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In the store: Bird chair, Danish dining and lots of chrome

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It frequently seems that we get an influx of several great new pieces at one time. The latest includes a newly powdercoated Bird Chair by Harry Bertoia for Knoll, a long Danish dining table with a set of chairs by Poul Cadovius, another Tobia Scarpa chrome plated steel and glass coffee table and a chrome chandelier.

We're having a charcoal colored pad made for the Bird Chair, so you'll be seeing it in its new duds soon. The Danish table is an impressive 94" dropleaf number that's a real stunner, and the Cadovius chairs speak for themselves.  In the past, we've sold an identical Scarpa coffee table, as well as the dining table from the same line, so we expect to sell this table easily. The chrome chandelier is very simple in design, but it packs a lot of glam.

Enjoy this look at our latest inventory additions.


Bird Chair by Harry Bertoia for Knoll

Danish dropleaf table and set of chairs by Poul Cadovius

Coffee table by Tobia Scarpa

Chrome chandelier (with a little peek at my SIL in the reflection)

Construction saga: Trash troubles

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Up till now, I've remained unflappable...philosophical, even...about weather delays, schedule conflicts with sub-contractors, minor changes to the floor plan and air conditioning ducts that have to be placed right where I wanted recessed lighting.

I didn't lose my cool the other day when I ordered my front door over the phone and the girl didn't think the card was going through, so she kept putting the numbers in. Six times. My bank told me that it would probably take a couple of weeks to get the money back into my account. But I stayed calm, even when the girl called back to tell me that they actually didn't have the door in stock but would upgrade me...to some hideously ornate door. I thanked her politely and asked if she could find my door (the one I had just paid for six times, mind you) at another store, since my contractor really needed to pick it up immediately. I didn't raise my voice when she called me back in a few minutes to tell me she'd found the door and had arranged to have it transferred to her store and that it would be there in 2 or 3 days. I didn't even make a fuss when I found out that the store she was getting it from was only a 10-minute drive down the freeway from her store.

But the war zone that is my back yard is starting to make me a little crazy. A relatively small pile was supposed to be hauled off last week, but there was a change of plans. In the meantime, more debris from the roofing job has accumulated, and every time I look at my back yard, I feel myself getting a little closer to the edge. The new cedar fence is my only consolation right now.

One trailer is already loaded for a trip to the dump, and my contractor is here today with a second trailer, so I know it's going to be cleaned up. In the meantime, it's probably better if I just avoid the kitchen window.


The mess that is my back yard

I try to look at the new fence and not the piles of lumber and concrete.

Construction saga: A little cleaner and a lot closer to a house

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Yesterday my back yard looked like an ant hill, with workers scurrying everywhere. Roofers, plumbers, electricians and framers were all here. The trash crew arrived and hauled away several more loads. I don't know how all those men kept from bumping into each other. I was so busy answering their questions that I never got anything posted, but it's just as well, because now I can tell you what was accomplished in the last couple of days.

The roof is finished. The bulk of the plumbing work is done, with the hot water heater to be installed today. Almost all the wiring is done, and the interior framing is complete. Next on the list is sealing and painting the exterior so it's watertight, and then the sheet rock will go up. Somewhere in there, the a/c guy will do his thing, and before I know it, I'll have a house.

Here's a peek at the vastly improved view from my kitchen window. The blue doors were inside my two-room workshop, and they've been propped in the front door opening to keep out rain. As a matter of fact, they're coming down as I type it, and the new door is being set today. The glass man is coming Monday to measure. Before long, my front doorway will be gleaming in all its orange and satin glass glory.



In the store: Case goods, tables and chairs

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To make up for skipping Thursday's post, here's a little eye candy for your weekend. These are new inventory items at the store. If you haven't visited our website for a while, we'd love for you to drop by, because we've given it a brand new look.


72" Danish credenza with curved front

Paul McCobb Planner Group storage unit

Brass and onyx biomorphic table in the style of Aldo Tura

94" Danish dropleaf dining table

Set of six chairs by Poul Cadovius

Tobia Scarpa Andre chrome and glass coffee table

Construction saga: Pinterest inspiration

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I can't believe it took me so long to get into Pinterest. I've been pinning actively for a year, and now I can't live without it.

It's been one of the most valuable tools I've had while working on my current construction project. Why would anyone want to bookmark an item these days when pinning is so much easier, so much more effective and so much more visual? I've kept my "To Buy" lists for the project on Pinterest, marking each item "Bought" as I ordered it. So efficient!

I've also used Pinterest for design inspiration, and here's one.


mid-century divider
pinterest.com

I'm having a partial wall built between my living room and bedroom, so I asked my contractor to build a two-tier room divider similar to this one above. The wall itself will be 5 1/2" high, and the divider will be about 8 feet long and 2 1/2 feet high and will give me a space to display small glass, ceramic and wood pieces.

Homie time

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Again this year, Mid2Mod is in the running in the Best Home Design & Inspiration Blog category of Apartment Therapy's annual Homies contest. I'd love for you to drop by the Apartment Therapy site and cast a vote for my blog.

Since 2008, Apartment Therapy has been holding the annual Homies contest to name the most popular blogs in the following categories:
HOME DESIGN
• Best Home Design & Inspiration Blog
• Best Home Projects & DIY Blog
• Best Family & Kids Blog
HOME COOKING
• Best Healthy Cooking Blog
• Best Recipe Blog
• Best Food Photography on a Blog


This week you can nominate and vote for your favorite blogs. You can also learn about many wonderful blogs you haven't found yet. Next week, the top nominees will be named, and you can cast a vote for your favorite among the finalists. Winners will be announced on Friday, February 15.

Avriel Shull

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Avriel Christie Shull
Avriel Shull (1931-1976) was an American architectural designer, builder and interior decorator from Carmel, Indiana. She studied art at Indianapolis's Butler University and at Herron School of Art but never completed her degree. She left school in 1948 to open her own commercial art firm. Shull married journalist Richard Shull in 1951, and their wedding was covered in Life magazine.

Though not trained as an architect, she began designing homes when she was in her 20s. She platted her first major development, Thornhurst, in 1956. Today, the neighborhood is remarkably intact and is regarded as one of the most impressive collections of her work. The houses include large expanses of glass, open floor plans and natural materials, such as limestone and brick.

Shull was a free spirited and somewhat eccentric woman who sometimes showed up on a job site wearing a bikini and sporting a cigarette in one hand and a tool in the other, giving construction workers instructions peppered with four-letter words and often laying stone on the exterior of homes herself. In addition to supervising construction sites, she also assisted with interior design.

In the 1970s, Shull created house plans for DIY home building magazines in the U.S. and Canada. She also designed commercial/industrial properties, apartment buildings and a library.

Shull died in 1976 of complications of diabetes.

From indianalandmarks.org, macduffrealty.com, indianahistory.org, wikipedia.org


Shull's blueprints
indianahistory.org

Shull's company logo
commercialartisan.com

First house in Thornhurst Addition
cresourceinc.blogspot.com

tourfactory.com

macduffrealty.com

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Again this year, Mid2Mod has been nominated in the Best Home Design & Inspiration Blog category of Apartment Therapy's annual Homies contest. I'd love for you to drop by the Apartment Therapy site and cast a vote for my blog.

Dux in a row

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We just got in a set of four Compass chairs by Erik Kirkegaard for Dux. We'll be reupholstering them, as someone apparently got distracted in the middle of the job, which is why two are upholstered in vinyl, and two are upholstered in fabric over a thicker cushion.

These chairs look as amazing in profile as they do head-on, and while most of us try to avoid turning our backsides to the camera...most of us of a certain age, at least...the rear view of these distinguished older ladies still looks great.

In spite of upholstery just begging to be replaced, these are some gorgeous chairs. We're selling them at a reduced price this weekend only, and the price will go up when they've been recovered, so if you're in the neighborhood today or tomorrow, stop by and take a look.


Compass armchairs by Eric Kirkegaard for Dux







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Again this year, Mid2Mod has been nominated in the Best Home Design & Inspiration Blog category of Apartment Therapy's annual Homies contest. I'd love for you to drop by the Apartment Therapy site and cast a vote for my blog.

Going once, going twice

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Yesterday my daughter and SIL attended an auction in Austin, Texas. Previewing started at 8 a.m., so they left Fort Worth around 5 a.m. in time to check things out before the bidding started at 10 a.m. The auction promised to be a long one, as the catalog showed 719 lots.

When they got there, they were told that the auction would last till at least 8:30 p.m., with no loading of any purchases till all the bidding ended, so they settled in for the duration. At 6:30 p.m., I heard from them. They had bid on all the lots they wanted and were headed out for dinner, in the hopes that they could load up and head home as soon as they got back to the auction house.

I had a couple of specific pieces of furniture I wanted them to try to get for me, but they were bid up pretty quickly. My daughter was hoping to bring home some art that was estimated to sell for $300-500, but it went for closer to $1500, so she came home empty handed too.

My SIL won several lots for the store, and I'll be showing them to you in the next few days. Till then, here are some of the pieces taken home by lucky winners...maybe us, maybe not.


Italian sofa in the style of Gio Ponti

Occasional table

Antonio Fornaroli desk

Cowhide stools

Glass top coffee table

Italian leather lounge chair

Vico Magistretti reclining armchairs

Slab top table

Console table

Danish hooked rugs

In the store: Case goods and seating

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As usual, my SIL has scored some exceptional pieces for the store. He dropped a long credenza and a large Danish wall unit off to be refinished, but here are the pieces he's put on the floor.

First, the 401 highback wing chair by Alvar Aalto finally arrived. It still has its original raffia upholstery and wooden buttons, and it's amazingly beautiful. We've been eagerly waiting for this piece, and it didn't disappoint.


401 highback wing chair by Alvar Aalto

He also got a beautiful daybed by Peter Hvidt and Orla Mølgaard-Nielsen, which is a beautiful blue with a lovely frame.


Daybed by Peter Hvidt and Orla Mølgaard-Nielsen

This rosewood sideboard is massive. Look at the way it dwarfs the Sarpaneva Festivo candleholders on top of it!


Rosewood sideboard

I think this Italian bookcase is an exciting piece too. I love the glass doors and splayed legs. It's attributed to Osvaldo Borsani.


Italian bookcase attributed to Osvaldo Borsani

The generation gap: An epiphany

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This photo gives you a pretty accurate window into our lives right about now...on a good day. It's starting to wear on all of us a little, but so far no one has had a major meltdown. The good news is that my contractor said I might be moved into my little modernist nest as early as the end of next week, although I'm betting on the middle of the following week, because there's still a shower to build, flooring to lay, baseboards and doors to paint, and my room divider and porch overhang to construct.




The living room, dining room and bedrooms are piled with boxes upon boxes of plumbing fixtures, flooring, light fixtures, ceiling fans and assorted hardware. A refrigerator, dishwasher, stove and microwave are sitting in the living room alcove, and another full-sized refrigerator resides beside the back door. Furniture is covered with quilts to keep sticky little hands off. My checkbook ledger is always out on the desk, to keep tabs on how the money is holding up, and the latest incarnation of the floor plan or cabinet configuration is always visible. Then there's the perpetual laundry basket, as trying to keep clean clothes for the grandsons and clean towels for the adults is a daily challenge, as is the constant picking up of toys and shoes.

Now IKEA pieces are being assembled.

And that brings me to the subject of my epiphany about the generation gap. Most baby boomers have a younger attitude and physical appearance than their parents had at 50+. For the most part, we watch the same shows on TV as our 30-something offspring, we still listen to cool music, and we haven't started wearing sensible shoes. However, a generation gap still exists, but it's not differences in politics or philosophy that divide the young from the old. It's IKEA. Because if you're over 50, chances are IKEA drives you crazy.

The whole IKEA experience makes me nuts, from battling the ever-present crowds, some of whom are in such a rush that they practically run you down with their carts and some of whom are milling so aimlessly, with no concern for the traffic jams they're causing, that you want to ram them with your cart. And what's up with the maze of departments that practically necessitates a GPS to negotiate?

Don't even get me started on assembly. Today I'm putting together a very small medicine cabinet, and suffice it to say that I won't be putting together anything else. I'm foisting off the Expedit assembly on my SIL and daughter, using the threat that I won't move to the apartment till it's together as leverage.

After much soul searching about how much money to spend on cabinets in what will essentially be a guest house to potential buyers, I abandoned the plans for the dark cabinets in favor of birch cabinets from IKEA. (I changed directions with the countertop too, but I'll share more about that later.) One trip to IKEA was all I can stand though. I plan to phone in my final order...and pay for assembly and installation. As long as I don't have to turn another screw or tap in another dowel, I'll be happy to shell out the money.

Handcrafted Modern

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I'm pleased to announce that our good friend Hank Tosh (the extremely talented owner of Tosh Mahal, where our furniture goes for extraordinary restoration and refinishing) is now creating his own line of handmade furniture.

We consider ourselves very fortunate indeed to be able to offer Hank's Handcrafted Modern pieces in our store. Take a look at these gorgeous mirror image, bookmatched live edge tables!


Live edge tables by Hank Tosh of Handcrafted Modern

Construction saga: Sneak peek

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Things have moved into high gear.

Yesterday the plumbing was finished, my hot water heater was installed, and my back yard...which for weeks had been full of trenches and exposed plumbing lines...has all been filled in and looks like a yard again instead of a war zone.

Flooring will be started today, the walk-in shower will be built and glass will be installed Thursday, cabinets will be delivered Friday, the exterior will be painted Saturday, and cabinet installation will begin Monday.

But the most important thing...the thing I am most excited about...is that the room divider I designed came to life yesterday, and it's just the way I envisioned it. Here's a sneak peek at it, before caulking and painting. The next time you see it, all kinds of lovely vintage pieces will be displayed there.


Partial wall/room divider between living room and bedroom

In the store: Eames, Saarinen and more

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The store has so many new and beautiful things that it's hard to know where to start. Wherever you look, there's another iconic shape to amaze and delight...designs by Charles and Ray Eames, George Nelson, Eero Saarinen, Alvar Aalto and Paul McCobb abound. Here's a look.


1957 Eames RAR

Large brutalist wall sculpture

C. Jere' brass lamp

Carrara marble tulip tables by Eero Saarinen for Knoll

Coffee table by Alvar Aalto

Drop-leaf desk by George Nelson for Herman Miller

Slate top La Fonda table by Charles and Ray Eames

Winchendon coffee table by Paul McCobb

Red marble tulip table by Eero Saarinen for Knoll

Long teak credenza attributed to Rosengren Hansen

Alison and Peter Smithson

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Alison and Peter Smithson
Alison (1928-1993) and Peter (1923-2003) Smithson were two of the most influential and controversial British architects of the mid-Twentieth Century.

Their first public building, Hunstanton Secondary Modern School, was completed in 1954 when they were still in their 20s. Known locally as The Glasshouse, the modern school was highly controversial but established the husband-and-wife team as major players in post-war British architecture. The school made use of mass-produced and prefabricated materials and reflected the influence of the Smithson's hero Mies van der Rohe.

Subsequent projects were the 1956 House of the Future, the early 1960s Economist Building and the early 1970s Robin Hood Gardens housing complex. Each demonstrated the Smithsons' determination to build schools, workplaces and homes for a progressive society.

Peter Smithson was born in Stockton-on-Tees and met Alison Gill, born in Sheffield, in 1928 when they were students at the school of architecture in Newcastle. The Smithsons married in 1949 and set up a practice together in South Kensington, which they ran as equals.

The Smithsons were not only part of the avant garde architectural movement in 1950s London, but they were part of the Independent Group, a cross-cultural discussion group, which proved to be highly influential in the British pop art movement.

The House of the Future was designed primarily by Alison for the 1956 Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition. It featured a self-cleaning bath, easy-to-clean corners and remote controls for the television and the lighting.

In 1959, the Smithsons were commissioned to design a new headquarters for The Economist magazine. The success of this project led to their securing a commission for the new British Embassy in Brasilia. However, the project was dropped as a result of government spending cuts.

In the late 1969s, the Smithsons designed 213 homes at Robin Hood Gardens in east London. Unfortunately, the project suffered from structural flaws and a high crime rate. It was often used as an example of the folly of modernist architecture, and its failure was very damaging to their reputation. They only did one more major public commission and spent the rest of their careers designing residential projects for private clients.

From designmuseum.org


The Hunstanton Secondary Modern School
designmuseum.com

The Economist building
inglesparaarquitectos.blogspot.com

Robin Hood Gardens
archdaily.com

The Smithson's weekend house
djibnet.com

Hexenhaus
designmuseum.org

Designed by David Levitt with additions by Alison and Peter Smithson
retrotogo.com

Big E, little e

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I've been in a buying frenzy now that my move-in date is imminent, shopping like crazy on eBay and dropping a few pennies on Etsy too. I'm starting to wind down, but I still have a few bids out. This is the fun part! Here are a few new things that will be making their way to the new modernist nest.


Vintage Danish candleholders
Don't let the nice picture fool you.
They arrived loose in a shoe box, without a speck of packing material...not even a little paper towel.
Luckily, they survived, but no thanks to the seller.

11" Scheurich bowl

Set of Dansk candleholders

Vintage handwoven wool wall hanging

Vintage carved bird

And a vintage folk art painted bird

And an Oiva Toikka Willow Grouse like the one we sold in the store months ago,

Signed de Simone bottle
When I looked back at a post I did on  Giovanni de Simone several months ago,
I realized that I had included a photo of the very same bottle as an example of his work.

Royal Haeger vases by Larry Laslo

Scheurich vase


And, yes, I'm so obsessive that I even have to have a spoon rest for my stove that I think is exactly right. Sad, I know...


Made in Italy, but probably new, from the looks of the stamp on the bottom

Must-see sale

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Back in July, I posted about the stunning home of friends Hiram and Andrew, who recently contacted my SIL to say that they're downsizing, and the house in on the market. They're planning to redecorate their new home, so (Hooray! Cue the fireworks!) most of the contents are for sale. The pieces will stay in place till the house sells, but I'll let you know the minute they're available to buy.

The 2600 square foot house has 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and a pool. For those of you in other parts of the world where real estate is sky high, the asking price will make you weep...$225,000.  Here are several more photos to amaze, delight and tempt.






































If you're local (or if you'd move to Texas for this house) and want to know more about the listing, email me for details.

Osvaldo Borsani

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Osvaldo Borsani
Osvaldo Borsani (1911-1985) was an Italian architect and designer. He completed a degree at the Politecnico di Milan and became a furniture designer in the family business with his father, who was a well known furniture craftsman. The business was then known as Atelier Varedo but later changed names and became Arredamento Borsani.

In the 1940s and 1950s, he produced an extensive body of work, which included seating and case goods. In 1946, he designed an especially noteworty wall-mounted shelving system. In 1955 he formed a firm called Tecno with his twin brother Fulgencio.  As the name of the company might suggest, Tecno took a technology- and research-based approach to furniture design.

Some of Tecno's best known pieces are the P40 lounge chair, which featured rubber arms and had 486 different positions, and the D70, which was the sofa version. For 30 years, Osvaldo was the company's only designer. In the mid-80s Gae Aulenti and Norman Foster began to design for the company, which is known today for its innovative furniture for offices and public buildings.

From deconet.com


P40 lounge chair
1stdibs.com

D70 sofa
icollector.com

Wall unit
artfinding.com

Armchair
midcenturia.com

Curved sofa
1stdibs.com

Desk
liveauctioneers.com

Table
trovegallery.com

P32 chair
donshoemaker.com

Coat hook
etsy.com - windesign

Construction saga: End of the line

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My construction saga is nearing an end. Baseboards and door trim went in yesterday, as did interior lighting. Floor molding will go in today. Painting of doors and trim starts today, exterior light fixtures, closet rod and shelves and the over-the-stove microwave are in the process of being hung, the shower will be grouted and the toilet will be set today or tomorrow. After that's done, all that's left to do is a little touch-up painting; then I move in and wait for countertops to be installed. As long as I have a toilet, a shower and a place for my bed, I can brush my teeth and cook in the house for a few more days. While I'm waiting for counters and sinks, the cedar overhang will be built outside, but I can be living in the apartment while that's done. I think I've reached the light at the end of the tunnel, and it's not an oncoming train!

This will be my last construction post before the big reveal, and even now, I'm only going to show you bits and pieces. Here's a visual checklist of what's finished:


Fans up? Check!

Lights up in the bathroom? Check!

And over the kitchen sink? Check!

And over the bar? Check!

Cabinets installed? Check!

Shower tiled and ready to grout? Check!

Heating and air conditioning installed? Check!

A place to charge my phone? Check!

Frosted glass in the windows? Check!

Floor down? Check!

Ready for exterior lights? Check!

Fence built and crepe myrtle ready to bloom? Check!

My retro pulls arrived yesterday, so they should be on the cabinet doors and drawers soon. I bought a recessed cabinet to hide the toilet brush and plunger, and a hole needs to be cut so it can be popped in. I also bought a birch medicine cabinet to match my bathroom vanity and put a plug inside so the electric toothbrush and such wouldn't sit out on the counter. That needs to be hung too. Just odds and ends left. I'm really getting excited!

Bright spots and silver linings

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If you've followed this blog for long, you probably know that I love the Easy Chair design by Ib Kofod-Larsen. Knowing how much I've dreamed of owning one, my SIL split the pair he had in the store and made sure my dream came true. (He's a keeper, I tell you!)

He also gave me a beautiful Italian vase, a Frankoma bowl and a huge art glass bowl that I've long admired. While I was loading up my goodies, my sweet daughter gave me two of her amazing Fabpats as a house warming gift. I was delighted and touched by their thoughtfulness.

The next time you see all these beautiful things, they will be in my new modernist nest. Till then, they reside in the temporary train wreck we call our home.




Yes, this is my life. Handbags stacked in the corner...because I sold the chest they were stored in. A box of extra lighting fixtures waiting to be sold/returned, topped by a steamer that needs to be used on our kitchen floor. (Toddlers are a lot messier day in and day out than they are when just staying with Grammo for a few hours.) Boxes of IKEA Expedit pieces waiting to be assembled. Disconnected cable box and Roku...because I sold the TV they were attached to. Bathroom lavatory in a box waiting for countertops. Displaced Eames rocker waiting for a new home. Pictures to be hung in the new apartment...and one to be sold without a frame, since it was knocked off the wall by a worker who was removing boxes of flooring from my bedroom.

Casting a glow over all this mess and giving me hope...my new Kofod-Larsen chair, Fabpats, bowls and vase.
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