Tag Archives: lighting

A Dash of Moroccan Design

It makes sense that I would wind up immediately inspired by the long-awaited book Marrakesh by Design by blogger Maryam of My Marrakesh! Her blog’s global style and riot of patterns had already inspired me to get a bunch of stencils from Royal Design Studio for the walls of our India apartment. (Alas the walls weren’t ready to paint during our last trip so I don’t yet have anything to show. Very impatiently awaiting our next trip!)

While reading the book, I’m seeing many design similarities between Morocco and India. The love of pattern, color and handiwork. The embracing of embroidery and bold textile embellishments. Sequins and mirrors. Even the superstitions, and using objects to ward off evil things. Heavy carved wood doors. Latticework on windows. The open Moroccan courtyards remind me of the open centers of vastu shastra rooms. And of course Persian and Islamic design influence can be found throughout India, although not as much in the South as in the North.

The book already made me add a dash of Moroccan style to our dining room:

I didn’t have to go far to get it. Just a flight of stairs to the basement. Finding these Moroccan lanterns buried down there took more time than the journey there:

We found these lanterns in Uptown Minneapolis. I suspect they’re from China, but Moroccan in style. This book made me remember them, packed away since we moved to Chicago eight years ago. They now join the mirror in the dining room, which was needing some sconces to make it feel less lonely and less … square:

I put battery-operated flickering tealights in them so there’s no worry about flames or mess. I once thought fake candle flames were a crime of the worst kind, but now with cats in the house, they’re safe and practical:

To hang the Moroccan lanterns, I found little hooks at Hobby Lobby. But they were brass color and I wanted them to coordinate with the lanterns’ copper color, so I colored the hooks with a Krylon copper leafing pen and then dabbed some color off with gauze to make the hooks look not-so-shiny. Then I hung them with shiny silver screws and dabbed copper color on those too. The copper leafing pen is wonderful — it dries fast and durable enough to withstand slips of the screwdriver while I was installing these:

I like mixing things up, so in this little corner of our home there are things from Cambodia, India, Italy, Thailand and that all-American of stores, Target:

Below the mirror, a gong we found at the shop at HanumanAlaya, a small hotel in Siem Reap, Cambodia, with Diwali diyas from India:

Another Lakshmi to add to the ones posted previously, and behind her a celadon vase from Thailand:

I found this Lakshmi in Chennai, India. She is my favorite goddess:

OK, I don’t know how this post got from Moroccan inspiration back to India. But, well, that’s how my house is …

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Railroad Parts as Decor Accessories

The coolest thing is when creative people find a totally unexpected use for objects. Like at this company called RailroadWare which I just tripped upon and had to share. Their pendant lights made of insulators drew me in to their site:

And check out this beautiful pendant made of traffic light elements, available in green, yellow and red of course:

Here’s a photo of pendant lights in action from their gallery:

Caution! Creativity overhead!

I love the colors of these.

But wait, it doesn’t stop with pendant lights! They created a variety of products, including a wall-hanging pot rack (which is an item that we’re looking for for our Chennai apartment):

A door knocker made of railroad anchor and railroad spike, and I suppose it could also be over-sized cabinet hardware if you want to make a big industrial statement:

And to that point, they offer door handles:

There’s even picture holders:

I’m inspired to look at things from a completely new angle now.

Industrial Pendant with Wire Shade DIY

Someone please buy all these supplies up and make this before I succumb to the desire! Somehow the farmhouse-style-country-style-urban-chicken-fresh-egg-thing is getting under my skin. I really want some chickens cluck-cluck-clucking in my yard. And rusty wire shade pendants by the backyard door. This is how trends work on you, work on you, work on you, they wear you down, until you want things you never wanted before.

From Rejuvenation, take a Burnside cloth-covered cord pendant. Very simple, just the cord and a vintage-looking lightbulb. The great thing is, you can choose from among 14 colors, from black to white to a variety of metal finishes:

You can also specify any length of cord you want. There are similar pendant cords sold in many places. This is a one-stop place for quality, customization and that key element — the vintagey bulb.

Find the look for less from Etsy seller junkyardlighting:

This comes in fun colors from CB2 and would be cute with colored wire baskets which are at this moment on etsy in red, blue, yellow, white …

Add a wire basket upside down, like these found on etsy …

Wire Basket from Etsy Seller jmg9009:

Wire Basket from Etsy Seller GingersGirl:

Wire Basket from Etsy Seller TimelessTreasuresTwo:

Wire Basket from Etsy Seller 40sZen:

Wire Basket from Etsy Seller bonnbonn:

Find more by searching for vintage wire egg baskets. Don’t sue me if I’m wrong, I’m not Martha Stewart here with staff to check into every detail, but it makes sense that you need a basket with a hole in the middle to thread the cord. You could also easily cut off handles if you don’t want them.

You are going for this look, an egg basket wire pendant from Hudson Goods:

Or this from Etsy seller junkyardlighting:

Or this which was at terrain but this style isn’t there now, however it’s easily DIY’d as this basket style is easily found on Etsy. Probably eBay too but I found Etsy so fruitful I didn’t get to eBay. Or your local antique shops and malls.

So please-please-please feel free to take these before I can get to them, so I don’t wind up with one of these in our … I don’t even know where this would go … that’s why I can’t have one. Besides, someone has to leave some baskets for the eggs.

Off Color

off-col·or (ôfklr, f-) adj. 1. Exhibiting bad taste: an off-color joke. 2. Varying from the usual, expected, or required color.3. Not in good health or spirits.

If you expected risque jokes here, I’m sorry to not deliver today! Instead I’m talking about colors being “off” from what was expected. Way off! It’s making me feel sick, or “not in good health or spirits.” Because I made a small investment in a dream, a gorgeous vision, that now would look like … yuck. Real yucky yuck.

Floor tile was laid in the India pied a terre this week! Yay! This is the photo my husband took of the tile for the bedroom floors when he visited last October:

I thought the lighter tile on the right would be installed in bedrooms, with marbled variation of blue-grays, reds, pinks. So I pictured some blues for the guest bedroom. I never buy blue, but I want to make the Chennai flat a real “getaway experience” with colors we don’t usually live with. So for the guest room, if I don’t find a big ol’ Indian armoire with some blue chippy paint, I would add blue chippy paint to an armoire. Like this one which someone placed in a now-expired classified ad (but the photo lives on):

Or this one at Rouget de Lisle, perfect because it has both blue and pink chippy paint and you’ll see why that’s perfect in a moment:

On the bed, I pictured a mix of Les Indiennes fabrics like these …

Elephants:

And blue block print bedding:

And small throw pillows that I would knit from silk sari fabric yarn like this from etsy seller Jazzturtle which mixes sari yarn with other fibers:

As backing for the knitted pillows, I would use this bicolor blue and pink silk duppoini from India that I got at Exquisite Fabrics in DC, in Georgetown, a must-stop shop whenever I’m in town:

And the pièce de résistance — the dream of a vision of India nights under sequiny stars – was to be made from these two obscenely sparkly sequiny textiles I found at A Fabric Place in Baltimore a few weeks ago:

I planned to turn these fabrics into drum/barrel lamps suspended from the ceiling in staggered fashion like this:

Can you imagine the light shining at night through the open patterns? The shadows it would make. Can you imagine during the day, the sequins launching sparkles and splattering them across the walls, whenever the sun shines through the windows? Very cool. Very different. Very somewhere-else-in-the-world for guests.

But noooooooooooooooo, it is not to be. None of it is to be. Because the color of the bedrooms’ floor tile is this:

Apparently, this is indeed the right side tile in the photo from the October shopping trip, not the left:

Really? Doesn’t look like it to me. Well, whatever happened … oh well. Doesn’t matter now. The tile is in. We can do the same decor ideas, but with different colors. Back to the drawing board!

My husband keeps asking whether we really do need to wait until we visit Chennai to pick the kitchen cabinets in person. Yes, we do, I insist. Why? He asks. This whole story is why! Colors are not always what they seem.

Anyway, I will still make the beautiful sequiny drum shades, and perhaps put them up for sale on etsy. I now have no need for pink and blue sequiny lampshades! The Baltimore fabric shop had so many sequined fabrics, there must be something else on their bolts in colors that would not clash horribly with the tile, so I’ll still make the drum shades happen for us. Hmmm … you know how I like paprika color … now that would go with this floor … at least I think so … maybe I better wait until I see the floor in person …