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Designers' Decorating Secrets
Ever wonder how interior designers do it? Learn how as three of our favorites share their secrets to great style.
By Alice Welsh Doyle

Why the Room Works: Tips from Jane

Jane Schwab

  • Open spaces: You need to have some continuity so the spaces flow together, but you want some individuality as well. I used a camel-and-blue color palette mixed with prints in both the family room and adjoining breakfast area. One separating element is the floor coverings. In the family room, a neutral textured rug ties the furnishings together. An Oriental rug in the breakfast area helps to define the space.

  • Scale: In a big room with high ceilings, incorporate some substantial pieces. I chose a large sofa and a tall fruitwood buffet with an oversize mirror. In the breakfast space, a high-backed sofa is used as a banquette.

  • Window treatments: Take window treatments up to the molding to enhance the ceiling height and add a little drama. Here the curtains are paired with bamboo shades which offer a casual touch without repeating a fabric. I think they also add some warmth.

  • Family Room
    A base of camel and blue makes for a warm, sophisticated look in the family room. Notice the mix of wood and upholstery pieces.

    One benefit of being a Homes editor is looking at beautiful houses and working with talented professionals. I've learned that the styles that look so effortless to me (and probably you) are really not. Designers think about every element--color, proportion, shape, and pattern--when putting a room together. The good news is that there are tricks of the trade, and you can learn them. So join three of my favorite designers as we go through different rooms, and steal some of their ideas along the way.

    Traditional With a French Twist
    "It all started with the blue," says interior designer Jane Schwab of Charlotte when describing the family room of her clients Hope and David Riggins. "Blue is a favorite of Hope's, and we really wanted to put it in a room where they spend a lot of time." A print fabric, eventually used for sofa pillows, was the starting point for the color scheme. "Blue is sometimes hard to use," notes Jane. "There was a time when everyone had a blue room, so it can feel old-fashioned or go toward a Colonial look. I think blue can still be fresh and up-to-date if you think more monochromatic." Here blue is combined with only one other color--a neutral camel.

    Breakfast Room
    Because the breakfast area opens to the family room, the color palette remains the same, but prints--a toile and a large check--bring a more casual attitude.


    Next Room: Classic Meets Contemporary

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