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Accent Color Choices and an article on WGSN.com Making a Memorial of Memorial Day Greetings from the Big Apple: It. Is. Spring! Sherry Hayslip Talks Coffee Tables with Park Cities People 2013 ASID Design Ovation Awards: It was Our Night! Greetings from the Big Apple: The Importance of Culinary Aesthetics Greetings from the Big Apple: Or in this Case, Los Angeles Color Essay: I've Got the Blues For Your Valentines Pleasure: A Fantasy Dinner for Two… Greetings from the Big Apple: Ghosts of Christmas Past Peace at Christmas and Throughout the Year While the Cat’s Away, the Mice will Play Design Dialog: Dressing Room Reveal Design Dialog: Watch for the Big Reveal Hayslip Design Associates and The Crystal Charity Ball Design Dialog: Peyton’s Closet is Almost Done Design Dialog: A Sneak Peek in Park Cities People Greetings from the Big Apple: Frankenstorm Greetings from the Big Apple: How I spend My Days in Class Greetings from the Big Apple: Coffee Talk and Baby-Doll Heads Design Dialog: Confessions of a Lapsed Decorating Mother Greetings from the Big Apple: How a College Kid Eats in the New Millennium Design Dialog: What About Fabrics Design Dialog: Words, Words, Words... The Painted Desert: The Enduring Appeal of Santa Fe Bienvenue ŕ Dallas: This Style Scout May Have Found Her Calling Design Dialog: The Duchess is a Diva Design Dialog: The Chair has Arrived! Greetings from the Big Apple: NYU Redux Design Dialog: First, Step Lightly… Design Dialog: Anxiety Over a Chair Hayslip Design Associates visits Nanz Hardware: Classic and Well Made Always Fit Design Dialog: It's All in the Planning Design Dialog: Converting a Room to a Closet Design Dialog: My mother has a new client... And it’s me! Hayslip Design Associates visits P.E. Guerin: A Treasure Chest in Greenwich Village Design Dialog: Taking on a New Client Coming Soon: A New Blog Series Summer in the City - Hayslip Design Associates hits New York Martha Says "It's a Good Thing" Memories of Morocco: A Day Trip to Fes Memories of Morocco: Le Jardin Majorelle Memories of Morocco: The Hidden and Not-So-Hidden Treasures of Marrakech Obscenely Beautiful Things – A Small Update The Family who Wanders Together... Trend Setting: All Aboard the Marrakech Express The Enduring Appeal of Chinoiserie Greetings from the Big Apple (and farewell Big D): Beginning a Collection Out with the old (soon enough)... Greetings from the Big Apple: Window Shopping in a Winter Wonderland Greetings from the Big Apple: I confess... I’m a Pack Rat My bags are packed, I'm ready to go... Greetings from the Big Apple: The Blank Canvas of a Dorm Room Bienvenue ŕ Paris: Shakespeare & Company Spooktacular Skulls: The Trend of Skulls in Fashion and Design What a Girl Wants: Or Are Great Closets Better than Sex? Bienvenue a Dallas: The Latest from Kitty Stuart Bienvenue a Paris and Life without A/C How to Turn Your Home into a Piggy Bank... or at Least a Star! A little love from our friends at D Home... Sherry's Blog featured on DG's Online Editorial 2011 TX ASID Design Ovation Awards New things are blooming on Armstrong Pkwy. Spain Part 2 - Madrid, Segovia, Toledo, and Avila Jamaica Has Never Been Lovelier Working in a Winter Wonderland Tested: How Twelve Wrongly Imprisoned Men Held onto Hope Our winning kitchen is featured on DesignGuide's blog! John Bunker Sands Wetlands Center How to Vacation in Architectural Bliss Smith, Ekblad and Associates: Architects and Engineers Still More Design Riches (Part IV) The Design Riches Continue (Part III) Sherry is featured in Dallas Modern Luxury A Little Touch of the Doge's Palace Sherry Hayslip quoted in the Dallas Morning News A Weekend in Three Acts: Act 3 A Weekend in Three Acts: Act 2 Turandot at the Metropolitan Opera |
Bienvenue a Paris: Lost in ParisOur Parisian Style Scout has embarked on her sixth week in the City of Light. Good thing she has a GPS...![]() Style Scout, Kitty Stuart Directionally challenged though she might be, Kitty has come to realize the wonders that can be found when lost in the City of Light. Read her latest post NOW. And don't forget to read Sherry's most recent post... What a Girl Wants: Or Are Great Closets Better than Sex? The first purpose of clothes... was not warmth or decency, but ornament.... Among wild people, we find tattooing and painting even prior to clothes. The first spiritual want of a barbarous man is decoration; as indeed we still see among the barbarous classes in civilized countries. ~Thomas Carlyle In college we read The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. I can recall clearly my professor announcing to us that by the end of the book we would possess powerful and mysterious knowledge…. that Mr. Chaucer would teach us “what women want most.” Now, I’m a woman, and I can tell you that I was surprised to hear that an English poet from the Middle Ages… and a man no less… would have the faintest idea what I might want. ![]() There are a lot of things I want… some trivial, some vital… some common and mundane, others precious and all-too-often unobtainable. I want to savor a little taste of dark chocolate with my glass of red wine. I want to lounge by the pool on a sunny day with the Sunday newspaper while Cole swims his laps. I want to work with wonderful, open, creative people (both clients and co-workers) to create warm, welcoming environments in which people can live… really live. I want to gather those I treasure most, friends and family, and keep them close to me. Oh, and I want a beautiful closet. Not just a closet… a temple to fashion and femininity. Efficient and ingenious in its use of space while ever mindful of the importance of style. A beautiful part of our home that will provide storage for my clothes, shoes, handbags, and jewelry, as well as an elegant dressing area for primping and pampering. Lots of mirror and light and exquisite surfaces and a place to store all of my pretty memories and mementos. I’m not alone in my desires. ![]() Many of my clients long for pretty places to play dress up. Some want whole dressing suites that combine lavish closet spaces with bathing and primping areas befitting a goddess. Others have slightly more modest tastes. And it’s not just women… it is men too. Don’t let them fool you. My Dream Closet So after much imploring, Cole acquiesced and helped me design a beautiful dressing room just for me. It’s not huge. There really are no huge rooms in our 1920’s Dutch Colonial home. It was a modest bedroom that was underutilized prior to its metamorphosis. Now an efficient layout and well-planned elements make an elegant closet and dressing room, not simply a utilitarian space. ![]() image: Hayslip Design Associates Glass paned cabinets are lit from the inside, showcasing my collections of perfume bottle, compacts, and family photos. I love how the drawer hardware, designed by Cole, appears to flow from drawer to drawer creating the illusion of a seamless, glimmering ribbon.
image: Hayslip Design Associates I love my lighted shoe closets. They allow me to see what I have and the lighting is super energy efficient LED which doesn’t get hot and won’t fade the shoes. "If the shoe fits... buy it in every color." - Unknown If you have the ability and the space to design your dream closet, I say, “Why hold back?” Think about how you pack for trips. Do you want to include space in your dressing area to lay out a suitcase? Consider including an island that would allow a spacious surface for folding with storage underneath for empty luggage. Pull out hanging rods are also handy when packing, putting away laundry, or bringing home dry cleaning. ![]() image: Studio Becker ![]() image: Studio Becker Are you able to have a special area of your dressing room for laundry? If so, why not install pullout bins for sorting laundry and dry cleaning? ![]() image: Studio Becker Can you also include an ironing station? Ironing boards can be fitted into a closet so that they tuck neatly away when not in use. And if we’re going to go all out, how about a designated ironing station for perfectly pressed pants? ![]() image: Studio Becker ![]() image: Studio Becker I’ve even know people to install a whisper quite washer and dryer in their dressing area. It seems so logical and eliminates the need to tote your unmentionables to a laundry room that may be at the other end of the house. Once hidden behind cabinetry you won’t even notice its utility. ![]() image: AskoUSA.com
This ladies dressing room has a masculine counterpart that I’ll show further on in this post. They share common flooring, a combination of gleaming hardwood and richly veined marble, but aside from that shared element there is no confusing the two spaces. This one is all femininity, with the spacious vanity, sumptuous seating area, and large adjacent closet. The addition of an antique secretary increases the room’s functionality by providing a space for private correspondence while adding to its womanly aesthetic. ![]() image: Hayslip Design Associates image: Hayslip Design Associates image: Hayslip Design Associates image: Hayslip Design Associates image: Hayslip Design Associates Her sublime bathroom continues the delicious palette of pearly whites and blushing pinks. ![]() image: Hayslip Design Associates On a considerably smaller scale... even the young ladies long for beautiful closets… ![]() image: Hayslip Design Associates Bold colors are better suited for these budding fashionistas. Stripped of the cunning artifices of the tailor, and standing forth in the garb of Eden - what a sorry set of round-shouldered, spindle-shanked, crane-necked varlets would civilized men appear! ~Herman Melville And don’t forget about the men. What did I say? Don’t let them fool you! Masters of the universe want to adorn themselves in the finest cashmeres, silks, wools, and leathers… and they don’t want to do it in a poorly lit cubby hole. Men’s closets can be much more than a place to hang your pants… they can be refined gentlemen’s clubs replete with trays of cut crystal highballs and bottles of single-malt scotch. ![]() image: Hayslip Design Associates image: Hayslip Design Associates Mariah Carrie’s closet, featured in InStyle “Hello, Lover.” - Carrie Bradshaw (21st Century American “poet”) Love, Sherry Originally Posted: 10/5/11 Comments |
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