Trois décors maximalistes pour ce jeudi après-midi d'automne, tous trois tirés du nouveau livre de Carl Dellatore 1. Avec ses panneaux dorés, son mobilier vintage et ses objets de collection, cette bibliothèque conçue par le designer @KenFulk n'est qu'un exemple des espaces remarquables présentés dans le nouveau livre de @CarlDellatore "More is More : Today's Maximalist Interiors", publié par @RizzoliBooks. - Photo par @DouglasFriedman #Repost @galeriemagazine #KenFulk #Rizzoli #GalerieMagazine #LiveArtfully 2. #Repost @carldellatore This dynamic space was designed by LA-based Kevin Isbell--and was expertly captured by photographer Annie Schlechter. It appears in 'More Is More Is More: Today's Maximalist Interiors' in the chapter focused on COLOR. Kevin shares his thoughts on the room, “Being part of a larger room overlooking Central Park, this dining area needed a personality of its own. The cool powder-blue Venetian plaster is the perfect foil for the warm tones of the gold satin–upholstered walls in the adjacent living area. The grasshopper-green upholstery and pillows provide the perfect counterpoint—a nod to the verdant trees just outside the windows in spring.” Second shot pattern: 'Dawnridge' in peacock by Cristina Buckley. Available through Schumacher #Repost @carldellatore Designers steeped in the aesthetic genre understand the importance of mixing patterns in maximalist interiors, and perhaps none more than New York based Markham Roberts. This image, which aptly appears in the chapter on PATTERN in 'More Is More Is More' underscores the point. Roberts shares some insight into the space, “In the dining room of the late nineteenth-century sea captain’s cottage overlooking Puget Sound that I share with my partner, James Sansum, I upholstered the walls with a Décors Barbares print designed by my longtime friend Nathalie Farman-Farma that I custom colored to work in the room. The similarly colored yet differently scaled pattern of the Bessarabian rug is effective in tying the two patterns together without being repetitive.” 📸 Nelson Hancock https://www.instagram.com/p/CkyLFhnN_qc/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=