So-fa So Good

Yesterday I said goodbye to the family couch.

After 32 years of stalwart dedication, this unapologetic voyeur has been used as a child-launch trampoline/fort/ship, witnessed a multitude of 3 a.m. angsts and rambunctious soccer parties, and served as a bed for visitors as well as some in-the-doghouse nights.

The legs once became a flower press when I had this bright idea of starting a new hobby, and for the past two years, has secured my passport when a leg became a little wobbly. 

It has hosted tacos, tequila and love.

But there comes a time.


Every so often I read about getting older, and whoever’s writing it says it’s great to be old; to be prudent and sapient and seasoned. To be at the point where you know just what matters in life.

They drool, “Beauty comes from within.” What are they thinking? Don’t they have necks?

But I loved my old leather couch. Over the years it had developed a beautiful patina that can only be achieved with high quality material.

 

SO WHAT HAPPENED?

What happened was that the old sofa was given a new home. (I really think it was happy with the old one.) But the time had come to replace it with something new. 

However, a really good sofa is hard to find.

No, I don’t mean the quality of its frame, the durability of its fabric, or its classic, timeless design. Those can be found in abundance. No, the kind of sofa I wanted, and frankly needed, was not easily found.
 

MAYBE IT’S JUST ME 

Okay, maybe it’s just me. But when I think about a really good sofa, this is what I think about: 

  1. Is it long enough to have a nap on? 
  2. Is it deep enough so that I don’t fall off when I’m napping?
  3. Can I use two pillows when I’m napping?
  4. Can I spill red wine on it without staining?

THE NEW SOFA

The new sofa isn’t working out; frankly, we’re having some issues. I haven’t quite decided, but I’m close to calling off our relationship.

Here are my issues:

  1. It’s new leather. It will need another 32 years to look like my old sofa. And I don’t have that much time.
  2. The new leather looks and feels great, but everything slides off. Including me.
  3. It’s curved. I can forget having a good nap. 
  4. It’s new. I don’t know how the red wine will feel about that. 

THE SACRED

There are some things that are sacred to me. (For any checklist I create, my goal at minimum, is to be somewhat ambitious. Ambition can vary from “starting a business” to simply “getting off of couch”.)

1. My trips. I don’t know if you’re that familiar with me, but hiking isn’t my usual choice of vacation activities. I tend to prefer shopping.

2. My walks. No, I’m not a tightrope walker like the famous “The Great Blondin”, nor do I try to compete with David Sedaris’ 25-mile-a-day stroll, nor do I compose symphonies in my head like Beethoven. But I am renown for my intermittent “Gandhi walks”, especially when trolling through new places or ignoring street signs.

3. My writing. Although trying to write after not writing for awhile, is kind of like trying to finish the Badwater Ultramarathon after three years of sitting on the couch and eating Cheetos.

4. My sofa.

IN CLOSING

Humans are hard-wired to connect; to each other, their i-Phones, their couch. From an evolutionary perspective, it makes sense that we are particularly sensitive to separating from our couches, since our survival is pretty dependent on getting in our daily nap. So we cling and have appropriate responses to that need, which keeps us safe and protected.

Given that, I really liked my old sofa. 

Sorry, no one wants your stuff.

Though we’ve been sequestered for months on end, this time has given us a fertile time to reflect upon our stuff. And this realization can be downright painful. 

And if you’re the parent of a millennial, prepare for disappointment.

For the most part, they DO NOT want your stuff.  

I don’t think there’s a future for possessions of our parent’s generation. It’s now a minimalist obsessed society.

I love to walk into a home and see that someone has their own individual aesthetic and design perspective and that they’ve collected uncommon pieces that speak to them. Their home decor may be the product of years (maybe a lifetime) of collecting. Each piece is a treasure that brings to mind the time, place, and story behind where they got it.

We all have heirlooms, what historians have come to call “the society of things”. They are important because they help tell our stories and make sense of the world. (except for Hummel figurines, Thomas Kinkade paintings, or barbeque lighter fluid left over from the ’70’s)

But with the growth of manufacturing, we became obsessed with the sheer volume and ease of goods we could accumulate — a need so bottomless that it has left us with cluttered living rooms, packed basements and garages, and overflowing storage units. After all, there’s a big difference between needing things, and wanting things. Unless you come from a family with tremendous providence, you probably don’t have much that’s worth a lot. It’s thought that if you liquidate everything in the average home down to the teaspoons, it’s worth about $5000, not multiples of that.  Yes, even the stuff you worry the most about, the stuff you think is so good you don’t use it for fear of breaking it, has little to no resale value.

Why? Baby boomers have glutted the market with their castoffs, and millennials, the next generation of buyers, don’t want it. And eventually, someone will be tasked with the OVERWHELMING JOB of getting rid of it. It’s just as important to continue defining who we are, as to continue eliminating who we are not.  You insist that your things have meaning. They have value. They have memories. They are important.

Well, they’re important  – to you.  It’s your memory, no one else’s.  

Nothing is worth anything if no one wants it.
 

My first and biggest job when I style or stage a home, is determining the excess.   

Some people are like complicated wallpaper, eager to entertain, but all too frequently unable to oblige. I remind clients who are having a hard time letting go of items, that there is always someone else in the world who could use it and who might truly treasure it. 

Or convincing them that they don’t really need it, use it, or require so many. That it might even be a blessing to the entire western world.

Or to obey the rule that if something new comes in, something old goes out. (Like that’s EVER going to happen.)
 
Or emboldened with dubious veracity, they want to de-clutter – mostly by giving their clutter to me. (“No” is a complete sentence.)


Alas, it goes without saying that I’ve been trying to influence people my entire life: ostensibly with limited success. 

Take the pearls, not the piano. 

Not only have tastes changed, but the way millennials think about stuff has changed. Their needs and desires have changed. Few now have formal dining rooms or a place for an ornate chandelier. They consider freedom a priority. They are more mobile and don’t want anything that heavily weighs them down. The hectic pace of life weakens their attachment to “things”.

They are choosing simpler lifestyles, often have limited storage space, as well as not having the past two generations of attachment, guilt and sentiment that comes with that mahongany sideboard. 

With today’s disposable culture, it’s cheaper to buy a sofa from IKEA than to hire a truck and move a giant sectional. As well, some of the older furniture won’t even fit in the smaller houses and condos. Some of it won’t even fit in the elevator.  

Many want to start and create their own collections – surrounded by pieces that are curated to reflect their travels, memories, ways of being, and their personal style. They want to choose their own lifestyle – and flatware. 

 The question is: What matters in the end? What endures?

Will they be treasures or burdens?  

One day, this will all be yours! 

So don’t guilt your children into keeping all (or any) of your possesions. Or they might just conveniently “forget” their copy of “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up” next time they visit.
 

ON TREATISE AND TRAVEL:
WHAT’S REALLY GROWING ON HERE?

The Best Decorating Tips You Ever Learned From Your Interior Decorator

This week, I’m sharing a recipe for delicious black bean meatballs. They’re versatile enough to eat for breakfast, lunch, or dinner and of course they’re great for snacking, right out of the fridge.

Oh wait, that’s next week. Today I’m waxing poetic on all I know about interior design, which should take all of 45 seconds.

A LITTLE COLOUR NEVER HURT ANYBODY

There seems to be a cultural bias against colour lately.

I ask you, how hard is it to decorate in 50 Shades of White? 

We dismiss colour as childish and frivolous, prizing neutral hues as a mark of coolness and mature taste. That belief has left us in a place where we feel almost ashamed to have colour in our lives.

Can I get a ‘Hallelu’ here?

Yes, you can picture it now. You’ve seen it all before. The trio of white shiplap, neutral tiles, and a non-noticeable paint hue. A beige bucket on a beach. A port-manteau of grey, beige and white. Flipper gray on the rest. Essentially as vibrant as a bowl of cold porridge. All scheduled to appeal to the largest swath of anybody who might buy your house within the next 25 years.

Even if you are a bit of a chromophobic, you can incorporate small pops of colour to energize a room, like: a couple of throw pillows, a vase, a piece of art. They become little gifts— small infusions of warmth and life. 

And it’s truly amazing what a lick of paint can do to a space. A pop of color can seemingly transform a space overnight. (Or however long it takes for the paint to dry.)Although a colour scheme based on mottled liver is probably not the best choice.

 

BUY THE BEST YOU CAN AFFORD

In the long run, it’s more economically savvy and sustainable to buy the expensive item once rather than opt for the budget-friendly finds and replace them every few years. So if it’s possible to wait a bit, you’re better off saving up for a durable and beautifully designed piece that will last.

Find a piece you love, save up, take the plunge, and then build the room around it.(It also can help to binge-watch decorating shows and download apps, as long as they never mention astrological signs.)  By the way, you are free to share this information with anyone ahead of you in the Starbucks line as long as I get credit for it. 

DON’T FOLLOW TRENDS

Trends come and go. So take a break from Instagram. Instead, sit down and ask yourself, What do I really love? Make design choices based on your personal aesthetic. If you decorate with items you love – or that your interior designer loves – your space will stand the test of time. I mean, life is just better with poms-poms.

 

TOSS TCHOTCHKES

We often make the mistake of buying lots of inexpensive, small accents like those litle ceramic sombreros that you were conned into buying on the beach in Cancun. It might seem counterintuitive, but it’s far more financially savvy to invest in one statement (and, yes, possibly expensive) accent instead.The end goal isn’t just to own more stuff. The end goal is to live a satisfied, deep, and more intentional life focused on things that actually matter – like gaining more TikTok followers.

.

LAST WORDS OF WISDOM

Always have a vase of fresh flowers somewhere in your home next to a glass of wine – and don’t worry about the budget. It will sort itself out in a few years.Secondly, Coco Chanel said it best: Before you leave the house, look in the mirror and take one thing off. The same can be said for your home—and clearly, your closet.And no matter what, always wear stretchy pants with an elastic waist. In preparation for the black bean meatballs you are going to make next week.

.

We now return to our regular programming.
 

I never met a pantry that I couldn’t organize

I never met a pantry I couldn’t organize.
There are some things that some of us only do every 25 years. Attend our high school reunion, traverse an IKEA store without buying something, and organizing a pantry. These are just simply facts.

It goes without saying that pantries, especially a walk-in, is a great selling feature and often high on a buyer’s wish list.

And if there’s one thing we learned from watching dandruff shampoo commercials, it’s that you never get a second chance to make a first impression. 

Sellers like to believe that buyers will stick to the main rooms of the house during a showing. In reality, potential buyers can, and will, look everywhere. They’re not afraid to look in closets, basement storage, and in pantries.

 I know, I know. Organizing a pantry is as pleasant and relaxed as cleaning a polar bear’s teeth.

But going from disorganized to dapper is the next level up.

It’s so worth it!

Purge
The less in the pantry, the more spacious and organized it will appear. Go through everything and toss anything that is expired, not needed or wanted. While on the market, purchase the minimum, so it doesn’t get overstuffed. 

Clear the floor
If there is not enough space, store large items in another area of the home to make the pantry look spacious, open and organized. The prime goal is to show lots of storage, so convenience may have to be sacrificed for the short haul.

Categorize 
Store similar items with similar items, with everything functionally accessible. Bring items, boxes, cans, and containers to the front of each shelf. Face the labels forward.

Switch out containers
Streamline and organize the pantry by transfering food items such as teas, pastas, spices, snacks, and baking ingredients, etc. into matching storage containers. 

You really need 7 spatulas?

Contents may have shifted during flight.

Soon it will be the first day of spring. Or, as it’s called in Canada, the middle of winter.

Traditionally it brings a ritual biological imperative – spring cleaning  – an unconscious, collective movement, literally. 

If you have lived on this planet as an adult for more than two decades, then it is highly probable that you may have quite the accumulation. Nowadays people are bit more aware of how much stuff they have, because it is beginning to be a bit of a social stigma if you have a lot of stuff.

Over the years “organized” seems to be my most defining characteristic, like I was a minor celebrity with this one claim to fame. I am rarely asked about my knowledge of eighteenth century Hungarian royalty. Which, frankly, is a shame.

Clutter makes us crazy and causes free-floating anxiety (which someone said was the only thing floating around free anymore). But for many of us, we might as well have been told to march outside and hang a new garage door, rather than discard anything.
Our rooms (and storage) should look like we just stepped out for Mexican food and will be back to our lovely, organized life momentarily. Okay, I can hear the chortling now…you don’t like Mexican food, so that’s not gonna happen.
Besides, we don’t want to be one of those houses where a friend walks in off the street and says, “Oh my God! I’m so sorry! I seem to be in somebody’s basement!”

We can get so used to certain luxuries that we start to think they are necessities, but when we have to forgo them, we often come to see that we don’t need them after all. There’s a big difference between needing things and wanting things.

But what I beleive is called for now, in a much deeper way, is to ask ourselves what it really means to live a life that is not defined by things.

Let’s call it “smalling up.”

Smalling up is figuring out what you really need to feel contented and grounded. For example, I have a friend who drives an old beat-up, raggedy car, but she will scrimp and save to buy a piece of art because art is what really matters to her. She smalled up. 

What matters is whether it’s just enough (and not too much) for us. We must determine our own list of “must-haves”, then narrow our stuff down to match it. Feeling a constant urge to upgrade our gadgets and acquire the latest models deprives us of the rich experience of being content with what we have and tuning into the present moments of our lives.

By simply entertaining the idea that what we have is enough, we begin to quiet thoughts that lead to the pursuit of the extraneous and wasteful.

In that sense, it’s just as important to continue defining who we are, as to continue eliminating who we are not. 
THE 6 R’S

REDUCE
 waste
REPAIR rather than replace
REFILL where you can
REDUCE the amount of stuff that you buy
REFUSE extra packaging or any packaging
RECALIBRATE expectations
The first step in the de-cluttering process is to wear loose, comfortable pants that do not have an opinion on your value as a human being.

Secondly, the best way to get rid of things you don’t need is to get rid of things you don’t need. I know, I know, you’d rather stick needles into your eyes.   

Dispose or donate anything that is cloned or used. For instance, is there a new blender, but you keep the old one just in case you think you might need it someday? Is there pottery going back to the Roman Conquest? Or why do you still have the bundt pan that emerges from the cupboard once a year to ruin a perfectly good cake.
 Think of that Japanese decluttering trend where you hold each thing you own and throw it out if it doesn’t give you joy. Just not the vegetables and heating bill. 
 Finally, if you can pass the job onto someone else, I’d recommend it. I mean, once you start overachieving, people expect things from you.
QUESTIONS TO ASK:

Does this item support current values and priorities?
Does this item fit in with the vision for my ideal home?
Could this item be useful/helpful for another person?
Would I buy this item for full price today?
Would it impact my daily life not to have this item? 
Is this item really worth the space it’s taking up? 
Is this item adding value to my life?
All in all, de-cluttering is an excellent investment of your time and some elbow grease, along with a few well-chosen containers, so at the end you can be happy in the knowledge that the day had been a day of purpose.
 

No Fake Turkeys on the Table

“No animal should ever jump up on the dining room furniture unless absolutely certain that he can hold his own in the conversation.”- Fran Lebowitz
 
While there are certain design faux pas we hate to see, there are rules you can break if required. One such decorating “no-no” is pushing the dining or kitchen room table against a wall, but sometimes for saleability, practicality, and pure spacial reasons, we have to compromise.Yes, it may mean sacrificing a seat or two, but doing so can actually lend a more intimate feel to the room—as well as freeing up much needed space. Remember, you should be able to have two people walk past side by side. In other words, at least 36″ for a traffic path.

First rule of thumb: The table ALWAYS has to be centered under the light fixture.You have no idea the hundreds of times I have had to correct this.

Space Saving Trick
If space is limited, remove the two end chairs and place them on either side instead, as shown below. 

Number of Chairs: Dining room tables should have a minimum of 6 chairs unless it’s a large room, whereas 8 or more chairs are appropriate. Kitchens should have a minimum of 4, but 2 will suffice if the kitchen is small.


Now please, please, do not set out place mats and china, or slap a fake turkey on a silver tray, That is so ’80’s.

Unless of course, the realtor is going to stay for dinner. Just make sure it’s a real turkey, The turkey, not the realtor. 
 

And no tablecloths.

No matter how bad the table top looks, it only distracts and makes the table looks visually heavy. Some sellers think they need a tablecloth to hide their scarred or stained table. If the table’s flaws are big enough to be seen in the pictures, the photographer can always mask them in the editing process – and the photos are what brings in the buyers.
 
My famous line is that you aren’t selling the furniture, you are selling the house.

Well, almost. 

Coming Out of the Closet

A few months ago, word started getting out that I knew how to fold fitted sheets.  Now I don’t know how many of you are getting up at 3 o’clock in the morning to watch the Olympics, but I do have to tell you that I feel this is truly an Olympian accomplishment.  No sir-ee, my fitted sheets aren’t wound up in balls shoved in the back of the linen closet, a way-station of disarray that smells like damp dogs and looking like the back alley of the Salvation Army. 

Also, there are no old bowling shoes, strands of Christmas lights, or a dustpan, and I don’t have to launch an archeological dig every time I want to change my sheets or have an avalanche of linens every time I open the door, “just in case I have 100 people spend the night at once.”  Yes, this achievement is designed to keep otherwise accomplished people humble. (I am prepared to wave off compliments on my Olympian skill.) 
 

Which brings me to help you stage a Linen Closet Intervention.
Now this is where the soap meets the washcloth.

Some may feel that organizing a linen closet is as pleasant as cleaning a polar bear’s teeth, and also a chance that some of this could be disappointing…nevertheless, here it is.
 
1. Let It GoFirst, take everything out of the closet.Then sort and retire the mis-matched sheets, worn-out facecloths, and any ratty beach towels that go back to the Roman conquest. 
2. EditGroup like items together. Limit yourself to 2 or 3 sets of sheets and towels per bedroom.Guest rooms should have 2 sets of sheets, towels, extra pillows and a blanket.
3. FoldFold items so no raw edges show.Treat the closet like a bookcase by bringing items to the front of the shelf.Fold items so they take up the entire depth of the shelf to allow for maximum storage. This may involve folding a towel in thirds one-way, and then in half. Lay out each size and see what works best.Stack towels and sheets by colour.Eliminate visual noise by sticking to neutral colours if possible, such as white, crème, grey or beige.

4. StyleUse glass or opaque canisters and bins for storing small items, using matching and same-size containers, so it looks straight out of a Martha Stewart magazine.If there is a shortness of storage space, the closet may also be home to cleaning products and extra toiletries.For toilet paper, remove the plastic wrapping and stack neatly in rows.Corral small items such as bottles and supplies into plastic containers.  

5. Consistency Keep sheets folded together in sets, bath-sized towels together, hand towels together, and washcloths together or in a basket. 

Now go for Gold! 
 

Grilled Cheese at Four in the Morning

It’s early evening, lengthened by the inky, sooty dark of winter. What has happened to this day? A day that goes like every other day, and the days after that. 

I’m tired. Not as in “I’m so sick and tired” (though, in a way, I guess that may be true, too). But tired. Like, I want to go to bed right now sort of tired. Is it the early dark? COVID-Somnia, bound in tormented seclusion? The waiting? 

The waiting. For what exactly? That one day the morning news will wake us with the announcement that we can go back to the time before our lives were upended? That the past two years was just a bad dream, a blimp in the earth’s timeline, a test?

Falling asleep is not the problem. It’s the middle of the night wake-ups. Why can’t I sleep through the night? And while we’re at it, what on earth is happening to my hair?! 

Should I read? Put socks into pairs? Make a grilled cheese sandwich? Or run through every boneheaded relationship I have made over the last seventy-two decades, which some might call “disturbing to others.”

Now here’s the real kick in the pajama bottoms: the circadian rhythm front. My extensive 3 AM research tells me that as we age, it is “normal” that as we get older, we don’t sleep as long or sleep through the night without waking. Not encouraging. 

Yea, the clock is ticking, literally, and sticking my head in the sheets is not an option. 

I am good friends with my bed. I do my best work in bed, and I mean that in the warmest way. But I prefer if not being between the hours of 2 AM and 5. But there it is, and yes, that is exactly the time it is right now. (I also can hear you mutter -“my best work?”) 

And yes, I know, my research also told me that you should only be using the bed for sleep and another fun activity that has a useful sedative effect. 

Believe me, I lay awake at night thinking about this. 

But this eternal waiting…

I walk, wandering around like a lost specter. It’s easy to feel discombobulated in the ubiquitous and now undramatic term “social distancing”. This now new routine social distancing and self-isolation has robbed us of our agency, and is starting to feel like little more than inconvenience giving others wide berth, but walking is as close to a magic pill that I have. It’s given me time to reflect on my life choices, and the rest, of my life. You know what they say about exercise and endorphins and not shooting your partner. 

We have discovered that we are on extended city breaks, very extended – in our own postal codes, trading plane tickets and travel pamphlets for I-Pages and pedestrianism as our primary means of seeing the world and thinking about what’s in it. 

Graham Greene once said that life was lived in the first 20 years and the remainder was just reflection. Again, not encouraging. 

Maybe it’s hope we need the most now, especially when we aren’t feeling especially hopeful. Desmond Tutu said that if we are devoid of hope, we should then just then roll over and disappear quietly, as hope says things can, and that things will, be better. 

Hope is vital for fulfillment and our well-being. To have something to look forward to when you wake up, to have a project you love doing, to have someone that really listens to you. 

And to find beauty. Not beauty in Hollywood glamorous, but as a calling. Beauty is about more rounded, substantial becoming, says the late Irish poet and philosopher, John O’Donohue, “in that sense, is about an emerging fullness, a greater sense of grace and elegance, a deeper sense of depth, and also a kind of homecoming for the enriched memory of your unfolding life.”


All in all, I guess we need to give ourselves some credit. Even a small step forward is a step in the right direction. Hey, even just standing still is still standing.

Although 3 AM in bed is perhaps not the optimal moment of which to derive a true picture of reality. 

All that glitters…

In the faded fleece of hectic Christmas’ past, we were often found forgetting our own phone numbers, putting clean laundry in the washer, and getting in the shower with our glasses on, along with ceiling-staring and aimless scrolling.
Thus, as the ports ramp up to around-the clock-operations in time for us to indulge in our annual holiday buying and wrapping spree, quietly panicking as we saunder past windows stenciled with non-denominational snowflakes, blinking wreaths and angels, I would like to wax poetic about the return of brown paper packages tied up in string. 
More often than not, typical gift wrapping paper has one life, as it’s coated with polyethylene, polypropylene, and laminates that give it that sheen; therefore non-recyclable
Use Up What You Already Have

First, the best thing you can do for the planet and your bank account, is to use what you already have in your home. In other words, hold off until you’ve given out all those gift bags and boxes and rolls of wrapping paper that have lived in your cupboard for two months and a thousand years.
Also, there is no shame in collecting old wrapping supplies and reusing them later on – especially if you’ve been the recipient of carefully wrapped gifts complete with real ribbon and expensive paper.
Secondly, do not overlook the humble box. With the amount of online shopping these days, there’s a good chance you have a stash of boxes somewhere in the house, awaiting recycling pickup. Use these to pack your gifts, dressing them up with paint, twine, evergreen boughs, or fabric ribbons.

Think High Design with Humble Materials

A few creative touches added to your gift such as tying with hemp twine and adding pinecones, cedar branches, boxwood, dried oranges, or any nature-inspired treasures, is not only a beautiful creative package to give away, but one which has the environment foremost in mind.
So put on your Christmas Spotify playlist, grab your candy striped congestion festive chocolate peppermint candy cane holiday whipped no foam lattes minaret of whipped cream, and that’s a wrap!