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t ra di t iona l STYLE NOW! 04/ 13 Layers of fabric and wallpaper energize a house with many rooms PATTERN happy 110 Interior design by j o h n k n o t t & j o h n F o n da s Interview by D o u g l a s B r en n er Photographs by B j ö r n Wa l l a n d er ListEn! Scan this photo to hear from the designer Buoyant spirits from Down East refresh the onetime hotel that John Knott and John Fondas transformed into their Maine summer house. The living room’s vivid fabrics, all by Knott’s firm, Quadrille, pack a playful punch, while Syrian inlaid chairs and Chinese ceramic stools evoke the cosmopolitan taste of New England seafarers. Opposite: China Seas Aqua IV wallpaper sets off blue coral, a 19th-century lobster claw, and a vintage American marine relief painting. The bold geometry of curtains in Quadrille’s Tashkent and an Adirondack folding screen anchor the lively play of China Seas fabric patterns: Nitik II trimmed with Pimento on a pair of vintage armchairs, New Batik on an Albert Hadley armchair, and Aquarias on throw pillows. Framed whale prints and a mermaid console add a salty splash to the mix. 113 Sister Parish’s house in Maine is still here on an island near yours. Do you feel her spirit looking over your shoulders? John Knot t: Definitely. She was the ringleader of this group of stylish New Yorkers, guys like Albert Hadley and Alan Campbell, who spent summers with her in Islesboro communing with the simple life. They created their own American look. We are continuing that look forward, because we like its clarity of patterns and colors and its livability. John Fondas: Little Cranberry, where we go from late spring to September, is super simple—a million times more off the beaten path than Islesboro. You can only get here by boat. The year-round residents are lobstermen. There’s one little store. No cellphone signal. JK: Which is the beauty of the place. We don’t have air-conditioning, heating, or a dishwasher. JF: You can get 18 people around the dining table, easily. We do that all the time. But it’s grilled chicken, vegetables, a salad, and ice cream. That’s it. JK: It’s a big production just to get the food out to the island, and then we’re hand-washing all the plates and glasses. And everybody’s got to help. This is really camping out, in a way. Does the house have a history? JF: It was built in 1905 as a hotel for ‘rusticators’ from places like Boston and Philadelphia. It had 19 tiny bedrooms. We combined two of them to make a dining room and took out partitions upstairs to create slightly bigger spaces. We tried to meticulously preserve the building, but we took liberties on the inside to make it comfortable and relaxed. This was a delicious opportunity to play around with fabrics and wallpapers we deal with all day long at Quadrille. You actually hauled all of this out here on boats? JK: It renewed our faith in the American work ethic. The contractor brought every piece of lumber on barges. Someone at our warehouse in upstate New York drove a moving van full of furniture onto the local oil Dougl as Brenner: This is a very American mixture of different furniture styles, family hand-me-downs, and the kind of China Trade exotica that New England sea captains collected. JK: Nothing could be more American than painted f loors in a vacation home. Painting dark floors white moved the house into the sunshine. Did you also want a clean break from bold pattern and color? JF: Believe it or not, the living room walls started off white. The first thing we chose was the ikat on the sofa. Then we put in all these other blueand-white patterns that we loved. The pimento trim that pulls everything together was inspired by an antique wallhanging that we intended to put up but didn’t use. When we were leaving at the end of the summer, John said, ‘With all this pattern, the only logical thing is to add one more.’ That’s how the wallpaper happened. JK: Because none of the rooms have much architecture or even moldings, wallpaper patterns elevate them to the next level of decorating. The whole room looks like a wrapped gift. Are curtains the bow on the present? JF: A big graphic curtain instantly gives a room stature. It’s a wow factor. We used curtains in every bedroom. The simplest pair of white curtains creates a sense of luxury and finish that you can’t get any other way. If somebody said, ‘Picture a red, white, and blue room with a George Washington toile and stars and stripes,’ I’d wince. But your Yankee Doodle Dandy bedroom is great. JF: It never occurred to us to ask, ‘Is this too much pattern in one room?’ It’s second nature. JK: Friends in the design business appreciate seeing this. Because decorating is expensive and long term, many clients are apprehensive about patterns, especially so many together. JF: It’s a risk to use 10 or 15 patterns in a room. JK: Risky, but we also want the joyful excitement—the happy, jazzy fun that’s part of what America is about. JF: barge, which was a World War II troop carrier—and it was a lot of furniture, because we used things from other houses we’d had. It’s the flotsam and jetsam of our lives coming together— the grand recycling that makes old vacation houses so homey and quirky. Were you winking at Lewis Carroll—and your city offices—with the living room’s riff on a lobster quadrille? JF: There’s a 1930s surreal-ness and a Tony Duquette vibe about the lobster claws. They’re on marble bases that were faux painted with extra veins, so they appear real and fake all at once. JK: It’s a vacation house. You want to enjoy yourself. Summer is not a time to be serious. I get a kick out of the voyeuristic bull’seye mirror over that four-poster’s headboard. And the coconut chandelier. JK: We have all kinds of things you’d never expect to see in a Maine island house. There is an Italian gilt sofa in the black-and-white guest room, but you know what? Everyone hangs out in there and watches TV. It’s a wonderful, casual space. Above: Restored windows frame views of Cadillac Mountain and Acadia National Park that have barely changed since Frederic Church painted them in 1850. His canvases inspired Maine’s first wave of summer visitors. Opposite: The dining room’s coconut-shell chandelier, Home Couture’s paisley Taj wallpaper, and soapstone pagodas cast an exotic spell on a Yankee crew of antique Hitchcock chairs. The resin mirror is a 20th-century gem by decorators Zajac & Callahan. Produced by Dav id M. Murph y S t y l ed by Pe t er Fr a nk 115 1 2 3 4 Antique wicker adorns a hall papered in Quadrille’s Vanderpoel Stripe. Cypress doors retain original hotel room numbers and exit signs. Dark floors got a coat of Benjamin Moore Patio White deck paint for summery brightness and easy cleaning. Opposite, clockwise from top left: 1. A French copper ship’s lantern. 2. Old photos guided Knott’s replacement of lost deck railings. He designed a new entrance portico using salvaged columns from upstate New York. 3. Knott retrieved a 1970s ikat from his archive for this slipcover. 4. A 1958 model Chris-Craft on a table made by a 19th-century sea captain. 5. Large-patterned Henriot Floral wallpaper by Quadrille in a cabin-size guest room. 6. White-painted wainscoting, a pedestal sink, and a claw-foot tub give the master bath a timeless appeal. 7. A restrained Shingle Style exterior belies the exuberance within. 8. Quadrille’s Les Indiennes fabric had never been printed in black until Knott recolored it to match the stripe in a guest room. 116 8 7 6 5 For Fondas, the white canopy recalls Early America as well as the colonial nostalgia of his native Bahamas. This guest room’s Georgian four-poster is canopied in check linen with a pom-pom fringe and dressed with Matouk linens. Hanging a mirror above the headboard, Knott explains, is a European touch. Right: Curtains in Home Couture’s Lorraine flank a bamboo tripod from Emerson Antiques in Blue Hill, Maine. The Aesthetic Movement chair is upholstered in the same batik pattern used on the walls. A bird print (“Our low-maintenance pet,” Knott says) perches in the 19th-century French cage. 118 An American Empire four-poster in the Greek Revival style just clears the master bedroom ceiling. The bed’s monumental scale befits the wallpaper, Quadrille’s Independence Engraving, depicting George Washington at the reins of a leopard-drawn chariot; the design was taken from a 1783 British printed fabric. Opposite, top: Independence Toile, the same pattern with a blue ground, covers the daybed next to a 19th-century English campaign chest. Opposite, Bot tom: The patriotic theme sprang from Fondas’s collection of Washington memorabilia and American flags. Independence Ticking was used for the curtains. For more details, see Resources 120