louis xv chair and ottoman

louis xv chair and ottoman

louis ghost chair simon martin

Louis Xv Chair And Ottoman

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The page you requested cannot be found. Don't see the file format you need? Free File Format Conversion louis xv 16l-820 bedroom tufted ottoman clas...jpgChat with us now. Live Chat Now 24/7Leather Cowhide UpholsteryCowhide BergereHide CowhideCowhide ChairsFaux CowhideCowhide LeatherLeather ChairsCowhide PursesFurnishings CowhideForwardOoo la la, What a great idea for the chair i want to re-upholster. The Buckley Chair and Ottoman. Great cowhide and leather chair. Dimensions: 80 x 80 x 45cm The ottoman features a Kiaat frame, brass castor wheels. Design printed on linen/cotton cloth, incl fabric protection. Our new ‘Zebra Rider’ ottoman as we like to call it, is the follow up of the Qalakabusha sofa. “Realising that there is a growing love for African design and a need for a new piece, completely different yet resembling the Qalakabusha sofa, we decided to launch the Qalakabusha ottoman. The Ottoman has been produced as a piece that can lend itself to any setting, style and taste, with a modern twist for the discerning, a companion to a sofa or a strong piece on its own” says Fee Halsted, Founder of Ardmore Ceramics.




The ottoman is locally manufactured. Kirkland's has an accent chair for any space whether it's for the living room or the bedroom. You can tie a room's decor together with accent chairs or imagine yourself cozying up in one of our comfortable armchairs and reading a good book. Think of all the possibilities. No matter what, you'll find the perfect accent chairs at Kirkland's! Viewing 1 - 20 of 69 View All Not Available In Stores Sunday, October 30th 2016 @ 8:01pm EDT 34 Bids (View History) Have a similar piece to sell? Pair Of Flamestitch Queen Anne Windsor Back Chairs Queen Anne Upholstered Wingback Easy Chairs Vintage Upholstered Walnut Dining Chairs Get in touch with one of our experts. Current Bid + $1 Current Bid + $2 Current Bid + $5 Current Bid + $10 Current Bid + $25 Current Bid + $50 Current Bid + $100 EVERYTHING BUT THE HOUSE, EBTH, and the Keyhole Logo are trademarks of EBTH, Inc. Website design and website “look and feel” are © copyright 2013–2017,




There are some amazing, one-of-a-kind items waiting to be discovered. Sign in to start bidding! Sign up now to instantly receive a $20 coupon code We know you'll discover something great! By clicking "Sign Me Up", you agree to our What a great find! All we need is a credit card on file for you to place your bid. Click the button below to add it in and get started on your bids!Just because your bookshelves are filled with Charlotte Brontë and Henry David Thoreau doesn’t mean your home library can’t boast contemporary design. Whether you’re adding a reading room to your home or overhauling the one you have, some timely decor could be exactly what your space needs. After browsing through the AD archives, you’ll be ready to trade in traditional details for vivid color palettes, modern art, and unconventional furniture. The key is making your modern interior comfortable enough to curl up with a book without having to sacrifice style. From a laid-back California lounge to a colorful Spanish study, take note of these ten reading rooms that pair today’s design trends with everyday functionality.




Elagent side table with sunburst design wood top and cinnamon metal details. Top avalible in walnut , Lacquer or bronze glass . Base is in sandblast walnut. Materials: wood and steel DIA 12 H 24 Furniture, Tables, Pedestal Tables & Stands USA - CA - San Francisco Atlanta Decorative Arts Center (ADAC) Balance and harmony are the hallmarks of Jiun Ho’s design vision. Textures against clean lines, rich dark woods against simple fabrics, shapes that are both challenging yet inviting, ultimately a bridge between cultures, ages past and those yet to come.PATRICK FREY and his wife Lorraine were struggling with a case of beige overload. Mr. Frey, the president of Pierre Frey, the storied French fabric house his father founded, decided that their classic Haussmannian Paris apartment needed rejuvenation. “We agreed to do something fresh and eclectic,” Mr. Frey said. “So many people don’t dare to work with bright colors, but I wanted anything but dreary Paris grey...to breathe a different air when I come home.”




To escape the doldrums, Mr. Frey, who designs his own fabrics and is known for acquiring heritage looms, turned to what he calls a “fabric face-lift.” Pulling from the company’s vast fabric offerings, the couple upholstered walls, hung new curtains, and covered sofas, chairs, and ottomans in vibrant silks, color-soaked patterns and graphic, ethnic motifs that ranged from Aboriginal designs to Ancient Egyptian botanicals. “Friends come over and say, ‘Oh, it’s so unusual!’ ” said Mr. Frey. Though critics have suggested the effect might have short-lived appeal, he disagrees: “The reality is, it brings in so much light and life.” The Off Duty 50: Global Holiday Gift Guide For the redesign’s palette, the Freys took cues from their evolving collection of art and objects. “We collect so many things—from art deco paintings and sculptures to African masks—we wanted the color scheme to reflect our varied tastes,” Mr. Frey said. Accommodating both the couple’s acquisitions and pieces they have inherited, such as original Louis XV chairs, proved challenging, but Mr. Frey found the fabrics they chose to be excellent negotiators, bridging stylistic and color differences.




The fabric face-lift also solved logistical issues for the Freys, who faced harsh renovation constraints and were bound to the fifth floor Rive Gauche apartment’s original footprint. While the space enjoys an unusual amount of natural light thanks to several exposures, the layout is unique and rather challenging. The flat has a radiating floor plan, in which all the rooms are accessed from a large, square central receiving room. Since changing the layout wasn’t an option, Mr. Frey redefined this square room by encircling it with a luxurious, jewel-toned silk curtain. Not only does the curtain add dramatic flair, it hides unwanted structural elements. This kind of fabric-based makeover is particularly French. While English and American decorators are more likely to rely on wallpaper, the French upholster their walls in fabric. It has a cosseting, transformative effect on rooms that even the most sumptuous, hand-printed wallpapers can’t deliver. As Mr. Frey put it: “It was just fabric—that is all we changed—but the before and after are spectacularly different.”




The living room in Patrick Frey’s Paris apartment boasts beautifully restored 1880s moldings, which he and his wife Lorraine wanted to highlight. Mr. Frey chose a neutral wall color to showcase the moldings’ intricacy, and serve as a backdrop for new, exuberant upholstery and idiosyncratic African masks. The room’s color scheme started with the embroidered curtains, designed by Mr. Frey, whose pattern references Pharaonic Egyptian flowers. “The chairs, sofa and ottoman all play with and draw out the colors in the curtains,” he said. The multilayered ottoman, acting as both table and auxiliary seating, has interchangeable cushions that allow the couple to customize its look. Mr. Frey draws a comparison to a popular French pastry: “It’s like a mille-feuille. The minute you swap the top cushion for one in a different color, it totally changes the atmosphere of the room.” “We don’t very often use a formal dining room anymore, so the idea was to have this room also be a library,” Mr. Frey said.




“We have hundreds of decorating books—they needed to go somewhere.” For the walls, he selected a cotton ikat in a 19th-century pattern from the archives of Le Manach, which his textile company Pierre Frey owns. “I wanted the walls to do the talking,” he said. To give their Louis XV dining chairs a more modern, informal feel, the Freys covered them in loose, white linen slipcovers (easily removed for washing) that wouldn’t compete with the wallcovering. The Ingo Maurer chandelier, a cluster of paper notes, nods to the room’s double purpose. TRICKS OF THE RETREAT “First and foremost, I wanted a warm, cozy feeling for the bedroom,” Mr. Frey said, “so we upholstered the walls in a pale blue linen, which complements the accents of bright coral throughout the room.” The coral pieces, as well as the painting above the generations-old Louis XIV commode, were purchased from Belgian interior designer and antiquarian Axel Vervoordt. Mr. Frey designed the abundant, hand-embroidered linen curtains, whose chevron motif reflects the blue walls, coral accents and the bedspread’s pattern.




The doors are painted in a diamond motif, a decorative touch that Mr. Frey borrowed from his favorite period, art deco. The graphic effect nicely frames the commode’s tableau. The dimly lit, muted blue hallway that leads to the kitchen draws the eye to one of the room’s few updates: the linen roman shades in a colorful brush-stroke pattern designed by artist Marie Cécile Aptel. Due to renovation restrictions, the Freys made only cosmetic fixes to the outdated kitchen. Instead of the usual reno suspects—bar stools and a slick eating island—Mr. Frey gives this breakfast nook a stylish upgrade with Napoleon III chairs and a white tablecloth, evocative of more formal times. “The Napoleonic chairs and tablecloth have a fun dialogue with the contemporary, modern curtains,” he said. “The push and pull keeps things interesting.” The low-key hallway offers a quiet contrast to the textile-based exuberance that characterizes the rest of the apartment. The Freys’ apartment has an unusual radiating layout: You access all the rooms from a large, central square area that acts as a multipurpose receiving space (note the grand piano).

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