Modern Wall Coverings, Africa-Style
Every so often I receive these big tempting catalogs called “Neiman Marcus: The Book.” As an added bonus, there is often a copy of INCIRCLE entree*. The only times I ever yearn to be rich are when the Hartsfield-Jackson security line for serfs like me is endless and I long for my own jet, and when I flip through entree.
This photo was taken by Kevin Garrett, who scouted out the best places to stay in South Africa for the magazine. It is the lobby of The Saxon Boutique Hotel in South Africa. I love the way the baskets are composed, and the color and texture they give to the wall; texture tells the whole story in this room. It seems very Vicente Wolf, whether it be something that would inspire him or something he would design. 17-hour flight in coach or not, I have been dreaming of going to this place ever since I read his article.
In fact, I couldn’t help but thing of the Kelly Wearstler Santa Monica Viceroy Hollywood Regency version of adding texture to a wall with “native” round objects. She keeps her color palette neutral (albeit what I call “Wearstler-crisp”) as well:
photo one by Kevin Garrett for Neiman Marcus INCIRCLE entree
photo two from KWID.com
*I can’t for the life of me figure out how to put the little thingee over the second “e” in entree. I can’t for the life of me remember what the thingee is called. Is it a tilde? I took Latin and Spanish, not French! And “Intro to BASIC” instead of “Intro to HTML” or “Typing for Dummies”.




May 1st, 2008 at 4:16 am
It’s an accent egu (that’s nearly all I remember after 7 years of French classes).
But I can never remember how to add it to words, either. I know there’s a way…but it’s way too complicated to really be worth it.
May 6th, 2008 at 2:06 pm
é
Hold down the key and enter –é magically appears.
May 6th, 2008 at 2:07 pm
Oops, the site didn’t take my set-aside entries.
Hold down the alt key and enter 0233.
May 6th, 2008 at 2:24 pm
Thanks Annie! That certainly is not intuitive!
becky
May 7th, 2008 at 8:24 am
Of course it’s not intuitive. It’s magic, as are most computer functions.