Focus on Antiques
Transcription
Focus on Antiques
SFDESIGN THIS ISSUE Focus on Antiques FALL 2010 ©2010 California Closet Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Franchises independently owned and operated. BEDROOM GARAGE ENTRYWAY WALL BED KIDS MEDIA CENTER OFFICE STORAGE CRAFT For over 30 years, California Closets has been helping define the most important spaces inside and around the home. As an innovator, trusted partner and standard-bearer for quality, we help the design professional create custom solutions that reflect their client’s personal style. san francis francisco co | 617 Townsend Street | 415.455.1200 san rafael | 610 DuBois Street | 415.455.1200 PANTRY 10 table of contents 4 6 8 10 President’s Message A Journey Beyond the Ordinary: Eight Creative Ways to decorate with Asian Art and Artifacts Read how Asian antiques can be included in good design of every style. Can the Luxury Sector Survive the Great Recession of 2008-2012? Alf Nucifora of the Luxury Marketing Council discusses what’s ahead for the luxury market and the economy as we emerge from this economic downturn. The Designer Advantage at Bonhams & Butterfields’ SoMa Estate Auction You may be surprised that there are some real bargains in antiques when buying at auction. ADVERTISING DSA Publishing and Design, Inc. Duff Tussing, Publisher Mike Watt, Sales 972-989-2208 CALIFORNIANORTHCHAPTER 2 HENRY ADAMS STREET, SUITE 301 SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94103 T (415) 626-2743 F (415) 626-0749 [email protected] www.asidcalnorth.com www.designfinder.com Dawn Lyon, Art Director 6900 Edge Water Drive McKinney, TX 75070 972-562-6966 972-562-7218 fax [email protected] www.dsapubs.com Fall 2010 12 14 on the cover “A double-overlay glass dragon snuff bottle, c.1760-1790. Estimated value: $23,000-$38,500. Source: Bonhams Hong Kong Reproductions: Ageless and Beautiful Learn how really good quality reproduction pieces offer an alternate to the more expensive antiques. My sick chair has a split personality! Read Eric Petsinger’s very amusing and informative article on antiques with multiple functions. 18 New Members 22 Local Calendar of Events ADVERTISERS INDEX BELMONT HARDWARE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 BONHAMS & BUTTERFIELDS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 BUFFALO BILLIARDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 CA HOME & DESIGN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 CALIFORNIA CLOSETS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 CERAMIC TILE DESIGN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 CINEAK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 DANMER CUSTOM SHUTTERS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 EPOCA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 GALLERIA SHADES & SHUTTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 HENDRICKSON’S WINDOW FASHIONS & UPHOLSTERY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 HUNTER DOUGLAS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 INTERTILE DISTRIBUTORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 MODERN FEVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 NATIONAL BLINDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 REBARTS INTERIORS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 SAROYAN LUMBER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 SHADES OF MARIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 TILESHOP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 TULIP HARDWARE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 WINDOWS & BEYOND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Fall 2010 3 PRESIDENT'S CORNER Dear Members: It has been an honor and a pleasure to serve you as President, and now the time comes to say “Thank you and goodbye.” BOARD OF DIRECTORS 2009-2010 PRESIDENT Gerald Jacobs, ASID, CID PRESIDENT ELECT Nancy Walker, ASID, IIDA, LEED AP FINANCIAL DIRECTOR Vaheed Taheri, Industry Partner ASID MEMBERSHIP DIRECTOR Raymond Ramirez, Allied Member ASID PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR Janice Aherns, ASID, CID COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR Michael Merrill, ASID DIRECTOR AT LARGE Claudia Hacker, Industry Partner ASID STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE Megan Dela Cruz Thank you all for your membership and contributions, by attending our events, visiting our offices, and simply for being in the Design trade. I also wanted to thank my Board; Nancy Walker, President-elect; Michael Merrill, D. of Communications; Janice Aherns, D. of Events; Vaheed Taheri, D. of Finance; Raymond Ramirez, D. of Membership; Claudia Hacker, D. at large; Megan Dela Cruz, Student rep; as well as Ruth Mesing, Office manager, and her assistant Nergesh Master; Lisa Jasper, Editor; Chris Shields, Associate; Cindy Hu, Intern. They all made my job so much easier! Most of them will remain in a new Board that will continue to serve you even better. Our farewell Professional Event will be hosted by Bonhams & Butterfields and will take place on September 17 at their Auction Facilities - make sure to sign up soon as space is limited. And absolutely plan to attend our Installation event on September 22nd. This will give you an opportunity to meet the incoming Board members, say goodbye to the outgoing ones and have a good time as well. This issue is focused on antiques. Antiques are wonderful to have around and enjoy, in addition to being sustainable, and we want to welcome the many neighboring showrooms that are part of our community, and two of them contributors to this issue. Our four contributors bring a lot of experience and excitement to this issue. Bonhams & Butterfields the Premier Auction House in the Bay Area has many unexpected events and business opportunities worthwhile looking into, such as Epoca, from discovery to sales procedure, and I love to shop there; Harmonique is always an inspiration for Asian art pieces; and Shears & Window brings the reproduction angle, when you can’t afford the real thing or to find just the right piece to work with you design. In 2005, while looking for a library table I stopped at Partridges in London’s Bond Street. They showed me one that had belonged to an English King. It was nice but not the size I was looking for, nor the price of £980K. When I returned 6 months later it had sold! So they showed me a pair of half octagon desks but they wouldn’t fit either, yet were less expensive, about £650K. When I returned 6 months later I asked, had they sold? No there is one piece in the window and one at the back. “And has the price changed,” I asked? “Yes,” they answered, “we thought they were priced too low, now they are £800K!!” Partridge’s unfortunately closed down last year! I tell this story because before the recent economic downturn my clients loved to think that I would shop for them in this range and also that if they did buy something so highly priced it might still make them a profit. Those were the days! Enjoy this issue, and all the activities this Fall. EDITOR OF ‘SF MAGAZINE’ Lisa Jasper, ASID, CID Jerry Jacobs, ASID, CID President, ASID California North Chapter SF Design • CA North 4 Fall 2010 5 FEATURE A Journey Beyond the Ordinary: Eight Creative Ways to Decorate with Asian Art and Artifacts By Patricia Benson W hat style is your current design project? No matter if the design is contemporary, transitional, traditional, or an eclectic mix, a hint of Asia in any of these settings can add just the right finishing touch to a room. When incorporating Asian artifacts into a design plan the choices range from simple Burmese lacquer bowls to dramatic 19th century Thai temple gongs. Since most items have been crafted entirely by hand with little or no machinery to interfere with the artist’s vision, you are infusing the gentle ambiance of an earlier age. My philosophy has always been, see it, love it (buy it…) and find a way to use it. Sometimes it’s old…sometimes very old but no matter the age, have fun blurring the lines as you incorporate these unique pieces into your design. Here are a few things that might spark ideas for your next design project. Antique wheels from Laos and Thailand are great used now as art. In one of my recent projects the client’s office fireplace had an odd niche centered in the brick above the mantel. We covered the strange void with a lovely antique teak wheel from Laos and salvaged a $7 piece of lumber to create a rustic mantel to finish the look. An antique Burmese lacquer tray can be placed on a cocktail ottoman as a place to display magazines. This lacquer tray was originally used to carry food to market. The ancient process of lacquering basketry to make everyday items strong, water resistant and long wearing has been practiced in most Asian countries for centuries. One particularly dramatic lacquer item from Burma is a “Hsun-ok”, which is a footed bowl with a spire lid that resembles the shape of the traditional Burmese pagoda and usually contains several layered interior chambers. These covered bowls are reserved for religious use in Burma to transport food to a monastery. Today we often convert these intricate bowls into beautiful lamps for practical use in decorating or combine a group of bowls in various sizes, colors and shapes atop a tall cabinet or entry table for dramatic impact. Every Buddhist temple in Southeast Asia has at least one handforged, solid bronze gong, as shown in the photo. Temple gongs are used as a call to prayer or in a healing and centering ritual. The sound that resonates when you strike the center of the gong SF Design • CA North 6 with its leather bound mallet radiates around you then gently disappears and drifts away to silence. In a traditional San Francisco home we enclosed and lighted a formerly uninspired interior window well with cherry wood to create a special backdrop for a gong. It now serves as an enchanting, totally unique and welcoming door bell. Asian furniture is at home in both contemporary and traditional settings, but we like to use it in unexpected ways. A former Chinese medicine cabinet can make a beautiful statement in a contemporary entry. The many drawers originally contained Chinese herbal medicine and still bear the characters identifying the contents of each drawer. Often this cabinet is topped with a time-worn teak pole salvaged from a river in Thailand, which becomes a beautiful piece of sculpture. An interesting Qing Dynasty demilune table is smashing when converted into a power room vanity in a contemporary setting with a white vessel sink. If possible, we leave the patina of the years as a juxtaposition to the contemporary added elements of our modern lifestyle. In one project, a 1940’s Berkeley cottage remodel, we repurposed an antique Japanese Mizuya tansu as a dining room buffet and storage cabinet by splitting the two sections, mounting the upper section on the wall and installing a mirror behind to connect the pieces. In another photo an antique bronze rain drum from Vietnam makes a stunning statement in this monochromatic living room when used as a side table. These are just a few ideas, but let your imagination run wild and add a bit of Asia’s rich past into your next design project. About the Author: Patricia Benson is the owner of Harmonique Home, a retail store with 2 locations in Berkeley, offering Asian antiques as well as custom furniture designed and built made exclusively for us by Asian artisans. Harmonique is pleased to offer special design trade consideration. CHAPTER NEWS 2010 Award Winners It is my great pleasure to announce those who have received National awards from ASID. They are: • Joseph Horan, FASID: Honorary Award for Life Membership • Martha Thompson: Honorary Chapter Medalist Award • Bruce Goff, FASID: Chapter Medalist Award These outstanding people were nominated by our California North chapter of ASID, with Camille Fanucci, ASID chairing the committee. What an effort! In addition, Camille will continue to chair this committee, along with Maloos Anvarian, ASID, our upcoming President-Elect, who have now put together our Design Excellence Award program. Congratulations to our three very deserving recipients of these awards! Jerry Jacobs, ASID CA North President Fall 2009 7 FEATURE Can the Luxury Sector Survive the Great Recession of 2008-2012? By Alf Nucifora F or the first time in recent history, the luxury market took a serious body blow. Most categories including retail, travel, hospitality, real estate and services saw dramatic year-to-year revenue and profitability declines, some in the range of 30-50%. We’ve been told the recession is formally on its way out, this from the same academic and think-tank geniuses who were assuring us in late 2007-early 2008 that any recession, should it occur, would be mild in its impact, a brief case of the sniffles in contrast to the fully-fledged economic pandemic that the country continues to battle. So what should we expect going forward? The late fourth quarter of 2009 saw an upward tick in luxury spending as the affluent, fearful of appearing indulgent to friends, neighbors and staff, opened their check books to activate dormant remodeling projects and gratify their delayed desires for various high-end baubles, bangles and beads. The numbers in the first half of 2010 show a continued return to spending by the super-affluent. But the trend is erratic and hardly reliable for any luxury marketer plotting survival strategy and spending decisions. So what are the canaries in the mine? 1. Watch the DJIA: The magic number is 10,000, the on/off switch so to speak. When the Dow rises above that number, they begin to spend. When it drops below for a sustained period, the spending spigot gets shut off. It’s all psychological, of course. The truly affluent have the money, but they feel poorer when their portfolio balances drift downward. 2. Watch the Consumer Confidence numbers: The Conference Board publishes them regularly. We were doing well there for a time, hitting the 60’s in May versus the dismal 40’s earlier in the year and the fatalistic 20’s in early 2009. And then in June it plunged again, indicating a frustrating resistance to confidence building on the part of American consumer who continues to worry about job security, declining home values, rising healthcare costs and an existing debt load that has to be repaid before credit cards can be reactivated. A purloined quote says it best. “Confidence grows at the rate a coconut tree grows. It falls at the rate a coconut falls”. With the American economy driven by consumer spending to the tune of 70%, consumer confidence must rebound before the economy can fully recover. Right now, consumers are spending less, saving more and reducing credit…the very prescription for continued economic woe. Notes economist Michael Lehmann, “When people feel good, they borrow and spend. When they feel lousy, they repay and cut back”. 3. Watch the three time bombs: In order they are, 1.) The unemployment rate, 2.) The residential and commercial real estate markets, and 3.) Credit card debt. The stubborn unemployment rate remains key to the recovery. As long as it hovers in the 9% range nationally (closer to 17% if one includes those who have opted out of the job market or SF Design • CA North 8 involuntarily transitioned from full-time to part time employment), any hopes of a significant or hastened recovery are out the question. The unemployed don’t spend. Equally corrosive, they act as a constant reminder for those who are gainfully employed that destitution is one capricious employer decision away. There but for the grace of God, go I. The numbers on residential real estate remain anemic with housing starts and new home sales fluctuating month-to-month and 20+ % of mortgage holders “under water”. Until U.S. banks and lenders flush out the 2.5 + million additional foreclosures on the books for this year, the prognosis remains poor. On the commercial side, between $800 billion and a trillion dollars in assets reside in the at-risk column. A prowl down the streets of most U.S. cities, our own Union Square and Financial District included, will attest to the fact that the plethora of “For Lease” and “For Sale” signs are a prelude of difficulties to come. With the American consumer holding an average $8000 in credit card debt, the national credit bill totals $900 billion, with approximately $400 billion of that at risk or loss during the next five years. And we wonder banks have reigned in their once profligate lending practices and why consumer credit spending continues to contract, wholly un-American behavior based on historical patterns? The bottom line The economy will recover, but at its own pace. Look for a very slow, protracted recovery that will demand rebuilding of consumer coffers as well as confidence. 2010 is still a year in search of economic stability, as most likely will be the bulk 2011. But we can survive and succeed in the interim. At the high-end, there will be pent up demand that has to be met. Homes will be purchased and remodeled. Cars will be traded in. Vacations will be taken and the lifestyle practices of the Bay Area affluent and wealthy will be resumed, albeit in a quieter, more introspective, more European manner. That means less extravagant spending on garish Rolexes and more investment in bespoke quality and family lifestyle enhancement, that long overdue kitchen remodel or room addition, for example. For the opportunistic marketer it’s a once-in-a-lifetime chance to capitalize on the fear and hesitancy of others and carve out market share while aggressively pursuing new clients and customers, “marketplace Darwinism”, so to speak. The one thing a recession guarantees is that strategically-smart risk-takers get richer and that competitively-driven marketers make their mark at the expense of the meek. Alf Nucifora is the Chairman and Founder of The Luxury Marketing Council chapters in San Francisco, Monterey Peninsula and Las Vegas. The Luxury Marketing Council is a global organization representing more than 1000 of the world’s leading consumer luxury brands. Don’t Settle For Ordinary Shutters. Discover the Danmer Difference. t Inspired designs, all hand-crafted here in the USA. t Installed exactly when you need it…Guaranteed! t Any window, opening or shape. No exceptions. The #1 choice of designers and hospitality Professionals for over 30 years. DANMER SHUTTERS. THE ULTIMATE CHOICE IN CUSTOM WINDOW COVERINGS. For a FREE design consultation call 800-547-0303 Contractor’s License # 574304 T U L H a r d w o o d I P F l o o r s UNPARALLELED FLOORING SELECTION PERSONAL STAIN CUSTOMIZATION | SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP OVER 25 YEARS OF HARDWOOD FLOORING EXPERIENCE Comprehensive Showroom • Extensive Selection of Green Products Large Check-out Samples • Personalized Service Unique Flooring Options • Seamless Restoration and Matching Custom Samples Made to Your Specifications 510.558.2030 1190 Tenth St • Berkeley, CA 94710 www.tulipfloors.com Fall 2010 9 FEATURE The Designer Advantage at Bonhams & Butterfields’ SoMa Estate Auctions By Christine Skinner B onhams & Butterfields is well known as San Francisco’s world renowned premier auction house specializing in high end art and antiques. What many may not know is that Bonhams & Butterfields’ monthly SoMa Estate Auction provides a comprehensive offering of furnishings from all periods, styles and tastes at mid range prices. Over 850 lots of fresh-to-market property including artwork, rugs, furniture, lighting and decorative accessories hit the auction block, allowing Bay Area designers and dealers to source unique and one-of-a-kind items at affordable prices within the $500 - $3000 range. For those not necessarily looking for the contemporary lighting, seating, coffee tables, bookcases, cabinets, decorative accessories and much more. antique, the SoMa Estate Auctions have recently Here are some tips for shopping at SoMa Estate Auctions: for introduced a new category those who have never bought at auction before, the process is of offerings which include quite simple. The online catalog with images is posted 2 ½ contemporary designer weeks before the sale. Previews are held 2 days before the sale furnishings (think McGuire, for physical viewing. It is extremely important to take extra care Michael Taylor Designs and inspect each piece closely, as items are sold as-is and are and Orlando Diaz Azcuy). non-returnable. Sourced mainly from private West Coast Looking for something in particular? Take advantage of Bonham's estates and search feature when you sign up for an account. Simply type in consignors, the the item you are searching for and Bonhams will automatically e- idea is to offer clean, mail you when one becomes available at auction. What could be pristine furniture, still easier? 'current' in design. SF Design • CA North 10 These include custom We love to answer questions. There are so many details regarding upholstered sofas, antiques, and especially regarding the auction process. FEATURE Specialists are always on hand to provide answers about provenance, condition or any other question you may have about an item. Be sure to register online or in person at least 24 hours before the start of sale. You may attend the auction in person, leave an absentee bid or bid via telephone. If bidding in person, please note we auction approximately 100 lots an hour. Large Items, denoted with a ‘W’ next to the lot number, must be picked up 3 or 4 days after the date of sale, as noted in the catalog. The next SoMa Estate Auction is scheduled for September 19. For more information, please visit www.bonhams.com/soma Christine Skinner began working for Bonhams & Butterfields in 2002, spending time both in the Furniture and Decorative Arts Department as well as the Fine Arts Department. For the last 5 years she has been the Director of the monthly SoMa Estate Auctions. Fall 2010 11 FEATURE Reproductions: Ageless and Beautiful By Greg McIntyre W hy buy a custom reproduction cabinet or chair when you can get a fine antique or a great bargain from a retail furniture store? I have been in the business of dealing with high quality, custom reproduction furniture—from traditional to modern— for over two decades. Here’s my answer: Ageless. Often using classical designs that have evolved over centuries, wellmade reproductions have the look and feel of times past while being made with the modern engineering and flexibility that allows for uses unimagined long ago. You can see it in the patina, the sheen on the surface of a table or console. It’s obvious in the grace of a finely carved chair or cabinet. Furniture that speaks of elegance and timelessness, whether a single piece for accent or a houseful, is easy to spot and stands out in any setting, and serves to make the setting more special. And it doesn’t have to be old or cost a fortune to be wonderful. Good reproductions can blend easily into any style, accenting the latest trends, while having a lifetime that runs generations and survives changing tastes. A wooden table top, a bronze chandelier, an aged iron base for a glass top table can have that specific look, touch and glow that suggests ageless beauty. Green. Quality reproductions can be the ultimate green furniture. Made to order by craftsmen, often using updated, cutting edge techniques and materials sensitive to our environment yet replicating old world craftsmanship, they can last and serve for generations, becoming the antiques of tomorrow. What could be more green than that? Custom. Let’s say you discovered a set of four beautiful antique dining chairs, but you need eight. And these are a little small. It’s hard to find matching antique chairs in the quantity and size you want for today’s modern lifestyle. However, with quality reproductions you can customize a piece to get whatever you want, any size you want, in any finish you want, in any fabric you want. SF Design • CA North 12 Durable. Mass produced furniture is often intended for a limited lifetime. Styles change. Why spend the money manufacturing something that will be outdated in a few years? And antiques, as beautiful as they may be, are sometimes delicate. Having a chair, sofa or table that is durable and that you can actually use in today’s busy lifestyle is important. Quality shows and lasts the test of time. Value. I have an elegantly shaped walnut eighteenth century style secretary in my living room. It looks Venetian. A showstopper, it’s also a reproduction that cost less than ten percent of the real thing, assuming you could even find the real thing. Reproductions by craftsmen and talented designers can last for generations and are a rare bargain when you look at cost and decades of use. Mass produced furniture, sometimes offering the immediate thrill of bargain prices, can often disappoint, making the value questionable in the long run. Good Company. I love well-designed modern furniture—sleek or angular, smooth or rough, sometimes startling, sometimes in dramatic finishes and materials. Often that look is complimented and enhanced by the presence of a classically styled reproduction that whispers elegance even while its young neighbors shout 2010. A good reproduction piece is excellent company in any setting, always respectful and enhancing. A great interior designer can create magic. And the skilled staff of a custom furniture and fabric showroom can be invaluable behind the scenes. For the end customer, it’s not always about money, but style, pride, selection and good investing. For them, what’s more priceless than hearing from their guests—“Wow!”— when they see the new home or redone space for the first time? How about when company comes back and wants more information on the special world their designer has created? Greg McIntyre is showroom manager at Shears & Window at the San Francisco Design Center Galleria. He can be reached at [email protected] or (415) 621-0911. HunterDouglas TRADE ALLIANCE Galleria Shades and Shutters is the design professional’s trade source for specifying, ordering and installing Hunter Douglas Window Fashions. As a Hunter Douglas Trade Alliance Partner, we can provide the following: • Fully staffed Hunter Douglas Gallery Showroom available for your use. • Complete book loaning library at no cost. • Professional and Certified measuring and installation services • Favorable trade discounts. • Exclusive unadvertised rebates and promotions • Flexible pricing models and different levels of service based on your needs and desires. • Right Choice Promise Guarantee • Hunter Douglas Certified Motorization Specialist • Home Automation • External Screen Shades and Awnings 1611 N. Broadway • Walnut Creek, CA 94596 • 925-938-8363 [email protected] • www.galleriashadesandshutters.com FEATURE My sick chair has a split personality! By Eric Petsinger A few years back on a buying trip through France, one of my favorite dealers in Lyon invited us back to her apartment for one of those ever-so-simple, but deliciously wonderful French meals. You know, pick up some pork chops from the neighborhood butcher, swing by the green grocer for fresh haricot verts, with a final stop at the bakery for that heavenly crunchy French bread, and of course a sinfully buttery tarte tatin to end the meal. Of course, I always consider myself lucky to get these invitations, not just for the food and generous hospitality, but to go behind the scenes to see just what that particular dealer surrounds themselves with at home. I guess I’m a true voyeur at heart and love seeing just what it is that people want to wake up to everyday, and what objects make them feel all cozy and comfy when they return home at day’s end. Leaving the summer heat outside, we enter Bea’s apartment building and begin our ascent up the wide, cool limestone stairway. The large walnut door opens and we enter Bea’s spacious flat with high ceilings and tall windows. She flings open the drawn drapes, thrusts open the hinged windows and a warm breeze blows past us. “May I show you around?” Absolutement!! Leading us into the quietly-elegant, lived-in sitting room, Bea points about the room, “ziss table belonged to my great-great grandfozzer. It is made from, how do you say… It eez small and round and you coook it in zee ooven. Ah oui, chest noot!” (ah yes, chestnut!) Before leaving the room I notice that, sitting next to the wellused Louis XVI marble fireplace is an over-scaled Regence open armchair with a well-worn gray painted finish that only 270 years of dutiful service can achieve. “Love this!” I blurted out. “Do you know what ziss eez? Bea asks? (Is this a trick question, I’m wondering?) “Une chaise?” I answer in my best third grade French. “Mais non monsieur!! C’est une chaise-demalade!” (A sick chair, I think to myself. Hmm, who knew?) Not quite, but almost. It is a chair that converts into a daybed and was used for someone who was convalescing. I loved this ‘sick chair’ and had to have it, so I asked if it was for sale. “It eez quite rare. 15,000 euros.” At that moment, I could have used a chaisede-malade. Oh well, no sick chair for me, but it did make me curious to learn more. I came to discover that these oddly-curious, transformers of yesteryear are known collectively as metamorphic or convertible furniture, or that uncomfortable sleep sofa that we’ve all spent sleepless nights on – today’s version of metamorphic furniture! (albeit a last place finisher by comparison to its antique brethren) Why was metamorphic furniture needed? What was its purpose? In Europe and Colonial America, most people had small living quarters and found it necessary to conserve space. You guessed it! Dual-purpose furniture began to appear on the scene. The table/chair , trundle bed, drop-leaf table and even the folding chair (still used today at every Thanksgiving ‘kids’ table. Remember?). Even Thomas Chippendale, in 1750, took a stab at creating a stool that morphed into a ladder for his wealthy clients’ private libraries. Not a successful model but its successor was not far behind. Practicality ruled the day until the mid-18th century, when an enthusiasm for cleverly constructed mechanical furniture began to emerge. Ingenuity was embraced and an intrigue in dual-purpose furniture took hold. Where Chippendale left off in 1750, the London cabinet makers Morgan and Sanders patented the first convertible library chair in 1811, during England’s Regency period. What appears to be a form of domestic furniture, opens easily to steps allowing access to the upper shelves - perfect for the manor house owners whose newly amassed book collections needed a specialized room for safekeeping. Thus emerged the private library where the efficient use of space was essential but quirkiness was embraced. In a New York Times article entitled, “Antiques: Much More than Meets the Eye,” by Wendy Moonan, Mr. Ballinger, Manager of the Bridge to Design • CA North 14 Philadelphia antiques shop Alfred Bullard Inc. said ''These were toys for rich men. They were costly when they were made. They were always of the finest materials and craftsmanship, because only the rich had libraries. I have never seen a library chair in a secondary wood or done with second-rate craftsmanship.'' It goes without saying that the cabinet makers also enjoyed the handsome profits they gained from providing the privileged with their toys. In the late 19th century, eccentricity and the unusual were a common thread in dual-purpose furniture. People now lived in larger dwellings so conserving space was no longer the driving force behind metamorphic furniture design. The wealthy delighted in these mechanical oddities and clamored for more. A desk could become a bed; a chair turned into a bathtub. One of the most unusual metamorphic objects is a Piano Bed made in Boston in 1865 (see the video online www.video.yahoo.com/watch/187678/1732523 Another online example, this one from the Antiques Roadshow archives, is a Victorian Reclining Chair produced in 1876. www.pbs.org/wgbh/roadshow/archive/200903A34.html So next time you’re sleeping on that pull-out sofa bed, remember that metamorphic furniture is not a recent development – it goes back centuries to when someone probably placed a plank of wood on two supports to make life a bit easier. Convenience and space restrictions made dual-purpose furniture necessary until the mid-18th century when the wealthy became fascinated and amused with mechanical furniture. The early 19th century brought the invention of the library chair that opened in to steps so the manor house owners with their new libraries could have the convenience they needed while being delighted with its eccentricity. By the end of the 19th century, the more eccentric, the better – think of the Piano Bed! • Custom-tailored with quality materials • Independent DUAL motorized control of foot & back rest • Automation through control systems [contact closure & IR] • Recliner and incliner [wall-saver] steel frames • Ergonomics: articulating headrest & lumbar support As for me, in the end, I did find my chaise-de-malade at a New Orleans auction house and have it on display in my shop – a beautiful Louis XV example of metamorphic furniture. It brings back great memories every time I admire it. Eric Petsinger is owner of Epoca, a source for fine antiques in San Francisco. He can be reached at [email protected] or (415) 864-6895. Bridge to Design • CA North 16 CHAPTER NEWS WELCOME NEW MEMBERS J oin us in welcoming our newest members to the ASID CA North Chapter.... Industry Partners Epoca New Professional Members Julie Elizabeth Manning, ASID Kristen Lynn Totah, ASID Mary Katherine Bowman, ASID Cynthia Riebe, ASID Michelle Dugan, ASID New Allied Members Deborah Lewis Gadbois, Allied Member Nicole Pascale, Allied Member Nestor Bradley, Allied Member Jane Antonacci, Allied Member Jennifer Grein, Allied Member Nicolette Roberts, Allied Member Peter Rudy, Allied Member Janet Tight, Allied Member Chelsea Clair, Allied Member Traci Bateman, Allied Member Stacy Stephenson, Allied Member Dannon Rampton, Allied Member Alexandria Nguyen, Allied Member Nancy Thomson, Allied Member New Student Members Sarah Hong Stacey Rodriguez Tiffany Kramer Michelle Becky Wong Carol Heraniah Bridge to Design • CA North 18 CERAMIC TILE SAROYAN LUMBER DESIGN California’s Largest Selection of Fine Decorative Finish Hardware & Plumbing SAN FRANCISCO BELMONT SAN JOSE 940 El Camino Real 982 S. De Anza Blvd. 115 Wisconsin St. 415.252.5625 650.591.0345 408.770.4844 SANTA ROSA BERKELEY WALNUT CREEK 2119 San Pablo Ave. 1279 Boulevard Way 1100 Piner Road 707.573.7373 510.548.5757 925.256.4341 belmonthardware.com Fall 2010 19 ALENDAR CHAPTER EVENTS Luminette Modern Draperies SEPTEMBER 17 CHAPTER EVENT AT BONHAMS & BUTTERFIELDS Instant Drama SEPTEMBER 22 INSTALLATION PARTY FOR OUTGOING AND INCOMING BOARDS SEPTEMBER 30 - NOVEMBER 9 HIROKO TO: ABSTRACTS AND BOTANICALS Oct 19 - Opening Reception for exhibit ASID Boardroom at San Francisco Design Center Galleria ® OCTOBER 6TH DESIGNER WEDNESDAY SEMINAR AT THE SAN FRANCISCO DESIGN CENTER “Picture Perfect: “Using Professional Photography to Your Advantage.” A conversation with Jay Jeffers and David Duncan Livingston. Our Trade Alliance Program offers: • Knowledgeable and friendly staff and complete showroom available for your clients OCTOBER 19-21 “KITCHEN DESIGN & EPICUREAN EVENT OF THE SEASON – DESIGN, WINE, DINE” San Francisco Design Center Galleria • Sample books for loan at no charge • Measuring and skilled installation services • Favorable trade pricing and discounts • Valuable resources and precise solutions to meet each client's needs NOVEMBER 3 DESIGNER WEDNESDAY SEMINAR AT THE SAN FRANCISCO DESIGN CENTER “MarketingTools” – A panel discussion moderated by Heide Gerpheide, Publisher, California Homes • Full service for consultation, price quotes, order processing, and installation NOVEMBER 17-18 DIFFA’S “DINING BY DESIGN” San Francisco Design Center Galleria MUSEUM EXHIBITS TRADE ALLIANCE SHOWROOM De Young Museum 247 California Dr, Burlingame, CA 94010 MAY 22 – SEPTEMBER 6 BIRTH OF IMPRESSIONISM: MASTERPIECES FROM THE MUSEE D’ORSAY M-F: 10:00-5:00 Saturdays: 11:00-4:00 Evening Appointments Available 650-348-1268 SEPTEMBER 25 – JANUARY 18, 2011 VAN GOGH, GAUGIN, CEZANNE AND BEYOND: POST-IMPRESSIONIST MASTERPIECES FROM THE MUSEE D’ORSAY rebarts.com Asian Art Museum THROUGH DECEMBER, 2010 SHANGHAI CELEBRATION © 2009 Hunter Douglas. ® Registered trademark of Hunter Douglas. 13596 SF Design • CA North 22 sanam wool & silk / available in standard and custom sizes