Saturday, September 11, 2010

etc.

This image inspires me to start hunting for black lace pieces to sew on old linen.

I don't know whether being born and raised in Kansas has anything to do with it or if it was because I worked for many years in corporate advertising, but I have never been able to loosen up when it comes to my styling abilities. My staff knows I like most displays to be symmetrical, our staple products to be lined up straight on a shelf and rarely do I want our vignettes a little cock-eyed or disheveled. Even if something is a mess, I want it to be a controlled mess. My excuse has always been that customers have enough items to decipher, why make a display crazy too?


Then one day I wander into an Anthropologie or pick up an issue of World of Interiors and see some fabulous hodgepodge of a display somebody has done where they have thrown caution to the wind and all styling rules are out the window, and I think, "Wow, how come I can't think like that?" Such is the case with Sibella Court.

Rug too big? Fold it in half!

I had read of her new book etc. months ago but forgot about it until a friend got a hold of a copy last week and was raving about it. A few clicks later and my copy arrived today. Cover to cover, from kraft paper jacket to vellum inserts to stenciled titles it was filled with images of wonder and abandoned chaos. Sibella is a photo stylist turned shop owner (hmmm, familiar) in Australia. Unlike moi, she has traveled the globe with her work, styling for Bergdorf Goodman, Anthropologie, House & Garden and Travel & Leisure. Maybe this is the cause of her reckless styling ability. (i.e.: she left Kansas.)

Showing the leftover electrical cords doesn't seem to bother Sibella.
She uses them to create less formality.

Shown here are a few of my favorite images she has from her website.

Come on! Taping a star together out of old ribbon? Genius.

One box is good, six are better.

Her book is divided into color stories (Foundation colors, Indigo Blues, Paper Whites) and collections (Travelers, Magicians, Tradewinds). I love how no one theme or period is represented in one photograph as it is a grouping of things that just appeal to her and yet work well together. She makes you see things differently and as she says in the introduction to her book: "This book is about deconstructed decorating." (you've got to love that term) "My hope is that you look at your possessions from a new perspective and be encouraged to reshuffle..."

A favorite palette.

She's right. Her book and website and other designers and stylists like her (J.Morgan Pruett and Rebecca Purcell) make me shake my head with jealousy because I wish I were more bohemian, more reckless with my styling and took more chances. I wish I knew if my customers would get it but more importantly- buy it! Some would of course, but could Curious Sofa exist on this aesthetic... in Kansas?? Maybe for now, I should just start with my own living room.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE!

Do you hear the cries coming from the delivery room? No, not from the baby- from the mother! That is me whaling down the hall because I am announcing the birth of Curious Sofa's ONLINE STORE... FINALLY!


To celebrate our TEN YEAR ANNIVERSARY in business (September 16th, thankyouverymuch) this shopkeeper finally bit the bullet and launched an online store. I heard your cries from Australia to Canada to California so I gave in to offering items for all of you who cannot get to Kansas City.

What a labor of love it has been. Since early May I have researched sites, consulted with tech experts, designed every page (not only the cart but an entire new website!), scanned press pages, bought product, photographed and retouched every item, written descriptions, proofread, loaded and loaded and loaded images until I have been morphed into this machine. But it took a small village to get it done too. Thanks to my tech Pat Tomek, my staff for measuring and organizing each and every item, and Sara our 1-800 gal for organizing the warehouse, taking the orders, helping you purchase and shipping them off safely. I am more than proud of the new aesthetic, easy navigation and content. I hope you like it too.

Now the disclaimer: Not all items you see featured in the store (from our blog pics) will be available online. Is this our goal? Absolutely, but giving birth is one thing, raising the child is another. The good news is there are many items on the site that are not in the store!

Check out six pages of fabulous
One of a kind
ANTIQUES
And customer favorites from every department:
BATH

KITCHEN

DECOR

PAPER

TEXTILES

RELIGIOUS
Also to our local fans: if you see it online, you cannot pick it up in the store (Hint: it's not even here! We have it stored in a warehouse).

PLEASE GO HERE to register so you can know of new items being added or any specials we may run.

Ready? Start shopping! We will replenish as soon as we can when items sell out.
.

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Amy Barickman Book Signing


Let me tell you about someone who works harder than I do: My good friend, entrepreneur and business owner: Amy Barickman.


Amy and I met 10 years ago when she wandered into my first store. She became a good customer and eventually, a dear friend. With both of us being business owners in Kansas City, Amy and I have been fortunate enough to share the pages of our local Kansas City Star newspaper, Country Living magazine (2007) and the current issue of Where Women Create. We have been roommates during Silver Bella and the Mary Englebreit Creative Seminar and during those times (and many beers in between) shared our trials over business owning, tossed ideas back and forth about design projects and been shoulders for each other during life's lessons.

Amy has two successful businesses: Indygo Junction and Vintage Workshop and now she has created a third. A few years ago when she discovered the works of domestic artist Mary Brooks Picken, everything changed for Amy. She was a woman obsessed! Something about Mary Picken from 1916 touched her heart and she had to write about her. As I like to tell everyone, this book is the story of the first Martha Stewart, Mary Brooks Picken.


This past year has been jam packed for my friend. Not only was she keeping her businesses, employees, ideas and projects flowing, but she also designed a new website, blog and self published the book VINTAGE NOTIONS which comes with a crazy press junket attached.
AND! She also has two kids to take care of!

Read about the book here.

This Thursday night she presents her labor of love (and sweat and tears) to Kansas City for the first time at our local Plaza Library. Read about her presentation here.

Curious Sofa is fortunate to have Amy in the store this Saturday from 11:00-2:00 for a book signing, but there is more! I encouraged Amy to rummage through her massive collection of textiles, needlework and paper ephemera on all things home-economic and bring it along to sell to you.

Please join us at The Sofa, meet Amy and take away a bit of history.
And Widgeonwood Market is going on at the same time too!
Out of towners, buy the book here.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Halloween, Part Two

All seven of our display windows were taped with giant cobweb patterns.

Day three has ended of our and Halloween Masquerade and Art Show. Another great crowd today and what wonderful weather we had!

As I zipped around the store shooting more pictures to share, I was pleasantly amazed at all that has sold already. I am equally thrilled this allows me to reorder more for you. After all, we do have two more months until Halloween!

Take another look around as I have added a few home decor ideas.

From the window above: I downloaded a few cobweb illustrations and used them as a rough guideline. I also bought 1/2" gaffers tape here. Gaffers tape is used in the film industry and will not leave any sticky residue on your windows (like duct tape) or dry from the sun (like masking tape).But masking tape would be a much cheaper alternative. A very sharp X-Acto blade and knife are highly recommended.

Large and small feather owls perch upon a 6' glitter tree.

Three samples of our elaborate masks shown above with our sparkling black and white
candle holders, an ornate iron mirror, antique wedding cake chandelier
and tiny picado paper garland.


Clock prop, giant silver candelabra and the pair of paper
slippers are from our artist Lesa Dailey.

Our black and white festival papers are one of my favorite items. I could keep these up
all year long. Cut them apart and use small sections on a mantle,
hang as a valance or under a glass top table.

Our giant garden statuary tip-toes through our forest of black bottle brush trees.
A hand crochet mask from artist Julie Reed. Tiny top hat headband
are for sale in the store.

Any old chandelier can become dramatic when you add a dozen feather ravens.

Shot by Carol Spinski

Getting freaky in the kitchen: stainless skull place card holders,
serving tray, pot holders, mugs and more...


More Springheads

Greg Johnson replenished his alien button portraits.

And not to forget the jewelry department, we have some great owl necklaces too.

Shot by my friend Carol Spinski

Popular blogger Artsy Mama interviewed me a month ago about how we plan our Halloween displays. You can read it here.

Believe it or not, many more images to come over the next month. Please stop in!

SHOP ONLINE AT

Friday, August 27, 2010

Halloween 2010

Marie Antoinette meets Alfred Hitchcock; so is the theme of our Halloween Masquerade.

The calendar may still say August, but there isn't anyone in Kansas City who isn't ready for cooler weather. Teasing customers that Fall is just around the corner is what we do best. This past week, from top to bottom, inside and out, the staff at Curious Sofa transformed our summer remains into a Halloween Masquerade illusion.

The list of what we do to prepare for such a makeover might be more than you have time to read about here, so I will condense the boxes of unpacking, endless note taking and cuts and bruises to sharing only the carefully orchestrated details.

Last January while searching for unique products I discovered a wonderful line of black lace curtain panels, valances, and runners. I knew they were special enough for me to build my Halloween season around, so everything else I purchased was to compliment them. Now black lace can go in only so many directions and because this was my fourth year to really do up Halloween in the shop, I had pretty much covered all the possibilities. We've done the antique thing, the haunted thing, Gothic rock 'n roll and a little creepy. What was left? Something a little more elegant.


In April I discovered an artist on Etsy who made incredible handmade masks. I had asked her if we could sell them in the store come September but over time the notion I would really sell $150 masks was pretty slim. So I did what only a creative Midwest retailer would do during a tough economy: I went for the store bought $19.95 version! So with black lace and ornate masks under my belt, my next inspiration came from the most unlikely place: Amadeus.


I can't remember now if I was flipping channels or surfing the web but the image of the masquerade scene from the movie Amadeus came to mind- and off I went in every possible direction.


Trying to create a retail wow while sticking to a budget can be tough but I am notorious for being resourceful where I can be and not so thrifty when I have to. My list of ideas went something like this: black lace, masks, and feathers which lead to Marie Antoinette, white wigs, and gloves, which lead to crystal chandeliers, candelabras and black candles with dripping wax; which then lead to the opera, musical instruments and sheet music which took me to leather furniture, old books, chalk busts, you get the idea. This is how I think.


The entrance to the store was always first and foremost in my mind. Finding the chalk busts was a bit daunting but eventually they reared their lovely heads. I bought a few wigs for the larger busts and had fun piling them one on top of another and tying them with white string for some extra funkiness. Dana was the chosen one to cluster all our crystal chandeliers and I scored the fabulous church windows at the last minute. We also have masks, masks and more masks of every shape and size too.


Antiques, crows, owls, spiders and crystal candlesticks were stock plied in the back room along with tubs of all things black and white. I passed over a ton of typical Halloween merchandise that is always available to stores like mine. You know the kind: pumpkin people with striped stockings, witches flying high with one tooth and a wart, scare crows that are well, scary. When I have a theme in mind I am hell-bent on sticking to it. I do have to bend the rules once in awhile just to supply our customer base, but I still try to give any traditional item a Curious Sofa spin.

One of the many styles of black lace adornments we have.

Speaking of, a few years ago I invited our local artists to bring their goods to sell along with our Halloween Premiere and it was such a hit, it has become an annual invitation. On Thursday, I was so busy getting things ready, I didn't have much time to review the work they were setting up. But then I get a tap on my shoulder and artist Greg Johnson shoved this in my face and I nearly DIED!

SICK and BRILLIANT art by Greg Johnson. He sold out that night.

Something tells me the average household with three kids will be buying these.

One of the many projects we rigged for the event: Vintage bisque doll heads mounted to
old bed springs and doll parts added to wooden dowels. Nothing like art on a stick.

When something is not selling, you change it: A silhouette I made to paint on
an armoire door. Also, the sisal skunks were a crowd favorite.

Would you believe this piano was almost trash! Another happy
accident just in time for the event.

Mercury lab bottles with poisonous graphics.

A final touch: I made witches hats, glitter masks and new sashes to
our awning of beauty contestants. (Yes, actual cities!)


The Art Show ends Sunday at 5:00
but our Halloween festivities continue through October 25.


Part Two of Halloween pics later this weekend.

www.curioussofa.com