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Interiors Addict

Layered interiors take time

A lesson I’ve learned this year is that interiors take time. You can’t buy an entire ‘look’ in one weekend’s expensive shopping trip and expect it to work. I’ve made many mistakes by being impatient. I’m the worst when I move into a new place and last year I moved twice. In six months. This threw me completely. I’d just got everything perfect in one place when we had to move (let’s not go into that story…). Of course, nothing from the old place ‘worked’ in the new place. And I was running out of cash. Cue major frustration. Do you ever have those days when you hate everything about your home and want to start again? Yeah, that was me. It was all wrong, wrong, wrong. A bit like looking at an overflowing wardrobe and screaming “I have nothing to wear!” But rather than sitting, in tears, surrounded by inside-out clothes, I’m sitting in a pile of cushions, throws and frames that I loved a few months ago and wondering where it all went wrong.

So what did I do? Rush out and buy more new stuff that would work in the new place of course! Will I never learn? In my impatience I bought a cheap coffee table that I hated within weeks. I bought at least three lots of co-ordinated cushions and throws in haste, not to mention two rugs and countless accessories. And you wonder why I try and sneak new homewares purchases past my boyfriend (“Oh this old thing? We’ve had it for ages, I just dragged it out of the back of the cupboard!”)

Anyway, to cut a very long story short, there was a time when I sat up and realised that I needed to calm the f**k down and stop buying stuff! I took a homewares chill pill. And in that time I realised the cowhide was meant to be under the dining table, not in front of the couch, I won a vintage marble-topped coffee table on eBay that I’m in love with (and only cost $85), found the perfect white quilt for our bedroom, re-styled the spare room/office with some of those accessories that no longer worked in the living room, and my stylist friend Emma came over and worked out my book case and wine rack needed swapping around. Genius!

At Darren Palmer’s session at Coco Republic Design School he told us to have a consistent, considered and cohesive approach to interiors and to spend a long time planning before you even part with any cash. Similarly, stylist Jason Grant once told me your home is never really finished and should always be a work in progress. I tend to agree.

It’s all feeling a lot calmer chez Interiors Addict these days. And this week, when I read this blog post by Anna Spiro where she talks about layered interiors taking a long time, I found myself nodding in agreement! I still want a new dining table and chairs but it’s not a race. And I’m okay with waiting to see if the flamingo cushions I’ve ordered are going to be the right shade of pink before I make a definite decision! I can’t promise I’ll never rush into a bad purchase again but like all addicts, I have the best intentions!

By Jen Bishop

Jen Bishop is our owner and publisher and an experienced journalist and editor. Interiors Addict has been her full-time job for more than 10 years. She is mum to two young boys and lives in Sydney.

8 replies on “Layered interiors take time”

Hi Jen, I have been reading your blog for a while now. Tonight’s post was just perfect!! I’m an Interior Designer and this is just so true. I have so many clients that initally want to rush and have all the decisions made in 5 minutes and everything done and dusted in 1 or 2 weeks!! Well yes it is just impossible, and all you end up with is an uncohesive and rushed looking interior. Paitence is certainly a virtue, and as much as I want to see the finished result myself – yes that lovely, layed, considered look is only achievable over time. Is it because there are so many shows on the telly doing makeovers in 1 hour, or one day that makes people think this is possible. Not to say that it’s not, but oh my god!! in reality it is so far from the truth it’s not funny. Anyway, I will certainly continue reading your blog. I have my own one too and will post on ‘Paitence’ tonight!! What luck. Thanks Jen

Couldn’t agree more – interiors are definitely ever evolving and develop over time. I really dislike that whole ‘package bought at the store’ look and ‘everything looks like it came from one store’. I believe interiors grow with you and change, you take some things with you through every change and some things get moved on or stored for later.

Thanks for your insight, it’s good to know we all make mistakes and want to start again.

Keren
xx

So true Jen!
Twice in 6 months, that sounds tough! I would have to be the most impatient person I know when it comes to just about everything! I have made countless bad purchases that end up in the homes of lucky friends and family over the years.
But more recently I have worked hard to hone my skills at finding quality pieces that I will love forever over trying to get that new trend immediately. But my home is a constant work in progress and I think it always will be.
Great post!

Glad it’s not just me, Leah 😉 I think it just takes time to realise all this 🙂 Thanks for your comment. Jen x

This is something I have to remind myself every single day. We’re almost finished a massive renovation and all I want to do is race out and buy things and decorate and “complete” each room. But I know I need to be patient and let each room evolve naturally or else we’ll end up with a house that isn’t ‘us’. Thank goodness for Pinterest to distract me!

Thanks for the great post. Isn’t it hard to be patient! The first year in our new apartment we sat Japanese style (which is much more glamorous than merely being on the floor) while we waited to find the perfect sofa! I would not compromise and would not buy a piece that was just “ok”. At the time I complained incessantly but am so glad about it now. Our beautiful couch was worth waiting and worth saving for. Absolutely agree that furnishing and decorating is a lifelong project.

I did the exact same thing in my most recent move late last year! We sat on a spare mattress in our living room to watch tv for over 2 months waiting for the perfect piece to be made. Its nice to hear from someone else who has done the same thing.
x Leah

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