Houzz Call: Share Your 'Happy Accidents'
If any of your home decorating successes have happened by chance, we'd like to hear about it
Houzz Contributor. Fresh out of journalism school, I fell into decorating media and immediately discovered a new passion. An Atlanta native, I spent several years as an editor for Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles magazine before making the leap to national publications and websites such as Houzz, Better Homes and Gardens and Southern Accents. I live in Birmingham, Alabama, with my husband and son, who’ve gotten used to coming home and finding the furniture rearranged. When I'm not dragging case goods across the floor, I enjoy good food and wine, college football, music of all kinds, and traveling.
Houzz Contributor. Fresh out of journalism school, I fell into decorating... More »
| Share: |
|
My recent ideabook about off-center art sparked some fun comments about "accidental decorating," as one Houzzer dubbed it. Essentially, it's what happens when a room comes together totally by chance, or when an unexpected change of design plans turns out to have an even better ending than the original.
Odds are, this has happened in your own home a time or two — and we'd love to see the result.
Odds are, this has happened in your own home a time or two — and we'd love to see the result.
by Joel Snayd
»
Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
A crystal chandelier hangs amid pots and pans in the kitchen of Joel and Erika Snayd's historic Savannah, Georgia, home — and its pride of place is totally serendipitous. When the couple bought the chandelier from an Atlanta market, it was buried under years of grime. Joel hung it from a potrack over the kitchen sink to keep it safe until he could clean it. Eventually, the Snayds were charmed by its offbeat placement and left it there, wiring it to add light and sparkle.
Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
Blogger Marian, better known as Miss Mustard Seed, pulled together this charming guestroom on a nonexistent budget, using finds from around her house. The results delighted her. "I realized that I had perfectly captured my style in one room," she said in a feature about her home. "It is French country meets American farmhouse with a little junk thrown in."
Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
According to designer Jessica Pakzad Bennett, the striped wall treatment in this room — part of a Newport Beach, California, project — sprang from a chance discovery during the planning stages. Although she and her client were debating light and dark blue stripes versus light and dark green ones, she grouped the four color swatches together and fell for the effect. Fortunately, her client did too.
Upload photos of your own happy accidents to the Comments section below and tell us how the decor came about. You could see your space in a follow-up feature on the Houzz homepage.
Upload photos of your own happy accidents to the Comments section below and tell us how the decor came about. You could see your space in a follow-up feature on the Houzz homepage.
Ideabook published on Dec. 27, 2012.
Latest Ideabooks
People found the photos in this ideabook after searching for:
View over a million photos:
Find Local Pros by Category:
Architects & Designers · Carpet and Flooring · Closet & Home Storage Designers · Design-build Firms · Fireplaces · General Contractors · Home Media Design & Installation · Interior Designers & Decorators · Kitchen & Bath Designers · Landscape Architects & Designers · Landscape Contractors · Specialty Contractors · Tile, Stone & Countertops
Find Local Pros by Metro Area:
Atlanta · Austin · Baltimore · Boston · Chicago · Dallas · Dc Metro · Denver · Detroit · Hawaii · Houston · Las Vegas · Los Angeles · Miami · Minneapolis · Nashville · New Orleans · New York · Philadelphia · Phoenix · Portland · Salt Lake City · San Diego · San Francisco · Seattle · St Louis















http://www.designocd.com/2012/10/refresh-your-grout/
To check out more of this space, you can visit here: http://thisishappinessblog.blogspot.com/2012/09/our-simple-mini-mudroom.html
And to view more spaces and projects in my home you can visit by blog here: http://thisishappinessblog.blogspot.com/
See my kitchen here:
http://justinetaylor.tumblr.com/post/10125225720/kitchen-tour
http://www.ashbeedesign.com/2012/12/laundry-room-reveal.html
http://www.ashbeedesign.com/2012/12/laundry-room-reveal-ironing-board.html
I do not really want to talk about the amount of sawdust that invaded my kitchen in the course of the power sanding that ensued (instead of staining and varnishing, for days I have been washing every dish I own. Some day, I will actually finish this floor). But if anyone is removing linoleum tar, I honest-to-God know the EASY way to get it off (assuming it's the same composition as mine). I discovered that one by accident, too - I was so sick with flu I was just too tired to scrape the last bit of my pre-soaked patch of tar before I went to sleep. And the next morning, after 12 hours of soaking under a towel and (initially) boiling water, all that nasty tar peeled off as if it had only been casually sitting there, waiting to depart for greener pastures. Now, if only there had been an easy way to remove brad nails...
My parents had purchased a townhouse in Park Slope, Brooklyn. One day my brother and I were were rough housing and made a hole in a wall of the passageway between the kitchen and the dining room. My father shone a flashlight to see if there was a stud near the hole so it would be an easy repair, and lo and behold, he spotted leaded glass! Long story short, we pulled the rest of the sheetrock wall away and found a floor to ceiling built-in mahogany and leaded glass server, complete with drawers, doors and marble shelves, all in mint condition - amazing! I guess we should not have been surprised though, earlier that year, when clearing the weed-choked garden, we found all the pieces of one of the marble mantelpieces, still in perfect condition, that was "missing" from the house.