The Stuff of Life
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.13 (692 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1849755051 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 224 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-07-14 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
She also considers the variety of display locations available within the home – blank walls, mantelpieces, windowsills, chests of drawers, tabletops – and suggests how to make the most of them. Some people are magpies—they love stuff; finding, collecting, and displaying it, while their opposite, the minimalists, are on a mission to contain it or tame it.The ideas in this book are sure to appeal to both magpies and minimalists and everyone in between.Â. In her gorgeous new book, sought-after interiors stylist Hilary Robertson reveals a multitude of different ways to style and display the “stuff of life†—the flotsam and jetsam of possessions that we all slowly acquire. Next, in Stor
Hilary lives in Brooklyn with her husband and son. . Hilary Robertson is a well-known interiors stylist and journalist with an illustrious client list that includes Canvas, Ochre, Elle Decoration, Vogue Living, and the Telegraph Magazine. She recently opened Mrs. Robertson, a store selling vintage furniture and accessories. Also a talented writer,
Also a talented writer, Hilary wrote the text for Josephine Ryan’s French Home (also Ryland Peters & Small). She recently opened Mrs. Hilary lives in Brooklyn with her husband and son. About the Author Hilary Robertson is a well-known interiors stylist and journalist with an illustrious client list that includes Canvas, Ochre, Elle Decoration, Vogue Living, and the Telegraph Magazine. Robertson, a store selling vintage furniture and accessories.
Love This a Book! If you are the kid that liked playing house only because you could decorate it, or if you automatically and unconsciously rearrange other people's decor, then this is the book for you. Even more so if you are the person who reads home decor magazines with your nose pressed to the page to see just what that interesting object on that coffee table in the photo is, then. Beautiful, but also a bit cold. A beautiful book, overall. The pictures are visually stunning and interestingly arranged--though I wish they were less "cold." The exaggerated shadows and grey tones gave the whole book an old and almost sad feel.There were a couple of exceptions: I thought the profiles on Hilary Roberston and Leida Nassir-Pour were lovely, noticeably warmer and more inviting. Ultima. sabine said stunning and insightful. this book is not only beautiful to me, but everyone who flips through the book when they see it on my table wants it instantly. well done! its gorgeous, every image and every chapter of the way its well thought out and photographed.