Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Slipcovers For Your Walls

Today's guest blog post comes from Slipcovers for Your Walls.

Slipcovers for Your Walls is the blog for www.casartcoverings.com to discuss Casart coverings, interior design dilemmas, decorating solutions,  and suggested ways to use Casart.
Posts are written by the Casart crew:  Ashley, Lindsey and Lorre Lei.

Check out Casaart. They have very clever movable wall coverings that are just fabulous.

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Escape Via A Labor Of Love by Slipcovers for Your Walls

Picture a Tudor row house in Brooklyn filled with a “laboratory” of painted floors, custom floral upholstered sofas and lots of whimsical wall coverings  often used in multiple patterns in one room.
John Loecke, Inc.

That’s the setting for designers Jason Oliver Nixon and John Loecke’s (pronounced Lucky) design firm, John Loecke, Inc.  The wall coverings get changed every six months or so.  (Casart, with its repositional, removable and reusable features would make that task a snap)  Jason explains, “For us, boring is death; we want the eye to be constantly engaged.  It’s Brooklyn. Clients don’t usually come to the office.” However, they entertain frequently and the wall coverings are a real conversation piece.   The interiors were featured in New York Home Design in May.

Photo by Dean Kaufman

To describe the living room, Nixon quotes Diana Vreeland: “Pink is the navy blue of India.”

Photo by Dean Kaufman

I’m not sure if those are gondola silhouettes but I think I also see red paper lanterns so perhaps the theme is Asian/Venetian?

Photo by Dean Kaufman

About the guest bedroom above- “People say they never want to leave,” says Jason Oliver Nixon. “The paper makes the walls disappear,” adds John Loecke.

The Hotel Gritti Palace in Venice was the inspiration for the dining room.  Two different patterns are used on the ceiling.  “Most folks would never think of wallpapering a ceiling,” says Nixon. “I love it.”
Nixon and his family vacationed at the Greenbrier when he was 12 and that began his interest in wall coverings. (Can’t you just see those Dorothy Draper interiors!  If you can’t,  see Revisiting Some of the Great Lady Decorators, Part 2. How could he not help but be impressed!)   “They had this palm wallpaper, like the kind you see at the Beverly Hills Hotel,” says Nixon. “It whisked me away to some magical realm.”  “Wallpaper is a simple tool for taking you to another place,” says Loecke. “The goal is to give you a sort of escape.”           -  Lorre Lei

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