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Showing posts with label Nancy Lancaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nancy Lancaster. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Buy this magazine before it's gone!


The December 2010 issue of World of Interiors (which has been on news stands since November) has Nancy Lancaster's yellow room on the front - or does it? I saw the issue over the weekend and thought "I don't need to buy that - I have it in several books." But then I did a double take - it looks like the original yellow room but is actually a recreation of that room. The article accompanying the photographs is very informational and if you are a Nancy Lancaster/John Fowler fan then you will want to own this issue of World of Interiors. It is still on most bookstore shelves right now. What are you waiting for - go get it!

The original Yellow Room below -


image via live like you blog

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Synchronicity


Haseley Court, Nancy Lancaster's home from 1954-1971, image from Latchford Pictures

We have been working with a wonderful client who has beautiful furniture that he inherited from his mother. Jane Douglas and I were both incredibly excited when we saw the English and American Antiques. There are some upholstered pieces that were purchased by Sister Parish for the client's mother in New York! Needless to say we are using those sofas and chairs. There are also some amazing decorative pieces that we will hopefully show you at some point.

Last week as we were wrapping up a day the client's house, he pulled out a book from the bookcase and told us that his mother and Nancy Lancaster were friends and that there were some letters from Nancy in the book! Apparently his mother and Nancy Lancaster got to know each other through their love for and association with Stratford Hall in Virginia.


Stratford Hall in Virginia, image from accessiblevirginia.org

Nancy Lancaster sold Haseley Court in 1971; the house had burned and she did not want to restore it. So, she sold the house but retained the life right to live in the smaller Coach House for the rest of her life.


Haseley Court Coach House where Nancy lived from 1971 until her death in 1994.

We were both speechless and excited! Can you believe the timing? We had just been posting about her on the blog last week. I believe there are no coincidences - it's synchronicity.




A couple of the letters written by Nancy Lancaster in her last years (she was in her 90's when she wrote these letters). In the letters she was still spunky and fun, and loved to work in her garden at Haseley Court.


Garden at Haseley Court




**Synchronicity is the experience of two or more events that are apparently causally unrelated occurring together in a meaningful manner (from Wikipedia).

from Synchronicty by The Police
A connecting principle
Linked to the invisible
Almost imperceptible
Something inexpressible
Science insusceptible
Logic so inflexible
Causally connectable
Yet nothing is invincible


Here's the great Police song Synchronicity.

all images courtesy of Whitehaven, unless specified otherwise

Friday, April 30, 2010

John Fowler & Nancy Lancaster


Fowler London bedroom from 1970's, image from Architectural Digest

John Fowler worked with and was inspired by and inspired Nancy Lancaster for many years. He began as an apprentice in a workroom that painted screens and fabric. He joined Sibyl Colefax's interior design firm in 1938. But it was his collaboration with Nancy Lancaster that really put him on the map. Together they made famous the English Country look (which wasn't really invented by a decorator, it just evolved in English country houses). It is the beautiful but slightly shabby look featuring lots of chintz and antiques handed down through families. Nancy Lancaster and John Fowler perfected this look. Over time Fowler's style became less shabby and more refined and fussy (especially the elaborate curtains he favored).

Some of his rooms:


Fowler's London drawing room for the Bruces, 1960's, image from Architectural Digest


Bruce family London drawing room by John Fowler



Another Fowler drawing room from the 1960's - Wingfield House, from Aesthetes Lament blog


Parisian drawing room, image from A Different Shade of Gray blog



Washington, DC drawing room of the Bruce family in 1970's, image from Architectural Digest, via Aesthete's Lament



Same DC room, close up of chairs that were in Nancy Lancaster's bedroom at Haseley Court, Architectural Digest, via Aesthete's Lament

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Recipe for a successful, comfortable room


Sitting room at Haseley Court, image from little augury

Nancy Lancaster thought rooms should look undecorated, aged and furnished over time. We agree with her. Here is her list of things that are important for a "comfortable environment," from The Great Lady Decorators:

"1. In restoring a house, one must first realize its period, feel its personality, and try to bring out its good points;
2. Decorating must be appropriate;
3. Scale is of prime importance, and I think that oversized scale is better than undersized scale;
4. In choosing a color, one must remember that it changes in different aspects;
5. Understatement is extremely important, and crossing too many t's and dotting too many i's makes a room look overdone and tiresome. One should create something that fires the imagination without overemphasis;
6. I never think that sticking slavishly to one period is successful; a touch of nostalgia adds charm. One needs light and shade, because if every piece is perfect, the room becomes a museum and is lifeless;
7. A gentle mixture of furniture expresses life and continuity, but it must be a delicious mixture that flows and mixes well. It is a bit like mixing a salad. I am better at rooms than salads.

To these guidelines Nancy always added her magic ingredients; open fires, candle light, and masses of fresh flowers."



image from live like you blog

Her famous yellow room above is filled with beautiful furniture and things and yet don't you just want to kick off your shoes and curl up in a chair? Comfortable, beautiful rooms have form and function working together hand in hand.

Charleston designer Amelia Handegan's rooms have that same feel to them.



the other side of that room above -


image from Southern Accents

I adore this Alessandra Branca room! Look at all of the fresh flowers.


image from elle decor

This Branca room conveys vibrant warmth and beauty.


image from Southern Accents


Branca understands what Nancy Lancaster was describing above - she says: "For me it's not enough that a room look good. It also has to work. I put an incredible amount of effort into making people feel comfortable." from New Classics Interiors by Alessandra Branca

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Nancy Lancaster's Mirador


I have been pouring over the photographs and devouring the words of the The Great Lady Decorators by Adam Lewis. Most of their stories have been told before (some many times), but it's nice to have all of them in one pretty place.

I loved reading the chapter on stylemaker Nancy Lancaster - she is legendary in Charlottesville, Virginia, which is where I went to college. Her family's house, Mirador, is just outside of Charlottesville. If you've ever driven by the house, you know it's something special. The house was bought by Nancy's grandfather Chiswell Langhorne after he rebuilt his fortune after the Civil War. It was then owned by various family members and was subsequently bought by Nancy and her husband Ronald Tree. It is still privately owned (the Trees sold it in the fifties, when they lived in England).


image from HMBD.org






above images from dhr.virginia.gov

Besides the beauty of the house itself, the house is special because three fascinating ladies lived here at some point. All of the Langhorne family (Nancy Lancaster's mother's family) - they are: Nancy Astor, Irene Gibson, and of course Nancy Lancaster.


Nancy Astor, painted by John Singer Sargeant
Nancy Langhorne Astor was born in Danville, Virginia and was the daughter of Chiswell Dabney Langhorne and Nancy Keene. She lived at Mirador in her late teens. She married Waldorf Astor, Second Viscount Astor and lived in England. She was the first woman to sit as a Member of Parliament in the British House of Commons.


Irene Langhorne Gibson, wife of Gibson Girl artist Charles Dana Gibson

Irene Langhorne Gibson was Nancy Astor's sister. She married Charles Dana Gibson in 1895 and was one of the primary muses for his Gibson Girls.


Gibson Girls by Charles Dana Gibson



Nancy Lancaster
Nancy Lancaster was the niece of the above two ladies. Her mother was Elizabeth Perkins, eldest daughter of Chiswell and Nancy Langhorne. Nancy grew up in Richmond, Virginia and New York. Her fondest childhood memories were while visiting her family at Mirador. She married three times, and it was during her second marriage to Ronald Tree that she bought Mirador from her aunt Phyllis. She bought the house in 1922 and sold it in 1950 when she was living in England. Nancy lived in England for most of her adult life and was considered to be quite a tastemaker in England in the first half of the twentieth century. She owned the interior decorating firm Colefax Fowler.


Nancy Lancaster's famous yellow room



Nancy Lancaster's Gothic bedroom at Haseley Court - image via Peak of Chic



There is more great information over at Little Augury.