This cozy mountain setting inspired us to go all out with natural decorations. Our gift to you: a home filled with great ideas.
On a visit to the North Carolina mountains not long ago, we found the perfect location for a wonderful holiday decorating story
as well as a seriously talented team that could create it. With interior designers Molly Northern and Darlene Parker, we visited
the Sunalei Preserve (pronounced soo-nah-lee), a residential community situated on a majestic mountaintop near Boone. Molly
and Darlene showed us through one of their favorite interior design projects, a handsome Adirondack-style lodge built of native
stone, bark siding, and hand-hewn timbers that's known as the Main Camp. When the designers mentioned their plans to return
to the Main Camp and decorate it for Christmas, we knew that we'd found quite a special story.
You can easily re-create Molly and Darlene's ideas using a variety of evergreen plant materials, such as boxwood, fir, pine,
holly, and nandina. Clip some greenery from your garden or purchase it at a tree lot, and let's get started.
HOLIDAY HINT: Set your kitchen aglow with sparkly tree lights. Wrap a strand around a length of garland and swag it across the windows.
One-of-a-kind log mantels and rustic doors--many created by carpenters using materials found in the woods nearby--make a perfect
backdrop for Molly and Darlene's all-natural decorations for the Main Camp. To get a head start decorating the deep porch
and several large rooms, they purchased ready-made wreaths and lengths of garland. Then they attached pinecones and other
materials using wire. For the front door, they created a fuller wreath by wiring a boxwood wreath onto a fir one. Tartan ribbon
and strips of plaid fabric add sparks of red.
The designers surrounded the front entrance with boxwood garland; twisted lengths of the same material adorn the gabled timbers
of the porch.
The welcoming interior is a marvel of exposed wood and natural stone. Darlene and Molly furnished it with comfortable seating upholstered in beautiful leathers and tapestry-like fabrics. Homeowners at Sunalei Preserve enjoy gathering in front of the fireplace in the library. To give a lush look to the mantel decorations, Molly and Darlene combined twigs and layers of greenery, including boxwood, spruce, cedar, and pine. Small lamps add a cheery glow, and a bow-trimmed cluster of greenery hangs just above the old landscape painting on the mantel.
The designers dressed up the Christmas tree with pinecones, bird's nest ornaments, clusters of nandina berries, and strands
of white lights. By inserting plenty of twigs into the crown of the tree, they made it look a good bit taller.
HOLIDAY HINT:
Fashion your own ornamental bird's nests by twisting clumps of Spanish moss or finely curled wood shavings into circles and
adding a few candy eggs.
To create containers for the large coffee table arrangements, Molly used wood screws to join three sizable pieces of poplar
bark. Glass cylinder vases filled with long twigs and pieces of greenery fit inside.
HOLIDAY HINT: Accent a coffee or dining room table with a tall arrangement of pine boughs, fir branches, long twigs, and berries.
For several years, Sunalei's developers, Mary Jane and John Rice, collected pieces of antique sporting equipment. Their discoveries--items
such as handmade snowshoes, wicker fishing creels, painted croquet sets, old skis, and wooden canoe paddles--find places of
honor in each room. With a few clippings of pine or cedar, Darlene and Molly gave these old treasures a touch of holiday flair.
HOLIDAY HINT: If you remove any branches from your tree to make it fit the stand, wire them together and then add a bow and pinecones to
duplicate this look.
The duo accented the dining table with a whimsical collection of porcelain elf vases and candy dishes, greenery, and desserts.
And they didn't forget to cook up a little holiday cheer in the kitchen. They fashioned a holiday window treatment by twisting
tiny white lights around evergreen garland and draping it above the window.
HOLIDAY HINT: Use quaint collectibles when setting your table. The designers filled nostalgic elf vases and figurines with an enticing array
of candy and other goodies.
"Warm Welcome" is from the December 2007 issue of Southern Living.
Printed from:
http://www.southernliving.com/home-garden/warm-welcome-00400000007952/
Copyright © 2013 Time Inc. Lifestyle Group. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy ( Your California Privacy Rights). Ad Choices
