At Home: A Style for Today with Things from the Past |
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Product Description
Leading interior designer and owner of Hollyhock, Los Angeles's renowned antiques and decorative arts mecca, Suzanne Rheinstein is known for her relaxed, elegant style. Style maker and interior designer Suzanne Rheinstein has a keen appreciation for special luxuries. She is a master at taking an eclectic mix of furnishings from the past and arranging them in a fresh, inspiring way. Elegant simplicity and attention to detail are the hallmarks of her look. A timeless quality pervades every room she designs. Rheinstein feels that how you live your life every day is much more important than getting your house together for a special occasion. Beautifully photographed, this inspiring volume shows examples of her work, ranging from a brick farmhouse in the Virginia countryside and a sophisticated rustic getaway overlooking the Big Wood River in Sun Valley to a year-round shingled residence on the beach in Newport Bay, as well as her own homes—a gracious Georgian Revival in Los Angeles and a New York City prewar pied-à-terre. They exemplify her talent for creating attractive homes that make living and entertaining extremely pleasurable.
- Amazon Sales Rank: #17378 in Books
- Published on: 2010-10-19
- Released on: 2010-10-19
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 1.15" h x 9.80" w x 11.94" l, 4.12 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 240 pages
Review
"BUY IT BECAUSE: Rheinstein's belief in quotidian elegance is inspiring. 'A party house,' she writes, 'shouldn't really look that different from your everyday house.'" ~Town & Country
"A visual feast 4 trad lovers. Decorating & entertaining lessons in gorgeous photos" ~House Beautiful
"Gorgeous homes are the business of Rheinstein, a designer who owns the Los Angeles style emporium Hollyhock. The jewel of this book is the chapter on her stunning redo of a 300-acre Virginia farm. NOT JUST the library, dressing table, pantry and even the laundry room are worth poring over, BUT you can pore over the library, dressing table, pantry and even the laundry room." ~The Washington Post
"Passion for the past led Rheinstein to open her own antiques shop. Now one-of-a-kind pieces and six homes that feature them (including two of her own) are included in this tome, out in November." ~Traditional Home
"Over the 20-plus years she's been designing interiors. Suzanne Rheinstein has adorned dwellings from a Newport Bay colonial, to a Sun Valley mountain retreat, to a Virginia horse-country estate. These, and more of her most sumptuous undertakings, are all included in her first book, At Home: A Style for Today with Things from the Past. The volume also features her own beautiful Los Angeles home." ~C Magazine
About the Author
Suzanne Rheinstein's projects have been published in many lifestyle magazines, including Elle Decor and House Beautiful, as well as in several books, among them Designing Women. Hollyhock is an important home furnishings resource for the design community.
Pieter Estersohn is a frequent contributor to Elle Decor, Martha Stewart Living, and other leading lifestyle magazines.
Margaret Russell, editor-in-chief of Elle Decor, is the author of several books, including So Chic: Glamorous Lives, Stylish Spaces.
Most helpful customer reviews
45 of 46 people found the following review helpful.
Past Perfect for Today's Homes
By L. M. Keefer
In her own words interior designer Suzanne Rheinstein takes you on a personal tour through six of her design projects including two of her own homes: her L.A. home and her New York City pied-a-terre. The living room of her NYC pied-a-terre is featured on the cover of this book. Rheinstein describes what she loves most in design: "fewer but better things, painted surfaces, a mixture of furniture styles, a personal art collection and attention to comfort, colors, textures, details and light."
If you like these elements, you'll love this book. The designer makes the case that if you buy and keep fewer and better one-of-a-kind pieces, you can decorate around them. You may change colors and fabrics etc. throughout the years, but the essential beauty and quality is always there. It's like these choice pieces are the characters in the play who always have starring roles in your homes and something to say--the scenery revolves around them. The beautiful and interesting rooms featured in this book support this philosophy.
The projects showcased in this book are diverse. In addition to the New York apartment, there is a Georgian Revival house, a horse country estate in Virginia, a Sun Valley Idaho mountain home, a seaside home in Newport Bay and a Florida cottage. Rheinstein takes you leisurely through each home and explains the design choices in her own words so it's a fun tour. She is very knowledgeable about design history, and there's many references to styles and well-known designers. She mixes Gustavian with Edwardian with Regency with ease and has an educated eye. Rheinstein owns a shop called Hollyhock in California and designs fabric for Lee Joffa. Some of her fabrics are used in the rooms in this book.
I love her quote by Joan Didion: "Every day is all there is." Rheinstein encourages you to use and enjoy the best every day. At the end of the book, she generously lists her design inspirations in Europe and the United States, her favorite design books in her library and her sources for her work.
"All design is opinion," she quotes her friend, and fellow designer, William Yeoward. We're delighted to see and hear her opinion on design in this beautifully unique book. If you love the cover, as I do, you'll love touring the rooms inside with her as your personal and companionable guide.
26 of 29 people found the following review helpful.
Dreamy
By Edward Kay
The most gorgeous, dreamy and inspiring book out this fall.
I love every page, every detail.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
At Home
By David J. Alexander
I have been known through the years to clip pictures of Ms. Rheinstein's work from the pages of shelter magazines. (I heard that she pronounces her name "Su-Zahn"). Anyhow, she is certainly a woman of immense talent, with an eye for the beautiful and unusual. And I am definitely a fan of her work. But certain things in the book surprised me. Especially the front cover, where either the lamp is too tall (and would most certainly shine in your eyes if you were to lie back on the chaise), or the table is too tall, or both. If it's all about comfort and scale, or at least part of it, I think it is so much nicer to be able to reach over to switch on a lamp, or put down a cup, on something which is the correct height; and not have light bulbs shining in your eyes.
On the back cover, the beautiful pair of lamps were not given lampshades which come down far enough to cover the lightblub socket and switch. This is a no-no and is not correct, but I don't understand why someone didn't catch it.
In the potting shed which was photographed, there is a collection of old watering cans placed up on high, which seem to do nothing but create clutter. So there are a few things such as these which surprised me, but I am still a fan, and wish I could afford one of her beautiful rooms. Her own house in the Hancock Park section of Los Angeles, is especially beautiful----I could move in and not change a thing!
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