theses changes. The sudden influx of extra layers crowd our shelves as we try to keep the shorts and tees on for one more day. Hot tea warms on the stove dirtying another dish after a long summer of paper plates and dinner cooked on the grill.

So what to do with all this stuff, how do we make the best out of a season between seasons.


1. Easy on Easy Off.
A chest at the end of the bed is an easy access way to store extra blankets or sweaters. You won't have to dig for items you want to pull out quick when your cold and bleary eyed mid way through the night or you decide to grab an extra layer after being confronted at the door by a blast of cold morning air.


2. The 3 B's,
Boxes, Bags and Baskets are smart functional and chic ways to organize and store clutter. Finding a style that matches your personality and is sized right for the item is key to making it work. Even in your junk drawer you can reinstate order by using old coin purses to corral stray batteries, a worn clutch works great as a pencil case. Decorative boxes pull double duty as table accents with the benefit of hiding the coasters and a deck of cards for a rainy day game of canasta.

3. Saying Goodbye
Of course there are always some things that now matter how many times you click you heels you just can't seem to make them go away. These are things you probably moved more than once in your life, maybe it started as your favorite shirt then it slid to the back of the closet, then got pushed around to a few other hiding spots. These things may even have been packed up brought to a new home and never made it back out of the box to see the light of day. It's time to say good bye. Cleaning up and organizing your garage is a great job for an early fall day. But before summer goods are packed off for 2 seasons of cold storage check the corners and closets and pull out the things you never touched this summer. The old shepard's hook with the broken wind chime, the cracked cherub statue, the stack of t-shirts that all seemed to have collected a spot of bleach, paint, or raspberry cobbler. Bag it, Tag it, and move it off your floor.


Remember cleaning out the old means making way for new.
Warning: Happy Shopping days ahead...