COTE DE TEXAS: Veranda
Showing posts with label Veranda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Veranda. Show all posts

Bloody Marys and All the Latest News!

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Olivine’s old fashioned storefront 








I stopped by Olivine the other day looking for accessories and lamps for a client.  I love Olivine – with its overflowing and layered displays.   You have to go around the store two or three times just to see everything – so much merchandise is hiding about.  I found some great sconces from Aidan Gray and a white female bust for my client – along with tiny glasses in rattan shelves just for me!  And, not stopping after a few glasses,  I bought some new candles too. But… what really caught my eye was a big display of Bloody Mary mix!  WHAT???? 


 


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The mix is called Garden District Bloody Marys and it’s been gaining fame after it was recently featured on Marlo Thomas’ Huffington Post blog HERE.  It’s such a great story about how the mix came to be. Naturally, it features a flamboyant Great Aunt Gladys from New Orleans whose mix was quite popular in the Garden District. Fast forward several decades and Aunt Gladys's great niece Stephanie Sonoja found herself out of work after toiling away in the advertising and marketing business.   Her mother had somehow finagled from Aunt Gladys the super secret recipe with its 21 ingredients.   The long trip from idea to grocers shelves took several years.  Stephanie learned that there are 8 ingredients in a Bloody Mary mix that when mixed with vodka causes it to burn and turn bitter.   Once Stephanie’s chemist was able to overcome that hurdle (Garden District Bloody Marys is one of the few mixes that does NOT turn bitter!) the next roadblock came from the bottler.  A large order from Costco had to be turned down when the bottler wanted to put the mix in a typical decanter.  Of course, the marketer Stephanie had other ideas.  In the end, she designed a beautiful carafe for the mix that is as useful empty as full.  It even has a illustration of the infamous Great Aunt Gladys.


 


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Since Olivine’s owner, Helen, is from Louisiana, she was naturally drawn to the mix, which she drinks while visiting her restored historic Galveston house.   What a perfect place to drink Bloody Marys since the architecture of Galveston’s historical districts is  so similar to New Orleans's Garden District.   AND being such a huge fan, this Friday, the 20th, Helen is hosting a party at Olivine to introduce the mix  to Houston.  The event is open to the public, so please drop by for a taste of what is promised to be the best Bloody Mary you will ever have!!    Along with the Bloody Mary mix, Olivine is also hosting a trunk show for Petite Bohemians jewelry.   


 


 


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The invite to the party this Friday!


 


Now, if you can’t make it to Olivine,  Garden District Bloody Marys and Petite Bohemian jewels will also be at the Gypsy Market the following Friday, April 27th.   The Gypsy Market is Houston’s newest antique/decor market hosted by 2620 at 2620 Joanel.   Ideally, you should probably make it to both events.  Go Houston!


 


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And here is the invite for the Gypsy Market at 2620 Joanel – NEXT Friday, April 27.  


 


 


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Of course, I want to show a few of my favorites in store right now at Olivine.  They have so many headboards and these great coronas.  Some are old and some are new.  Too cute!


 


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Great chandeliers – like this Italian style that is so popular right now.








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These lanterns are great for the tabletop or outside.  BUT BUT BUT – if I were looking for an electric lantern, I would buy this for under $300, and take it to a lamp man and have him electrify it.   For under $500 – you could have a fabulous lantern.  And if you didn’t want it black – paint it!   This is a great buy.





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I liked this pair of lamps.





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This gray gate leg table would be great in an entry hall piled with books, or as an end table next to a sofa.  It would also make a cute high coffee table.


 


 


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There is so much to see – this isn’t even 1/2 of the store!!


 


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Cloches and birds and rattan wrapped candles.





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Vintage kidney styled dressing table.  I wish I was doing a bedroom now.








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I bought the prettiest angel there awhile ago.  Now, she has a Joseph in stock.  At least I THINK this is Joseph!







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And the prettiest Madonna.  Look at the base and her crown.








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  I wish my baby was still a baby!  This tulle and silk dress in blush pink is to die for.  It also comes in blue.


 


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  NOW, don’t forget to join Helen at Olivine for a taste of Garden District Bloody Marys this Friday, from 4 to 7 pm at 2405 Rice Boulevard.  For more information, see Olivine’s web site HERE.


 


 


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Leon Max in England by Henrietta Spencer Churchill.  Minimalist?  NEVER!!


 


  A little news from the publishing world.  Have you seen the new May issue of Architectural Digest?  What is going on with this magazine?  It keeps getting better and better and better.  Margaret Russell has really turned this once tired publication around and made it so elegant with the most outstanding houses and photography.  The pictures are big and clear – no more small, boring pics.  Russell is a genius.  If you have ever doubted the importance of the Editor in Chief – the new Architectural Digest should settle it for you.   There is a world of difference between the last editor and Margaret and boy, does it ever show.


 




The master bedroom sitting room at Easton Neston!  Must be nice.  Notice the desk with the attached clock.  Photography by Oberto Gili – a master with the camera.  His own recent book is gorgeous HERE.


 


  This month’s Architectural Digest issue is called “Grand Tour – Ravishing Homes Around the World.”   If you are a minimalist, don’t bother.  The interiors are filled with clutter and antiques of the best kind.   The cover story – Easton Neston by Mitchell Owens is drop dead gorgeous.  OMG!  Talk about just bring a toothbrush and move in, I’m ready!!!    I loved this sentence from Leon Max, the owner of Easton Neston:  “All the tables should be old and the chairs should be new if one can help it.”    Spoken like a man.  Men HATE antique chairs because man is so much bigger today than man was a few hundred years ago.  (Which is so weird when you think about it.  Why are we so much bigger today? I mean, I know why I am bigger – too much candy and cheeseburgers, but why is man – the species – so much taller than man was just a century ago?)


 




Interior designer May Daouk’s Beirut Villa – photography by Simon Watson.  Notice the console on the left piled high with blue and white porcelains.  


 


There are EIGHT houses featured this month.  EIGHT.  When was the last time you saw a magazine that featured EIGHT houses?   The funniest thing is at first I counted seven and thought that was incredible.  But I went back and recounted and was stunned to discover it was EIGHT!    Now, if only they would change the font, I’d never say a bitchy word about AD again.  


 




  Timothy  Whealon in Monte Carlo.  Simon Watson.


 


And on top of all this – there is a new AD web site with huge photographs.  Hear that House Beautiful?  Vogue and Architectural Digest (both Conde Nast) have finally embraced the digital age and have given us these beautiful images online.  Thank you!


 


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  And finally, I received the best package in my mail yesterday.   From Amazon.  The new book by Lisa Newsom:  THE HOUSES OF VERANDA.


Pick me up off the floor, I’ve died and gone to heaven.  Drool is collecting on my chin.  My eyes are in bugged out so far they may never recover.  I look like I have Graves disease.


OK – people, listen.  I’ve told you about some of my favorite books this year – Phoebe Howard’s and Segreto’s – both gorgeous.  AND now, add a third one to the list.  If you like Veranda, get this book.  That’s all I will say.  RUN.   There’s nothing really new here.  It’s all your favorite houses from past issues.  But that’s the point, isn’t it?  To have all your FAVORITE Veranda houses together in one HUGE book – with extra large photographs, without all the writing over the pictures like it happens in the magazine.  Just clean, huge, beautiful photographs of your favorite houses. 


  


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Like this.  The most beloved cover story ever – it is the cover of the book and the first house featured.  This house is the home of clothier Edourard Vermeulen. From Belgian (naturally) – it is a stunner.  I’ve always loved that urn filled with roses.  And that table – so hot right now in America, but this house was designed years ago. 





The photographs are so much bigger than they are in the magazine!  I LOVE IT!!!!!!!!!!!     Each house featured – almost each single house in the book was a favorite of mine.  Did I edit this book?  I was wondering???   Ha!  Seriously, Newsom picked out each house that I myself would have picked out for the book.  There are tons of houses, 30 in all,  and I think there were only two that weren’t absolute favorites over the years.   And even those are beautiful.








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The next house is a classic by Dan Carithers (my favorite of all his houses – well one of them!) I’ve always loved the curve of the sconce – it looks like sculpture. 





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The next is a house by John Saladino.  Oh my.  And on and on it goes.  It’s a feast for the eyes.


 


You can throw out all those dog eared, yellowing and torn clips from Veranda.  It’s all here in one place now – in this book.   Some of the pictures were fresh again – it had been a long time since I’d seen them.  Others were more well known.  A real bonus - there are two gorgeous houses by the Houston great Babs Watkins, including the first house I saw of hers that made me fall hopelessly in love with her aesthetic.  Such great memories.  And that is what this book represents – memories.   Memories of falling in love with design and designers.  Remembering the first time you saw Bobby McAlpine’s work.  Or those gorgeous aqua beach houses.   A reader emailed me saying “I wish you lived here so we could sit and look at the book together.”  Yes – I understand what she meant.  If you do too – this is the book for you.


 


 


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Babs Watkins – the first house of hers that I had seen – Love at First Sight!


 


My only complaint?  At 288 pages, it’s still not enough.  Do it again, Lisa, come on, one more please!!!  Volume II. 


AND hint, hint, someone at Southern Living should do the same thing with all the great  Southern Accents houses.   If that would only happen….


 


To order the book click on the picture!








  


 










































































Scooping the Magazines

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The new October Veranda is out, beautiful– as it always is - full of drool-worthy houses that are totally out of my price range – just like I like it.  But on closer inspection,  the October Veranda looks familiar, very, very familiar.   Why?  Might it be because two of its feature stories have already been seen here on Cote de Texas.   What?   I’m kidding, right?    Nope.   What’s going on with Veranda today?  Why the recycling of old stories?

 

 

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“OY Suzani!!” story from Cote de Texas March, 2009 – seen in this month’s Veranda.

 

Veranda and the late Southern Accents were always the cream de le cream.    They were the two magazines that I would circle the Barnes and Noble parking lot  for - waiting on the Thursday delivery truck to bring the newest issues.   Over the years, so much has changed, but thankfully, much, like an old friendship, has stayed the same. 

 

image A favorite Southern Accents cover – maybe my favorite one ever.   This cover inspired a rash of lilac colorways that were added to fabric houses.

 

Of course Southern Accents is now gone, a victim of the bad economy and scarcity of ads; readership was never the issue.   For me, the death knell started when I first noticed the paper they were using.  Instead of the usual nice and thick variety, SA switched to thinner and lighter paper.  You know, the exact same kind of  lifeless paper that Southern Living uses.  Cheap.   The beginning of the end.   When it was announced they were closing their doors, I was sad for days – I say this with no exaggeration.   Southern Accents had been such a large part of my life, it was a design bible.   Each month I would rush to see if any favorite Houston designers had made it in the issue.  This was before the internet and design blogging, and the ability to follow designers portfolios was nearly impossible.   Magazines alone made it possible to see what designers were up to;  magazines gave you a glimpse into their current aesthetic.   It was a family affair.   Many issues my mother, or my aunt or my sister would call and we would discuss it, house by house.  If it was an rare “bad” issue, we would warn each other:  “got the new SA, don’t bother.   It’s TERRIBLE this month!”   Or, “go get your issue and turn to page 140.   I just love that!”   You see, these magazines mattered to a lot of us.    Back then, they didn’t publish each month and the wait for a new issue was torture.  At least SA came more often than Veranda, sometimes it seemed as if the new Veranda would never arrive.   But it did and still does, while SA is gone forever.

 

 

 

 image All In The Family:  This beautiful house was editor Lisa Newsom’s son’s.  Another classic cover and story. 

 

Over the years Veranda quietly changed.   Their southern-only editorial material went international.    The shift was subtle.   I hadn’t even realized that change was intentional – I always assumed  the non-southern houses were the second homes of rich and famous Dixie-ites.   And yes, Veranda’s paper quality suffered too, just like SA’s.  Pick up an old Veranda and feel the difference, it was almost like reading a design book, certainly not some rag you could pick up at the grocery store.   Which brings up another difference – Veranda was never found in a grocery store or a drug store.   It was special, a jewel that didn’t mingle with Track & Road or True Romance.   You had to seek it out to find it.  But that’s no longer true either since Hearst bought the magazine in 2002.    Veranda even went digital a few months ago and finally rolled out a viable web site.  Will wonders ever cease?

 

Ay.   Was there ever a prettier cover?  Simple perfection in a Belgian country mansion owned by that country’s top fashion designer.

 

Despite all the changes at Veranda, the magazine basically looked the same.   It never changed drastically, it just tweaked things here and there.    It may think it’s now an international magazine, but its roots are southern and always will be.   A few months ago founder and editor Lisa Newsom quietly stepped down, replaced by former domino alum Dara Caponigro.   Gulp.    domino and Veranda?     The blog gossip was brutal.  It wasn’t personal against the new editor who is universally respected, it’s just we didn’t want OUR Veranda to become the “how to get this look for less” magazine for Kappas and Pi Phis.    So far, so good.    I haven’t noticed Dara’s impact yet, but I’m sure it is coming and will probably be good.  She knows what she is doing.   Young and talented, maybe she is what the magazine needs – fresh blood and all.    I just hope she knows what to do with a Pam Pierce or a Carol Glasser house, the importance of them and others like them.   The verdict is out.

Which brings me back to this issue – why all the old features?    Much of this month’s Veranda is very old, recycled news for Cote de Texas readers and bloggers in general.      On the Skirted Roundtable, then House Beautiful editor Stephen Drucker told us (listen HERE) that  he liked to run features as soon as they were photographed.  He didn’t believe in holding onto stories longer than a few months, a year - tops.    It’s unfair to the designer, he said, because if you run work they completed four or five years ago, it doesn’t really reflect their current style.   Five years is an eternity in the design business.   

 

image A Houston legend:  Kay O’Toole’s former highrise apartment.

 

So, what happened this month at Veranda?   I KNOW I shouldn’t be writing this.  I should keep my mouth shut and be a good little blogger.   I don’t like to go negative here, and I rarely do,  but, I’ve gotten numerous emails from readers about this, questioning it.    Making editors unhappy isn’t in the best interest of bloggers. 

On the last Skirted Roundtable (Listen HERE), we discussed the importance of blogging to magazines, again.  Yet again!   I said and I do strongly feel this, that a few years ago the magazine editors seemed apprehensive of bloggers potential power and they courted us.    Today, they are no longer threatened and shouldn’t be.    Blogs and magazines work hand in hand.  Blogs need magazines, not the other way around and editors know this now.   We aren’t a threat, we never were.   We’re more like free advertisers, valuable advertisers for sure, but still free.    

Digital magazines like Rue and Lonny pose much more of a threat than bloggers like me or  “My Pretty House” do.    Still, as Margaret Russell told us on the Skirted Roundtable (OK, enough with the Skirted Roundtable already!!) popular bloggers might reach 50,000 readers a month.  Magazines reach over 200,000.    That statement alone put us in our place, fast.    Reflecting on Russell’s views, I’ve taken myself much less serious.   I’m not a magazine, I’m not a writer, nor am I a photographer.   I’m just a woman sitting in her sweat pants with holes in them pontificating from my backyard about what I like.     Trust me, there’s no one quaking in their boots about this.   

 

image October’s House Beautiful:   Is it an ad or an editorial statement?  Who paid for it and why?

 

Still, it was a shock when I read a two page ad/editorial in the new House Beautiful defending magazines against the internet by asking “Will the internet kill magazines?  Did instant coffee kill coffee?”   Two pages with no hint as to who wrote it, who paid for it and why.   According to the ad, readership is up, especially in the younger, most important demographic.    Magazines, the ad says, do what the internet doesn’t:   “neither obsessed with immediacy nor trapped by the daily news cycle, magazines promote deeper connections.  They create relationships.”   Yep.   I agree with that.   I live that.    But two pages to make a point?  Someone sounds awfully defensive.    And speaking of immediacy and daily news cycles, how old should a project be before a magazine deems it too old to run?   Why hold onto stories when you risk the chance of the pictures leaking out to the internet months and years before you finally go with it? 

 

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J. Randall Powers gorgeous townhouse project in this month’s Veranda.   This project has long been one of my favorite of Powers.  Photo from PaperCity who ran this story years ago.  Additionally, pictures of the townhouse showed up on real estate web sites when it was put up for sale. 

 

So, buy the new Veranda, I did.  As usual, the photography is gorgeous.   Their pictures cover both pages in many instances and there are some wonderful designers featured this month.    Although if you are short on cash, you might just want to read this story of mine “Oy Suzani” – from   March, 2009 (HERE.)   It’s the same spec house from Mary McDonald shown in this month’s Veranda.   Pictures of this house have shown up all over the internet this past year.   Or, to read about the Randy Powers house also featured this month, see my own article called “Chinoiserie Central at Piano Nobile”  HERE.  This gorgeous townhouse by Powers was actually first shown years ago in PaperCity, a Houston magazine.   I know Powers is thrilled to have his work seen in Veranda, no doubt, but I can’t help wondering if he would have rather had a more current example of his work shown.   Probably.      Then, there is the profile on Timothy Whealon, that wonderful young interior designer, which showcases a house that has already been featured all over the blogs.   The bloggers  took their pictures from Whealon’s own web site.      I’m sure Veranda would have preferred Whealon not post those pictures until their story was published, but how many years could they expect him to hold off?  One, two, three years?    Once a photograph turns up on the internet, it goes viral, it spreads from blog to web site to blog, over and over like a nasty cold, until no one can actually say where the original picture came from.   And yes, I know, copyright issues and the internet are much debated, heated topics best left for another time. 

Finally, there’s the Veranda story about Edith Head – yawn.  Please don’t tell me that Veranda is going to take up Architectural Digest’s mantel and  showcase Hollywood ad nauseam.   Now that Margaret Russell is heading up AD, maybe their Hollywood adulation will end.  Hopefully.  But really, Edith Head in Veranda?  Seriously? 

 

image October’s House Beautiful:   gorgeous new decor – eye candy to inspire, to lust for, to dream about.   Interiors like this by Daniel Sachs are why House Beautiful is at the top of their game.    

 

I know times are tough for the magazines.  And like I said, I probably should  just kept my mouth shut and hope that maybe soon we’ll be getting current stories from Veranda never seen before, of projects just completed.    I can’t recall ever seeing a house in House Beautiful that was first shown all over the blogs.   I could be wrong about that, but that magazine always looks fresh and current.    And it is always a a surprise, a visual feast.   This month’s cover story shook me to my core, leaving me to question, again, my own aesthetic.   The heavily ethnic, Indian and English inspired interiors by Daniel Sachs left me speechless.    Bland Belgian-who????  There are so few quality magazines left, so few design magazines of any kind left, and I want to be surprised, I want to be speechless, I want to be inspired.   I want to get my magazine and have my mouth fall open and just stare and gape and read and reread and scan in the pictures and talk about them here on the blog or on the Skirted (ok ok ok – I won’t say it again).  

 

Jill Brinson’s Atlanta house was the subject of much adoring blog buzz.

 

The last time that truly happened for me was House Beautiful’s cover story of Jill Brinson’s house HERE.   GAWD.    It inspired me, it awed me, it made me green with envy in a very good way.   It provoked discussion and blog buzz.    I want that from my magazines.   Every time, every issue.   Too much to ask for?   Probably.  Yes.  Too much.    I’ll settle for once a year. 

Veranda Magazine

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Cover story:  Magnificent Swedish clock/desk combination.

I love when a magazine's cover is beautiful.  I'll spy the new issue on the stands and my heart skips a beat while I rush to the checkout counter.  If the cover is especially pretty, I won't scan the magazine on the way home.  Instead, I'll wait until I can take the article all in, with no distractions.  The new Veranda magazine has such a cover!   The story centers around a gorgeous, remodeled Dallas home owned by a young Texan couple, both of whom have ties to the design world.  The Newsoms started and own the wildly successful Wisteria catalogue, a favorite source for designers and design lovers everywhere. The wife, Shannon, is the daughter of one of Houston's great interior designers, Jane Moore - who also owns the shop Jane Moore, Ltd. which specializes in Swedish and French antiques.  And, as if that isn't enough design pedigree for one couple -- Andrew, the husband, is the son of Veranda's founder and editor Lisa Newsom (a fact which was news to me.)  No wonder Wisteria is as fabulous as it is!!  With genes like these, how could Shannon and Andrew go wrong? 

Have I told  you yet just how fabulous their home is?  Filled to overflowing with painted Swedish and French antiques, it is a vision in soft, muted colors.  Gustavian furniture is a close cousin to French furniture and they mix well together.  Plain and checked linens cover the peeling painted wood frames of the chairs and sofas.  Walls throughout are painted white and the wood floors are just as light.  No fussy drapery here, instead wood shutters cover the windows.  Sprinkled throughout the house are pieces from the Wisteria catalogue, but mostly the accessories are one-of-kind antiques, some of which will serve as inspirations to copy for the catalogue.  Veranda magazine is based out of the deep south and thus, isn't available everywhere, so for those unable to buy it, here are a few highlights from the Newsom house:

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One side of the living room, Gustavian chairs, French console.

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Gorgeous antique mantel, french chairs.  I love the old books on the mantel.

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The dining room with new steel table from France, antique French chairs and chandelier.  Swedish Moro clock in the background.

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Living room with Chelsea Editions check on custom sofa.  Swedish chairs and center table.  Modern lamps are an unexpected touch.  Wisteria green jug on table.

Names Can Be Deceiving: Shabby Slips

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Veranda's September 2007 cover story featured Houston designer Renea Abbott's work on a large, Provencal-inspired home built in California. The finished product is the culimination of years of hard work, construction alone lasted over three years. This project catapults Abbott into the upper echelons of the design business, something she truly deserves. The "farmhouse," as it is referred to, is a study in timeless design - aged materials were used throughout and careful attention was given to the most minute details to ensure authenticity. The result of all this hard work is a home truly deserving of respect. Rather than do interiors that are faithful to its farmhouse style, Abbott's choices are instead sometimes surprising and yet, always fresh. The front cover with the Cy Twombly over an 18th century mantel epitomizes Abbott's work: the modern mixed with the antique. Both ends of this spectrum are represented by sophisticated pieces. This design mix is familiar to Houstonians long aware of Renea Abbott.

Best known as the proprietress of the store Shabby Slips, Abbott has garnered much local press, mostly showcasing her own frequently changed environs. The store started out with a simple premise - slip covers handmade to cover the plush, down-filled sofas and chairs that filled her shop. Everything was white back then, but things at Shabby Slips are different now. The walls are a deep, dark shade. Wonderful, period antiques have taken over floor space formerly devoted to the masses of cushy upholstery. In fact, slip covers are no longer even offered to the public. The direction of the store but not it's name has changed completely. And, the change could not be more gorgeous. Large, gilt chandeliers glitter over the furniture's gilded finishes. Mid century lacquered pieces vie for attention with rustic oddities. Exotic lamps are fashioned from rock and crystal. The atmosphere in the store has taken on the air of an exquisite jeweled box. Sophistication is the key word here. Always in motion, Abbott has reached out with branches of Shabby Slips in Austin and New Orleans. And in Santa Fe, her mother Barbara Carlton runs the store there with its decidedly different more western feel. If visiting Houston, Shabby Slips should be a must stop on the antique shopper's agenda.



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Sparse, yet elegant hallway in the Californian farmhouse.




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The dining room.


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The elegant bathroom with the double shower placed behind the tub.




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Beautiful Californian garden with limestone table and Rose Tarlow chairs.


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Shabby Slips: gilt antique furniture, contemporary fabrics.




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More antiques with a surprising Global Views table.


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Crystal obelisks on laquered trays.




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More gilt, more modern.




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A lamp with a modern rock crystal base.




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Another interesting lamp base.




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Finally, a sofa meant for slip covers!




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An unusual zebra upholstered chair.




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A typically untypical Abbott tablescape.




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The mix that Abbott is known for: slipcovered furniture, antique cyrstal chandeliers, rustic coffeetable.




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The old mixed with the new.




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Out back, behind a gate, through a back yard - Shabby Slips recently expanded into a neighborhood house.




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In the house annex, things are definitely more casual.




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Someone could move right into the shop's annex.




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Notice the rug from Creative Flooring. This is my favorite 'skin' pattern.




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Wonderful card table with a mix of chairs.


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I love how the curtains are tied back in this room.


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And lastly, Abbott's attempt at being hip: two pink, Palm Beach inspired chairs.