Posts Tagged Santa Rosa Interior Design
Bodega Bay Remodel
Posted by Irene Turner in Projects, Renovations, Sustainability on April 26, 2012
This remodel project is located in the South Harbor, Bodega Bay, California. My clients found me through this blog, over a year ago. When I met them they had owned their week-end home for seven years. As they were transitioning from sports parents to empty nesters, they were beginning to spend more time here, both by themselves and with adult friends.
They hadn’t done much with the house since buying it. With sandy kids and their friends, utility was the name of the game. Nor had the original owners updated anything since building the house in the mid 70’s.
Entering a new phase in life, which included more adult entertaining, and hopefully, an expanding family down the road, they wanted to make changes in the house that would enhance the enjoyment of the space for years to come.
Initially they thought to simply update their kitchen and bathrooms, add light to the dark redwood rooms and subtly refresh their furnishings. But as I spent some time with them, getting to know them, understanding their vision and lifestyle, as well as spending time in the house itself, there seemed to be far more potential in the space then was first apparent.
So with the go ahead to design the plan, I set my goals with my clients as follows: Continue reading “Bodega Bay Remodel” »
Wisteria-Via Santa Rosa Interior Design
Posted by Irene Turner in Nature on April 24, 2012
It’s wisteria season again, and my back yard is filled with these luscious blooms and divine scent! Just last week I posted a picture of my wisteria in bloom on Facebook which elicited a tremendous response, so I thought I’d share more.
When my husband and I bought our home 8 years ago it was considered a fixer upper to put it nicely. But, being an interior designer, and my husband a Real Estate Broker, we looked past the ruble and checked out the bones. Nothing sold us more on this house over others then the 25 foot by 25 foot wisteria arbor in the back yard…no matter the neglect. Continue reading “Wisteria-Via Santa Rosa Interior Design” »
The New Face of Beauty
Posted by Irene Turner in Personal Style & Well being, Product/Trend Alert! on April 19, 2012
Women…Stand up and unite! The face of beauty is changing and the trend is slowly moving towards allowing ourselves to be real again. We are beginning to establish a new yardstick by which to measure our looks and how we portray ourselves, in the world, and in the media.
As we baby boomers move through life we bring with us money (read buying power), our self absorption about our looks, and our refusal to age like our parents. And, as we watch our over processed peers on todays reality TV shows, we are finally starting to refuse to succumb to past standards of beauty; Waif like figures, with too much botox and a continual fight to look under 40 when we are not.
This trend is emerging from two fronts. Continue reading “The New Face of Beauty” »
Suzani Textiles-via Santa Rosa Interior Design
Posted by Irene Turner in Art, Interior Design & Renovation on April 17, 2012
Suzani decorative embroidered textiles are some of the most beautiful and colorful pieces of art fabrics in the world today.
Functional aspects of art have always appealed to me, and although these works originally were conceived to be simply useful, they really do add so much beauty to everyday life.I’m a world traveler, as are many of my clients, Continue reading “Suzani Textiles-via Santa Rosa Interior Design” »
The Getty Museum-via Santa Rosa Interior Design
Posted by Irene Turner in Architecture, Art on April 12, 2012
When the Getty Museum, located off the 405 in LA was being built, I thought it was a monstrosity. Big, hulking, monolithic, it seemed to loom over me as I traversed the crazy LA traffic on my way south from my lovely bucolic Sonoma County. Well…it’s still monolithic, square and somewhat hulking, but I’ve changed my tune completely!
I recently went for my 4th or 5th visit, I really can’t remember all the times I’ve been there. The day was clear (as clear as you can get in LA) and the perfect temperature to spend the day enjoying this wondrous place designed by Richard Meier and Partners.
Richard Meier is a modernist, and his buildings tend to be square and bulky. But in spending time in the Getty, I have found there to be a peculiar sense of Grace that flows throughout based on much thought and engineering by Meier. Here are the three attributes of the buildings that I’ve grown to love and admire, and that contribute to its graceful feeling:
- The design is based on the square. While this may not be a surprise to some, it is the extent to which the square is consistently appliedthat is admirable. The basic square is 30 inches…the perfect size space for an individual to feel comfortable within. Every other square is a derivative of this basic 30 inch square.
- The light is magnificent! And I mean all of it. With the placement of windows, the way the buildings sit on the land, and the hidden or secondary entrances one stumbles upon, one thing is clear; the movement of light inside and out, changing as the sun moves through the sky…both throughout the day, and throughout the different seasons. This to me is the most clever aspect of the buildings by far!
- And lastly, or third, is the reflective qualityof the buildings as a whole. Originally, Meier wanted the whole building to be white. I’m glad that the Getty powers that be prevailed and that while it has a lot of aluminum siding in a warm white, the stone is a warm, golden limestone. Otherwise the glare on a sunny day would have been unbearable. Never the less, the reflection comes from the materials themselves, and also from the water features that are integrated throughout, and every window and glass door that reflects the scene opposite it. Magnificent!
While I’ve loved the Getty gardens from the beginning, I’ve grown, over time, to love and appreciate the thought and the amount of detail that has gone into the buildings themselves. For the first time this past visit I took an architecture tour. The docent was enthusiastic and knowledgable. I highly recommend the 45 minutes. It’s incredibly informative.
Have you been to the Getty? Check out the video below for more views of this stunning museum. And tell me, what’s your favorite museum?



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