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How To: Decorate for Fall

Posted by: admin in how toDecorating on

a99889_05_pumpkincenterpiec_lIt’s fall! While most people profess that their favorite season is summer, Fall has a lot of fans. Fall is my favourite season by a big margin (more sunshine than spring, less humidity than summer), and that means I always want to get into the Fall spirit by decorating my house. 

That said… I prefer a more minimalist approach to décor. All my furniture is white. Lines are clean. Clutter is forbidden. I might love fall, but I’m not going to start making Martha Stewart style pinecone bouquets and sticking them around my home, or suddenly feeling the pull of big wooly plaid blankets draped over all my furniture. First of all, who has the time for that? Secondly… just no.

So, if you’re like me, how can you feel like you’ve got a bit of fall in the home, without going full Little House on the Prairie?

Here are some fun, LOW HASSLE ideas, from my own mind and the internet:

1. White Pumpkins

They used to be rare, but nowadays they’re popping up in local grocery stores – white pumpkins, sometimes called ghost pumpkins are a neat way to get the shape of the season, but in a new way. You can:

  • Line up white mini pumpkins on a mantelpiece
  • Turn white mini pumpkins into votive candle holders
  • Cut off the top and remove the seeds from a full sized white pumpkin. Don’t carve it though! Put a flower vase into the pumpkin and display some seasonal blooms - (note, these won’t last more than a few days inside – best done for a special occasion!)

2. Pinecones

Yes, I realized I just disparaged pinecone crafts, but this is as easy as it gets. Take a contemporary, low silver bowl or tray and then fill it with the nicest pinecones you can find. Looks seasonal, not kitchy.

 

branches-in-a-vase-284x3003. Branches and sticks

Trees and wood grain have been big design trends for a while now, so don’t pay for artfully arranged, carefully chosen dead branches from a florist, go pick your own out. They’re plentiful this time of year, and FREE. Besides, what says fall more than a branch without leaves? The easiest way to bring the outside in. Best yet? These displays don’t need water.

Photos: Pumpkin Vase, Martha Stewart.com; Branches, Vastu Design Clique


The Best Online Design Resources

Posted by: admin in tipsDecorating on

Maybe you live in a dreary rental that you can’t do much with. Maybe you’re dying to change something about home, but you don’t have much of a budget. Maybe you’ve got the time to embark on a weekend home improvement project, but you’re lacking inspiration. Or maybe you just like to dream?

No matter what the reason, going online can be a huge source of ideas, inspiration, daydreams and super practical advice for anyone with the decorating bug. I certainly have one... so here are a few my favourite places to find inspiration when I’m online! 

Apartment Therapy: One of the most popular online design sites, and a personal favourite of mine. Apartment Therapy works hard to be a fantastic resource - it’s constantly updating during the day with a great mix of DIY projects, design showcases from around the world, interviews with artisans and designers and even photographic tours of Apartment Therapy reader’s homes from around the world. If you like homes and design, it should be in your bookmarks folder.


Freshome: Skewing much higher in the budget range than Apartment Therapy. With plenty of pictures and information about some of the most stunning and inventive architecture in residential homes today, reading Freshome is a fantastic way to fuel your daydreams if you’re a fan of architecture. If that’s not entirely your speed, don’t be deterred - there are still plenty of great articles and inspiring ideas on the site.


Design*Sponge: This site is almost the polar opposite of Freshome. Where is the former is about offering up high end inspiration, Design*Sponge is all hands on, affordable and ever so slightly twee. There is a great focus on putting up fun, practical DIY projects - so if you read Design*Sponge, you’ll never be bored and wishing you had something to do on a dark, wet winter afternoon! Also not to miss: the period under $100 product round ups.


Ikea Hacker: Sometimes it’s good, sometimes it’s amazing, occasionally you’ll want to do it yourself, but a lot of the time, you wonder why anyone would ever do that to perfectly good furniture... It’s Ikea Hacker - the blog where readers from all over the world showcase their (occasionally misguided) efforts to improve on the products from the world’s most popular design store. Whatever the outcome, the owners of the furniture in question are happy, and usually it’s structurally sound...


And there you have it - a round up of some of my favourite websites for design inspiration. Got suggestions of your own? Share them in the comments!


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