Design Stars Share Their Bedroom Decor Secrets
We're not sure how these celebrities ever catch up on their beauty rest, but we asked them to give us a glimpse of their bedrooms and reveal their best decorating tips.
Photo: Matthew Hranek |
Dylan Lauren
Dylan Lauren, owner of Dylan's Candy Bar andRalph Lauren’s daughter, choose a white and blue theme for her bedroom. Her canopy bed is dressed in gingham sheets designed by her father. "I definitely eat candy in bed,” she says, “I have things like lollipops and gumball machines around my house as decorations."
More from HouseBeautiful.com |
Photo: Jessica Antola |
Peter Som
Fashion designer Peter Som likes a serene bedroom with nothing hanging on the wall above his bed — he worries something could fall on him while he's asleep! He chose these patterned sheets from his collection at Sferra. "The subtle colors make it more of a texture than a print," he explains.
Photo: Jessica Antola |
John Robshaw
Fabric designer John Robshaw has a love of decorative sheets, bold colors, and found objects from the Middle East and Asia. His bedroom "is kind of a semi-hippie crash pad," he says. "You can call it that, and I wouldn't be insulted."
Photo: Kerri McCaffety |
Bryan Batt
When Bryan Batt isn't playing Salvatore Romano on the set of Mad Men, you can find him back home in New Orleans...not making his bed. "I'm a slob!" he says. The coverlet is Sferra Jacquard, the glass and brass floor-lamp tables are from his store, Hazelnut, and the sheets are 620-thread-count hotel-quality sateen sheets from Bed, Bath & Beyond. "I believe in mixing things. It doesn't always have to be the highest end. If it looks good, it is good," he says.
Photo: Jessica Antola |
Rachel Roy
To de-stress and unwind, fashion designer Rachel Roy hangs in her bedroom hammock, which she found on vacation in Jamaica. "My bedroom is a cocoon, a cave, a place I go for unwinding and recharging. The hammock gets me to chill in seconds. The swinging and rocking puts me in a place of Zen that's very healing," says Roy. But she never actually sleeps in it: "It's not Gilligan's Island!"
Photo: Jessica Antola |
Kelly Wearstler
"A bedroom is a restful space that should be easy on the eye," says designer Kelly Wearstler. So she chose a soothing palette for the interiors of the Tides hotel in Miami. But that doesn’t mean she thinks the bed should be boring. "Like clothes, mix up the bedding any way you see fit. It needn’t all belong to the same set,” she says, "Your bed can be as original and surprising as you are."
Photo: Jessica Antola |
Thomas O'Brien
Designer Thomas O'Brien — who designs bedding for Target and has a new book, American Modern, out — sleeps in his living room. "It's huge, much bigger than my bedroom, so I got the idea of putting my bed in here and turning it into a sort of artist's studio, circa 1920," he says. He recommends buying at least two sets of sheets that are slightly different, but compatible, and changing them out two or three times a week. "That's one of the fastest, most affordable ways to change the personality and character of a bedroom," he says.
More from HouseBeautiful.com:
14 Clever Tricks for Tiny Kitchens
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar