Have you ever walked into your new office or your home and looked at a blank wall and wondered about the possibilities? New construction techniques allow for large open spaces, but sometimes this means large open walls that don't easily lend themselves to traditional interior design. Is it enough to simply add furniture, some accents and maybe a few pictures and plants or are you looking for something more? It could be that you're wondering how to manage some of the cracks, depressions and flaws in a wall or maybe the surface doesn't lend itself to typical painting.
Silver Linings! This quarantine situation has certainly been difficult for everyone, but it has given us the opportunity to give a few of the treatment rooms at Mirbeau (Skaneateles) a new look, as well as do some general touchups. It has been amazing to me how well the finishes have held up at...
I don't do many kids rooms...just not my thing. But I recently did a kids bedroom to go with a "fish themed" bathroom that I did a few years ago. Here are a few pics from that project.
Over the course of a career (if you are lucky) you get some opportunities to do work that is challenging, and will stand the test of time. Patrick and I recently did some touchups at the Mirbeau Spa in Skaneateles. I did the original work there 20 years ago...it doesn't seem possible! I was lucky to...
We've had the opportunity to do some woodgraining lately...making things that are not wood look like wood. The beams in these pictures are actually drywall. We painted them to make them look like oak. One was painted to look like dark brown oak with pegs (like post and beam construction) and the...