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We Noted: Lisa Corti

Somewhere in our journeys, we stumbled upon the whimsical, colorful, inspirational work of Lisa Corti.

Lisa Corti from the Corner Store Sonoma

These cushions, set against the muted classic French blue and gold tones of the French settee, do nothing but pop. Available at The Corner Store in Sonoma. Image via The Corner Store.

More Lisa Corti available at Christine Foley, Die Scheune, Ethnic Chic, or Lisa Corti's site.

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Filed under: by Whitney Kolb on 21-Aug-08 04:28
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We Noted: Chapter Two

chapter two pattern

The next time you're in the Miami area, swing by Chapter Two. The Women's Alliance has created the organization to be a nonprofit, sustainable community element by collecting ready-to-wear, high-end, second hand clothing for the Chapter Two resale shop. Their cause? They use the funds generated from sales to help provide skills training and professional clothing to low-income women seeking employment. They've taken the consignment store concept to a new level, by providing the customer a unique brand experience, complete with chic signage, collateral, store layout and merchandising techniques.

chapter two vintage wallpaper

Chapter Two called in design firm mono to create an identity system that aligned with the nonprofit's tagline: "Everything deserves a second chance". Enforcing the concept of sustainability, mono used vintage wallpaper scraps for their business cards. My favorite elements? A variety of inspirational patterns, great typography with use of a classic small caps face, and the vintage-inspired black boxes hanging off the page.

chapter two collateral

Found via Design Crush.

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Filed under: by Whitney Kolb on 11-Aug-08 05:11
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A Glimpse of Perfection

A recent post on Cote de Texas just took me back. If you will allow me the indulgence of recollection, I'd like to share my memories on a brief three months of perfection.

It was the summer after my junior year of college. As an interior design major, I had drooled for years over Charles Faudree's work. He is a cousin of an uncle, and uncle made the necessary call, and my internship was established. I made arrangements to stay with my cousins in a small town just outside Tulsa, but not far, so I could make the drive in each day. I felt like the luckiest interior design major in the entire country: I had an internship with Charles!

Years before, we had actually been to Tulsa to see his "Chateau Debt" (as he fondly called the money pit that was his dream house, now sold) when I was probably only 14. I remember walking through the front door, and feeling like little orphan Annie the first time she walked into the Daddy Warbucks mansion. On returning home to Oklahoma City, I insisted on painting my room a Pratt and Lambert butter color, and swooning over Ralph Lauren's sage green Charlotte floral, the closest thing I could find to a Bennison fabric on a 14 year old's budget. (I have a picture--I'll try to find it to post.) So, yes, that was me. A fourteen year old in love with interior design and chateaus and toile.

I can't even begin to describe the months of my internship. I don't remember my first day, but I do remember walking into house, after house, after house, of perfection. Nothing out of place. Dreamy antiques all over the place. Sarah Brightman, Frank Sinatra and classical music in rotation on the shop's stereo. Meandering over to T. A. Lorton to smell the candles when it got slow. Riding in the van to deliver furniture, to the lamp shade shop. Cleaning out the fabric room, ordering fringe for my first custom made silk pillows. Walking into the shop one day to see Charlotte Moss sitting in Charles' office, collar popped in crisp perfection. Every time I turned around, there was more fabulous.

I know life is never perfect, but looking back, that summer FELT like it was. Everything was beautiful--all the way down to the milk in the glass jar in the refridgerator. If I learned anything from Charles (and I learned a ton!), it was to take the time to savor the small things, the details, the littles. Maybe the beauty of that summer lied within the details he surrounded us all with. Charles continues to remain an inspiration to me, not only for his design work, but for his heart for humanity, and his divine sense of humor.

So let me throw the question back to you: do you mind sharing a time when 'life was perfect'? Maybe just a moment, or maybe a season, but a time when life seemed to have it's own soundtrack of bliss? If you don't want to comment, feel free to email me at whitneyenglish at yahoo dot com.

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Filed under: by Whitney Kolb on 21-Jul-08 06:08
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