Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous owner filled the house with toile everything. Curtains. Wallpaper. Knick knacks. Rustic French everything. Everywhere.
We still get her copies of country curtains in the mail.
MCM, please. ðŸ«
Country Curtain is no more. But I think Vermont Country Store picked it up.
Anonymous wrote:Previous owner filled the house with toile everything. Curtains. Wallpaper. Knick knacks. Rustic French everything. Everywhere.
We still get her copies of country curtains in the mail.
MCM, please. ðŸ«
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also hate MCM and I agree it's almost unavoidable right now. MCM is the furniture equivalent of the Tiffany heart tag necklace or a Louis Vuitton logo wallet-- something people think signals they have taste and money, but actually shows they are mass-market consumers and suckers for aspirational branding. MCM belongs in McMansions.
To get furniture that actually shows character and craft, try antique stores and estate sales. My favorite hidden gem, which I hate to give away, is Cornerstone in Maryland. They specialize in traditional non-MCM furniture and they are wonderful to work with. https://onlycornerstone.com/
I hate stuff like that. It’s straight out of grandma’s house.
Anonymous wrote:I also hate MCM and I agree it's almost unavoidable right now. MCM is the furniture equivalent of the Tiffany heart tag necklace or a Louis Vuitton logo wallet-- something people think signals they have taste and money, but actually shows they are mass-market consumers and suckers for aspirational branding. MCM belongs in McMansions.
To get furniture that actually shows character and craft, try antique stores and estate sales. My favorite hidden gem, which I hate to give away, is Cornerstone in Maryland. They specialize in traditional non-MCM furniture and they are wonderful to work with. https://onlycornerstone.com/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was reviewing various run of the mill websites for furniture ideas recently and everything looks like Mad Men, late 1960s. I was sick of it when my parents and aunts/uncles had it when we were kids. I'm even more sick of it with its current revival. When are we going to get back to more timeless styles? Are there companies out there that are not currently catering to this period?
Well...it's been in style since the middle of the last century, not sure what you want here.
Ehh. It was not "in style" in the 80s-2005. Only after 2005 did it start rearing its head again.
Anonymous wrote:Here you go OP, found the perfect couch for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was reviewing various run of the mill websites for furniture ideas recently and everything looks like Mad Men, late 1960s. I was sick of it when my parents and aunts/uncles had it when we were kids. I'm even more sick of it with its current revival. When are we going to get back to more timeless styles? Are there companies out there that are not currently catering to this period?
Well...it's been in style since the middle of the last century, not sure what you want here.
Ehh. It was not "in style" in the 80s-2005. Only after 2005 did it start rearing its head again.
Ehh, it was back by the late 90s. I bought my first apartment in 1997, furnished it with MCM furniture (the real one, from the 60s, bought at estate sales), and then saw an article in NYTimes about the comeback, so it was definitely in the air.
Anonymous wrote:West Elm, Room & Board, DWR are mostly MCM. I wouldn't say Pottery Barn, Restoration Hardware or CB2 are. Crate & Barrel has a mix. Arhaus is more organic modern but not MCM. Or try Kaiyo / Consignment or FB marketplace for more traditional.