Funnily enough, as I was packing paperwork for our trip back to the US this summer, I stumbled across an old folder with some of my long-term gray bedroom inspiration images. In light of my last post, I can’t resist sharing them, although they are actually the old-fashioned version of actual tear sheets and in most cases I have no information on designer or publication. If you know any of the details, please drop me a comment and I will be sure to credit it.
Familiar players appear in this tight shot reflected back in a gorgeous Venetian mirror, including it, lovely white linens, stripey gray silk taffeta and European style bed. I’m not sure I would ever get up if this was my bed.
This is one of the earliest images, torn from The Washington Post Magazine and dated Oct. 4, 1992. It is on very faded paper, but I promise you it is gray, as is that standout Belgian cabinet. Just noticed now that there is even a blanc de Chine figure on the ledge.
I always had a hankering for a bit of architectural wall detail, which has been created here with the simple use of different color gray paints. There is some ticking stripe here too – in the bed hangings for instance – although it is hard to tell in the beautiful bright light of the photo.
In this very well-known bedroom by Mary McDonald from the November 2001 issue of House & Garden, photographed by Melanie Acevedo, simple molding has been painted out in white to create architectural interest. In the end, I have never had a space that would have been suited by this kind of detail, but I always love it. Note the Bagues sconces over the fireplace and the bits of ticking stripe amid all the stark gray and white. The natural floor covering warms things up, which is something I should consider.
Other images, saved the more modern way on my computer include this divine one by Alex Papachristidi in a 2006 Elle Decor. Yards and yards of gray silk taffeta tempered by the contrasting glow of the gleaming antique commode and gilt-wood mirrors.
Another influential Papachristidis image is from the living room of the same apartment (and the one the cover of his book The Age of Elegance), in particular the grid of black and white images above the daybed.
A corner in Suzanne Rheinstein’s NYC apartment is another favorite, with its Bagues sconces and Gustavian settee covered in what looks to be a very fine stripe. The whole apartment is subtle and full of gray and can be seen in Elle Decor.
Do you keep tear sheets? I still like them better than Pinterest somehow – more tactile, more real.
Related Posts on Color:
More Pale Grey From Abroad
Today’s Treasure…Nautilus in Shades of Grey and White
Feeling Blue…The Perfect Library
O-Hanami Decorating…Pale Pink Bedrooms for Cherry Blossom Season
Ume Blooming…Maybe Pantone Should Have Called Their Color of the Year Plum Blossom?
Gorgeous Green…Rooms Inspired by a Bamboo Forest
Views To a Room…Green Guest Bedroom at the Shore
Living Lavender Dreams
Golden Ginkgo…Warm Yellow Tones for Autumn
Steve
Every one of these is perfection.
tokyojinja
I think that’s why they managed to stay around for so long!
Elizabeth
I want to try the architectural wall painting in that third bedroom in my dining room. Seems like a fairly easy, and easy to change out, fix for a not too interesting room. Love the Alex Papachristidis living room – that grid would be another fun idea to copy! Thanks for the inspiration.
tokyojinja
I think that style of painting would be ideal to bring some interest to a dining room. It just needs some good math, good painters tape (remember to use the trick of a light layer of base coat over the tape edge before painting the accent color – email me if you don’t know what I mean by that) and a little effort. Send photos!
Penelope Bianchi
I adore tear sheets! I had collected thousands of them! I had to go through them!
I still have some; feeling them is important!!!
tokyojinja
I’m not at all surprised that you are a bit “old school” like me Penelope!
Pip
Love the Mary McDonald room. No tear sheets for me. Pinterest, Pinterest, Pinterest. Oxygen
Pip
How did my Px signature autocorrect to Oxygen??!! Px