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    Home advertisers/home-furnishings Ask a Designer: Retro's fun, but keep a balance
    Ask a Designer: Retro’s fun, but keep a balance
    Anonymous
    advertisers/home-furnishings
    MELISSA RAYWORTH, Associated Press  
    June 12, 2010

    Ask a Designer: Retro’s fun, but keep a balance

     

    Going retro has never been easier. Whether you love ’50s
    space-age style, ’20s art deco or design from any bygone era,
    vintage furniture and home accessories are everywhere today.

    Flea markets and antique shops are stocked with vintage
    treasures or trash, depending on your perspective. Yard sale season
    is in full swing, bringing Naugahyde recliners and vintage
    Tupperware into the daylight after decades of slumber in attics and
    garages. And at a slew of websites, from niche marketers to the
    catchall that is eBay, you can find real vintage pieces and endless
    reproductions.

    But while it’s simple to get your hands on decor from the past,
    it’s more complicated to use it well.

    “Doing retro right is all about balance,” says designer Brian
    Patrick Flynn, founder of decordemon.com. “If you do everything
    from the same period, your space can become cliche or kitsch. What
    you mix retro with is what makes the space unique and updated.”

    We asked Flynn, L.A.-based interior designer Betsy Burnham and
    HGTV’s “Design Star” judge Genevieve Gorder for their favorite
    retro decorating techniques.

    LESS REALLY IS MORE

    “If you’re really into the ’50s, don’t do the Formica table, and
    the jukebox, and an old radio, and five other things,” Burnham
    says. Instead, choose just one or two evocative pieces. “Not only
    is it more tasteful, but I think it’s more effective.”

    For a client who collects toys and action figures from the ’80s,
    Burnham designed built-in shelves and suggested displaying only
    part of the collection at one time. “We found a way to have it
    enhance the space, and not have the space dictated by it,” she
    says.

    Treasured retro pieces of furniture or art will be ignored if
    they’re displayed with too many items from the same era. “You won’t
    notice it until you have something to give it contrast,” Gorder
    says, so mix favorite vintage items with contemporary pieces. “The
    juxtaposition between new and old is a beautiful conversation.”

    And don’t be misled by books about retro design, says Flynn. “If
    you look in any design book, you’re going to see a room that’s all
    packed with things from a certain era,” he says. “But it’s meant as
    a reference,” not as a template to be replicated.

    LIGHT THE WAY

    Beyond buying furniture from a given era, you can infuse your
    home with vintage flair or temper retro furnishings with
    contemporary style through strategic use of light, pattern, color
    and texture.

    “George Nelson pendants are probably the most iconic form of
    mid-century pendant lighting, and they mix well with virtually
    anything,” Flynn says. “Table lamps, especially chrome and ball
    1970s style, add a nice element of postmodern sexiness to any
    room.”

    Burnham agrees: “Vintage lighting is fantastic,” she says, but
    old lampshades should be replaced with fresh ones to “enhance your
    vintage stuff, make it beautiful again.”

    Like lighting, patterns and colors “can act as a bridge between
    yesterday and today,” Flynn says. “Start off slow with accent
    pillows or draperies. If you get comfortable with that, move on to
    wallcovering. A great designer to turn to for geometrics is David
    Hicks. His prints are still in production today and just as popular
    now as they were in the 1970s.”

    In his own home, Flynn highlighted the house’s mid-century
    architecture by using 1970s diamond-patterned wallpaper and Nelson
    pendent lights above the side tables, contrasted with a traditional
    bed. “The room has a definite retro appeal,” he says, “but it
    doesn’t feel forced or out-of-the-box.”

    He’s also a fan of grasscloth, which can give walls a ’50s or
    ’70s vibe, and using contemporary color combinations in retro rooms
    (try black, gray and blue “with pops of Kelly green” for a “swanky,
    masculine and entertaining-savvy” look, Flynn says).

    RESPECT THE ARCHITECTURE

    These designers agree that while your home’s interior design
    doesn’t have to evoke the same era as the exterior, there should be
    some connection.

    “One of my rules is to really understand the architecture and
    give that value, and take it inside with the interior design,”
    Burnham says. “But you don’t have to be literal. My house was built
    in 1927, and obviously I don’t want to have a Victorian interior. I
    keep it classic, with a twist.”

    With a mid-century home, the defining characteristics are a
    low-slung shape and clean lines. “It’s about the lack of detail,”
    Gorder says, “so I wouldn’t go all Rococo with my interior pieces.”
    But, she says, she might use bold vertical stripes to give the
    illusion that the rooms have more height.

    Also consider the size of rooms and the practical uses of the
    space. For a living-room conversation area, a cluster of ’60s orb
    chairs might look cool, Gorder says, but what about the acoustics?
    Seating, whether it be a contemporary sofa or a pair of antique
    barber chairs, should help guests talk and connect.

    RETRO OR REPRO?

    Whether original or a reproduction, quality is what matters.
    Shopping online, it can be hard to determine whether a reproduction
    is well made or whether a vintage piece is in good condition. Be
    sure to ask questions.

    Shopping for vintage originals can be tough. “It helps to
    educate yourself,” Burnham says. “Do a little research … (and)
    your shopping will be so much more effective.”

    The final tip? Have fun. These designers says retro decorating
    is about celebrating styles you love, even if that means just a bit
    too much kitsch. Whatever era you prefer, Gorder says, “it’s
    important that you please yourself, because it is the one
    environment you control.”

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