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Hardcover Dwellings: Living with Great Style Book

ISBN: 0821228463

ISBN13: 9780821228463

Dwellings: Living with Great Style

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$9.59
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Book Overview

Two of today's most acclaimed interior designers share their secrets in this ultimate guidebook for creating a beautiful home. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A must have

This is a divine book. Sills and Huniford show in the pages of this book that they are America's premier decorators. Thier talent is so great and the understanding of how interiors can be elegant, refined, well edited and still very livable are beautifully portrayed in this pages. To have this as a reference and a cronicle of thier work is a treasure. I HIGHLY recommend this book.

Don't listen to other reviews......

This book is great!! From the text you actually learn something rather than just a bunch of boring pictures. The pictures are annotated with the designers comments- you can actually LEARN things from this book. It's not a pretty coffee table book ( thank god, do we really need another one of those?! ) but one which you can actually learns secrets to great design. One step above the beginers level. I would highly recommend this book!

I just HAD to add my two cents' worth, because...

I was amazed by the polarity of the reviews for this book -- always a good sign, as long as the lengthier reviews are the negative ones. Having bought a copy for resale, the reviews below motivated me to heavily skim it, and here's the fat skinny as I see it. These guys really are gifted professionals, whose approach melds formal principle with intuitive insight. Their advice taken piecemeal may read like mostly conventional wisdom, but there is a LOT of it packed into a small space. And their bemoaned "writing about themselves" (hard to avoid, really) is how you get the Be-Here-Now feel of their process. This personal, casebook approach adds considerable vitality to the link between the layered and revealing text and the superbly composed interior photos. No, the latter are NOT huge -- discernment is a mark of these designers, and the medium is as much the message here as with the design examples and text. The real learning comes Zen-like, in the space between the words and images -- that's why some readers "get it" and others (who tend to want concrete "how to" or big, flashy pix and divertingly original text) don't. Check out a library copy if you're in doubt as to whether you're this book's kind of person. Or just take the plunge, get humble and patient, and see what -- and how -- you can learn.... On the text: sure, we all know that the floor is the foundation of any room, furniture should be suitable, luxurious bathrooms will pamper you, wall surfaces offer lots of possibilities, and colors should harmonize but need not match. But then you come upon nuggets of concentrated utility, like their three (primordial) strategies for the use of color, and such interesting observations as, "When color is integral to the material -- stone, wood, metal -- it registers less strongly". The authors' offbeat perspective surfaces here and there like a thread in a tapestry. They liken the floor to the "face" of a room -- then survey ten classic flooring materials in a sentence, list eight functions that floor designs can serve in two more, and rattle off a dozen points of practical wisdom about carpets -- all this being reflected in the accompanying pictures. You don't read this book so much as you mine it. The use of many transitional pages with nothing but large-scripted aphorisms and chapter titles IS a tad on the indulgent side, but even here the whole can be more than the sum of the parts. "A room's function should be paramount in determining the way it looks" (4: Living in a Room), yet "The more defined a room's function is, the harder it can be to design" (8: Functional Spaces). "Be Here Now", gentle acolytes -- these dividers are really connectors as well, functioning on the rebound as subsumers of more practical wisdom than is apparent until you've done your homework. Read that text and get your eyeballs into those pix for a couple of iterations, grok the "tell `em then show `em" paradigm in play, and go to school on these gu

The Deans of Design Reveal Some of Their Magic

Yes, the photos are all too small, and some of the advice seems surprisingly basic. But these two top designers, who were recently included in Architectural Digest's list of the Thirty American Deans of Design, do reveal some of their magic in this little gem of a book. I'm a serious, but self-taught amateur decorator, and I've found that books by the truly top designers are worth studying because they present a photographic record of all the work by one designer (or in this case two designers). As I've studied the photos in these kinds of books, I've learned to identify the common themes that emerge in one particular designer's style. I've also learn which themes run across the work of many top designers. This knowledge, which you just don't get from a magazine, has made the interiors I design for myself far more sophisticated and professional. I've had this book for about a month and have paged through it almost a dozen times. Last week while I was gazing at a photo of one particularly striking room, I figured out the perfect display of objects for my coffee table, a solution that had eluded me for a year. The objects I selected were very different from the ones in the photo, but I never would have thought of them had I not been looking at this book. Surprisingly, getting the coffee table right has made the entire room, which had always seemed to lack someting, come alive. The best part is I didn't spend a penny because I already owned every object I used. My hunch is that if Huniford and Sills had been in the room with me, they would have suggested the very same items. I'm certain they would approve of what I did because I feel like I've "picked their brains." If you'd like to pick the brains of two of the country's leading designers, you'll find this book to be well worth its modest price.

Style with Style!

Beautiful! Absolutely beautiful! As a young design professional, it always gives me pause to see the work of a talented peer...make that a pair of peers. Sills and Huniford are making their mark on the 21st century, as David Hicks, Billy Baldwin, and Jean Michel Frank did in the 20th. Having waited for this book to be published since an interview done by the pair in the early 90's, "Dwellings" fulfills its promise of making simple the secrets to a stylish interior. This tome is a pleasure to all those who harbor ascetic tendencies, yet relish a heeping helping of drama every now and again. Kudos!
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