Restoration Hardware’s Gustavian Collection
Restoration Hardware never fails to impress. For some time now, they have been featuring french furniture, but have offered a line of Gothic, Modern, Colonial and Gustavian lines. There are just a few handfuls of companies who reproduce classic furniture and Restoration Hardware is one of them.
Give a person the choice of something freshly painted, and something aged with patina, they will always choose the piece that has a bit of history. Many people would rather choose something classic looking, that opt for a new design. Antiques are seen over and over in the magazines, but finding them is a different story. Magazines showcase antiques because they are often rare, and more interesting than our modern furniture, and they always offer a fresh look that isn’t seen too often.
It is nice to see a company produce an antique design with some integrity. Their Gustavian chair priced at $179 is cross between both the Swedish and French style in the 18th century. The chair is made of solid oak and has a curved top rail, shield back and comfortably upholstered seat on smoothly hand-turned, tapered legs. The French Louis XVI table is priced between $1295 – $1795 depending on the size. Gustav III brought over the french designs from France when he spent some time in Paris and Versailles, which is why most of the Swedish furniture is based on the Louis XVI styles. Hooray to Restoration Hardware, we know you have many fans!

Gustavian Medallion Collection | RH

Gustavian Spindle Back Collection
Louis Philippe Chests- A Dresser Style That Can Be Made Over To Look Expensive

I stumbled across a fantastic blog called Life in The Fun Lane the other day and I was pleasantly surprised. Don’t we all want to be in the fun lane in life? Everyday armed with a smile and jetting on the highway of happiness? Holly Baker is the author of this splashy blog, which includes pictures of her home renovations in more than a few pages of her blog.
At first glance, you can tell she has incredible taste, but you will also notice that she also isn’t afraid of getting her hands dirty as she includes several painted furniture makeovers in her own home.
After browsing through her home pictures I couldn’t help but notice the Louis Philippe chest in her home. Being a furniture painter myself, I knew these chests didn’t come with industrial pulls, and the builders options for this chest are always white, and black and cherry veneer.
So it was a nice surprise to look at her version of this terrific chest. As you can see, she took off the traditional bail pulls, and instead put on door pulls.
In the past, I have loved the way these industrial pulls have looked, but they never looked quite right on my furniture. Combining the rustic look of gray and steel just goes hand in hand.
- Ace Hardware sells 5 handles in a kit for only $12 dollars which is a bargain price.
- Stanley Hardware Utility Pull, Nickel #750098
- Utility Door Pull, in Black
- Stanley Home Designs Utility Cabinet/Door Pull, Polished Brass
- Utility Door Pull, in Zinc
- Utility Door Pull, in Black
- National Mfg. Galv Utility Door Pull
- 10 Label/card Holder Black Plated 3 1/2×1 1/2 W/screws
- 25 Label/card Holder Nickel Plated 5/8×2 1/2 W/screws
- 25 Label/card Holder Brass Plated 5/8×2 1/2 W/screws
- Card Holders (no pull) 1-1/2” x 3-1/2”, 2-Pack
- Label Holder 1/2” x 2-1/2”, pair
- Styles inspiration – 3 5/32″ long label holder in faux iron
- Label Holder 1-3/8″ X 2-5/8″ Satin Nickel W/ Pull LQ-PN1052M-SN-C
- Knape & Vogt Label Holder 2in Plus 1in
- 25 Nickel Plated Card Holders 1×1-5/8 Inches W/#2×1/4″ Screws
The Louis Philippe furniture collection features good looks with lovely clean lines and a bit of detail. If you are after a streamlined chest, this might be for you. The first time I came across a (modern) Phillipe Dresser, I just had to get it. I used to paint furniture and resell it. I personally have had the chance to buy the 6 drawer Louis Phillipe dresser twice, in addition, I have also sold a pair of the nightstands. All three sets were painted black, as all of the furniture was bought used, so they had scratches that needed to be sanded out. From my experience, let me tell you about these chests…..
The Advantages:
If you are looking for a really nice looking dresser, with classic looks, this dresser certainly pleases the eyes. It has very attractive lines, and a bit of detail in the molding around the top of the dresser.
- Powell Louis Philippe Cedar Chest
4pc Full Size Bedroom Set Louis Philippe Style in Antique White Finish
Louis Phillipe Black Bedroom Chest - 4pc Full Size Sleigh Bedroom Set Louis Philippe Style in Black Finish
Computer Desk with Hutch Louis Philippe Style in Cherry Finish
Coaster Louis Philippe Style Night Stand, Cherry Finish
The Drawbacks:
This set is made of selected hardwoods and veneers. The only draw back to these chests are they are made of composite woods, which means they are not made of solid wood. This dresser is good for staying in one place and not being moved around. I moved the dressers that I had painted, and although they didn’t damage them, it wasn’t good for them either.
This dresser does not hold up well to wear over the years. In fact, if you were to accidentally drop the chest while you were bringing it into your home, it would dent it permanently. This is what happened to one of the nightstands. We accidentally dropped it, and it bent the corners of the wood. While most chests made of solid wood would scratch, these chests would be permanently damaged. In addition, you would NOT want to put these chests in moist conditions. The wood on the drawers would expand. These sets are heavy, but the quality of wood is not so great.
These dressers operate on sliders. If you have seen an Ikea dresser, you know what I am talking about. Vintage and antique dressers often have middle support sliders, and wood separating the drawers. The modern day dresser doesn’t even use plywood, they use something similar to cardboard. I cannot remember off the top of my head what separated these drawers, but I believe it was the metal gliders. The draw back to these metal gliders is the drawers slip off of them so easily. On another note, they glide in and out, and function with modern smooth cabinetry.
If you are the sort of family that moves around A LOT, forget about this set, because it will get damaged over time. If you are intending to buy it once, and keep it in the same spot, it really is a great deal for the price point. It is one of the nicer dressers around for the price, but the construction isn’t top quality. For a little more than $300, it is a very nice looking dresser, you have to agree~
- A stunning solid wood antique
- Antique German Louis Philippe Chest- Bonnin Ashley Antiques
- Acme 25505 Louis Philippe Antique Chest –FlatFair.com
- French Custom Louis Philippe Style Desk -WOW!! Fireside Antiques


Aidan Gray’s Swedish Furniture Line

Founder and head designer of Aidan Gray, Randal Weeks has a thing for European design and Swedish furniture. The Aidan Gray line represents everything that encompasses old world design and aesthetics. Products are made-by-hand with natural materials such as solid wood and rustic metals.
Aidan Gray is quickly becoming known for their architectural looking decorative accents and their reproduction antique furniture. Not only do they carry beautiful antique-looking furniture, but the finishes are extraordinary. Their furniture is finished using old world painted finishes and classic distressing techniques. Multiple layers of paint, glaze and waxed finishes are often skipped with most retailers as they become tedious and ridiculously expensive for most companies to make a profit, which has opened up the door to niche companies such as Aidan Gray, Barreveld, Uttermost, Restoration Hardware and Wisteria. Furthermore, being a faux painter myself, it also takes quite a bit of practice to get these antiqued painted finishes looking just right. You need the right paint combinations, because as you add paint, the overall color changes, so I appreciate a line which goes the extra mile.
Painting can be tremendously rewarding, but also quite a lot of work especially when layers of paint are involved, so it is especially nice to see a company provide the extra finishes which give more of a worn antique appearance. The best thing about Aidan Gray is YOU can sell their line, and open up your own small business.
Many retailers who sell shabby and rustic antiques tend to bring in Aidan Gray in amongst their antiques because the line brings forth more of the authentic paint finishes that are often found in Europe. In fact, many small business are even selling on ebay from the comfort of their homes instead of having a store front. Many blogs have sprung up featuring furniture staged in homes with price tags and additional pictures about the furniture which are ultimately connected with “but it now” on ebay.
Ebay has been the fastest growing online outlet, which many sites such as Esty have tried to match, that it is foolish for a small retailer not to be listed on ebay. Paypal, and Amazon have gained the peoples trust when it comes to personal securitythat most people turn to them when they decide what retailer to purchase from. Today you see big mega stores such as Target selling on amazon because that is where the people gather today. With such a niche line such as Swedish furniture, who would have the time to drive across the country to visit a specialty store? Check out some of Aidan Gray’s beautiful Swedish looks for your home, and possibly for your future store.
Book Review: Lars Sjöberg’s The Swedish Room
Lars Sjöberg is well known for his Swedish guides on Gustavian interiors and 18th and 19th century Swedish furniture. Sjöberg is a curator of the National Museum of Stockholm, and is author of several books : The first one being The Swedish Room (Creating the Look) published in 94, then L’Art de vivre en Suède, (2002), and his most current book Classic Swedish Interiors published in 2010Lars 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 10 homes from around Sweden. His most current book – Classic Swedish Interiors published in 2010,focuses on Sjöberg’s most complex project: the manor of Regnaholm. The home was unoccupied for about 40 years when Sjöberg arrived in 1966. This home was his first allowing him to experiment with refurnishing and copying old Swedish furniture. Odenslunda, a small manor from the 1770s details an exquisite panelled exterior and is said to be his family home. Sörby was a renovation which was a 17th-century manor house, reproduced in its entirety for an exhibition in Stockholm.
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. He told The Telegraph that as a young child his mother would read to him the history of Finland and Sweden and for his 10th birthday he was given his grandfather’s book about Sweden’s palaces and manor houses which fueled the fire for collecting historical furniture and restoring anything Swedish. In the 1990’s he designed a Gustavian collection for the Swedish company Ikea. The Ikea collection was designed with his help, and being that he was involved with the Swedish National Museum in Stockholm, he was the perfect go-to-guy.
The Swedish Room” written in 94, with his wife Ursula is still one of the very best books on Swedish decorating and remains 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 and basic elements. 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. One in particular shows a time capsulated finish after layers of wallpaper were removed which revealed late eighteenth century decorations. (See below) The walls were originally covered in a linen which provided a perfect base and smooth surface for painting. The house was built and finished in neoclassical style during the time after the return of king Gustav III from Italy 1784. 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 Neoclassicism and the French Empire which took place between 1790- 1820
Additional sections discuss painters in Dalarna, Halsingland and Gastrikland, with a section that details restoration and recreating period homes.
Thank you to Belgian Pearls for the bottom fabulous pictures. The rest were obtained from a free preview of Google Books, which can be viewed for free. This book needs to be on your shelf. I guarantee it serve for many inspirational projects.
Secrets From Suzanne Rheinstein To Pull Off A European Decorated Home
The photos above and below were taken in a room designed by Suzanne Rheinstein at the Greystone Estate, the site of Veranda’s annual showhouse Picture seen on lusterinteriors.blogspot.com
Architectural Digest & House Beautiful magazines both publish annual lists of current successful designers, and Suzanne Rheinstein always is noted as one of the top designers in the LA area. Other established designers such as Michael Smith, Thomas Beeton, Kathryn Ireland, Barbara Barry, and Waldo Fernandez also are all noted to be the best in Los Angeles.
Suzanne Rheinstein is owner of Los Angeles renowned Hollyhock, an extravagant LA Antiques Store. Rheinstein is known for her relaxed, elegant style, and special attention to luxuries. Beyond her store, and her book, Rheinstein also has a fabric line with Lee Jofa.
Rheinstein’s Manhattan Home made the cover of Elle Decor for the month of November 2010 featuring an upscale Gustavian designed residence in New York. After her daughter Kate got married, and grandchildren were too hard to resist being away from, her husband Fred relented and the couple finally found the perfect corner space in the upper east side of New York. Rheinstein tells Elle
“We adore our house in L.A.,” she says. “It’s very forgiving and full of wonderful family treasures. But for New York, I wanted something a little more city, a little more stylized. And I wanted the palette to be a little more calm.”
The Gustavian styled home is filled with hues of grays, creams, taupes and soft greeny blues which is known to be classic Swedish style. “There’s color, she adds, but “it’s just very offbeat, like the pale ochre pillow on the chaise…….”
Beyond the beautiful extravagant 18th century antiques Rheinstein owns, is a stunning mural which has captured the publics attention. Bob Christian, a decorative painter and artist created a gorgeous mural that surrounded the room. The overall effect was a large scale toile look. The room wouldn’t be the same without it.
Her current book At Home: A Style for Today with Things from the Past, features six distinctive homes that express Rheinstein sophisticated elegant style. The book also features both of her own homes in Los Angeles and New York. Rheinstein’s book is beautifully photographed, and shows an inspiring volume of her own work, in which she mixes Gustavian with Edwardian and Regency with ease. The book shows a range of styles including a brick farmhouse in the Virginia countryside to a Beach in Newport Bay.
She has been quoted saying it is better to buy quality one-of-a-kind pieces, and decorate around them “Fewer but better things, painted surfaces, a mixture of furniture styles, a personal art collection and attention to comfort, colors, textures, details and light.”
We couldn’t agree with her more.
This 18th century Antique Swedish Gustavian Painted Bench is the epitome of Swedish furniture. They are almost impossible to find in America, and quite expensive to purchase. Rheinstein’s Swedish bench is upholstered in a dark beige with undertones of olive and grey. The bench perfectly sets the stage to match the paint on the walls which also governs the paint colors on the hand painted floors.
- The secret to design is precisely as Rheinstein suggests- Designing around a few pieces of fabulous furniture.
- Period antiques are well made and often have features that are very hard to come by in today furnishings.
- A great antique usually has one of these qualities
- Great Bones, and Style such as the curvature of Louis XV furniture, or the straight appeal of the Directoire styles of Louis XVI.
- Fantastic aged patina– Gustavian furniture has incredible painted finishes with beautiful ornate painted motifs.
- Quality wood like Empire Furniture , or Lavish wood veneers such as Regency furniture.
- Well made statement pieces truly are show stoppers on their own that all that is needed is a few well chosen accent pieces to finish a look to get a magazine quality highly-decorated home.
See the November issue of Elle Decor For More Pictures of Her home.
Visit Hollyhock’s web site to see antiques, upholstery and decor items for sale
Joni from Cote De Texas has an in depth article on Suzanne Rheinstein’sGeorgian home which is worth viewing. It has been hard to locate any of Suzanne Rheinstein’s work, and Joni seemingly has went out of her way to gather some of the previous rare pictures of her amazing home through the transformations. We borrowed a few of her pictures that really show the Swedish style in its best!
Compare her New York apartment with her LA Home, and you will see so many beautiful painted floors. Paint can completely transform a room. The colors on the floor in the above picture create a calming atmosphere. The detail on the console is exquisite! You would want to float a piece like this in the center of the room. – Picture from Cote De Texas


How To Wash Raw Wood For The Perfect Swedish Finish
Swedish Furniture & Decor Ideas – Directoire Chest By Wisteria
This chest from Wisteria is one of my favorites. The minimal carving paired with a calming hue of a painted wash gives this mango wood chest that Swedish feel.
The Swedish have always been known for their wood furniture and in North America, many people identify them more for their beautiful painted finishes. In the Scandinavian countries of Northern Europe, the day light didn’t last long in the winter, and painting furniture became a natural response to adding light into their homes. Countries such as Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland, are much like northern Canada, in that the winters seem to last a lot longer, as the sun goes down quite early making the days feel shorter and shorter. Midnight sun is when sun is visible for a continuous 24 hours, mostly north of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic Circle. In Svalbard, Norway, the northern most inhabited region of Europe, there is no sunset from approximately 19 April to 23 August.
The opposite effect, which is called polar night, is where night lasts for more than 24 hours. This only occurs inside the polar circles. Some populations in several countries experience these extra long summer days, and extended nights in the winter are those areas in the by the Arctic Circle such as the Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut in Canada. The United States of America has a state above the Canadian Provence of British Columbia called Alaska which see these extended periods of night and day. Also we have Denmark, Greenland, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia, and areas of Iceland who also experience varied degrees of longer winters and summers.
The rustic grey antique painted finishes are why most people love Swedish ANTIQUE furniture. The muted paint colors which have been naturally distressed over time have an ornate feel to them with layers of beautiful patina. These old time paint finishes have become popularized by Restoration Hardware to Wisteria, and have become one of the most frequent emails we receive on our Painted Furniture site asking us to show how to achieve them.
Rustic distressed furniture has become incredibly popular as people turn towards the comfortable primitive looks for their homes as they settle down, moving away from the modern interiors of the upper city looks that tend to be cold and uninviting. Today people still want the upscale furniture, but they also want the heirlooms of natural worn woods, and painted finishes that have been passed down through family generations. There is nothing like throwing a log on the fire and cuddling up in a wool blanket with a cup of hot chocolate as you enjoy watching the kids run around with their toys, not worrying if a nick or scratch is going to ruin the look of a piece.
This Directoire Dresser By Wisteria is bleached and the naturally distressed acacia wood is accented with diamond patterns and antiqued metal federal styled hardware
One of the most common and easiest ways to achieve a Swedish distressed finish is simply by watering down paint and applying it to raw wood.
Most of all Swedish paint colors are muted grey and beige tones. Other classic antique colors blues, greens, yellow, but they are all muted tones with some sort of black or white mixed in. In the late 17th and early 18th century there was a limited amount of colors compared to our vast selection today so painters would either add black or white into the main colors they had available, which is why you see darker shades of green, yellow and blue, and then really milky white versions of basic colors.
The KEY to re-creating antique looking finishes are to work with the period colors, and not brights. Bright white is never a color you find in antiques, and is often the number one mistake when people white wash furniture. You want to stick with the undertones that have green or beige, as these are common undertones in antique furniture.
The best way to achieve THESE particular wood finishes that Restoration Hardware is so famous for, or Wisteria’s Directoire Chest looks is to work with bare wood.
I find that finishes that have a polyurethane top coat do not work well, because the paint needs to soak into the wood, so if there is a top coat, be sure to sand the finish down so the paint has something to grip on to.
Take some beige, or green-gray paint, and a small bowl with water in it. With your paint brush dip the brush into the water, and then into the paint. Your brush should contain a water down version of the paint. As you can see in the primitive wood basket below, I used Painters Touch in the color Fossil, brushing on the paint, leaving it for a few minutes and then wiping it off.
I took a really weathered bench which had been eroded by the rain over several years and painted on a greenish beige over the entire bench. I painted the entire bench on my front lawn within just 5 minutes. It was a rather sloppy job of painting, but after 10 minutes, before the paint was really dry, I took the garden hose and washed it down with a small amount of pressure, which left only a watered down wash of the paint on the bench.
The paint should essentially penetrate the wood like a glaze, and reveal the wood below, leaving a wash. You can use any shade, so long as it is not white, but either has natural undertones such as green or beige.
Additional ways you can add time-aged character is to add marks to your piece of furniture manually giving the look of wear and tear. Use a canvas bag that closes, or a natural type of cloth bag and fill it with bolts and nuts. Hit the surface of the wood with the nuts and bolts, which will produce indentations in the surface of the wood. Don’t go over board with a hammer or chisel, because they often don’t look realistic.
Painters Touch in the color Fossil is a color I use often. You can buy it at Home Depot, although strangely enough I haven’t been able to locate the quart size on Amazon or at Home Depot. (Maybe it is just popular) So I scanned in the formula I had Sherwin & Williams Make for me.
Here are some of my suggestions with the Brand of Behr Paints. My suggestion is to go with a color you really love. I do enjoy working with Olive colors such as the top color UL 180-1, but I also use colors like UL200-18 in the middle. The color I used leans towards for this project is the color in the bottom right hand corner, UL200-19, as my basket turned out darker than the pictures portray. The key is to work within the natural colors, and within colors you really enjoy looking at.
The other paint suggestions I have are:
Martha Stewart Paints- Heath MSL212
Martha Stewart Paints- Mourning Dove MSL210
Behr – Sand Fossil 770C-3
Ace Paints- Dried Fern D23-6
Ace Paints – SW 6158









































