Sunday, September 20, 2009

15 Favorite Design & Decorating Books

Here are 15 of my favorite books on interior design and decorating, including some on home organizing and storage. I have all of them in my reference library and use them over and over again as resources and inspiration for my projects. Most of these books can be found at your local bookstore or you can order them online through these links.
From time to time, I'll recommend additional lists of favorite resources. My monthly newsletter also lists favorites for interior design, decorating, home organizing, and more.
1.The Color Scheme Bible: Inspirational Palettes for Designing Home Interiors
2.House Beautiful Colors for Your Home: 300 Designer Favorites (House Beautiful Series)
3.House Beautiful The Home Book: Creating a Beautiful Home of Your Own (House Beautiful Series)
4.New Decorating Book (Better Homes & Gardens)
5.House Beautiful Decorating Style (House Beautiful Series)
6.Decorating Idea Book (Idea Books)
7.Home by Design: Inspiration for Transforming House Into Home
8.Not So Big Remodeling: Tailoring Your Home for the Way You Really Live
9.Creating the Not So Big House: Insights and Ideas for the New American Home
10.HGTV Before & After Decorating
11.Taunton's Home Storage Idea Book
12.Pottery Barn Home (Pottery Barn Design Library)
13.Pottery Barn Storage & Display (Pottery Barn Design Library)
14.Pottery Barn Workspaces (Pottery Barn Design Library)
15.Great Traditional Style (Better Homes & Gardens Decorating)
Happy Decorating! If you need some assistance, I'm available for consultations.
Visit my website for more information.

Eco-Friendly Home Furnishings & Decor



I've added a new page to my website which will feature eco-friendly, green, and sustainable home furnishings and accessories. This month's featured on-line resource is Viva Terra. For more information click here.

Enjoy! You'll find some beautiful home decor items and many are on sale!

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

My Latest Color Inspiration

" Apple Trees"
5x7 Oil on Linen Panel by Susan Abbott
This was a recent post by Vermont artist, Susan Abbott and I was very taken by the colors she used to capture this scene in an apple orchard. It's a fall scene, for sure, but the colors are not what you'd typically describe as being "fall-ish." Instead of using deep greens, reds, russets, browns, and the typical "colors of autumn" she uses a vibrant cobalt blue and a bright granny apple green along with some reds, oranges, yellows, and deeper greens and blues.
This could be a great color scheme for a very contemporary living room - picture walls in the bright yellow-green, chairs or a sofa in the deep blue, a couple of chairs in a striped fabric that picks up the rest of the colors, and a colorful contemporary print using the apple trees as an inspiration for the window treatments. Throw pillows could be a combination of solids and prints - reds, yellows, oranges with blue & green. Add a few striking black accents and the room could really pop. Floors could be a natural bamboo or for a more striking look, stained a deep ebony.
These colors are clear, bright, and very cheerful and could also be a great combination for a kid's or teen's room. Lots of possibilities!

Friday, September 4, 2009

Late Summer Newsletter

Here's a link to my Late Summer Newsletter which was published on September 3, 2009
Check out my Special Offer Coupon for September! It's a contest with a great prize!
To view previous archived editions of my newsletters, click here.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Summer Special Offers Extended

My Summer Special Offers for interior decorating and House Therapy services have been extended through August 31, 2009. It's been a busy summer and it's almost over (oh no!). You can still take advantage of some great deals which I'm offering to new clients, returning clients, and if you don't need any decorating or home organizing assistance, please refer me to a friend! Special bonuses available if you refer a friend to me for either contracted interior design & decorating services, or choose from my a la carte menu of consulting services. Click this link now for more information. Offers end August 31, 2009 and will not be available again for awhile!

Thursday, August 13, 2009

The 7 Elements of Great Design


The 7 Elements of Great Design:
Balance, Harmony, Proportion, Scale, Color, Style, Rhythm/Flow


What are the things that will make your dream interior come to life? Every décor is composed of specific elements and each piece has to work together to create a cohesive whole. Everything needs to flow together or have a rhythm, a balance, and work together in harmony to create a room or a home that is comfortable, welcoming, and a reflection of the tastes and lifestyles of the occupants.

When designing a room or an entire home, there are specific things that a designer takes into consideration when planning the space. There are key elements that must work together to create a harmonious whole. A room, or a home that conveys a sense of balance and harmony has architectural elements and furnishings that are in proportion to each other and in scale with the proportions of the room. The room or home also uses color and style as key elements to bring everything together.

  • Color can set the mood or tone of a room, and style is what makes a room or home unique, gives a room personality, expresses the tastes and lifestyle of the occupants, and rhythm or flow is what you achieve when it all works together as a balanced and harmonious whole.
  • One way to achieve balance is with harmony, color, and scale. The success of a room is due, in large part, to the sum of its parts. The proportions, the number and shapes of the objects in the room, the various windows and their shape and proportion, the amount of light and the type of light that comes into a room, how light reflects off various surfaces, the architectural details that give a room it's style.
Transforming a bare room into a comfortable, visually appealing, and welcoming space with a purpose is the specialty of design professionals who are trained to work in 3 dimensions and with great thought. The thoughtful aspect of decorating is also a vital part of the whole process, whether or not a professional designer or decorator oversees the process.
  • Color and texture sets a mood. A lot has been written, studied, and discussed about the psychology of color and its powers. But the most persuasive argument for any color choice remains personal preference. Through the ages, color has performed a variety of roles -from energizer to tranquilizer. Whether composed of warm, cool, light, dark, gently varied or highly contrasting hues, the color palette used in any room is very influential in setting the ambience.
  • Color is very subjective, personal, and to some people, very intimidating. There are so many options, with infinite possibilities and limitless possible effects that may be dramatically different or so subtle that we hardly notice them. We each recognize the "perfect color combination" when we see it, but many of us stumble when we try to describe or explain it. Add to the choice of colors and the way they are used in a room -how much of each and where, and this part of interior design gets more complex.
Finding the colors you love isn't that complicated. Here are three things that will help you choose colors with more confidence.
  1. First - Your eyes or visual sense-use them to discover color combinations that you like or colors that you are drawn to.
  2. Second - a basic understanding of the language of color will help you to understand how to use the different colors you like to create the right mood or ambience for a room.
  3. Third- there is a lot of help already out there to help you with your choices. Your local paint store, books, magazines, TV, and trained professionals. You don't have to reinvent the color wheel.
Ask yourself what tone do you want your colors to set? Warm & cozy? Upbeat & bright? Dreamy? Earthy? Fun & playful? Relaxed? Soothing? Once you know the tone you want to set, it's much easier to pick the right colors for you.

  • Along with color, texture and scale are essential components in the development of a room's character and comfort level. Texture is derived from the furnishings in a room - the upholstery, rugs, artwork, window treatments, accessories. The gloss of polished marble, laquered woods, silver and crystal accessories suggests a more formal look. While berber carpet, canvas upholstery, and wicker furniture suggest a much more casual look. Texture and color rely on one another for the integration of a well-designed room. To choose a color without considering the effects of texture would be to leave out a vital step in developing a room's character.
  • Scale, like color and texture, breathes life into a room as much as the people who live there. How we live in a space and relate to our surroundings depends very much on the scale of the furnishings and the relationship of one object to another. Massive furnishings that dwarf the inhabitants will also intimidate them. On the other hand, undersized furniture reduces the chances for comfort and diminishes a room's "drama."
  • Scale is the delicate balance of size and shape, high & low, formal and informal, with comfort and intimacy being the end result. How all of these essential elements come together in a room in some sort of balance will determine the level of harmony. Balance & harmony work hand-in-hand. Scale is to a room what shape is to a garden.
  • Scale is essential in the development of balance. That is the balance between big & small, light & dark, pattern & texture. Achieving successful relationships between these elements is what both interior and exterior designers aim to do. Making the various elements appropriate to the size of a room is also essential to conveying a sense of harmony & balance.

The Italian architect Andrea Palladio put forth the principle: "Build in such a manner and with such proportions that all the parts together may convey a sweet harmony to the eyes of the beholder." What was true hundreds of years ago is still true today.

  • A house should grow and develop over a period of time - it should be a process. It should come together over a period of time and reflect the personalities, tastes, and lifestyles of the people who live there -not the designer or decorator who pulled everything together.
  • A room or home that comes together and grows along with the people who live there achieves a timeless and "undecorated"quality - and a sense of harmony - a balance of color, texture, and scale.


In closing, the combination of all of these elements work together to give a room or a home a rhythm or flow - where all the design elements work together - flow together seamlessly, and make the space feel warm, welcoming, and balanced and in harmony with the people who live there.


Need some help pulling all of these elements together? You can call or email me for an appointment or a consult, or visit my website for more information.
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Copyright July, 2009 Ceil Petrucelli Ceil Petrucelli Interiors Bennington, VT 05201

Monday, July 20, 2009

Ava Living Featured Project

Featured this week on Ava's Choice at AvaLiving.com

I was notified this morning that the design selection team at Ava Living chose one of my design projects to be featured this week on Ava's Choice on AvaLiving.com. The project photo appears on the homepage slideshow on www.AvaLiving.com for 7 days, beginning on Monday, July 20th until Sunday, July 26th. My project is Photo #5 on the slideshow.

This was a traditional dining room which I designed for former clients in Manchester, VT. Other photos of the same project appear on the portfolio page of my website. We used their existing antique dining room table and chairs, but had new slipcovers made for the chairs. The area rug was purchased from A Candle in the Night, Brattleboro, VT.