Designer Marshall Watson’s Scandinavian Summer House

In the Swedish archipelago, designer Marshall Watson let the landscape guide his palette. The result is a serene summer house that’s the essence of Scandinavian style.
This story originally appeared in the March 2016 issue of House Beautiful – See the original post here
More pictures can be seen at incollect.com

International Interior Decorating Magazines Worth Buying
Antik & Auktion- (Antique & Auction) Antique & Auction is a great Swedish magazine which focuses on antiques and art. Experts write about furniture, silver, rugs, art and much more. Features often include auctions, fairs, and general trends around the antique market and prices.
Antik & Auktion 11 Issues For $99 On Amazon
Gods & Gardar (Gods & Farms) -The magazine that takes you to the beautiful farms, manor halls and castles that will leave you speechless. Learn about the families who have inherited and live in the countryside on these dream farms. Gods & Farms tells us how to live a modern life out in the country. For those who enjoy looking at classic style in the Nordic country, rich history, breathtaking antiques, architectural homes and lush gardens, this magazine might be for you.
Gods & Gardar- godsochgardar.se
Gard & Torp –(Farm & Cottage) is the only magazine that deals with how to renovate older homes. When was the house built, and what colors were used? Tell me about how to buy a older property without destroying the original charm? The Farm & Cottage takes you behind some of the oldest homes and gives expert advice on how they are maintained. Here you will find inspiring images of farms, cottages in rural areas.
Gard & Torp -10 Issues For $85 On Amazon
Hem & Antik – (Home And Antique) -Do you like renovations? Are you excited about antiques, yet desire to have modern amenities? DThen this is a magazine for you! Classic Home & Antique is namely the country’s first and only interior design magazine that is also an antique newspaper. In this magazine you will see furniture and auction finds, side by side with modern day furniture such as Ikea. Classic Home & Antique is published six times a year and is in Swedish.
Hem & Antik –6 Issues For $49 On Amazon
Skona Hem (Comfortable Home) Comfortable home is a source of inspiration for those who are interested in interior design. Here you will find inspiring homes in Sweden along with home décor, the latest trends, antiques and all things that involve the home.
Skona Hem- 14 Issues For $133 On Amazon
Other International Magazines To Consider:
Campagne Decoration– $44.41 ($7.40/issue) 6 Issues- Amazon
Period Living – $143.99 ($12.00/issue) 12 Issues- Amazon
Elle Decoration – British Edition- $122.72 ($10.23/issue) 12 Issues- Amazon
World of Interiors- $103.09 ($8.59/issue) 12 Issues- Amazon
Elle Interior (Sweden) $127.99 ($12.80/issue) 10 Issues –Amazon
House And Home (Canada) $21.63 ($1.80/issue) 12 Issues – Amazon
Marie Claire Maison – (France) $57.07 ($7.13/issue) 8 Issues- Amazon
House & Garden – (England) $91.63 ($7.64/issue) 12 Issues – Amazon
Homes & Antiques- $59.90 ($4.99/issue) 12 Issues – Amazon
The English Home– $32.75 ($5.46/issue) 6 Issues- Amazon



5 Homes Decorated Around The Nordic Style
New Orleans invid Mälaren- Skona Hem
Country House Inspired After New Orleans -One hundred and fifty meters from Lake Mälaren is 1800-century house whose decor is inspired after the famous city of New Orleans. Kristina Spur found the house 11 years ago in deplorable condition. It leaked, had no electricity, water or heat. The building had been abandoned since the 1950s, and the roof was almost completely destroyed as the home had it’s original roof timbers from 1887 when the house was first built. In February 2001, she moved in with her two sons Oscar and Gustav, then 3 and 5 years old. Read more about this transformation at Skona Hem
A Swedish Seaside Home Decorated Around The Nordic Style- This Scandinavian home is surrounded by rocks and sea. The owner, Jacob is an architect followed in his forefathers steps, as his ancestor designed the the library in 1760, at the Royal Palace in Stockholm. His home boasts huge windows, which can be seen from the ocean, and lets in a terrific amount of light, and provides an open concept with the vaulted ceilings. Interior wood paneling on the walls brightens things up. The interior decor mingles the new with the old. One of the oldest pieces in the house is a rococo sofa from 1760, which was completely refurbished. Originally featured at werandacountry.pl
Granholms Estate has been named the the Manor of the year in 2014 in the Great Gods & Farms Gala. Gransholm is also Mary and Jan Åke of Trampes private homes. Granholm’s mansion, built in 1812, has regained its original beauty. With great passion and respect for the history, the family has managed to create a modern functional home while preserving the cultural history behind the home. The mansion also serves as showroom for antiques. See the rest of the pictures in godsochgardar.se
Gotland House- When Asa Hallin and Håkan Jacobsson finally got to buy the house of Hemsedal municipality 20 years ago, it was run down and in poor condition. Håkan is a carpenter by profession, and through the process of renovating the house, they enlisted the help of another carpenter, a mason and a painter. Over a year and a half, they completely restored it back to the style resembling its original condition. Read more at lantliv.com/
Restored Home Built In 1792- There isn’t a lot of information about this last Swedish home on the internet. The home is decorated with classic Swedish distressed furniture. It is unclear how many rooms are in this house, but an obvious kitchen/ dining room has a large center table, with two rectangular side tables pushed together. Off this room, is another bedroom with a twin bed, and rustic wood chair. A children’s room is the highlight of the tour, with a painted blue doll house situated on a table, with a country style Swedish bed with draperies. A stenciled floor make this room memorable. Photography Solvie dos Santos
View the pretty pictures below:

Nordic Style Historical Interior Decorating Books – Living Museums in Scandinavia
Living Museums in Scandinavia By Per Nagel- On Amazon From $89
An inspiring, interesting and useful insight into Swedish life and interior decoration of the past. This is a lavish photographic guide to 13 historic houses in Scandinavia that have been preserved exactly as their original owners left them. They have now been opened to the public as museums.
The houses featured represent a wide range of types, from the sophisticated Jugend style to simple country dwellings, city houses and studios, and belonged to artists, architects and scientists, as well as ordinary folk. Painstakingly reconstructed and preserved with authenticity, these homes offer the reader a rare opportunity to travel back in time to experience the best in Scandinavian style, characterized by simplicity and by clarity of light and color.
From The Amazon Preview:
The museums chosen for this book are all authentic Scandinavian homes. Their distinctive common Scandinavian origin is evident in the wonderful clarity of light and colour and in the beautiful, simple living style for which Scandinavia is so well
known.
These museums also have in common that they seem especialry alive because they are still intensely reflecting the life that was once lived in them. They are all real, in
the sense that they were created by those who originally lived there. It is as though the residents have just stepped out for a moment! These homes represent a wide variety of types ranging from a sophisticated Jugend style to simple country style, and from urban houses to farms and artist’s studios. The residents have represented many social levels from famous citizens and farmers to well-known artists, architects and scientists.Because of the strong authenticity of these places, they offer us a rare opportunity of going back in time and experiencing different ways of living, and perhaps
finding inspiration for our own lives.
Photographer Per Nagel has collaborated with architect Vibe Udsen for many years in publishing the world-wide distributed architectural annual, LIVING ARCHITECTURE, which is based on his exceptional photographs of Scandinavian architecture.
In LIVING MUSEUMS IN SCANDINAVIA, Per Nagel’s evocative photographs convey the atmosphere of these old residences in such a magnificent way that the reader almost has the feeling of having been there.
Table Of Contents:
8 Melstedgard Farm House on Bornholm, Oenmark
16 Erichsens Gard Townhouse on Bornholm. Denmark
24 Hjorth’s Pottery on Bornholm. Denmark
26 Michael and Anna Ancher’s House The Artists’ Home In Skagen. Denmark
42 Holger Drachmann’s Villa Pax The Artist’s Home in Skagen. Denmark
58 Kauppila Farm House in Finland
68 Qwensel House Chemist’s Shop ana* Home in Turku. Finland
82 Hvittrask Architects Saarinen, Gesellius and Lindgren s Home in Finland
96 Carl Larsson-Garden Karin and Carl Larsson’s Home in Sundborn. Sweden
124 Zorngarden Artist Anders Zorn’s Home in Mora. Sweden
138 Carl von Linne Carl Linnaeus’ Town House and Summerplace in Uppsala. Sweden
163 Siggebohyttan Mine Owner’s House in Nora, Sweden
182 Husantunet Farm House in Alvdal. Norway

50+ Decorating Books Worth Looking At
1. Shades of Country: Designing a Life of Comfort – From $3.99 Amazon
“Shades of Country,” written by “Chippy Irvine,” masterfully presents some of America’s most beautiful, charming and fascinating country houses. It is profusely illustrated with a wealth of examples of actual American homes, some of them are derived from European country styles, but most are what we think of as typically American – east coast farmhouses, Shaker simplicity, Montana ranch and rustic Adirondack cabin. This book covers a lot of decorating territory. A few pictures of each, as well as others styles like Ranch, or French. If you are having trouble deciding on a style, this book might help you.
2. Country Living Decorating with White- From $14 Amazon
Country Living Decorating with White showcases a beautiful new vision of how to use this classic hue. Explaining the art of choosing the right shade of white and blending it with other colors and objects. Close to 150 color photographs fill this volume with captions describing successful design features and giving decorating tips. The classic motifs of white with blue or black are given primary focus, although every room of the house is shown with various color accents.
“I have wanted to change back to all white but needed ideas to avoid a completely “washed out” look. Varied surfaces, tones of paint color, accents, etc. are among suggestions that work well with white and offer many great ideas.”
3. Living Life Beautifully $14 On Amazon
Christina Strutt Living Life Beautifully tells the story of how Christina founded legendary fabric company Cabbages & Roses and grew it into a lifestyle brand. Christina talks about her inspirations and influences, and how she works these into her products. Christina gives the reader a look behind her home where she designs her fabrics, experiments with her new wallpapers, and gathers all her favorite antiques.
4. La Vie Est Belle: The Elegant Art of Living in the French Style – $18 On Amazon
The book is arranged by region and offers a privileged glimpse inside dozens of French homes, from chateaux to farmhouses, as well as the regions in which they are set. Interior colors are more simple and muted that what we use here in our American country homes
1. Country Houses Of France– From $9 On Amazon
This book introduces readers to 22 idyllic dwellings situated in some of the most beautiful regions in France. 246 illustrations.
2. Country Houses of Sweden- From $16 On Amazon
Part of Taschen’s Country Houses series, this book illustrates the magnificence of castles and manor houses of Sweden. Barbara and Rene Stoeltie journeyed through Sweden in search of exceptional houses to write about and photograph. Featuring a castle filled with family treasures, a wood built farm, a forgotten artist’s studio built on a cliff by the Baltic and the house in which Astrid Lindgren, the creator of Pippi Longstocking, was born.
“Not long after I checked this book out from the library, I was wild to own it!
The first reviewer is right — these are not “cutesy” or “quaint” old houses. In poring
over the many, many rooms and homes included in this volume, I felt I gained some understanding ofScandinavian design in general.”
3. Country Houses of Holland From $4 On Amazon
This work depicts Holland’s country houses both old and new, from castles and windmills to historic houses and reed-thatched cottages. The houses shown include Tsaar Peterhuis’ cottage, inhabited in 1697 by Peter the Great and the painter Cornelis Le Mair’s antique Far Eastern themed farmhouse.
4. Living in the Countryside From $3 On Amazon
We have tirelessly travelled through the country-sides of Sweden, Ireland, England, Holland, France, Greece, Tuscany, Majorca, and Greece in search of the best examples of rural homes which reflect the tradition and culture of their inhabitants.
5. Living in Tuscany– From $7 On Amazon
“I have owned this book for some 12 years and still not a month goes by without me leafing through its pages. The photos in this book are absolutely beautiful and stunning in their own right and can be enjoyed immensely even without using the ideas for decorating your own home. However I have done just that and I keep coming back to the lavishly presented houses in this book.”
6. Living in Ireland – From $6 On Amazon
The homes featured here live up to the most fanciful of expectations, ranging from cosy little dwellings to castles and stately homes.
7. Country Houses of Tuscany– From $6 On Amazon
Another book on Tuscany? Is it still possible to discover something new there? Barbara and Rene Stoeltie prove that it is. They have found the most beautiful country houses in the remote towns of Chiusi and Montalcino and in the Chianti and the wild Maremma region. These romantic farmhouses and isolated villas have been photographed exclusively by Rent Stoeltie for the third volume in the successful “”Country Homes”” series. Rene is a master at capturing the soft light of Tuscany which, once seen, is never forgotten. It Floods the interiors and paints cryptic messages on the uneven terracotta floor tiles
1. Colour Recipes for Painted Furniture and More – From $13 On Amazon
Annie presents 40 new projects and ideas, showing you the easy way to update tired furniture and transform your home. From Swedish hues, cosy and comforting rustic shades or an elegant French look, here you will find a project to suit you.
“I bought this book for the information on color mixing of Annie Sloan paints. It has a detailed section which uses the colors within that line of paints showing them on a color wheel and then breaks down how to mix those colors and produce other colors and shades of paint”
2. Quick and Easy Paint Transformations: 50 Step-by-step Ways to Makeover Your Home for Next to Nothing From $12 On Amazon
This book features fifty pieces of furniture, before and after pictures with step by step images of mainly furniture with a few walls and floors.
“I found this book very helpful as I learned many “Tips & Trade Secrets” that would had taken me years to learn through trial and error.”
3. Annie Sloans WorkBook– On Amazon–
Each page features a hand painted drawing or sketch as well as inspiring tips from Annie herself. Plenty of room was left for you to sketch, paste pictures or fabric that inspire you as well as blend colors of your own!
4. Creating the French Look –Buy it from $13 On Amazon
Greys, whites and linens with toile de Jouy are the most well known look but we also have chic and quirky. Parisian influence as well as the sunny and bright look from the south. In this book Annie uses her experience as an interior designer to combine the use of paint color and fabrics.to create the french look with 25 easy to follow step by steps.
1. Paint Alchemy: Recipes for Making and Adapting Your Own Paint for Home Decorating by Annie Sloan From $19 on Amazon
Mix and transform your own paints to invent colors just for you and your home–at a fraction of the cost of store-bought cans. More than 50 unique recipes, special sections offer information on how to grind pigments, basic rules for safe handling of materials, organic pigments, and how to give your paint distinct characteristics.
2. Inspirations in Painted Furniture by Annie Sloan From $8 On Amazon–
Staining, bleaching, waxing with colored waxes, stenciling, faux finishing, hand painting, stamping, distressing, wax resist, crackling, gilding and more. The book is organized into six chapters by decorating styles: Fruit and Flowers, Figures and Animals, Classical, Geometrics, Finishes, and Distressing.
3. The Practical Guide To Decorative Antique Effects by Annie Sloan From $3 On Amazon–
“Provides clear, well-illustrated instructions on a variety of decorative finishes….offers a review of the materials, with directions on application and equipment and shows how the techniques can be combined and applied to particular furniture projects…. Recommended.”—Library Journal.
4. The Painted Furniture Sourcebook: Motifs from the Medieval Times to the Present Day by Annie Sloan From $4 On Amazon-
American colonial, Dutch folk art, Irish vernacular, Scandinavian neoclassical, Oriental lacquerwork, German baroque and more–all achievable by collectors, decorators and do-it-yourselfers. For each enchanting room and object, the author reveals how the paint effect was achieved and how to recreate it in the contemporary home. A generous glossary of techniques describes the essential terms, from spattering and marbling to patinating and distressing. The book also offers a library of over 50 motifs, both classic and modern, for use as a fingertip reference or for on-the-spot tracing.
More Annie Sloan Books:
Annie Sloan Decorative Gilding: A Practical Guide by Annie Sloan-
Gilding includes instructions for applying metal leaf and using bronze powders, while Paint Effects covers sponging, marbling, rag rolling, and the like. Each book begins with a photographic overview of the techniques and continues with directions. Captioned photographs illustrate the basic technique and variations, and a “Pitfalls” section shows common mistakes and how to avoid them.
Annie Sloan Decorative Decoupage: A Practical Guide by Annie Sloan
The Practical Guide to Decorative Antique Effects by Annie Sloan-Applying a variety of ideas from colorwashing to decoupage, a detailed reference demonstrates how inexpensive furniture and objects can be made to look like antiques while providing tips on equipment, surfaces, and more
Classic paints & faux finishes by Annie Sloan, Kate Gwynn and Geoff Dann- Step-by-step instruction on classic decorative techniques including glazes, simple oil paint, limewash, bronze powders, decoupage, wood stains, antiquing and distressing, crackle varnish and more. This has become the standard book on decorative paint finishes.
Annie Sloan Decorative Paint Effects– Gilding includes instructions for applying metal leaf and using bronze powders, while Paint Effects covers sponging, marbling, rag rolling, and the like. Each book begins with a photographic overview of the techniques and continues with directions. Captioned photographs illustrate the basic technique and variations, and a “Pitfalls” section shows common mistakes and how to avoid them
Annie Sloan Decorative Wood Finishes: This book covers many aspects of wood finishing from painting to polishing.
1. The English Country House– From $36 On Amazon
The English Country House takes a look at the architecture and interiors of sixty-two stunning houses in a range of architectural styles spanning seven centuries—from the medieval Stokesay Castle to the newly built, Lutyens-inspired Corfe Farm—brought to life through the world-renowned photography library of Country Life. 400 Color Photographs
2. New French Country: A Style and Source Book From $9 On Amazon
“Of the many books I’ve read and collected on French Country style and decorating, this is the best and most thorough. The book is set up into categories and is concise, beautifully depicted in large color photos, with accompanying text. NOT a coffee table book, but a true reference book for French Country decorating.”
3. English Country House Interiors – From $31 Amazon
Jeremy Musson was the architectural editor of Country Life from 1998 to 2007. nglish Country Houses are featured celebrating diverse styles beginning with the Jacobean, traveling through the Baroque, Palladian, Regency, Gothic Revival to the Victorian. For lovers of Palladio and Adam, English Country House Interiors is a real feast.
4. One Man’s Folly: The Exceptional Houses of Furlow Gatewood From $41 Amazon
Four houses, fourteen acres and forty peacocks, along with a sweet menagerie of cats and dogs, gardens, and outbuildings (including a peacock hospital) compose Furlow Gatewood’s compound in Americus, Georgia. Furlow bought his first antique treasures, milk glass chickens, from his paper route earnings eight decades ago and hasn’t stopped collecting since. This book features the splendor of his collections. His homes have been built to house his treasures including antique furniture, salvaged doors, mantels, windows and shutters.
“This book gives the reader so many lessons in style and correctness of scale and correct material use . A million words could not convey the schooling that these pictures will give you . I have a huge library on architecture and design and this one is my favorite”
5. A Kitchen in France: A Year of Cooking in My Farmhouse From $21 Amazon
When Mimi Thorisson and her family moved from Paris to a small town in out-of-the-way Médoc, she did not quite know what was in store for them. She found wonderful ingredients—from local farmers and the neighboring woods—and, most important, time to cook. Her cookbook chronicles the family’s seasonal meals and life in an old farmhouse, all photographed by her husband, Oddur.
6. My Paris Kitchen: Recipes and Stories From $17 On Amazon
A collection of stories and 100 sweet and savory French-inspired recipes from popular food blogger David Lebovitz, reflecting the way Parisians eat today and featuring lush photography taken around Paris and in David’s Parisian kitchen.
7. Charleston Architecture and Interiors From $9 On Amazon
Here is a chance to see inside the private homes of beautiful, historic Charleston, South Carolina. Each chapter covers one home, all of which are private homes, with the exception of one museum house. Lovely full-page photographs illustrate both exterior and interior of each of 15 featured houses from the Colonial, Federal and Greek Revival periods.
8. Italian Rustic: How to Bring Tuscan Charm into Your Home From $9 On Amazon
Within its 226 pages lie the secrets of traditional Italian craftsmanship, which can be applied to your own house regardless of where you live. Want to redo your kitchen with a wood-beamed ceiling? There’s an entire chapter devoted to the subject. The author even provides resources for hard to find items in America (you aren’t going to find brick or terra cotta roofing material at Home Depot or Walmart.
1. The Art of Faux: The Complete Sourcebook of Decorative Painted Finishes From $27 On Amazon
“This is the most complete guide to faux painting I have found. There are excellent step-by-step instructions accompanied by full-color photos for each technique. A vast array of beautiful & impressive faux techniques follow. My favorites were the red tortoiseshell tile & mosaic effects.”
“After looking through well over a dozen different and popular books on fauz painting/faux finishes this was the only one that was worth purchasing. It is the most complete guide that anyone could find in my opinion. Pierre covers just about every finish imagineable (glazing, crackle, colorwash, patina, sponging on and off, several faux marbling and wood finish techniques, as well as many others).”
2. Professional Painted Finishes: A Guide to the Art and Business of Decorative Painting From $2 On Amazon
“This is a wonderfully thorough book on creating the highest quality specialty painted finishes. It is advanced enough for the serious decorative painter while the instructions are detailed enough to allow the amateur or novice to try these techniques with outstanding results. The projects are more sophisticated and time-consuming than those in most books. A great deal attention is paid to tiniest details that make these finishes really stand out.”
Other Faux Painting Books
The Painted Ceiling: Over 100 Original Designs and Details
The Painted Furniture Sourcebook
Revisiting the Painted House: More Than 100 New Designs for Mural and Trompe L’Oeil Decoration
Good, Better, Best: Trade Secrets for Spotting a “Find” From $3.99 On Amazon
Carol Prisant wrote the popular ?Good, Better, Best? column for House Beautiful for several years. Good, Better, Best coaches antiques novices and devotees in choosing the highest quality items, featuring three photographs depicting a good, better, and best example of hundreds of antiques to distinguish the treasure from the less desirable version. Packed with more than two hundred full-color photographs and illustrations, this ingenious handbook is also broad in scope, covering everything from brass doorstops and porcelain plates to silver napkin rings and furniture from America and Europe. Sharing tips for deciphering a manufacturer?s initials, spotting a fake, and much more, Good, Better, Best makes it easy to learn what to look for and what to avoid.
1. Inspired You: Breathing New Life into Your Heart and Home – From $8 On Amazon
Thousands have found inspiration at Marian’s blog, missmustardseed.com, and now she shares dozens of new projects, ideas, and DIY adventures in the pages of Inspired You. Marian will remind you that homes don’t have to be magazine material to be special, comfortable, and inviting. The goal you’re working toward is home. Not a perfect home.
2. Young House Love: 243 Ways to Paint, Craft, Update & Show Your Home Some Love -From $4 On Amazon
This debut book by bloggers Sherry and John Petersik is filled with hundreds of fun, deceptively simple, budget-friendly ideas for sprucing up a home. With two home renovations under their (tool) belts, 5 million blog hits per month, and an ever-growing audience since the launch of Young House Love in 2007, Sherry and John are home-improvement enthusiasts primed to pass on a slew of projects, tricks, and techniques to do-it-yourselfers of all levels.
3. The Handbuilt Home: 34 Simple Stylish and Budget-Friendly Woodworking Projects for Every Room From $12 Amazon
Woodworking projects from Ana White, the popular blogger who has inspired millions of homemakers with her stylish furniture plans and DIY spirit. As a young mom on a tight budget, Ana learned to make her own well-designed pieces inspired by the styles in her favorite stores—saving thousands of dollars in the process. Now, in this reference for woodworkers of all skill levels, Ana shares everything she has learned along the way.
4. The Nesting Place: It Doesn’t Have to Be Perfect to Be Beautiful From $12 Amazon
“I would start off by saying that this book wasn’t what I expected, but I feel like I’m constantly having that reaction when I pick up a non-fiction book. I thought this book would be a little more “put this colour with this colour” or “this style looks great in this area” or perhaps some great inspiration on how to find hidden gems at thrift stores. Instead, this book was more about appreciating your home for its imperfections. Stop dreaming and comparing your home to those in magazines and on blogs, you need to love your home how it is, and grow from there.
In the beginning of the book, the author takes you through the story of each of the 13 homes she’s had since she married her husband. She shares her mistakes as a first time home buyer and her stories of living in a scary neighborhood and living in dream homes. She also shares her experiences from having money to barely scraping by. It is all these experiences that have helped her to love the home she lives in. To top it off, she is actually currently renting. So you don’t need to be a homeowner to make your home all fancy”
4. 501 Decorating Ideas Under $100 (Better Homes and Gardens Home)- From $7 On Amazon
“Several of the projects appealed to my tastes and style. It got my creative wheels turning and enjoyed every second of reading and flipping through it, even the things that weren’t “me” were still very interesting.”
“This special issue from BH&G is a gem. There are tons of ideas that are not hard to do and that sparked my imagination”
6. The Perfectly Imperfect Home: How to Decorate and Live Well– From $12 On Amazon
Over the years, founding editor in chief of domino magazine Deborah Needleman has seen all kinds of rooms, with all kinds of furnishings. Ranging from classics such as “A Really Good Sofa” and “Pretty Table Settings” to unusual surprises like “A Bit of Quirk” and “Cozifications,” whether you are at a flea market or a fancy boutique—or just mining what you already own.
1. Classical Interiors: Historical and Contemporary From $48 On Amazon
A fresh perspective on the work of the most important figures of classical design from the seventeenth century to the present. Classical Interiors: Historical and Contemporary, a spectacular presentation of the myriad varieties of classical forms, demonstrates the enduring lessons of traditional interiors for designers and architects today
“This book blew me away. The collection of photo and accompanying text are excellent, comprehensive and amazing. The printing is also excellent. The variety of classical locations is extensive. This book is a very welcome addition to my collection of classical architecture and decoration.”
2. Governors Mansions of the South From $21 On Amazon
From the Greek Revival architecture found in Mississippi to the Queen Anne style of North Carolina, governors’ mansions in the American South convey a passion for antiquity, as well as a regional elegance.
3. Linda Applewhites Architectural Interiors Transforming Your Home with Decorative Structural Elements From $4 On Amazon
Architectural Interiors offers creative solutions such as adding a column or pillar to define a space, installing unusual cabinetry to give structure, adding a set of elaborate moldings for extra elegance, or installing French doors to connect a room to the garden.
4. Perfect English- From $25 On Amazon
At its grandest it is a stately home furnished with antiques, but the houses featured in this book are country cottages, farmhouses, townhouses and flats. The book’s chapters, Plain English, English Eccentric, English Rose, English Country House, and Classic English reflect the many facets of English style.
5. Imagined Interiors Representing the Domestic Interior since the Renaissance From $14 On Amazon
“Imagined Interiors” deals with both public and private attitudes to the domestic interior, and features everything from grand decorative schemes to homely cottages.
The Renaissance provides enthusiasts with an informed and informative historical survey of how the home has been depicted in western art over the last 500 years. Illustrated with 260 full-color illustrations.
6. At home in Renaissance Italy From $123 On Amazon
At Home in Renaissance Italy draws together an impressive range of ideas and objects—from sumptuous paintings and textiles to kitchen utensils, popular prints, jewelry, and everyday dress—to reveal how the homes of the upper and middle classes made a crucial contribution to the flowering of the visual arts in 15th- and 16th-century Italy.
7. Great Houses of Europe: From the Archives of Country Life From $42 On Amazon
Spectacular plasterwork; original wallpapers, fabrics, and furniture; and in tact art collections—and include feudal castles, royal summer palaces, hunting lodges, and pleasure pavilions, often set in equally fine gardens and parks. This volume presents 200 masterful images complemented by revealing narrative that offers insights into the history of these remarkable houses. From the dramatic Swedish post-Renaissance Castle Stokloster—with arguably the finest interiors in Europe—to the extraordinary Villa Kerylos on the French Riviera and the Venetian Palazzo Abruzzi
8. Historic Houses of Virginia: Great Plantation Houses, Mansions, and Country Places – From $32 On Amazon
The treasures of American heritage are showcased in this volume range in time from the seventeenth century to the twentieth, and include such peerless masterpieces as Colonial Williamsburg’s Governor’s Palace, George Washington’s Mt. Vernon, Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, Robert E. Lee’s Arlington House, and Stratford Hall Plantation
1. Irish Furniture From $74 On Amazon
This book encompassing everything from medieval choir stalls to magnificent drawing-room suites for the great houses—from earliest times to the end of the eighteenth century.
2. Making Authentic Country Furniture With Measured Drawings of Museum Classics (Dover Woodworking) From $3 On Amazon
Extensively researched, profusely illustrated book explores principal elementary antique country furniture designs used in North America over the past 400 years — with English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, French, Dutch, German, Spanish and Norwegian influences represented. 95 measured drawings for constructing candlestand, pedestal table, rocker, corner cupboard, cradle, armoire, many more.
3. French Interiors of the 18th Century From $65 On Amazon
“I loved this book which really is a great survey of French 18th century decorative arts. Using engravings, paintings, and pictures of objects, the book divides the decorative arts into chapter categories (porcelain, silver, glass, painting, etc.) and attempts to fit their development into the larger development of French interior design.”
4. The Splendor of Roman Wall Painting From $31 On Amazon
Visitors to the former residences of wealthy ancient Romans cannot help but be astonished by their grand architecture and enchanting wall paintings, still vibrant with cinnabar reds, golden yellows, and deep greens.
5. The Finest Rooms In America – From $19 On Amazon
The Finest Rooms in America: 50 Influential Interiors from the 18th Century to the Present is a selection by Thomas Jayne, one of America’s best decorators and scholars of American design. This book covers a broad range of American periods and styles, beginning with the Tea Room at Jefferson’s Monticello and continuing to the present, concluding with Albert Hadley’s modern sitting room.
Among those featured are the dressing room at Vizcaya in Miami, the living room at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House in Los Angeles, the dining room at the Saarinen House at Cranbrook Michigan, and the living room by Frances Elkins at Casa Amesti in Monterey, California. Prominent contemporary designers include Bunny Williams, John Saladino and Albert Hadley.
6. French Interiors: The Art of Elegance – From $25 On Amazon
Christiane de Nicolay-Mazery, a specialist in furniture and antiques at Christies and Honelon, invites her readers to enter the elegantly luxurious interiors of some of France’s most exclusive abodes. From the classic taste of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to the creativity of the nineteenth century, she traces the path to the finesse of the twentieth century, which combines tradition and modernity. The interiors portrayed in these nine exquisitely illustrated chapters pay tribute to the refinement of French taste, a savoir-faire that has been continually renewed.
7. Paris Flea Market Style- From $13 On Amazon
Claudia Strasser takes us on a winding tour through the Parisian flea markets finding decorative pieces all along the way. Strasser discusses ways to bring the look to your home by building collections and looking for furniture and accessories to reflect your individual style whether it’s Napoleon III, Louis XV, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Moderne or Belle Epoque.
8. Romantic Irish Homes– From $11 On Amazon
“I always thought I was eclectic antique in my decorating. After seeing this I realized my Irish roots are showing through in my home even though I never lived there.”
“I highly recommend this lovely and enchanting volumne to anyone who loves gorgeous rustic period trappings in Tradional, Contemporary, and Artistic abode spaces.”
1. Aged to Perfection Adding Rustic Charm to Your Modern Home Inside and Out – From $4 On Amazon
This guide reveals the secrets to adding old-world charm and character to any home-even newly constructed houses. From heirloom furniture to classic window treatments, ideas abound for creating a beautiful rustic effect. Add simple architectural details such as crown molding. Or try paint techniques like crackling, mosaics, and staining to keep a new house from seeming too new.
West Swedish Castles And Manor Houses- Author Björn Höglund
Beautiful book for anyone interested in history, architecture and dramatic life stories, except you simply cannot buy it on Amazon, ebay, Ebay Sweden or anywhere else for that matter!
A bit about the book
This book visists thirty manors in Bohuslän, Halland and Västergötland both private homes and historical buildings.
This is the first book that takes a comprehensive approach to castles and manor houses in the three western Swedish provinces. Today there is a strong and growing interest in local history and western Sweden as a tourist destination. This book is an excellent guide for future trips, and to each castle and manor is a related fact box with concise information that guides the reader for future trips!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Björn Höglund is active as a writer and cultural journalist in Gothenburg. He has previously written quiz books, guidebooks, textbooks in social studies and history as well as the book about pet games’ history all play games (2009). Bjorn also works for SVT and has written questions on the track and Fifteen to One
Krister Engström studied film and photography at Göteborg University and currently works as a freelance photographer. He has been involved as a photographer of the books in time, the place, the architecture (2010) and Stationshus (2009).
The Swedish Room Lars Sjöberg $15 On Amazon
Lars Sjöberg is well known for his Swedish guides on Gustivian interiors and 18th and 19th century swedish furniture. Sjöberg is a curator of the National Museum of Stockholm. Lars Sjöberg has made it his life’s work to preserve Swedish manor houses that originated out of the 17th and 18th centuries. Over 40 years he has acquired over 8 homes from around Sweden.
Well known for his in depth knowledge about Swedish history, he has transformed many grand homes around Sweden with the help of his wife Ursula, and father whom was a metal smith and skilled in the carpentry trade.
The Swedish Room” written in 94, with his wife Ursula is still one of the very best books on Swedish decorating and current considering it is more than a decade old. This wonderful book features 192 pages of great attention to detail of the many ornate finishes found in Swedish decorating. This book is a must have for any decorative artist or faux- finisher. The interiors selected for this book are simple ones with soft color schemes, washed plastered walls, pickled floors, and certainly authentic 18th century interiors. The homes all feature a cleaner, pared-down look with not a lot of clutter which you would normally see see in french homes, but rather very carefully selected objects that are neoclassical in nature. Sjöberg’ features stately homes, which appear to be palaces or mansions in nature, but with simplistic interiors. Swedish impressions from farms and cottages with higher end furnishings can inspire any person who is after the grander looks but with a natural appeal.
The most impressive of this book is his Ekensberg home which is located on the banks of the Lake Mälaren, about 40 km away from the Swedish capital Stockholm. This three-story Italianate villa built in 1788-90 feature some of the most stunning pictures. Layers of wallpaper were removed which revealed late eighteenth century decorations. Lars Sjöberg has continued renovating this house since 1976 and says the work is never finished!
The book is split up into 5 main sections detailing specific periods of Swedish history.
Section 1- The Stirrings of International Style discusses the impact of the French and Italian Baroque of the period between 1640-1720.
Section 2- New Alignments discuss the Late Baroque and the Influence of the Orient, and England through 1720- 1750.
Section 3- Progressive Refinements discuss the spread of the French Rococo throgu the period of 1750- 1770.
Section 4- Elegance and Enlightenment discuss the Gustavuan style thriugh 1770-1790
Section 5 discuss the influence of Neoclassicalism and the French Empire which took place between 1790- 1820
Addtional sections discuss painters in Dalarna, Halsingland and Gastrikland, with a section that details resortation and recreating period homes.
A Dallas, Texas Home Decorated Around The Swedish Style
Featured twice in Veranda, this utterly unique home contains 1610 square feet, decorated in the Swedish, Nordic decorating style. The current owner transformed this cottage into a Swedish oasis in the heart of West Highland Park, Dallas, featuring fabulous finishes and extraordinary workmanship.
Calcutta marble adorns the open kitchen and bathroom, while antique French stone mantles create a warm ambiance. Large French doors with double-paned glass add to a light and bright interior. Several interior doors were specifically picked out in European antique markets and imported. The kitchen was designed for serious cooking and includes top appliances with room to entertain guests. The brick patio was built on pier and beam foundation for future expansion, or to be enjoyed exactly as it is.
This property is listed under 4611 Arcady Avenue, for $879,000, MLS #12170512 at Briggsfreeman.com
3 Houses Decorated Around The Rustic Swedish Style
1. Cotswold’s Barn Conversion comes from Light Locations. Inside, the home is saturated with shades of whites. Take notice of it’s whitewashed rustic oak beams, the neutral decor scheme and open plan interior. Decorated around minimal decor, this home has rustic furniture, industrial pendant lights, linen bedding and furniture and huge picture windows.
See more of this home at Light Locations
2. A Chattahoochee River Home, decorated by designer Amy Morris, was seen in Atlanta Home Magazine. This home is decorated around the neutral palette, with soft creamy whites and touches of gray, green and blue. In the entry hall, we see the start of a theme that continues throughout the house…. “Rustic and elegant“. A herringbone-patterned brick flooring, combined with country distressed furniture is very welcoming. What makes this house appear warm and cozy are the fabric choices and old world color choices. One of the designer’s favorite style secrets involves using outdoor fabric in busy rooms…… “I typically use a polyester, which looks like natural velvet,” she says. It looks great and no one knows.”
View more of this interview in Atlanta Home Magazine
View Designer Amy Morris Interiors
3. Ginger Barber’s Rugged Texas Home. This home was featured in House Beautiful‘s July 2009 issue. As you enter her 180-acre property you see a beautiful white farmhouse, which is Ginger’s main house, and across the pasture, is her 1850s guesthouse.
When they decided to renovate the guest house, they worked with an open design scheme. It has a combined family and dining room, along with a master bedroom and bathroom.
She choose to work with a soft creamy gray for the color scheme. Going with a lighter color palette helps the rooms feel bigger. In addition to keeping it brighter, they boarded every wall with reclaimed wood and whitewashed the boards for warmth.
Ginger Barber On Lived-In Rooms
On Patina “A nice wide table with the paint peeling off. It’s got great lack-of-paint, doesn’t it? I love chipped painted things; they feel more natural, softer, more inviting. And that washedout Swedish cupboard in the main house’s living room is so wonderfully dull—I love that, too. I’ll even take a new piece and work on the finish to get the look I want. If you look at that pine table in the main house, you’ll see it’s stripped raw, rosy raw. I used white chairs around it because I love the back and forth of crisp white against old and worn”
On Slipcovers- “Again, you’ve got to live. You’ve got to be ready to throw the slipcovers in the wash andbe done with it. My work is 90 percent slipcovers. I mean, this family’s got two Jack Russell terriers, and they’re always on the furniture.”
Simple Linens- “I think a person gets sick of a floral sofa in six months, tops. And in a small space it probably takes even less time to get tired of too much color. The accessories are what give a shot of color to my work, and their shapes and textures add personality. A simple purple-striped coverlet does amazing things for a white bedroom like this guest room, doesn’t it?”
View more of this article in House Beautiful Magazine
View Designer Ginger Barber

3 Swedish Style Homes Featured In Magazines
I have been holding on to Veranda’s November / December 2011 issue which featured an 18th century manor situated in Sabylund, 2 hours west of Stockholm. Built in 1780’s in the Gustavian aesthetic, the house has stayed virtually intact as it was back in the 18th century.
In the red room, chalky white finished chairs with gilt wood embellishments are covered in Chinese red damask. A Swedish day bed functions as a sofa and a bed, and is accompanied by a table surrounded by Gustavian white painted chairs. A Swedish Kakelugn stove has gold painted garlands on the tile. A number of small rectangular portraits hang on the wall.
In the main room, light blue painted walls are framed with wall moldings, and hand painted garlands add a romantic feel to the walls. Sheer drapery allows the light to come into this room. A settee and Louis XVI chairs with a blue and white stripe slipcovers form a seating area with a Empire table and crisp white tablecloth. A pale light blue and white scheme pull together a soft, yet delicate look for this room. A pink rug, and lighter pink upholstery seen on the backs of the chairs offer up a subdued, yet tender room to lounge in. Large gilt oval portraits add a historical feel to the room.
A grand library filled with the owners original books offered a taste of the high life. Books were so much more valuable in the 17th and 18 century, and having a library filled with them, suggests the owners were well off. A 1799 white stucco medallion mounted on a simple wood frame depicts the houses first owner. A Dutch or German table centers the room, with English cane chairs backed to the books. Swedish pewter candlesticks sit on the table, along with a brass telescope for viewing nature. The shelves are painted in a blue/ gray, houses natural leather books adding such rich contrast. Furniture is left in it’s natural wood, which adds a rustic effect.
“The most interesting thing about this house is that it has actually been lived in all these years” says Johan who owns the house. His wife Ingrid Lagerfelt and their two children live in this home currently. Their ancestor inherited the house from the original brother and sister who built the home. Johan is a doctor, and his wife Ingrid farms the estates 2,500 acres of land.
More from Veranda:
- Swedish Design Inspiration – Veranda.com
- Eugenia’s Swedish Shopping Resources – Veranda.com
- Swedish Country Interiors -Book Review – Veranda.com
- Swedish Antique 18th Century Daybed – Juan Montoya
- Winter Warmth – Veranda.com
Johan and Ingrid Lagerfelt’s Home In Veranda
Johan and Ingrid Lagerfelt’s Home In Veranda
An Up-close and Detailed Look At The Wall Painting
House Beautiful first captured our interest in this Swedish styled home decorated by Carol Glasser and Katrin Cargill. The home bathed in blues with Swedish-style home by Carol Glasser Interiors.
This home was originally decorated around an English country style, and featured in Country Living magazine in the 1990’s.
Later the homeowners decided their taste had changed, and they wanted an 18th century look focused on the styles found in Sweden.
To start this process, everything in the house was sold, as they started the process of decorating their home, completely from scratch. It wasn’t just a change of furniture and a little bit of paint, but rather the house’s walls were taken down to their studs and every thing was given a new facelift, -the roof, floors, windows and walls.
Carol Glasser decided to work with Swedish Style expert Katrin Cargill who brought the eye for authenticity.
In the living room sits a classic style Swedish painted sofa, while on the other side of the room gives the room a modern twist with a Charles sectional from B&B Italia. Walls show off a rustic look with painted planks with a faux chair rail. Antiques in this room are beautiful in their original paint. A French Directoire mantel and Swedish tea table and armchair make the perfect 18th century sitting area. These pictures came from Katrin Cargill’s website and are updated shots of the home.
More From House Beautiful
- Furniture Now — Swedish Fantasy – House Beautiful
- Gustavian Corner Cupboard – Island Decorating Style
- Decorating in Antique Blues – House Beautiful
- Swedish Paint Colors – House Beautiful
- Swedish Country Style – Swedish Cottage – House Beautiful
- Hamptons Beach House – Swedish Design Home
- Scandinavian Design Advice – Swedish Style
- Swedish-Style Kitchen – House Beautiful
Swedish-style home by Carol Glasser Interiors.
View all the details behind these Swedish Paint Colors at Home Beautiful
The Devoted Classicist featured the country manor home of Baron Henric Falkenberg, which is located in western Sweden on the shore of Lake Vanern in Varmland province. The property was featured in an article by Miguel Flores-Vianna with photos by Fernando Bengoechea in the April, 2000, issue of Elle Decor magazine.
The house itself was completed in 1774 by master carpenter Johan Georg Reincke, and has been in the Baron’s family since the late 19th century. It has been mentioned that this estate to has over 1,000 acres of property! In the photo below of the billiard room, a portrait gallery features of the baron’s ancestors, and portrait paintings of the original owners of Varmlands Saby hang above a Dutch armoire in the dining room. See more at The Devoted Classicist Blog
More From Elle Decor
- Modern Swedish Style – Elle Decor
- House Tour: Modern Swedish Style – Elle Decor
- Swedish Revival – ELLE DECOR
- Cottage Industry: Architect Gert Wingardh’s Gothenburg Home
More From The Devoted Classicist
- The Devoted Classicist: New Library of Reclaimed Pine
- The Devoted Classicist: Mellon-White Townhouse
- The Devoted Classicist: Roger Prigent’s Paris Pied A Terre

5+ Nordic Homes Decorated Around White
The Swedish interior decoration magazine Skona Hem had a wonderful write up on an English family who transformed their home into that of a Gustavian period style.
The home is largely based around a white palette, anchored by distressed wood floors which create a down to earth family feel. While many of us wouldn’t have access to an authentic Swedish tiled stove, we can incorporate the lines of the furniture that were seen through this time frame.
What To Look For….
– Straight Or Curvy Lines– Look for Rococo, Louis XVI furniture that has straight lines. Look for straight chests which you can add round ornate pulls, and round keyholes to. Victorian furniture also can be painted and re-upholstered to achieve that Swedish appeal.
– Mix And Match Styles– Don’t be afraid of mixing in a variety of country and formal styled furniture. You can see in this home, mixing and matching is very appealing.
– Go Authentic With Patterns- Work with country throws, and rugs to bring in the authentic patterns of Sweden.
– Wallpaper Is A Great Investment– Wallpaper can really transform a room, as seen in this home. Go for white based wallpaper with a geometrical or floral based patterns.
-Lighter Everything– Work with lighter colored fabrics, with an airy feel. Go for thinner fabrics for the summer, and collect natural based thicker wools for the winter time.
– Faux Painting and Stenciling- Create faux molding with paint. Here we frames on the walls, used in combination with stencils to give a whimsical, feminine look to the walls. As you can see, they pick a very light blue for the frames, and all the stenciling is done in a couple shades lighter and darker than the base wall colors. This look is very easy on the eyes.
– Crystal Chandeliers Everywhere– Chandeliers can really make a difference. In this home, almost every room has a crystal chandelier. Get the Swedish look by changing out your light fixtures to something more classic. It will instantly change the space.
Carolina Rediviva Building, Uppsala University Library (Uppsala, Sweden)
Swedish in Connecticut via Robert Couturier
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
ELLE Russia Decoration July-Aug issue featured a manor house, Gelskov Gods, on the island of Funen in Denmark. The house featured a classic nordic style home with a stripped down, very moderate decorating scheme. The home featured a masterful mixture of baroque, rococo furniture in a clean white and gray based interior.
Anette and Heine Robert Dahl used to live in Copenhagen, but in the spring of 2009 they moved to Gelskov, in this Manor on Funen where they also hold exhibitions, display antiques and flea market finds which they offer for sale. The home also functions as a bed & breakfast.
Gelskov Gods
Gelskovvej 10
Hillerslev
5750 Ringe
Tel.+45 26638094
Get The Look Of Their House…….
-Layer Shades Of Gray – Go for a shade of gray on the walls, and add architectural accents in a painted shade that is a couple shades lighter than the walls. Create straight lines near the ceiling that mimic architectural molding.
– Black Works As An Accent In A White/ Gray Toned Home- In a color scheme like this, black can really give that pop that you need. If your not crazy about black, go with charcoal, or a really saturated tone of gray. Colors like rusty orange, gold, gilt finishes really work in the opposite color spectrums. Add gilt wood mirrors on the walls, decorate with rusty metal accents. Go for an additional color for a pop here and there through your room.
– Keep Your Collections In One Area– In the picture below you can see a bookcase, or shelf holding a variety of white tableware. Collections can look interesting, and when they are paired or displayed in one area, it can give your house an organized look, without it being overwhelming. Here you can see the house has a lot of contents, but they choose to house the collections.
– Add A Variation Of Color In A Different Tone– In one of the hallway’s open areas, you can see a shade of lighter colored pink on the walls, which brings life to the area. If you choose to have a home based around the gray tones, add some subtle colors here or there to warm it up. You can see they do that with the color green on the trumeau mirror in the hallway. It goes with gray, but it isn’t black, black, black. A hint of blue, green or red in the undertones can make a difference in a theme that is based around the same color; in this case gray.
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
Gelskov Gods, a manor house on the island of Funen in Denmark
It is always fun discovering blogs from around the world. The Norwegian Interiors & Inspiration Blog posted some wonderful pictures of a Swedish villa strongly inspired by the typical Swedish Gustavian style. The pictures are taken by the Danish photographer Mikkel Adsbol. It seems as though there are a variety of pictures taken on this home which shed a light on the various rooms throughout the house. A Bit of Everything Sometimes Blog also featured some wonderful pictures. Of the rooms, the washed wood floors, and various Swedish furniture reflect a Gustavian direction in this residence. The bedroom has a slight hue of lilac, as well as the child’s bedroom which seems to have Swedish motifs painted on the walls.
Living Inside also features some lovely pictures of this home.
A Renovated Log House Decorated Around White- Seen On expressen
Modern Furniture In A Castle In Denmark –DH Design & Co
Modern Furniture In A Castle In Denmark –DH Design & Co
Modern Furniture In A Castle In Denmark –DH Design & Co
Modern Furniture In A Castle In Denmark –DH Design & Co
The Norwegian Blog Ernashus posted some striking pictures from Swedish Wlfsta Goods of a Swedish styled interior with some unexpected rustic elements you normally don’t find in the blue and white typical Swedish room that is often shown. In fact, the Swedish style isn’t one that fits in a box, there are so many diverse ways to Swedish decorating, that there are no general rules. Although I am enlighted to see some new variations on the style.
There isn’t too much about this home. This 19th century Swedish home was once neglected, and brought back to life. The brick home with it’s characteristic sloping roof and eaves gives off a very unique impression. The expansive lawn and gardens are accented with a matching gazebo.
Borrow Looks From This Home
There isn’t much on this home. The original article was featured on weranda.pl/…..
This home is spectacular. A great home to borrow ideas from for a white based interior.
Borrow Elements From This Home:
– Have You Ever Seen One Canopy Tying To Beds Together? – Why not? We often see traditional canopies above a single bed. In this case, the home owners decide to use one canopy over two beds. Decide if you like the look. Look at avidekiotthon.hu, ahouseromance.blogspot.com for additional pictures.
– Hire A Faux Artist For A Mural– A mural can really bring the flavor of 18th century living into your home. Hire someone who paints for a living to get it just right, and you will find yourself looking at it for years to come.
– Go For A Pop Of Color- Red is a color to use in moderation, and this home uses it right. We see a classic French chair upholstered in red, with a few throws in this saturated tone.
– Go For A Shade That Is Off White– Pure white can often be too bright, but mix it with a bit of yellow, red, or blue, and it can take on a totally different life. In this home, a warmer look is achieved by mixing in yellow undertones. For cooler tones, work with purples and blues. They add in green grays, and muddy reds to the mix which also work with the warmer color palette.
– Invest in Art Work That Speaks To You– Maybe you love botanicals, or framed embroidery….what ever it is, hang it up and draw attention to it.
– Open Up Your Hutch– Let people see your collections. If you have a bookcase or armoire with doors, open them up. These pieces can really be centerpieces in a room.
– Leave Some Pieces In Their Raw Wood State- If you plan on decorating around white, leave a few pieces in their raw wood. Strip off the existing paint, and work with the plain wood- all natural. Go for an accent chair, or a couple accessories in plain wood. You will see it will go a long way in a home based around white.



Antique Swedish Dealer Jane Moore’s Home Veranda Magazine

Veranda featured a wonderfully Swedish home way back in their March 08 issue of a home designed by Jane Moore. This home was also featured in the book Swedish Country Interiors by Rhonda Eleish & Edie Van Breems which was published in 2009. Indulge Decor Blog put together a terrific job of comparing the home in each of the publications, and noted what changed and what did not.
This home was decorated in both Swedish and French antiques. Among all the antiques that stood out were the chairs which were featured in the house. The chairs sitting in the living room, have detailing paint in light blue, which perfectly contrasts the sandy colored linen.
Swedish rococo chairs are paired with a check upholstered couch and feature a heavily distressed paint finish with colors of green. In the sitting area, a pale blue rug seems to be the perfect choice to add color amongst simple Swedish rococo chairs. This room is simple and elegant, and the furniture seems to add so much of the interest in this room.
About Jane Moore:
Those who follow the Swedish and French decorating circles know all about Jane Moore. Her interior designs have been admired for years. Jane Moore is an interior designer and antiques importer from Houston. Early in Jane’s career she imported primarily English antiques. It wasn’t until she traveled to France that she fell in love with the Provence style. Impressed by the cottages and farmhouses, it influenced her whole design compass. She later traveled to Sweden and found more of the humble countryside she saw in France.
“Everything was so simple. They copied from the French, but in a more rustic way. I loved that.”
Jane Moore’s work has been published in Veranda Magazine and Southern Accents Magazine more than once. Her work was also included in The Houses of Veranda book by former Veranda editor Lisa Newsom. Jane and Lisa Newsom are now connected by family. Jane’s daughter, Shannon, is married to Lisa’s son, Andrew, and the pair (Lisa and Andrew) own the Wisteria catalog.
Veranda featured an article titled “5 Design Tips To Live By– in which Jane Moore gave her top 5 tips when it comes to decorating.
Consider Your Environment
“One of the most important rules of decorating is to let your environment help you make decisions about your home. For example, I have always lived in Houston, where it is very hot and humid. As a result, I always pick cool colors that come from nature—soft blues, greens, grays—because when I come in out of the heat, I want to be refreshed. Wherever I am, I look outside and bring that in”
Edit Your Home, and Keep Only Things That Work With Your Current Style
“In each stage of life, we have different needs. Many of us want to keep holding on to things from each stage. We feel that if we hold on to what’s safe, we don’t have to deal with what’s changing.It’s hard for a lot of people to get rid of what was given to them or what they bought with their own money in their earlier stages of life. But as we grow and mature, our likes and dislikes change, and that’s okay! Don’t hold onto what doesn’t fit anymore.”
“We all love a lot of different things and different looks. Decide what you love the very most, where you feel the most comfortable, what’s the most peaceful to you. Once you’ve done that, carefully edit out what doesn’t enhance that look or feeling. I started my career doing almost all English, but as I grew to love the Provençal and Swedish aesthetics, I let go of those English things, even though I still loved them. The same goes for people with a lot of bright, colorful pieces who want to transition to something serene and neutral. With each object, ask: ‘Is this going to fit in?”
Be Who YOU Are, and Not Someone Else
“Many of us have things we don’t necessarily love, but we live with them because they have sentimental value: heirlooms, gifts, things we didn’t know how to say ‘no’ to. What I tell my clients is this: Be in the moment as it is right now. ‘It’s your moment. Let’s do what makes you happy, what makes you have a good feeling when you’re home.’ Those before us—grandmothers, mothers, friends—had their time to enjoy what they loved, but that doesn’t necessarily mean we have to love it, too.
Buy things you LOVE, LOVE, LOVE
Avoid buying what I call ‘fillers.’ Instead, buy only what you absolutely love, what you simply cannot live without. A good rule of thumb: If you see it, don’t buy it right away. Then if you keep thinking about it, go back and buy it, because you’ll always be sorry if you don’t. Most of the time it costs more than you thought you’d ever spend. Buy it anyway. A few years from now, it will be even harder to find and cost twice as much. For example, I have this 18th-century hand-carved angel on my mantle—it wasn’t anything I was looking for, but when I saw it, it just touched me. I didn’t buy it immediately, though. I thought
about it for 24 hours, and I still just had to have it. At the time, I was trying to rationalize purchasing it, thinking ‘Oh, someday my daughter will love it, or my granddaughter will love it,’ Then I thought, ‘No. I love it, and if they choose not to have it in their homes someday, that’s all right.’
Contact Jane Moore:
2930 Virginia St. Houston, Texas 77098
Phone (713) 526-6113
Jane Moore Interiors On Facebook
Gustavian Room Designed By Jane Moore Featured in Veranda March 08
Also seen on “Houstonian Great Jane Moore”- Cote de Texas
A stunning Trumeau Mirror- Seen On Veranda





Swedish Gustavian Designed by Jane Moore Featured in Veranda March 08 Featured on Cote De Texas

Swedish Gustavian Designed by Jane Moore Featured in Veranda March 08 Featured on Cote De Texas


Swedish Gustavian Decorating by Jane Moore Featured in Veranda March 08






























































