My Cart

loader
Loading...

A Perfectly Kept House is the Sign of a Misspent Life

Creative Ideas and Real-Life Tips


  • Rizzoli
  • by M.R. Carter
For all those who choose to live "imperfectly" with the messy things they love, this book shows how to do so creatively, happily, and with considerable style ideas from leading designers. A beautiful and inspiring volume, A Perfectly Kept House Is the Sign of a Misspent Life focuses on living well with everything that makes a house a home. Life isn't perfect-why should your house be?

ISBN 9780847833658 | E | HB
€55,00
at this moment not in stock
Quantity
More Information
Publisher Rizzoli
ISBN 9780847833658
Author(s) M.R. Carter
Publication date October 2010
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 216 x 273 mm
Illustrations 250 col. & bw ill.
Pages 272
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Description

for Making your Home Lived-in, Warm, Welcoming, and one-of-a-kind (without worrying about everything being just right!)

For all those who choose to live "imperfectly" with the messy things they love, this book shows how to do so creatively, happily, and with considerable style ideas from leading designers. A beautiful and inspiring volume, A Perfectly Kept House Is the Sign of a Misspent Life focuses on living well with everything that makes a house a home. If you have been influenced by the picturesquely cluttered studios of Pablo Picasso or Alexander Calder, or by the art- and book-filled house of Vanessa Bell, this unique style book will stimulate you with its creative ideas.This volume explores how real-life tastemakers (photographers, textile designers, fashion designers, writers, artists) integrate their life and interiors to live well with their passions, histories, conveniences, and inconveniences. In inspiring essays, Mary Randolph Carter muses on such key housekeeping concerns as clutter versus mess; open windows; and unmade beds. Combining practical tips with liberating philosophy-"Don't scrub the soul out of your home"; "Make room for what you love"-this volume celebrates living beautifully and happily, not messily. Lavishly illustrated with intimate photographs of different living spaces, Carter exalts in the beauty of imperfection and in living perfectly in our "imperfect" homes. Life isn't perfect-why should your house be?