The next few days will see even more changes: Bathroom trim installed, drum chandelier and bathroom sconces hung, bedding arranged, accessories placed and final artwork hung. To be continued..
Recent projects,tips,help and advice on home staging, Redesign and Interior Design
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Our Fabulous Subs - Part 2
The next few days will see even more changes: Bathroom trim installed, drum chandelier and bathroom sconces hung, bedding arranged, accessories placed and final artwork hung. To be continued..
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Our Fabulous Subs- Part 1
We’ve been moving full steam on our Reader’s Retreat space
at Showcase and are less than 2 weeks out from completion. This is when vision
meets actuality. In the next week and a half, we will be installing tile, a
custom bathroom vanity, final lighting, plumbing trim , shower glass doors,
wallpaper, abalone shell panels, all furniture and accessories, draperies and
bedding. This week so far has seen the brazilian cherry color of the floor turn
ebony, drywall patching cover exposed lighting runs and lath and scratch coat
cover the walls of the shower stall.
Our master schedule is updated continuously throughout the day as we
adjust for labor availability and
unforeseen delays. It is a juggling act to say the least and we have hit our
far share of drama. What project undergoing a change this massive this fast
wouldn’t? we will try to cover all the steps to come, but first, I want to go
back 2 weeks when our bedroom built-ins were installed. We have been incredibly
lucky. We have had some wonderful craftsmen working alongside us throughout
this process, often donating their time, labor and materials. Our cabinets were
built in sections by two different woodworkers who needed to work together
to make them look seemless:
The East wall (windowseat wall) was built by Richard Kolarik
of Kolarik Cabinetry in Sunland. He is also building a custom zebrawood trey
table we designed to reach across the plum chaise we’ll be installing in next
week. This is his wall:
The South wall (display cabinet wall) was built by Gary Hagen of Hagen’s Woodworks out of Glendora. He is also in the process of building our bathroom vanity.
In the days to follow the cabinet installation, we had our
painters, Richard Stewart Painting (Sunland) prime them and paint them in Dunn
Edward’s Limestone with an eggshell finish. Take a look at their meticulous work:
We have so much more to come and it will come fast in the
next 10 days:
Flooring refinishing updates and pictures, the Kravet
abalone shell wallcovering will be backed and framed for wall panels, bathroom
tile from Walker Zanger and plumbing fixtures from Kohler’s Purist line and
their new Flipside handheld will be installed. Stay tuned….
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Master Bedroom Redesign
When we are caught up in lengthy interior design projects, we love to get the immediate gratification of a redesign or staging job. With interior design, we wait months, sometimes years, to see the final outcome of our efforts, but a redesign or staging can take just days to see the light. Here's a redesign project we just finished. Our client asked that it be a surprise for her husband's birthday and after several months of planning, we installed everything in the last 2 days while they were out of town.
The dresser and side table have been with our client since college. Since they had cedar-box drawers and could eliminate buying costly new pieces, I decided to explore their growth potential with paint and an updated look.
When we talked about drapery options, keeping the windows light and airy was of top priority. I suggested a sheer drape which would be whimsical and light, but with a natural fiber roman shade to give the smaller sized windows weight and the illusion of greater width.
The chest the client had at the foot of the bed is beautifully made. It has bird's eye maple panels and is cedar lined. I could not, in good conscience, have painted it and since I also felt it was disproportionately sized for a king bed, we changed it out for an open-legged bench.
For an unexpected pop of color against the mint walls and the blue/green of the headboard, I put celadon sheets on the bed and added a grouping of 3 green glass vases to the dresser.

The room has wonderful south/western exposure. It's a large room with all day light, a feature the client wanted to maintain through soft, light-filtering window treatments. |
Two of the client's requests were that a writing desk be included in the new layout and that the balloon roman shade over the window-seat be replaced with something less formal. |
Working with the mint green of the walls and the camel color of the window-seat cushion proved more difficult than I expected. Neither color is well-represented in most home decor stores at the moment. Aqua is everywhere. Mint, not so much. So, we looked for complimentary colors. I came across the bedspread first. It became our inspiration for the space. It combined mints, camels, celadon green and a purple silver. I leaned heavily on those colors for accent items: pillows, desk lamp, dresser decor.
Finding a King headboard in stock or getting one made and delivered within a few week turnaround was another challenge. |
Here is the desk we found for her at an auction. It's Italian made and
amazingly fit in our budget. I love using antiques when I can. They
add an air of formality and history to a room.
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Before |
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After |
The side tables got 4" furniture feet to give them some elegance. They got painted silver with purple undertones to coordinate with the bedspread and I changed out the hardware on all 3 pieces from the wood knobs to antique bronze pull
rings that coordinate with the drapery hardware.
When we talked about drapery options, keeping the windows light and airy was of top priority. I suggested a sheer drape which would be whimsical and light, but with a natural fiber roman shade to give the smaller sized windows weight and the illusion of greater width.
Before |
After |
The chest the client had at the foot of the bed is beautifully made. It has bird's eye maple panels and is cedar lined. I could not, in good conscience, have painted it and since I also felt it was disproportionately sized for a king bed, we changed it out for an open-legged bench.
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Inspiration
When we found out that we would be designing a room at the
Showcase House, we dove in headfirst. The Showcase committee gives all the designers a broad series of color
palettes from which we can choose. Initially, we tended towards browns with
pops of orange and cinnamon. And then, after a trip to the Design Center, we
mixed things up and did a 180.
This beautiful ikat fabric turned our heads
immediately. It changed our color
palette and the whole direction for the room.
As you can see, browns went the way of silver. We love the rich plums and the golden citron
color. The silver tones create a cool
and calming contrast to the more lively plum and yellow-green.
The fabric became our jumping off point. A Queen size, fabric bed will be covered in
it. Bold, we know. But right away we knew we were heading
somewhere exciting. If we’d had any
doubts about this more vivid color scheme, they soon dispersed. The next day we found this beauty…
The chaise is a
1920's art deco piece covered in plum velvet. It became our other major
inspiration in the room. Its color
helped direct the space and its purpose as a "place to lounge"
encouraged our reading room theme. We
are having the legs of the piece re-stained to blend into the newly re-finished
dark wood floors. We love that the piece
has that vintage, retro, glamorous feel while its color gives it a modern pop.
The combination
of classic and modern is an aesthetic we really love at Strong Studio Designs. This ikat fabric is a current, formal take on
its ethnic origins while the chaise is a nod to a time gone by. We definitely wanted to incorporate more art
deco elements in the room. Remember this
little nook?
In between the
bathroom and the closet in a small hallway, it could easily be wasted
space. But you know we like to use every
nook and cranny we can. We found this
gorgeous table, which was so meant to be.
It fits perfectly!
The tortoise
shell vanity table is also art deco. It
is French art deco and will anchor the dressing hall space. It features a glass top, turned legs and
tortoise shell facing. We are currently
on the hunt for the perfect vanity table chair to offset the tortoise shell
table veneer.
We have so many
incredible elements in the room. We
can’t wait to show you more!
Monday, January 28, 2013
Our Showcase House space - The Reading Retreat
The Reading Retreat
For years we’ve been toying with the idea of throwing our
hat into the ring for a Showcase House space. The pros and cons of designing
for Showcase House is a blog entry in and of itself. Busy schedules never made it seem like
the right time. Since, these days, busier than most, there’s no such thing as the right time, we took the leap. As we walked the house the first time, we looked for a space
that was manageable for us both in size and financial under-taking. (The designers bear most of the cost of
implementing their designs). The room we ultimately got was not among the three
rooms we targeted. The guest suite we ended up with was originally part of an
up-stair’s Maid’s Quarters that consisted of a sitting room and 2 guest suites
over the garage. The space was originally presented to us as a single space for
one designer’s under-taking. The scope of it was more than I think any single
designer wanted to tackle outside of the Master Bedroom and kitchen, so the 3
rooms were ultimately divided into 3 individual spaces. Since we had
not focused on the rooms over the garage as a possibility when we walked the
house, there was only one space I remembered well: A room with sloping eves and built-in architectural
interest. Oddly, this is the room
we were given and it suits us: A space with a little bit of quirk and lots of
personality. (If the room were a redhead, we’d just go ahead and move in.)
Here is our space:
The room presents some interesting challenges. Its ceilings are all sloped, which make
utilizing the under-eve space crucial.
Sloped ceilings can sometimes limit a homeowner’s options in
a space. We, however, found our
inspiration under these sloped ceilings. We are going to wrap two of the walls in custom cabinetry,
creating bookshelves, extensive storage and a window seat nook under the window,
perfect for snuggling up with a good book. This relaxing reading retreat will feature all the comforts
of a bedroom oasis, but will provide practical solutions to everyday storage
needs, as well. As mothers of four, we are all about finding
creative storage solutions.
One of the other challenges in the room is its North Eastern
exposure. This makes the room very
dark for much of the day. In order
to bring more light into the room, we have chosen a silver/blue grass cloth wall
covering with shimmering top layers. Reflective, iridescent fabrics will also help
bring light into the room. Perhaps
one of my favorite features of the room will be the un-expected abalone panels
we’ll be framing in sterling, silver-brushed wood frames (Courtesy of Fast Frame
La Canada). They’ll provide light and a striking focal point over the
headboard, side tables and along the wall of the entry hallway.

The shower stall
will feature a floating bench, a
medallion tile focal point and Kohler’s Purist line of plumbing fixtures with
their new flip-side handheld. The tile will be a cool-tone combination of Walker Zanger’s
new lines: 6th Ave.
ceramics, 21’s stone finish porcelain and Rue Pierre’s leathered, pillow-edged
Blanc-Antique marble.
Strong Studio Designs in Showcase House 2013
Pasadena Showcase
House of Design
We have some exciting news over here at Strong Studio
Designs and much to our relief, it has nothing to do with Courtney having
another baby. We are actually giving (re)birth to a room at the Pasadena
Showcase House of Design! This is
a prospect that both thrills and exhausts us. We’d like to invite you to ride along with us as we embark
on this exciting adventure.
For those of you who don’t know, the Pasadena Showcase House
of Design has been a Pasadena tradition since 1965, with its proceeds benefitting
three annual music programs. It is
now one of the most successful home and garden tours in the United States. Each year the Showcase committee
chooses a large, historic house in the Pasadena area and then lets loose a bevy
of interior and exterior designers to update and beautify the house. Through some inexplicable fate, we were
chosen to remake one of the rooms.
We’re not sure why we were chosen… Was it our semi-polished portfolio
(finished fifteen minutes before presentation time) or our magnetic
personalities? We aren’t sure, but we are sure we are going to take the
Showcase House by storm!
Over the next couple months, we’d like to share with you, in
non-designer lingo, the nuts and bolts (and tiles and fabrics) of the
process. The past month has been a
whirlwind already. We can’t
imagine how much crazier it’s going to get. All we know is that with amazing sub-contractors, some
incredible textiles and wall-coverings, a healthy sense of humor (followed by
an occasional dose of red wine), we will make it through and even have a little
fun. Grab a glass and join us!
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Italy and Design
Italy and Design
By Annsley Strong
Everyone likes Italy. Well, maybe not everyone,
but I don't get those who don't. It's got beautiful
architecture, iconic art, fabulous topography
inland and along the coasts, warm colors, people
of passion for life and love, food that has taken
flight from the comfort we Americans associate
with our own and a light that transcends it all.
Did I mention the light? And the love? I mean,
it takes courage to start your Saturday evening
on a park bench, literally entwined in each other,
completely ignorant of the wedding party and
guests gathering around you, watching you
watching the view. Bold! Engaged! In the
moment.
But I digress. Each of the component parts of
the landscape--ancient, modern, ruinous or
reimagined--is veiled in the softest of lights,
held loosely by the softest caress. There is a
grazing of the cheek, a glow that emanates from
within, a joy that should be reinterpreted in every
interior and exterior space. It is the single most
important element of any space--purposeful but
seemingly unintended, natural. It remains the
focus of what we do.
By Annsley Strong
Everyone likes Italy. Well, maybe not everyone,
but I don't get those who don't. It's got beautiful
architecture, iconic art, fabulous topography
inland and along the coasts, warm colors, people
of passion for life and love, food that has taken
flight from the comfort we Americans associate
with our own and a light that transcends it all.
Did I mention the light? And the love? I mean,
it takes courage to start your Saturday evening
on a park bench, literally entwined in each other,
completely ignorant of the wedding party and
guests gathering around you, watching you
watching the view. Bold! Engaged! In the
moment.
But I digress. Each of the component parts of
the landscape--ancient, modern, ruinous or
reimagined--is veiled in the softest of lights,
held loosely by the softest caress. There is a
grazing of the cheek, a glow that emanates from
within, a joy that should be reinterpreted in every
interior and exterior space. It is the single most
important element of any space--purposeful but
seemingly unintended, natural. It remains the
focus of what we do.
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