Saturday, December 25, 2010

Cassata Time!

Three days of preparation for a minute on the tongue, a lifetime on the hips. 

Cassata - in Sicilian it translates to "the most wonderful dessert ever!"  In my last post, I said that cassata can induce laughter.  Read on!

I can't give you the recipe because it's a well guarded family secret and if I do,  I will be subject to unspeakable torture.... (Never piss off the Italian family!) But I can give you a description...

It starts with a sponge cake.  Luscious lightness in a spring-form pan.  Once the cake is baked, I freeze it.  Makes for easier slicing.

Two days before the family chow-fest, I defrost the cake and slice it into three layers.  The first layer is laden with freshly made chocolate custard.  The second is a mixture of sweetened ricotta cheese with mini chocolate chips and bits of maraschino cherries.  The third, homemade golden vanilla custard.

The laughter inducing ingredient??  Rum!  Lots of rum!  Cups and cups of rum! Each layer of cake is coated in rum before the custard and ricotta are added.  Then the whole cake is covered with an icing of the sweetened ricotta, a sprinkling of mini chocolate chips, and a cherry or two.  Someone once tried to calculate the calories in a piece of cassata.  They were never heard from again...



I Googled "cassata".    There were tons of pictures.  These look sort of like mine, but not really.  When I bake mine this week (not seeing the family until New Year's) I will post pictures.  

Cassata is Dad's all time favorite dessert - the one that is only served at Christmastime.  After everyone is tanked up on lobster and wine, we bring out the desserts.  The cassata is sliced and placed on Dad's dish first.  He sniffs... (You can fail a breath-a-lizer test on the fumes alone). We all wait with baited breath...(ok, more like garlic breath...)  He tastes....He savors the melding of ingredients and proclaims....

"NEEDS MORE RUM!"

Every year its the same, no matter how many gallons of rum I use.  So now we just put the cake on a dish and the bottle of rum on the table!  And we laugh!  We are with family...there is good food on the table...there is plenty of wine, plenty of rum and plenty of love.  Life is good!

"Buon Natale Tutti"

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Eat, Drink, and Be Merry!

     The holiday season is in full swing!  House is decorated, cards have been sent.  The shopping - almost there!  Now its time to think about the food.  (I'm Italian - it goes with the territory!)  For my family, the big celebration is Christmas Eve.  And if we all can't get together on the 24th, whatever day we can get together becomes Christmas Eve.  So much has changed since we were younger, but so much has stayed the same.  The cooks and bakers have shifted down a generation.  The houses have changed.  Even the menu has been tweaked.  But there is always family, food, laughter, wine and "cassata".  I think the wine and cassata have a lot to do with the laughter! I'll explain...

     Christmas Eve dinner in an Italian family usually always involves fish.  The tradition was 7 fishes or fish dishes.  We whittled it down to shrimp, baked clams, seafood salad, and lobster - lobster fra diavolo over pasta...lobster tails...lobster and more lobster...technically not fish, but close enough!

    Lobster Fra Diavolo - Taken from Google Images

    Shrimp Cocktail - yes Google again!

    Baked clams - more Google images!
     
    The following is how Maria Liberati describes "La Vigilia" or Feast of the Seven Fishes.  (La Vigilia?  The Vigil?  Were they waiting for the birth of Christ or Santa Claus?) "By all accounts, the Feast of the Seven Fishes began as a southern Italian custom. The tradition was hugely popular in Italy’s most southern points, including the island of Sicily. At one time, Rome, the Eternal City, seemed to the farthest point north where La Vigilia was celebrated, although today,  Italians throughout the world celebrate it. No one knows for sure the significance for offering seven fishes, although there are numerous explanations for it. Some believe that seven fishes are served because it took God seven days to create the world, while others mention the Seven Hills of Rome. There is also the possibility that the seven fishes symbolize the seven sacraments in the Catholic Church, along with the seven sins."

    Read more: http://gomestic.com/cooking/traditional-italian-feast-of-the-seven-fishes/#ixzz18b4WEbwm

    Me, being the odd one out, will not eat any of that, so I always come prepared with spaghetti and meatballs!  I'm sure my family hides their faces when they talk about "the one that doesn't eat seafood", but I have since had my position strengthened by my husband and new sister-in-law, who also don't partake!

    Also from Google Images

    Since I don't eat the fish, I also don't cook it!  Baked goods are my specialty.  When the party is at my home, my brother steps up to the plate to do most of the cooking.  And cooking always involves wine...a little for the food, a little for us.  (I'm so glad the baking is done ahead of time...)  Once everyone is officially there, the cocktail hour begins.  My sister brings her roasted peppers.  We make my mother's spinach dip in pumpernickel bread.  Shrimp cocktail...(I did say it was cocktail time).  And wine....

    Still a Google Image!

    With all this wine, you can see where some of the laughter comes in!

    First course - baked stuffed clams...second course - PASTA (my turn to eat!)...third course - lobster! (Don't care...I've already eaten!)  And, of course...wine....     By now, four to five hours have passed, we are sated with food and drink...and everyone is sitting around waiting for that special moment! No its not that magical time when you look out the window to see the first snowflakes of winter twinkling in the moonlight. No, it's not Santa and his eight tiny reindeer gracefully landing on the roof with a sack full of everyone's dream gifts.....IT'S CASSATA TIME!!!!

    What is cassata????  Why does it induce laughter?  Stay tuned....!

    "I cook with wine...sometimes I even add it to the food." - W.C. Fields

    Thursday, December 9, 2010

    "Deck The Halls With Lots of Holly....!"

    (Fa la la la la.....) I can't sing, but I can sure decorate a house for the holidays!  Back in the day when I had a new house and no furniture and accessories to fill it, I would go crazy with seasonal or holiday decorations.  Corn husks and pumpkins, yep!  3 large Christmas trees - no problem!  Banisters, curtain rods, grandfather clock - it was all dressed in greenery, baby's breath and bows.  I  had a girlfriend who came to my home in the middle of December.  She was so depressed because my house looked like Santa's Village and she hadn't bothered to do anything.  She took the next day off from work, went out and spent a ton of money AND hired someone to put up and decorate her tree.  I must have created a monster because for the next several years, her addiction grew to the point where the outside of her home had 200 fully lighted Christmas trees (I kid you not!) and an assortment of moving characters on her lawn.  Her electric bill was over $1000 a month!   Geesh, some people are just so competitive...!

    Fast forward a few decades...(too fast for my taste!)...Limited time and limited energy and a house full of furniture and accessories has curtailed my seasonal decorating, but I still manage to put up enough so the Grinch still thinks this is "Whoville".  The trick is to use fewer pieces on a larger scale, incorporate the accessories you have and try not to move all the furniture in the room to accommodate the Christmas tree!



    My very favorite tradition of the season is the tree decorating.  Every year on the Saturday morning after Thanksgiving, my daughter and I drag the tree out of the attic.  While I prefer the look and smell of a real tree, after 20 years of cleaning up pine needles, I'm done!  I can put my tree up when I want to, it doesn't need watering, and it looks as good on the last day as it did on the first!  And just think of all the trees lives I've saved!

    Once the tree is out of the attic, we put in her favorite Christmas DVD - "The Santa Clause" with Tim Allen. The same movie every year.  Then the assembly begins - inserting each branch and making sure it is shaped correctly...stringing the lights and getting my arms scratched up from the branches... the strings of lights that work perfectly and then die on you as soon as they are on the tree...oh the memories!!  This year, I was spared all that!  My wonderful husband helped me pick out a new tree - 3 easy pieces and its pre-lit!!  I love my husband!

    Then I unwrap each ornament that I have been collecting for the past 30 years.  Some purchased on vacations, some received as gifts, some bought to commemorate a special event, others handmade when I had spare time.   As my daughter places them on the tree, I fondly remember each one.  Its a "Hallmark moment"! (sigh...)


    And then reality sets in...Once the tree is finished, so is my daughter.  "'Bye Ma, see you later!".  I spend the rest of the day running up and down two flights of stairs to the attic for the rest of the decorations.  I can't complain - it helps me work off the rest of the leftovers I ate from Thanksgiving!



    The chandeliers are now decked in pine boughs and bows, the mantle, with greenery and stockings.  The wreath is on the door....candles are lit...centerpieces are placed on tables and I am now thinking about wrapping the gifts!  So here is a glimpse of the house in its holiday finery.  (Forget the gifts...the stairs wore me out.) Until next time...









    "A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."   - Antoine de Saint-Exupery

    Tuesday, November 30, 2010

    Back Bay Blah to City Chic - The Finale

    Well, we weathered the storm - literally!  The rains still came, but the leak held. Now we can finally do the install!

    The client chose a wonderful king sized sleep sofa from American Leather.  It was covered in a very soft, velour fabric - Gibson Stone.



    American Leather's Gibson Stone


    To jazz it up a bit, pillows were covered in Pindler P4634 Mitchell in Rust.

    Pindler P4634 Mitchell Rust

     
    Duralee 31832 in Black Walnut 629, a nice strong masculine fabric with a geometric design was used on the chair and ottoman next to the sofa.

    Duralee 31832 in Black Walnut 629

    Chair sneak peak!
    One corner of the room was dark, so we chose a rust patterned fabric from Pindler for a chair, to brighten up the space.

    Pindler 9893 Samir in Beaujolais

    It was bright, but not this bright!








    A nicely patterned rug on the floor ties all the colors in....







    And the unveiling..........                                BEFORE.............






                                                                             AND AFTER....






                                                                                 KITCHEN BEFORE......




        
                                                                             AND AFTER.....



    Not bad, if I do say so myself! The customer still wanted to keep some of the old furniture pieces for sentimental reasons, so we worked them into the design.   Jonathan, the contractor is still my hero for getting the construction done on time and on budget and the customer was pleased with the end result.  Life is good!

    "Attitude is not about whether the glass is half full or half empty, it's about who is paying for the next round." - Unknown

    Monday, November 22, 2010

    Back Bay Blah to City Chic - Part 2

    My last post gave the preliminaries on redesigning a bachelor's Back Bay condo.  For my readers not famililar with the Boston area, the Back Bay is a very nice section of Boston near the Charles River consisting of many Victorian brownstone buildings in the residential section and taller "mini skyscrapers" in the commercial section.  Curious as to why its called "Back Bay" when its near a river??  Years ago, the area was actually a bay off the Charles River.  In 1857 the city started to fill in the tidal area and it doubled the size of Boston!  Try doing that today with our EPA regulations! Was the area already so crowded in 1857 that they had to fill in a bay to house everyone??  Sorry, I am so totally off track here!

    The condo destruction moved along nicely - carpet was ripped out, the kitchen was dismantled.  My client and I were feverishly emailing and snail mailing fabric, furniture, granite and flooring samples.  And I have to say that decisions were made pretty quickly.  My client spent a Saturday afternoon shopping at Home Depot for styles of cabinets and granite he liked while he was on the phone with me!  He gave me the stock numbers and I checked them out online and gave my opinions.   Parallel shopping at its best!

    Condo in process
    One thing I neglected to mention in my last post... two of the window frames had sustained water damage due to a leak in the outside brick a year ago.  The building management assured us it was all fixed, so Jonathan (Boston Building Doctors)  and his crew scraped away the old bubbled paint and sanded and repainted the sills to gleaming perfection!

    Bubbled paint on window frame

    And then the rains came........


    The particle board revealed...


    Frame cave in

    Not only wasn't the original leak fixed, but with all the spring rain we had, the leak turned into a gushing river pouring through the particle board (yes, I said particle board) window frame.  The top part of the frame turned to mush and caved in.  The "Spirit of the Bay" was coming back in a big way,  exacting revenge for being filled in! (Sounds better than "It rained and we sprang a leak!")  As for the particle board (yuk and double yuk!),  this was part of a rehab done years ago.  To change the windows now  would be a huge procedure involving the housing authority because the condo was in an historic district.  Building management again went out and repaired the leak.   So we let the windows dry out for a month, repaired again, and kept our fingers crossed....

    In the meantime, furniture, appliances and cabinets were ordered, paint was chosen and everything seemed to be moving along pretty smoothly...

    And then the rains came....again....

    Window Frame - intact!


    Luckily, the finger crossing worked!  No leaks!  (Alright, maybe some credit is due to building management for actually fixing the leaks.)

    During a construction job, there are bound to be unforeseen problems.  A good designer doesn't panic.  You just deal with the problem and move on.  Fortunately, in this instance, it was not attributed to anything I or my crew did.  (It was all Mother Nature's fault!  Blame her!) 

    Next week...the finished product!

    For all my readers, this is the time of year when we all reflect on the good in our lives and give thanks for our blessings.  Happy Thanksgiving!!

    Monday, November 15, 2010

    Back Bay Blah to City Chic - Part 1

    One of  the most challenging projects I worked on this year was a bachelor's condo in Boston that was decorated in a "post college - but not entirely grown up" decor.  The challenge was that the owner lived in Ohio, but this condo was in Boston. He used it several times a year and he always let friends or family use it when they were in town.   We only had one face to face meeting during the whole project.  Everything was done by email or "parallel shopping".  Parallel shopping is my term for going to a chain store (Home Depot, Pottery Barn), picking out items I think would work in the space, then have the client go to his or her store in their location and check out the items in person.

    On our only face to face, I took several pictures and talked with the client about his vision for the condo.  In his fifteen years of ownership, nothing had changed.  He wanted to have the carpet ripped out and install hardwood in the living room and hallway, tile in the kitchen, new cabinets in the kitchen and a new sofa for the living room.  By the time we were done talking and proposing, we were now basically going to gut the entire condo and order new furniture!  Hey, why have a scrambled egg when you can have an omelet??!

    This was my first time doing more than just "decorating" in Boston.  Parking, building permits and the logistics of hauling stuff up in elevators was a little out of my league.  My usual contractor very graciously gave me an estimate for work, but the thought of working in Boston scared him as much as it scared me!  Just my luck!  There was a contractor currently doing work in the building.  Jonathan Moretz  from Boston Building Doctors ( www.bostonbuildingdoctors.com ) not only knew how to navigate the Boston building codes, he had done so much work inside the building that he pretty much knew what was behind each wall and what the building required as far as flooring, noise control, trash disposal and elevator scheduling.  AND, his price for the renovation was reasonable.  Jonathan, you are my hero!

    Kitchen - Before

    Skinny Kitchen!!

    The kitchen was an issue unto itself!  Long and narrow and only 3 feet of space between each side.  The refrigerator handle stuck out too far into the small space.  The microwave was so low to the stove that it wasn't code.  Under cabinet lights were bulky and the white plastic had yellowed.  Any improvement here was going to be a big improvement!!  We talked about changing the layout a bit - moving the refrigerator to the back of the room to open up the space and moving the stove to the side bank of cabinets to make this a true galley kitchen instead of a u-shaped.  There would be better use of space and cabinets.  In the end, the client opted to keep the layout as is so he wouldn't go over budget with the "unknowns behind the walls".


    Living Room - Before

    "Dorm room look!"

    The living room was in serious need of furniture with a more pulled-together look.  There were too many small pieces that had no purpose, the poster art was hung "willy-nilly" on the walls, the walls were white, the sofa - white, the chair was dark green and the window blinds were mauve.  And don't look up because there was some hideously yellowed track lighting on the ceiling!!  Need I go on??  Too painful to talk about!

    The bedroom wasn't bad.  A new coat of paint, new carpet and we were good to go.

    In the next several weeks, I put together floor plans, furniture and fabric suggestions, cabinet and appliances options and Jonathan and I met several times to discuss the destruction and construction of the condo.  It was January and all this had to be finished by April!  Yikes!  ( Let's see if Jonathan will still be my hero!)

    Next week - "the process"!

    "A house pulled down is half rebuilt." - Proverb

    Monday, November 8, 2010

    Inspiration...

    In her latest blog,  good friend, and fellow design  blogger, Yvonne Blacker, asked the question, "Where do you look for inspiration?"   http://designvignettes.blogspot.com/2010/11/where-do-you-look-for-inspiration.html.  Great question!!  Everybody needs inspiration, whether its in an artistic  field, medical field, educational field.  We all need something to get the brain juices flowing!

    So I pondered the question with respect to my own life and career.  While I don't have "heroes" in my life, I always look towards people I know who are going through an extremely difficult time - whether its health, career or family related.  It puts all my little "bitchin's and moanin's" in perspective.  If they can get on with life, I certainly can!  When I was pregnant with my daughter, I developed diabetes.  I was hospitalized so they could regulate my blood sugar and teach me how to give myself insulin injections.  "You want me to stick a needle in my thigh and prick my fingers how many times a day???" " No thanks, I'll pass!"  Then I remembered a friend's granddaughter who was 5 years old and able to inject herself.  Her condition was going to last a lifetime, not just the next three months.  Ok Self,  suck it up and get on with it!  She was my inspiration that day.  And, you know, once you did the initial stick, it didn't even hurt!

    In my design business, I look around a client's home for that one "spark" that will get the design ideas rolling.  It may be a piece of furniture, a color on a piece of pottery, an architectural detail in a room.  In previous posts, I looked towards the colors in nature...my travels... a pet.  I guess our life and experiences are our best  inspiration!

    My first client, Chris, (who didn't know she was my first client!) hired me to pick the paint colors for the home she was moving into. I had to do some quick thinking on my feet to dazzle her with my design brilliance so she wouldn't know I was a novice.   She had this wonderful room with a hexagonal cut-out in the ceiling.  It almost looked like the dome of an observatory.  We decided to paint it a pale blue-green so it looked like you were looking through a portal to the sky.  She also loved the sleeves of my jacket - a worn out, brown leather bomber jacket.  That became the inspiration for the sofas!  We found a great red striped fabric that added punch and  tied in all the colors and voila!  Family room done!



    Well, maybe not that easily, but once you have the basics laid out, the rest usually falls into place.

    I guess my initial inspiration to go into interior design came from other people's homes.  I would find myself asking, "If this were my home, what would I do with it?"  Then I would plan out (in my head, of course) how I would change colors, change furniture, change traffic flow.  I took an adult ed course on interior design and that was it!  Full steam ahead! Get the degree! Get into the business!  I had found my calling!

    So. my readers...I put the question out to you...."Where do you go for inspiration?"  I would love to hear your answers! 

    I certainly don't regret my experiences because without them, I couldn't imagine who or where I would be today.  Life is an amazing gift to those who have overcome great obstacles, and attitude is everything!" - Sasha Azevedo (American Actress, Athlete and Model)

    Monday, November 1, 2010

    Table Top Tips for Turkey Day

    Looking out my window and taking in all this gorgeous fall color reminds me that the holidays are coming fast, so I'm taking a break from watching design shows to focus on some quick tips for setting a pretty table for Thanksgiving and any other events you are having this fall.

    New England Autumn

    According to my father in law, "If you can't eat it, it doesn't belong on the table."  Ok, Dad, how about we compromise and combine the edible with the inedible??

    One idea I have used for different holidays - I have a pair of tall candle holders with glass bowls on top.  The glass is lovely, but with just a small candle inside - its lacking.  I fill the bottom of the bowl with something in the colors of the season and nestle the candles inside. A regular glass bowl will work just as well.  Assorted nuts or multicolor color beans they sell for soups make a great base that you can use with an orange or rust colored candle for the fall.  For Christmastime holidays, I have used fresh cranberries,  red or green jelly beans or mini pine cones.  Just remember to use tea lights or small candles that have some kind of enclosed bottom so you don't end up with a waxy mess to clean up.  And make sure that whatever you use will not catch fire or melt!  (The M & M idea didn't work out so well!)

    Candlesticks with some fresh oregano sprigs!


    Berry sprigs and candles

     Waxed gourds in a pretty, low basket will look very festive when flanked by several brass candlesticks.  Add some mini dried corn cobs or leaves from the backyard as an accent!  Or how about a brass bowl filled with fruit and nuts?  Oranges, apples, pomegranates, pears - sit them on a bed of walnuts or chestnuts and you have a display that is not only beautiful, but will serve as one of the courses of your dinner!

    Fake leaves don't make a mess and never turn brown!

    Or you can read my first post, entitled "Lighten Up!" where I talk about using herbs as centerpieces.   http://thefocusondesign.blogspot.com/search/label/Seasonal


    The centerpiece is only half the battle!  I like to try to mix it up with my table linens.  I like a solid color tablecloth with pretty patterned napkins. Or coordinate different patterns - florals and stripes go well together.  I even have napkins that are floral on one side and stripe on the other! Roll 'em up, fold 'em up!  Use napkin rings! Use old bracelets or jewelery to adorn them! Use your imagination!



    If you have good china that justs sits in the cabinet - use it!  It's just as easy to set a table with the good stuff, as it is with the everyday ware.  There are just too many pretty pieces of china out there sitting imprisoned behind glass doors because we are afraid that if we use them, one of them may break.  So what?  Once they break, you can add in other pieces that coordinate. The best looking tables are ones that aren't so "matchy-matchy".



    And don't forget to dress up the food!  I sometimes dip grapes in raw sugar and put those around the turkey platter.  Maybe its a little too "Martha Stewart", but everyone oohs and aahs and the grapes get eaten! 

    Remember that the best things about your holiday table is not what's on it, its the people around it.  They add the spice, color and flavor to your life!

    "We tend to forget that happiness doesn't come as a result of getting something we don't have, but rather of recognizing and appreciating what we do have."  Frederick Keonig

    Amen to that!!

    Monday, October 18, 2010

    Astroturf As A Design Influence??

    The latest show in my quest to see what the fuss is all about in design shows brought me south to Miami.  David Bromstad, season one winner of HGTV's Design Star,  hosts the show in his hometown of Miami.

    Photo from HGTV website
    In this episode, David's clients were looking to fix up their non-descript dining room and adjacent patio area.  Unfortunately, I don't have any photos of the patio area, but take my word for it...it needed HELP!


    Photo from HGTV website

    Here is the before picture of the dining room.  It looks like someone's version of a neat garage after a party.  The backyard view was of  the backside of someone's fence and the only thing this fence was protecting was a square of rotting, greyed out decking.

    David looked to a restaurant for inspiration for the space.  Not the actual restaurant, but a creepy dark bathroom inside the restaurant AND the stalls were totally covered with astroturf!!  If that didn't get the client running for the hills, they were either blind or in a state of shock! And he made them feel the astroturf to see how great it felt.  Pet the wall of a public bathroom???  I was gagging and I wasn't even there!   HOWEVER, I had to see where this was going... like onlookers waiting to view the grisly scene of an accident!

    As the "accident" unfolded, I was very surprised to see that not only did everyone survive, but they came out of it better than before! David's "Mexican modern" style uses lots of bright colors (Hence the name "Colorsplash") .  The dining room was painted a bold shade of turquoise.  A very large sculptural chandelier was used as a focal point in the small space.  The original table and chairs were reused, but in this brightly colored room, they went from "school cafeteria" to modern day chic.  David also painted a canvas in a series of colorful, concentric squares that resembled the screens of TV's from the '50's.  A nice touch, but in real life, most of us designers don't have enough time to hang the artwork, let alone create it!



    The finished room - courtesy of HGTV's website









    A few more added pieces and the room was very "contemporary instead of June Cleaver".  (I believe that description was used on the show.)

    So what happened to the astroturf??  It ended up as carpeting for the patio area.  Now, I prefer the real thing, but I guess when the climate does a number on your lawn, the astroturf carpet makes an ideal solution. (At least it didn't end up in the client's bathroom!)   For the patio area, David made some wood sculpture light boxes to hide the fence and provide lighting for the area at night.  He used a seating bench and two large cocoa bean chairs for a seating area done up in brightly colored cushions of turquoise, orange and lime green.  Three ceramic cubes in turquoise served as a coffee table and he had giant glass globes custom blown and mounted on the floor with lights inside for additional ambiance. Not too functional during hurricane season, but they did give the area a nice look!  Wooden planters around the perimeter housed trees that would grow to 14 ft to hide the fence and create a private cocoon for the owners.

    To view the entire episode, go to www.hgtv.com/hgtv-color-splash-miami/videos/index.html and click on the arrows next to the episodes until you come to Mid Century Patio/Dining Room.

    He almost lost me with the astroturf, but in the end, I liked the look!  Especially the patio that will never need mowing!  This show may be worth tuning in to again!

    "The purist and most thoughtful minds are those which love color the most."  John Ruskin

    Sunday, October 10, 2010

    HGTV - What Is All The Fuss About??

    As I've said in a previous post, I don't watch design shows or HGTV.  So many of my blogger friends do and are constantly talking about "what went on in yesterday's episode".  So I've decided to watch and critique.

    I did have the good fortune to see Emily Henderson, the recent winner of HGTV's  Design Star, at the taping of the Nate Berkus show.  I LOVED what she did for a military couple who were constantly moving, but were never paring down.  Unfortunately, that season is over so I'll have to check out some online episodes. But in not watching the whole season, I will miss the drama, the angst, the backstabbing and the thrill of  victory....yeah, whatever!   From what little I saw, I was impressed with her ability and I do want to see more! (But I could do without the drama, etc!)  You can follow this link to view the episode and see the before and afters. 

                                http://www.thenateshow.com/episodes/detail/decor-in-a-day/


    Emily Henderson - Photo taken from HGTV website


    Design On A Dime - the premise sounded interesting - the designers  have a $1000 budget to fix up a room in a home.  The episode I watched featured a young married couple with a new condo.  Their basement bedroom was a yellow box with small windows, low ceilings and no detailing whatsoever.  Their furniture was seriously lacking - dining type chairs were substituting as end tables.  Designer Frank Fontana to the rescue!  (Wasn't he a character on Murphy Brown??)

    Frank Fontana - Photo taken from HGTV website


    With this whopping $1000 budget, they went to work.  An old armoir top with dental moulding found in an alley (how convenient!) was transformed into a neo-classical headboard.  They made columns for two corners of the room from plywood and footing tubes - some faux finishing and voila!..they looked like plaster columns!

    Fontana and his crew found some cheap nightstands, nailed some moulding to the sides for a picture frame effect and faux painted them to give them a wood grain.  They reused old closet doors to create a built in bench, added wainscoting to the walls, painted the walls a bland almond color (to match the bland almond colored rug), added moulding to the windows, new bedspead.....yadda yadda yadda.

    In the REAL WORLD, unless you are a total DIYer, the room painting alone would have eaten up that $1000 budget. The faux painting?  Unless you have some artristic talent, its best left to the professionals (again, forget the budget!)  And if you are a DIYer, you have to have the tools to perform all these miracles!  I don't know about you, but my workroom can't handle 8 ft footing tubes with ease! And my saw?...let's just say they took it away from me a long time ago!

    The finished effect was nice - a little bland - but the ideas for reusing and repurposing were very good.

    So not really impressed with this episode.  I think they would have benefited more from a cool color on the walls and some nicely framed artwork, task lighting and a patterned area rug.  More bang for the buck.   Unfortunately, I could not get any pictures of the episode.  Before and afters would have been very helpful.  Design is so visual, so you will have to use your own imagination this time! The link below has some good, low cost ideas for sprucing up a bedroom for under $200. 

     http://www.hgtv.com/decorating/budget-friendly-bedroom-updates-from-expert-designers/index.html

      Next up....Color Splash Miami!  The name alone is intriguing!

    "The objective in times of economic restraint should be to seek excellence, not opulence."  David Craib