Category Archives: Fancy designers

White Bathroom Week concludes with: Expert advice!

For my final installment of White Bathroom Week (er, White Bathroom Fortnight?), I grilled architect/designer/blogger–and fervent tile enthusiast!–Dale Cohen, whose fab bathroom was featured in The Art of Tile. I knew she’d be a source of brilliant design advice:

Q. Any tips for keeping an all-white bath from looking too clinical?

 A. In the wrong hands, white tile can look antiseptic. Be sure to choose the right white! Ideally one with a softness to it, like a handmade tile. If you are pairing white tile with thick stone countertops in Carrera or statuary marble, consider rounding the countertop edge, and then repeat the stone along the wall base as a molding. This could be as simple as 12-inch-square stone tiles cut in half and laid horizontally, which will bring the floor up to where the wall tile starts, thus creating a properly finished feel.

For the floor of my own New York bathroom, I chose a mosaic of hand-chopped stone—the technique used by the ancient Romans 2,000 years ago—and a wall base of handmade tile glazed a custom grey. These two handmade materials mesh gently with my stark white machine-made Italian tiles, softening the contemporary lines without being cloying. The feel is modern and chic.

Q. Tell us more about those Italian tiles. I remember you obsessed about finding one with a bright white bisque (i.e. the tile body)?

 A. When designing a modern bathroom and using cool hues/tones, as so I often do, the color of the tile bisque is vital. It adds subtlety to the color of the glaze above. An off-white bisque makes the white glaze read warmer, while a white bisque gave a truer white. The Italian tiles I used in my bathroom—a modern, machine-made product—has a white bisque that works well with the cool, grey trim.

Q. Are you still digging the elongated format you chose for your wall tiles? Any subway-tile design advice?

I love the elongated tiles. And I think there are so many more ways to use subway tile than the standard running bond. Bring in pattern by adding some square tiles into the mix—alternating them to create a plaid, for example. I also like them installed vertically.

In addition to playing with pattern, using materials that are larger than you might feel comfortable with—not huge dimensions, just scaling up a bit—creates a greater sense of space. I’m not a fan of tiny, tiny anything; the little half-inch mosaics drive me wacky! When it comes to mosaics, tiles, and patterns in general, I find that people typically pick a smaller scale than is ideal. This is just a matter of inexperience with materials and their application (I may be shot for saying that, but oh well).

I remember working with my sister in Washington several years ago. I got a cry over the phone that could be heard the whole length of the Acela track: “Dale, I’m at the wallpaper store I am overwhelmed and have no idea what to do!” The next weekend I was in D.C. The three papers she’d chosen for her powder room were all tiny prints. I took her to her local paint/wallpaper store and chose three patterns that were larger in scale; when applied to the walls, they created a greater sense of space. Same with tile.

Q. Would love to hear your thoughts about when to splurge on handmade versus machine-made tiles, which I posted about earlier this week?

A. The reason to splurge on a handmade tile is for the look. They have a soft, old-world feeling and inject a sense of warmth that cannot be achieved with machine-made tiles. Don’t get me wrong, I love machine-made tiles—just in the right setting. When working on historic spaces like Gracie Mansion or a Victorian-era house in the West Village, I almost always use handmade tiles in subtle tones. They add a sense of patina and age and are historically appropriate; they’re still made similarly to how they were back in the day. If your floors are statuary marble and you live in a Brooklyn brownstone, for instance, I would use handmade tile because it makes a real difference.

Q. Do you ever source crazy-colored tiles in baths, or do you always favor a more neutral look?

A. The craziest I went was a mustard-yellow tile for the kitchen backsplash of an historic apartment on the Upper West Side—and that was only to complement the client’s mustardy granite.  

The reason I choose neutrals for bathrooms is that they are very expensive rooms to design. If you’re going to live in your home for the next 10 or 20 years, you need to really love your material choices over that period time because the effort and expense to redo them is prohibitive.

Q. Any other advice about designing white-tiled loos??

A. White is just as complicated as any other color choice. Using white tile in a bathroom and making it feel warm and inviting takes work and an ever-so-subtle use of materials—everything screams “color!” against white. Small tonal changes will be noticed in a white bathroom. So choose tile with care and an eye for sophistication and your bathroom can go from everyday to spectacular!  

Q. In your blog, A Bachelor’s Decorated Life, you discourse about about masculine style! Have you found bachelors to have specific taste in tile?

A. Bachelors generally like to play it safe and not add too much sparkle. I use warmer, earthier tones, sometimes deeper colors—although rarely in tile. The middle warm greys would be as dark as I might go, with the occasional subtle deep accent. I have found that men like a home that is inviting, laid back, and that can be easily maintained—nothing too fussy: i.e. clean lines, warm colors, and very little pattern. I like to think of it as their cool cave—leaving the caveman behind.

Stylish single gents (and you ladies who want to snag ‘em) take note!

Thanks, Dale!

[Photos 1, 3, and 4: Ben Ritter. Photos 2, 5: courtesy of Dale Cohen]

Commune Design’s tiled indoor/outdoor kitchen

communedesign2

Flipping through the June Food & Wine (yes, I’m a little behind in my magazine reading…), I came across an article on L.A. design firm Commune, whose work I’ve admired (including their shop for Heath Ceramics!). Among the projects featured was this fab kitchen and adjacent courtyard patio, from a house Commune completed in Los Feliz. Per F&W, the cement floor tiles are custom from Redondo Tile, based on a 40s French design. Very inspired!

Tile is a perfect flooring choice for creating continuity between indoor/outdoor spaces, although the elements are always a concern. Cement tile is very well suited to the California climate; another great choice (my fave) is stonelike porcelain–of faux-wood porcelain planks.

communedesign1

(Plus, Heath L.A.!)

heath ceramics

Laura Gottwald’s stunningly mod stone mosaics

Ellipse-Stripes

My favorite discovery at ICFF last spring: interior designer Laura Gottwald unveiled an amazing line of mod waterjet-cut stone mosaics for Sara Baldwin’s New Ravenna, which are being carried by Stone Source. They come in 6-by-12-inch modules, in a variety of marbles and other stones. I wanted to steal all of her samples and take them home with me!

I’ve been seeing some amazing water-jet-cut designs lately, but manufacturers have mostly been enlisting the technology to create either very contemporary designs or very classical olde-tyme patterns. While both extremes have resulted in some amazing product, I think the technique–which creates super crisp lines–is a natural for very graphic, mid-20th-century influenced designs like these, which I love best! 

Visit Laura’s website to visit some of the amazing spaces she’s designed. And Sara from New Ravenna did a great blog post with lots of background scoopage. Plus check out Interior Design’s article, too:

lauragottwald

More of Laura’s designs:

rectangles smaller

3a 2 expensive b

A digital rendering of the above:

Pattern.Concentric

As seen in: the Dior Institute

dior1

Oooh la la! Will someone please book me a trip to the Dior Institute at the Hôtel Plaza Athénée in Paris so I can check out the spa’s amazing tilework in person? Thank you so much.

Above: the hammam! Below: The fiber-optic-lit mosaiced pool. [Eric Laignel's pix from Interior Design mag.]

dior2

And speaking of Royal Tichelaar…

tile-stove-project-by-dick-van-hoff-2tile-stove-largewhite-gla

…a shout out to Dick van Hoff‘s awesome Tile Stove project, which debuted at Milan. More goodies on Dezeen! Almost makes me hanker for winter.

tile-stove-project-by-dick-van-hoff-tile-stove-detail-6

Boffi kitchens gets a taste of tile!

boffi-kitchen-duemilatto-2

This makes me most excited: Piero Lissoni‘s Duemilaotto kitchen system for Boffi, featuring…drumroll, please…a tiled ventilation hood! I’ve seen tiled hoods a few times before–very clever–but always in a southwestern-y style, with pretty hand-painted ceramics or some such. Lissoi’s system–which incorporates tiles into the backsplash and countertop, too–is the first time I’ve seen the treatment in a contemporary setting. What makes me so excited about this design is his paring of very clean lines and sleek surfaces with more textured finishes like the rough-hewn wood (one iteration of the system has an Acacia island) and artisan ceramics that have the appearance of woven fabric.

Trendir did a great post showcasing the whole system…check it out here. Or visit Boffi.

A close-up:

boffi-kitchen-duemilatto-7

An overall of the whole system:

boffi 1

Shiny Metallic Mosaics at Barbie Shanghai

Barbie-Store-JSA-3242

What?! Totally nuts! Go Slade Architecture! (Meanwhile, I can’t even believe such a thing as a Barbie store in Shanghai exist but whatevs…)

Barbie-Store-JSA-3223

More Invader sightings!

almost flashed 10th Ave. squatting to snap this one so low to the ground... 

En route to see Invader’s show at Jonathan LeVine today (one of, like, three galleries open in all of Chelsea), I found a few more of his site-specific graffiti. Fun fun. The installation was neat but, now that I’ve seen it, I think I prefer his work in the context of the street…more serendipitous! (Meanwhile, I almost flashed 10th Avenue squatting in my miniskirt to snap that one above, which was in a little nook quite low to the ground.) His work can be found in some 40 cities.

The show included a series of pieces that looked like mosaic tiles from afar but that turned out to be made of Rubik’s Cubes. Nuts!

invader invades the High Line!

Invader invades the High Line! Wonder if he stopped to get coffee at the Birdbath kiosk...

 

check out the cute blue invader sticker in the middle!

check out the cute blue invader sticker in the middle!

Bauhaus-inspired tile designs at Urban Archaeology

This amazingness just appearing in my in-box! From Urban Archaeology’s current newsletter, in which the company recreated Bauhaus masterworks in tile:

urbanarchaeology

Below, a rendering of an installation pattern inspired by Anni Albers’ Design For Wall Hanging, which Urban Archaeology suggests recreating with tiles from their Claymonde collection. Click here for more!

urban2

Cool kitchen backsplash ideas

from Solistone

People often ask me for good backsplash tips. Tough one! Personally, my favorite look is to banish upper cabinets and run a swath of tile all the way to the ceiling, but this is most impractical for the storage challenged. I’ve seen great installations where people continued their backsplash tile above the cabinets–which is great if the wall is visible (i.e. flush with the cabinet doors). Once I even saw a kitchen with no backsplash at all, just a run of tile above the cabinets…the effect was surprisingly effective.

My advice is to keep it simple: one type of tile will do…you don’t have to mess with insets and medallions, which work nicely in a ginormous room but which–to me–or otherwise too distracting. A backsplash doesn’t usually take up a lot of space, so it’s a nice place to splurge on a pricier tile. But consider extending the backsplash beyond the sliver between counter and cabinets, continuing to an adjacent feature wall, for instance. The look really pulls a room together and makes it feel more cohesive.

Also consider an unusual material, like Solistone’s stainless-steel river rocks, above. Shiny metal is not for everyone, but the sinuous lines play nicely off sleeker countertops and appliances.

Here’s some more cool stuff:

from Ann Sacks

from Ann Sacks: an all-over pattern wraps around to the adjacent wall--great idea of you have strange angles or odd slivers of space

from Ann Sacks

from Ann Sacks: bold wallpaper-style patterns lend a more decorated look

from Mosaico+

from Mosaico+: consider playing with off-beat shapes

from Mosaico+

also from Mosaico+: you can't go wrong with a juicy shot of color

from Motawi

from Motawi: take advantage of the little sliver of space to do something textured

from Tau

from Tau: love the wainscoting brought just above counter height and topped with penny tile

from Trend

from Trend: forget the backsplash and do a feature wall instead!

from Ceramica de Treviso

from Ceramica de Treviso: bring tile down the wall and wrap it over the countertop

from Granada

from Granada: bracket patterned tile with a solid border

Have any great tips? Weigh in below!