designer spotligi-it
Transcription
designer spotligi-it
AUSTIN JvfONTI-IL Y 1-/0Jvf£: What do you call your area of design? STEPHANIE MOORE: Fashion for windows. My love of fabrics has created a specialized niche in the design world, where I use fabrics in just about every application possible-drapery, bedding, upholstery, slipcovers, pillows, lampshades and wall art. Fabri<; is a great solution for transforming a room and giving it a delightfully eccentric focal point. AJvf/-1: What draws you to a certam fabric? SM: Well, of course it depends on the project and the client's personality. I search for fabrics that I feel accomplish the aesthetic of the room I am creating. When I look at fabrics I look for color, pattern or texture and how they interact. Designer Stephanie Moore at her studio with some of her favorite fabrics. RIGf-lT: Moore's cat, Kiki, poses on a couch with pillows made from Cush Cush fabrics. Afvf/-1: Where do you find your fabric? SM: I love the hunt for unique one-of-a- DESIGNER SPOTLIGI-IT kind fabrics and trims. My finds come from Talking Design with ~abric Maven Stephanie Moore abroad and, of course, the Internet. I also by meghan richardson I photography by kelly kirlin and russ smith Austin-they offer an array of fabrics and flea markets, antique shops, traveling use Stockton Hicks & Laffey here in trims to the trade. LOCAL DESIGNER AND FABRIC MAVEN STEPHANIE MOORE has enjoyed a career that spans the worlds of fashion, film and interior design. She has worked as an assistant designer and . AMI-I Your favonte find? pattern maker for the fashion industry and as pattern maker and costumer in the Austin fiLm SM: Bolts upon bolts of community, where her work was used in such films as Varsity Blues, Where the Heart Is and vintage fabrics from the '60s and '70s in the Office Space. But Moore's most recognizable effort is most likely her store Cush Cush Fabrics back of a store in Monterrey, Mexico. bold-patterned and Furnishings. From 2000 to 2004, Cush Cush offered a tantalizing array of vintage and new fabrics, trims, furniture, gifts and accessories for the home, but now that its doors have AJvf/-1: Tps on mixing fabrics? closed, Moore's current endeavor is Cush Cush Design. Through Cush Cush Design, Moore SM: I like to make a room interesting by fulfills her desire to meld the worlds of fashion and interior decoration one project at a time. adding a casual fabric to a more formal 28 Austin Monthly HOME continued on page 3 0 notebook I shop talk continued from page 28 textile, or combining a floral pattern with a more neutral graphic stripe. If mixing traditional and modern, keep the color palette simple. AfvfJ-1: What are your favorite local stores right now? SM: I love Uncommon Objects for inspiration, Kickpleat for its fashion influence on my designs and Mercury Design Studio for its unique furniture finds. R~D Sophisticated Vintage Comes to !=redericksburg THI: QUAINT STORI:S OF FRtDI:RICKSBURG will soon welcome a new member to the lineup-Red. Owned by Carolyn Moore, whose designs have been featured on 1-/GTV and in Country /-lome, th is new 3,000-square-foot retail store, open ing mid-June, will offer early 2oth-century antiques as well as pieces from Bella Notte and Dwell Linens, Jonathan Adler and Cisco Brother's upholstery. According to Moore, Red is a p lace for "women who are looking for pieces of quality and distinction, yet are not afraid to try someth ing new, where classics remain and new inspirations appear at every turn." 218 W. Main St., 830-990-0700. www.redinfred.com. AfvfJ-1: What are your favorite shopping Web sites? MITCH~LL GOLD+ BOB WILLIAMS SM: My fa vorites include: Westlake Premieres MG+BW's !=irst Texas Showroom www.vvrouleaux. com for trim, www.wallpaperfromthe70s. com, www. contemporarycloth. com, THI: FAMOUS DI:SIGN TI:AM WHOSI: FURNISHINGS have graced the pages of Metropolitan /-lome, Domino and even Time has come to the Lone Star State. First stop: Austin. Known for its concept of "re laxed design," MG+BW designs furniture that fits the way we live in the present day-comfortably but chic. The Austin showroom, which opened in May, is operated by local couple Joni and Greg Greeson, former ly of Eurway European Interiors. Expect a showroom with high-gloss white floors, soft white walls and an ever-changing mix of professionally styled furniture settings, showing off the "stars" of each collection. The Shops at Mira Vista , 2785 Bee Caves Rd., 347-1616. www.luludk.com for fabrics and wallpaper and www.johnrob- shaw.com for bedding and fabric. AfvfJ-1: What are your latest projects? SM: I have just completed Adelante Boutique, a fun "Seventies Glam" boutique and a ranch www.mgbwtexas.com. house for the CEO of Whole Foods-think palaces of India. AfvfJ-1: What has been your oddest design request? SM: The most unusual request was to slipcover a toilet in silk brocade. AfvfJ-1: Best design advice or tip you have ever received? SM : Draw inspiration from unexpected sources- other cultures, eras, art, nature and fashion. QUICK TIPS WITH BOB WILLIAMS AUSTIN JvfONTJ-IL Y J-IOJvfE: How did you create the concept of "relaxed design'? BOB WILLIAMS: I realized that people were still sitting on damask, but they were wearing Gap. There is a sort of disconnect in this style of living, so we decided to create furniture that is an extension of what people are wearing. Afvf/-1: What do you see as the hottest design trends this summer? BW: Since 9/11, we have seen a lot of rich, intense colors. This summer we will see the resurgence of soft colors such as periwinkle blue and kiwi green. continued on page 32 30 Au stin Monthl y HOME