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If you have
absolutely no interest in the arranging or rearranging of your rooms,
house or houses, of course, leave it to a decorator and give your
attention to whatever does interest you. On the other hand, as with
bridge, if you really want to play the game, you can learn it. The first
rule is to determine the actual use to which you intend putting the room.
* Is it to be a bedroom merely, or a combination of bedroom and boudoir?
Is it to be a formal reception-room, or a living room? Is it to be a
family library, or a man's study? If it is a small flat, do you aim at
absolute comfort, artistically achieved, or do you aim at formality at the
expense of comfort?
If you lean
toward both comfort and formality, and own a country house and a city
abode, there will be no difficulty in solving the problem. Formality may
be left to the town house or flat, while during weekends, holidays and
summers you can revel in supreme comfort.
Every man or
woman is capable of creating comfort. It is a question of those deep
chairs with wide seats and backs, soft springs, thick, downy cushions, of
tables and book-cases conveniently placed, lights where you want them,
beds to the individual taste, double, single, or twins!
The getting
together of a period room, one period or periods in combination, is
difficult, especially if you are entirely ignorant of the subject.
However, here is your cue. Let us suppose you need, or want, a desk, an
antique desk. Go about from one dealer to the other until you find the
very piece you have dreamed of; one that gives pleasure to you, as well as
to the dealer. Then take an experienced friend to look at it. If you have
every reason to suppose that the desk is genuine, buy it. Next, read up on
the furniture of the particular period to which your desk belongs, in as
serious a manner as you do when you buy a prize dog at the show.
Now you have made
an intelligent beginning as a collector. Reading informs you, but you must
buy old furniture to be educated on that subject. Be eternally on the
lookout; the really good pieces, veritable antiques, are rare; most of
them are in museums, in private collections or in the hands of the most
expensive dealers. I refer to those unique pieces, many of them signed by
the maker and in perfect condition because during all their existence they
have been jealously preserved, often by the very family and in the very
house for which they were made.
Our chances for
picking up antiques are reduced to pieces which on account of reversed
circumstances have been turned out of house and home, and, as with human
wanderers, much jolting about has told upon them. Most of these are
fortified in various directions, but they are treasures all the same, and
have a beauty value in line color and workmanship and a wonderful fitness
for the purposes for which they were intended. "Surely we are many men of
many minds!"
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