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Interior Design Consulting "Translating French Styles"

 

Newsletter - September 2002


The essence of French Style

 

• Ask ten people to define or describe French interior décor one is sure to receive ten very different responses. To some it might mean a bedroom swimming in layers of toile de Jouy fabric. To others it might conjure a room filled with rococo furniture favored by Madame de Pompadour in the 18th century.

• To us, it represents more ephemeral qualities rather than a specific combination of decorating rules or pieces.

• The best of French style is about risk-taking - whether in home décor, fashion, architecture, culinary arts, literature. It is the antithesis of predictable. French style is -- almost by definition -- fresh, unexpected, thought-provoking, often asymmetrical or curvaceous, and never, never, stodgy.

• Even before a trend hits the mass markets, the French will be off in other directions, offering hip consumers new interior design directions.

• The veneration of history and antique furniture, fines arts and domestic accessories also plays a part of French style. The cultural context is critically important to the French, though not so slavishly applied as to become predictable in design practice. So while beloved antique furniture and art may be handed down from generation to generation -- the room-settings are always in flux - new additions to collections of fine porcelein, old paintings moved to different rooms; bold, new colors applied to the walls behind an 18th century giltwood mirror.

• Dynamism characterizes the French approach to all style issues. Nothing is static, the principle is an open-mindedness to change.

 

Jane Pierce Losson
Interior Design
Consulting