view in pdf format - Hazelnut New Orleans
Transcription
view in pdf format - Hazelnut New Orleans
Our Favorite Store Hazelnut, New Orleans It’s not enough that Bryan Batt is a TV star on the wildly popular Mad Men. He also gets to own an enchanting home decor shop in The Big Easy! You’re a successful actor in L.A. playing Salvatore Romano, the art director on the hit AMC series Mad Men. But you also run this stylish home boutique in New Orleans. What’s the story? taining, and giving just the right presents, so that’s why we’ve focused on gifts, furnishings, tabletop objects, and beautiful home accessories. Everything is new. There’s a lot of color, and a sense of whimsy. I love things that make you smile. I was born and raised in New Orleans, and I still live here part-time—and having a shop was always a dream of mine. What are some of your favorite wares? Alison Evans’s line of oyster ceramics. They have raku-style glaze in shapes like oyster shells. I’m also wild about our Byzantine leaded Italian crystal decanters and glasses with a 14-karatgold Greek key around the top. We have a white ceramic elephant side How do you film in L.A. and still run Hazelnut? 1 Life is not an either/or proposition. You can do many things—you just have to be organized! And thank God for Tom Cianfichi, my partner in life and in the store. We both love design, enter- 2 3 Interview by mimi read 5 4 6 table that’s really fun. And there’s a collective called Art Department, a group of Russian potters in Massachusetts who do ceramics. We have some of their vases and their little houses, all handpainted in bright colors. You seem to make animated conversation with anyone who pops in. I run from stores where salespeople act snooty! I want people to have a good time and be visually stimulated. The first thing that happens when anyone walks in is that they’re bowled over by the marvelous Japanese quince perfume of Seda France candles, which are, funnily enough, made in Texas. ‘What smells so good?’ they’ll ask. I always say, ‘It’s me.’ It’s after my grandmother, Hazel Nuss. “Nuss” means nut in German. She was a well-known New Orleans dance maven—she had three dancing schools— and I just adored her! * HazelnUt, 5515 Magazine St., New Orleans , LA; 504-891-2424; hazelnutneworleans.com 1. Hazelnut’s mix of accessories, art, and furnishings. 2. Ceramic oyster bowl and tray. 3. A long view of the interior. 4. Photographs of The Big Easy’s City Park by Roy Barloga. 5. Batt’s new fabric design, Pontchartrain Beach. 6. His New Orleans toile, in Café au Lait (there are four other colorways). 7. The historic storefront on Magazine Street. 50 HOUSEB E AU T IF UL .COM don’t miss •Batt’s own fabric designs: Pontchartrain Beach, a collage of Louisiana motifs in Palm Beach‑y pink, yellow, lime; and New Orleans toile, featur‑ ing such classic images as a courtyard, a street‑ car, St. Louis Cathedral (both $36 a yard). •The fabulous selection of tabletop items like silk flower napkin rings ($6), and mother-of-pearl salad servers ($64), and the alligator place-card hold‑ ers ($32 for a set of 4), and crab bowl ($125). •Reverse decoupage plates and platters by artist •The charming accesso‑ Laurel Wilder. Her cre‑ ries (trays, guest towels) ations could upstage your handmade from Batt’s canapés, but you can two fabrics by local crafts also hang them on walls people (from $15). (from $82). 7 lara robby/studio D (3) Okay, why the name Hazelnut?