Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Tips For Creating Your Own Visual Memory Wall At Home
DesignSTL
|Jan/Feb 2020
Picture galleries that integrate traditional works and children’s art allow mother of two maggie pearson to slow down time long enough to capture snapshots of her family as it grows. Here, she shares tips for creating your own visual memory wall at home.
-

WORK WITH YOUR SETTING
If you’re planning a gallery wall for a public space such as a parlor, choose a traditional work of art as your centerpiece and build around it. Here, a Modernist print poster takes center stage. “This art should reflect your taste and your interests,” says Pearson. Generally, the focal point should also be placed at eye level, she says, “because when an adult walks into the room, that’s where their eye will land.” If the gallery is meant for a private area of the house, such as a back stairwell, it makes sense to forego the serious art altogether in favor of your children’s art or something similarly lighthearted.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Jan/Feb 2020-Ausgabe von DesignSTL.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON DesignSTL

DesignSTL
Cut from the Same Cloth
“Turkey Tracks” is a 19th-century quiltmaking pattern that has the appearance of little wandering feet. Patterns like the tracks, and their traditions and myths, have been passed down through the generations, from their frontier beginnings to today, where a generation of makers has embraced the material as a means of creating something new. Olivia Jondle is one such designer. Here, she’s taken an early turkey track-pattern quilt, cut it into various shapes, and stitched the pieces together, adding calico and other fabric remnants as needed. The result is a trench coat she calls the Pale Calico Coat. Her designs are for sale at The Rusty Bolt, Jondle’s small-batch fashion company based in St. Louis. —SAMANTHA STEVENSON
3 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
Color Block
A background in sculpture trained artist Aly Ytterberg to see objects more fully.
3 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
A Modern Story
How a little log cabin went from being a home to a guest house
3 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
IN GOOD TIME
With the help of interior designer Robert Idol, a Kirkwood couple creates a home that pays homage to the past, yet feels just right for their modern young family.
5 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
Let's Dish
"Food Raconteur” Ashok Nageshwaran wants to tell you a story.
2 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
The Right Move
New shops and showrooms bring exciting opportunities for local designers, makers, and arts organizations to sell their wares to home enthusiasts here and everywhere.
2 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
Green Dreams
Painter and gardener Lauren Knight branches out.
3 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
Cultivating Kokedama
Chris Mower of White Stable Farms discovered the Japanese style of gardening in Italy. Now, he’s bringing it to St. Louis.
2 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
Graphic Mood
Letters, icons, and illustrations that speak in a hand-drawn language
2 mins
January/February 2021

DesignSTL
AUDRA's New Digs
Audra Noyes, of the Saint Louis Fashion Fund Incubator’s first class, opens an atelier in Ladue.
2 mins
January/February 2021
Translate
Change font size