Here's the stunning trailer for Tom Ford's screenwriting and directorial debut film, A Single Man. It's set in 1962 and taps into the Mad Men zeitgeist perfectly. The hair, furniture, and fashion alone are reason enough to get excited, then you add on Julianne Moore with winged eyeliner eyes and a deconstructed disheveled Jackie Bouvier Kennedy up-do and Colin Firth wrestling with his sexuality in chunky black glasses... Well, I'm wetting myself. Be sure to watch the clip below in HD.
Please welcome our latest columnist to The Rural Modernist fold, Joe Armenia from Campagna Home. He will be weighing in on his latest design obsessions, tips, and finds on a regular basis and I couldn't be happier since it means less work for me.
We are obsessed with juxtaposition. Not only is is great for fashion (crappy old jeans, a plain white tee shirt and Gucci python loafers, for example), but it is a GENIUS design technique for your home.
As you have seen in countless photo layouts, the merging of old and new (read: quaint traditional meets hyper modern) in interior design is haute haute haute. Nowhere is this design trend more prevalent than in the homes of urban refugees, who seek a better lifestyle and more space outside of the city, but who decidedly do NOT want to lose their edge. Modern classics like a Saarinen table or Bertoia barstools are what the chic folk like in the country. Juxtaposition....a woodsy, rural setting and a sleek piece of furniture/art. Somehow it works.
Taking that a step further, we love to take expected and traditional pieces and flip the script. We've been lacquering very ornate Baroque and Rococo frames in super bright colors like turquoise and fuchsia. We recently took an antique 19th century French farm table and replaced the entire surface with a slab of gleaming red lucite. But this can be done in much more accessible, everyday ways for the average Joe.
The genius and twisted minds behind Subversive Cross Stitch feel the same way. We have all seen framed cross-stitch designs on the walls and embroidery hoops of our grandmothers and spinster aunts. They are sweet and comforting, "Home Is Where The Heart Is" type of fare....but now, there is a whole fresh take on them....just look at some of these special designs:
Can't you just see these in glossy, brightly painted frames on a stark white wall...in a grouping? Positioned creatively, the tongue-in-chic of it all will be a major design plus, and the small scale of them will keep your overall design minimal and clean. It is super cheap (just a few bucks for the whole kit....then a few more for a cheap frame and some spray paint!), really powerful, and a ton of fun. And that's what design should be.
I wear many hats around here: I'm The Rural Modernist, a Doodle Whore, an illustrator, a pot thrower and a budding greeting card mogul. Let's pause for a moment to let me shill for my very own little greeting card company, Handsome Devil Press. We're thrilled to announce the launch of our new e-card iPhone app just for gay dudes. If you are one (or know a few), you can learn more about it over at Cerebral Itch.
Remember that cool modern house in Ferris Bueller's Day Off?
Thursday, September 17, 2009 | Ferris Beuller, Landmarks.org, Rose House | 2 comments »Can you imagine what a travesty it would be if it were torn down and replaced with a faux Tuscan McMansion? Ew. The Rose House and Pavilion is one of the most significant modern houses in the Chicagoland area and was featured in the movie "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" when Cameron kicked his father's Ferarri through the glass curtain wall. The house is currently for sale and inquiries have been made to significantly alter the house or demolish it. The house is featured on Landmarks Illinois 2009/2010 Chicagoland Watch List, as a threatened historic structure. For more information, visit Landmarks.org.
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