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To day we have
reproductions (good and bad) of the veteran types, and some commendable
inventions, more or less classic in line, and original in coloring and
style of decoration.
At times, one
wishes there was less evident effort to be original. We long for the
repose of classic color schemes and classic line. In art, the line and the
combination of colors, which have continued most popular throughout the
ages, are very apt to be those with which one cans livelongest and not
tire. For this reason, a frank copy of an antique piece of painted
furniture is generally more satisfactory than a modern original.
If you are using
dull colored carpets and hangings, have your modern reproductions
antiqued. If you prefer gay, cheering tones, let the painted furniture be
bright. These schemes are equally interesting in different ways. It is
stupid to decry new things, since every grey antique had its frivolous,
vivid youth.
One American
decorator has succeeded in making the stolid, uncompromising square ness
of mission furniture take on a certain lightness and charm by painting it
black and discreetly lining it with yellow and red. Yellow velour is used
for the seat pads and heavy hangings, thin yellow silk curtains are hung
at the windows, and the black woodwork is set off by Japanese gold paper.
In a large house,
or in a summer home where there are young people coming and going, a room
decorated in this fashion is both gay and charming and makes a pleasant
contrast to darker rooms. Then, too, yellow is a lovely setting for all
flowers, the effect being to intensify their beauty, as when flooded by
sunshine.
Another clever
treatment of the mission type, which we include under the heading Painted
Furniture, is to have it stained a rich dark brown, instead of the usual
dark green. Give your dealer time to order your furniture unfinished from
the factory, and have stained to your own liking; or, should you by any
chance be planning to use mission in one of those cottages so often built
in Maine, for summer occupancy, where the walls are of unplastered,
unstained, dove-tailed boards, and the floors are unstained and covered
with matting rugs, try using this furniture in its natural color
unfinished. The effect is delightfully harmonious and artistic and quite
Japanese in feeling.
In such a
cottage, the living room has a raftered ceiling, the sidewalls, woodwork,
settles the fireplaces, open bookcases and floor, stain all dark walnut.
The floor color is very dark, the sidewalls, woodwork and bookshelves are
a trifle lighter, and the ceiling boards still lighter between the almost
black, heavy rafters.
The mission
furniture is dark brown, the hangings and cushions are of mahogany-colored
corduroy, and the floor is strewn with skins of animals. There are no
pictures, the idea being to avoid jarring notes in another key. Instead,
copper and brass bowls contribute a note of variety, as well as large jars
filled with great branches of flowers, gathered in the nearby woods. The
chimney is exposed. It and the large open fireplace are of rough, dark
mottled brick.
A room of this
character would be utterly spoiled by introducing white as ornaments,
table covers, window curtains or picture-mats; it is a color scheme of
dull wood-browns, old reds and greens in various tones. If you want your
friends photographs about you in such a room, congregate them on one or
two shelves above your books.
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