Welcome In Luxury Furniture

See more home furniture, garden furniture, furniture shop, patio furniture, office furniture, furniture shops, the furniture store, furniture store, furniture stores INSIDE.

Welcome In Luxury Furniture

See more home furniture, garden furniture, furniture shop, patio furniture, office furniture, furniture shops, the furniture store, furniture store, furniture stores INSIDE.

Welcome In Luxury Furniture

See more home furniture, garden furniture, furniture shop, patio furniture, office furniture, furniture shops, the furniture store, furniture store, furniture stores INSIDE.

Welcome In Luxury Furniture

See more home furniture, garden furniture, furniture shop, patio furniture, office furniture, furniture shops, the furniture store, furniture store, furniture stores INSIDE.

Welcome In Luxury Furniture

See more home furniture, garden furniture, furniture shop, patio furniture, office furniture, furniture shops, the furniture store, furniture store, furniture stores INSIDE.

Showing posts with label flea market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flea market. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

From Fleamarkets to high end design: on tour in Sweden

I have just returned from a fabulous two weeks holidays in lovely Sweden and am totally rested and inspired (and even a little tanned!). What a totally cool and laidback country....aaahhh...I want to live there. We shopped, sauna'd, sailed, canoed, shopped some more, read books, drank very expensive wine (not by choice - and only a sip for me!) and took heaps of photos. Below I will share some of what inspired me most.
I saw these upcycled cupboards in a shop window in Stockholm's trendy area Sodermalm. It's not an actual shop, but the designers used it as an advertising space. Very clever!

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A great lamp shop in Sodermalm, with lamps in antique, retro and contemporary styles.

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An atmospheric picture of a street and bicycle in Stockholm's Gamla Stan:

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This was our idyllic sauna on the waterfront on the island of Lidingö near Stockholm. Lovely. You could bring your own candles and make it a cosy retreat in the evening. Once all heated up you dive straight into the sea water. Brrrrrr....

Sauna

Here's me enjoying some sunshine on the ferry in Stockholm.

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One place we spent quite some time in was the department store P.U.B. Apart from serving an awsome lunch and home bakes, the store features many great brands and shops. The home interior department was wonderful! I wanted to buy everything wih the result that I didn't buy anything because my brain could not take all the beauty...and I would have to ship it all back by at least three large containers . So I just took lots of photos.

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And of course there were plenty high end designer furniture shops with the familiar names of Arne Jacobsen, Eames, Vitra and many others. Always nice to have a wander around these stores although some times I must admit I get a bit bored by them, as they always look a bit 'sterile' to me. Where's the junk?! Gimme me some junk!

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Well, junk galore once you're in the countryside, I tell ya. At first I had no clue what the word 'Loppis' meant. I thought perhaps people were selling strawberries or something at their farms, so I paid little attention. But soon we were enlightened by our landlady who told us they were nothing less than mini fleamarkets! Hey-ho! So as you can expect, I soon shouted STOP! LOPPIS! at every Loppis sign at the side of the road, driving my husband bonkers. Some barns were full of total rubbish and didn't have much to offer, but I did find three lovely 'characterful' (i.e. cracked) Swedish blue plates though for the grand sum of 30p.

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We also found some more junk: the vintage car cemetary in BÃ¥stnäs,Värmland, which has become a bit of a tourist attraction. Hundreds of rusty cars from the 1940s-60s scattered in the field and forest, piled on top of each other with trees growing through the roofs. Bizarre but fascinating! 


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Last but not least, we brought back some plastic rugs from Swedish brand Pappelina and one unknown make but equally cool. In Arvika, a provincial town in the province of Värmland, we came across a fabulous rug shop with rugs in every colour and pattern under the sun. 

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Shame the holidays are over, but it's a country I definitely want to go back to. Even if it was only for the evening swims in the quiet lakes.

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Thursday, March 24, 2011

Treasure hunting at lunchtime: one enamel teapot and two vintage spice jars

Photo
People kept on telling me about this place but I never got around to visit... The Box Room in Banchory, Aberdeenshire. Yesterday lunchtime I finally had time to pop down and have a look. My oh my, what a great spot for treasure hunting! Hidden away on a small industrial estate and packed full of second-hand furniture and just...well, stuff. Chairs, tables, cupboards, bed frames, mirrors and lots of cups, vases, decorative things and of course your fair share of hideous kitsch-y pictures. Cheap too, that was the best bit! £10 for a chair, £20 for a table. Not all great pieces, but there are some real gems with potential. I feel I should really keep this little secret to myself and not shout it from the roof tops but most of you live far enough away not to all of a sudden raid the place, haha ;-)

I will definitely be checking here for furniture once I'm ready for my next DIY project, but yesterday I was a good girl and only came home with one lovely blue enamel teapot and two cute mustard yellow spice jars... Had to be strict! "No, Nina, you can't have that chair - you gotta finish your other one first!!" Can't wait to go back though, they told me they get new stuff everyday...

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Monday, February 7, 2011

Creating an eclectic interior: how to decorate with vintage furniture and found objects



So you've spotted this gem of a chair, but how are you going to use it in your interior? It may be unlike anything else you have in your house, so what does it go with, where do you put it? And what about that vintage sideboard… how do you mix different types of wood in your interior? Chatting to various people I found that many love going to antiques shops and markets, but don’t always know whether something will actually look good in their own homes. I personally just buy it if I really like it (price-depending of course!), as somehow I find that if you buy items you love, no matter how random – they will blend in. After all, it is you who has chosen them because they are your taste, which is that one great thing all those items have in common. 

From now on I will regularly post about how to decorate with vintage items and unique pieces of furniture, to show you how to create a stylish home that reflects your personality. I will collect pictures that will hopefully inspire and give you creative ideas. Here we go! Top image: e-architect.co.uk
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Vintage cupboards and displays

The images below are from the great blog sfgirlbybay by decorator Victoria Smith. See how she mixes different types of wood and styles of chairs and still create a very 'balanced' look. Grouping artworks (instead of hanging them apart) can create a great display on the wall.




Covering a wall with lots of framed photos is another way to get a real 'wow-factor' (as well as displaying lots and lots of great pictures!). I've done it in my house too and visitors always love it - it's a great talking point.

 


Place an antique cupboard on its own and display your favourite collection on it (cameras or... vases, teapots, books, glassware, anything...?).


 
Mixing and matching dining chairs

The picture below is from the blog Things We Heart. Some people prefer the 'catalog approach', buying a brand new dining table and six matching chairs. Why not pick a beautiful antique wooden table and place six different chairs around it? They can be all different in different colours, all the same but in different colours or all different, painted in the same colour. Be creative! It sure creates an original, more characterful look.




Another example of mixing different styles, from the blog The Brick House: a big vintage dining table combined with the popular mid-century Eames chairs. I also love the collection of vintage vases in the background. Very stylish!




Here orange metal chairs are mixed with painted wooden ones, all put around a nice vintage table. They belong to Judy Kauffmann, whose colourful home was featured on Design*Sponge.




I'd like to finish this first 'themed' post
with some top advice from fellow blogger DebutanteClothing

Here are 5 Tips to Decorate with Vintage:
  1. Buy what you love.
  2. Your home should be pleasing to your eye. You have to live there. If you don't love your decor, you will not feel comfortable in your own home. If you love that moose head, use it!
  3. Don't be afraid to mix wood tones.
  4. The 1957 Better Homes and Gardens decorating book reminds us that wood is a color. This doesn't just apply to vintage, but vintage furniture that was meant to last was made of wood. Check for tones in the wood grain that may be complimentary to one another.
  5. Be patient. Shop often.
  6. My furniture did not come home with me in one weekend. That's one of the luxuries of buying new - you can get a catalog looking living room in one shopping trip.  But in order to achieve decor with character, you may have to be patient for the right piece to come along. Check your local thrift store, flea market, and even Ebay, often.
  7. Mix it up.
  8. True design comes from mixing unexpected elements, colors, and textures. With vintage furniture, you run the risk of looking like you live in a time warp - same goes for vintage clothing.  Don't be afraid to mix decades, vintage and modern, and shapes.  I tied the straight and rounded lines of my dining room together with a really inexpensive ceiling lamp at IKEA - it has a straight wooden base with rounded white plastic light shades - a perfect blend of both lines in the room.
  9. Don't be afraid to re-purpose.
  10. The goal of decorating with vintage is two fold - owning quality constructed pieces and creating a one of a kind look.  If you happen to find a fabulous dresser, but have no room or need for one, try re-purposing it as a storage credenza in the living room.  Or use a telephone stand as a holder for remote controls.  We re-purposed a wardrobe cabinet as a TV cabinet.  My husband just sawed out the inner drawers and we use the lower drawers for media storage. It would be a shame to leave a beautiful piece of furniture or accessory behind simply because you have no use for it  in it's current purpose - get creative.
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Sunday, November 7, 2010

Painting furniture. How to do it properly!

Image: Design Sponge
I love the Design Sponge blog, especially her Before & Afters, and recently I discovered many 'how-to' manuals on the site as well, which I am definitely going to use in my future projects. At flea markets, carboot sales or on the freecycle website you can find so many unwanted, unloved, but real 'high potential' pieces of furniture waiting to be transformed and I'm just itching to start a little project again.

I have always admired cupboards or side tables that were painted to look 'antique' in a nice distressed style, but I never quite understood how to create that look. One of the secrets, as described on Design Sponge, is not to put primer on those bits that you want to look 'old' and worn, like the corners or edges of a drawer for example. Then when you paint over it, the paint doesn't stick as well to the surface as it does to the primed bits, so the original colour still shines through. Dark brown cupboards are apparently best to use for this look. Good tip!

>>> For the full How To, please visit Design Sponge: painting furniture.






And of course, once the hard work is finished....go shopping for some cool hardware!

Image: surroundingsonline.co.uk

Image: the bellalifeblog

knobs from www.sunburstknobs.com

Friday, November 5, 2010

Inspiration from Japan...cups, bowls, fabric and a kimono flea market!

 


Karaku Pottery


Aaaah! Look at this! Shopping heaven! A shop called Kanzando in Kyoto. Image: www.savoryjapan.com

A country I have never been to but is high on my wish list is Japan. I heard so many good things about it and the aesthetics are amazing. I just love the absolute beauty of Japanese ceramics such as the ones pictured from Karaku Pottery in Tokyo. They also have a shop on etsy and ship internationally (yay!). 

And what about this delicate chop stick set from Wasabi World... not that I'd be using it daily, but isn't it pretty?

Image: Wasabi World


I also adore vintage kimono fabrics, which I discovered are for sale on eBay for very reasonable prices. Perfect for cushion covers or other small projects - or to upholster an old chair with, like Anna Troupe did.

The best discovery I made however was the website of Ichiroya, or the Kimono Flea Market. A Japanese flea market!!?? Man, that sounds like serious heaven to me. I must go. I think our next holiday destination needs to be Japan. 

Do check out the Ichiroya website by the way, as it's charming (as is their newsletter http://ichiroyanewsletter.blogspot.com/ ).

Upholstery in vintage kimono fabric by Anna Troupe
Image: catwalkthreads.wordpress.com


Kimono fabric buttons! Image: puchimaiko.blogspot.com



Image: Fluffbuff 


Image: Ichiroya







Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Today's Charity shop finds: two crochet blankets and a soap dish


































I can't help myself. Every time I am in town I HAVE to go into a charity shop - cause you never know what you may find. If I am in a certain part of town I pop into a row of at least five of them. Today I was lucky and found two lovely crochet blankets, hand-made by an old lady who apparently supplies them to the store year-round! (Knitting non-stop, maybe I can put in requests!)


I also found a nice old ceramic soap dish in green. (Oh yes, and a cardigan and top, but I won't bore you with that ;-).

Friday, March 27, 2009

A table made of vintage plates

I came across this table from Imu Design, a so-called prototype named 'Plate U'... and isn't it brilliant? I mean, I'm not sure how practical it is (imagine having an animated gossipy chat with your best friend while holding a glass in your hand and then you decide to put down your glass on the table while keeping your eyes on your friend, not looking where the actual holes in the table are... that sort of thing), but it's cool. The frame is made of steel, the plates are "hand-picked" as the designers describe it themselves and I assume they found them in charity shops or on the local flea market.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Flea market and carboot sale finds

With my blog I am trying to promote 'junking up your home' with weird and wonderful finds, so I decided to share a few pictures of some of my own junk with you today.... These pictures are of my fire place in the lounge (an ideal place to display little treasures).

On Sundays there's always a carboot sale in Inverurie, a town near to where I live in Scotland, and I once found these two heavy weight silver candle holders for the grand total of £2 and was a very happy girl.

The yellow and green things hanging from it are decorative key rings from Marrakech. I bought loads of them last year while on holiday and they spice up any door or drawer handle (or candle holder!). The very ornate frame is a big round mirror hanging above our fire place. We got it from an antique/junk shop in Sauchen, Aberdeenshire.

The old, battered 1920s wooden box decorated with Japanese illustrations I recently found for £1 in a bargain box in an antiques shop in Cowbridge, South Wales. My partner's parents thought I was mad buying something that was already broken but I just smiled and decided not to try to explain it...

The eastern european (or middle-eastern?) decorative copper mini-karaf - or oil pot, whatever - has been in my family for a long time. This sounds like it's a real family piece and extremely important but it's not worth much if anything at all and the truth is, I just like the Aladin-like style of it!

The two tea lights I once found in a nice home decor shop next to Harrods in London (and it was the only thing I could afford ;-).

By the way, the fire surround used to be ugly dark brown but my dad suggested painting it in glossy black and that was great advice! (I will post a before-and-after shot of this soon)

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