Sunday, December 27, 2015

Salvage Style

from: http://www.sunset.com/


Rent to Own.ph: Have you any hand-me-down furniture, thrift store finds, bits and pieces that don't really match but you can't let go off because you need them for your home and buying new pieces is out of the question? Don't despair! Here are useful ways in revamping those pieces and making them part of a beautiful whole!

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For Kelly LaPlante, a leading Los Angeles-based interior designer, author, television host, and new mother, green design isn't just about choosing fabrics and furniture made from sustainable materials.

She prefers to help her clients find new use―and often unexpected new love―for things they already own. "There's nothing more green than keeping what you have," she says.

Her own Venice loft is proof that hand-me-downs and thrift-store finds can rise to stylish new purpose.

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Refinish

The dining table was brown and had belonged to a client. “They were going to throw it away,” says LaPlante, who saw potential in its curves.

After being revived with a punch of bold red paint, it’s the star of her dining area.

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Reveal

Rather than adding new floor covering, LaPlante stripped decades of paint from her loft's concrete floor. "The patina that had developed from all those years is beautiful," she says. "We just had the floor buffed and called it a day."

Strategically placed area rugs keep rooms cozy.

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Refresh

LaPlante's partner Mike Rader relaxes on a used sofa in the living area. She paid just $200 for it, had the cushions steam-cleaned, and repainted the trim a glossy white.

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Rethink

LaPlante often rethinks definition to find the perfect fit for objects. Here, she uses an outdoor garden stool as an indoor side table.

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Reupholster

LaPlante sits atop a thrifted chaise that she upgraded with 6 yards of eco-friendly velvet fabric. The legs were also freshly painted to match the sofa’s.

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Restyle

Rather than filling her shelves with books, LaPlante left room for shapely objects and empty space to create a pretty display. "I first visually balance the case as a whole," she says. "Then I arrange the contents of each shelf."

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Remix

Kelly encourages making your own eclectic dish set with mismatched cups and plates―with styles from all different time periods―from secondhand stores.

"They don't have to go together, they just have to look interesting together," she says.

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Resource

Buying vintage is always LaPlante's first choice, but when there's something she can't find secondhand, she turns to Craigslist (which is where she found these good-as-new stools being sold by a guy who'd decided he didn't want them). "At the very least you're reusing what someone else no longer wants, rather than buying new," says Kelly.

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Repurpose

The dining space (shown here, below the master bedroom) doubles as a home office for the couple.

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Rearrange

"Junk store art" from local thrift stores and "good art" by up and coming local artists is combined along the walls of the loft's landing.

"The combination looks surprisingly great together," LaPlante says. "The fashion in which we hung these―all at the same centered level―holds the look together, gallery-style."

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Reuse

The headboard of the couple's bed is a cast-off footboard from a tall client who preferred to stretch out while sleeping. "I call this double reuse," she says, since it was already from an antique bed frame.

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Retreat

Potted plants serve double-duty here as a privacy screen from neighbors (while still allowing a city view) and as natural air-filters.

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Revamp

Kelly ditched the old florescent lighting in her bathroom and rigged an antique chandelier to work with the existing system.

"I wanted to glam it up a bit," she says. "It's an easy way to make an ugly bathroom pretty without renovating. And those little bulbs don't use much electricity, and make everything glow."

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