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Home Stories: Design Ideas for Making a House a Home
Home Stories: Design Ideas for Making a House a Home
Home Stories: Design Ideas for Making a House a Home
Ebook348 pages2 hours

Home Stories: Design Ideas for Making a House a Home

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Learn how to create rooms filled with warmth, meaning, and your own unique story of home
 
Kim Leggett’s ï¬?rst book, City Farmhouse Style, was a big hit. Now Kim is back with the welcoming interiors her fans crave and a no-rules approach that is all about using what you love to create rooms that tell your personal story.
 
Everyone has a story worth telling, and every room can become part of that story—whether you decorate it with heirlooms, flea market finds, simple mementos, or a mix. In Home Stories, Leggett shows readers how to use all these treasures to design very special rooms filled with interest and meaning.
 
She begins by asking readers what it is that attracts them to a certain piece: “Thinking hard about what really speaks to you, and then using it as the basis for design, is the secret behind all of the best, most interesting rooms.”
 
Each chapter presents fascinating spaces and the stories behind the accessories, furnishings, and mementos that fill them. There are plenty of projects, too, plus practical design guidance and design inspiration for refreshing decor as the seasons change.
 
LanguageEnglish
PublisherABRAMS
Release dateFeb 23, 2021
ISBN9781647000202
Home Stories: Design Ideas for Making a House a Home

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    Book preview

    Home Stories - Kim Leggett

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    CHAPTER 1

    OUR STORY

    OUR STORY

    Telling the story of our home means so much to me. Nearly everything brought in and styled within our own house is connected to our lives in a personal way—whether it’s the history of the piece itself, or a past or present memory.

    I’m excited to share with you the story of a nineteenth-century bookcase that once belonged to a Civil War soldier from my birthplace in Tennessee, a rug lovingly made by the hand of a homeless New Yorker living with AIDS, a collection of keepsakes gathered from family, an antique church sign that brought back fond memories of Sunday morning church services, and the surprise ending to a story of the time I convinced David to painfully sit through a Broadway musical.

    I’m especially proud to share ideas for making a house a home; such as how I transformed my dream farm table into an unexpected arrangement that precisely suits my family, and how a guest bedroom became a shared office space that works beautifully.

    Gosh, there’s just so much to tell! So, let’s get started, shall we?

    The straight, simple lines of the Odd Fellows lodge chair salvaged from Upstate New York make for a perfect perch to put on and take off shoes. It fit my city cowboy, David, just fine for pulling on his boots. Don’t be fooled by the pretty picture though; it doesn’t usually look this way. Most days it’s a catchall for bags, hats, jackets, and other articles of clothing.

    FIRST IMPRESSIONS

    The entryway sets the stage for what is to come and is the introduction to your home’s story. Whether it’s a grand entrance or a space no larger than a welcome mat, there’s plenty you can do to make an impact.

    This entryway pairing of a handmade rug and chest began when I spotted the gorgeous early-1800s chest of drawers in a Smoky Mountain antique shop. I fell hard for its authentic abstract paint decoration. Its maker was not only a craftsman but also a painter, an accomplished artist—one before his time. It felt more like a modern masterpiece than a fancied-up chest of drawers.

    No room, including an entryway, is complete without the warm feeling offered by a beautiful rug, and I had purchased the perfect one many months before. Around Thanksgiving, David and I took a weekend getaway to New York City. We took our usual stroll along Broadway and Columbus Avenue, admiring the window displays, visiting our favorite thrift stores, and picking the Grand Bazaar NYC flea market. If you have never visited a Housing Works Thrift Shop, put one of them on your next New York City itinerary. Their nonprofit stores benefitting homeless people living with AIDS and HIV are chock-full of everything from high-end antiques to general run-of-the-mill thrift-store finds.

    As I stepped through the doorway I noticed several large wall hangings that appeared to be works of art. Turns out they were a display of rugs hung on the wall to protect them from foot traffic. I was particularly drawn to one with alternating lines of creams, browns, and blacks. I lifted the tag to discover that these rugs were handmade by artists in the Weaving Project, a group of homeless women living with HIV and AIDS. Each tag told the story of its rug’s talented maker. My rug was lovingly woven by Amirah in 2006 from shredded scraps of donated clothing and was called Winter Moss Spring. Although it was a blustery November day, my heart melted. I thought about Amirah, wondered if she was keeping warm in winter, and if she had food to eat.

    When I found the decorated chest I knew instantly that I would bring the work of these two artists together in my home. I felt their lives paralleled somehow. He, more than 200 years ago, keeping comfortable absent modern conveniences, and she doing the same in a world that offered everything—both masters working with their hands, both undiscovered by the great collectors, both cherished by a storyteller.

    In my home the entryway overflows into a small, undefined room. The builder intended it to be an office. Instead, I decided to make it a small library and creative space—a sanctuary for inspiration, planning, storytelling, and escape.

    My bookshelves are stocked with titles that run the gamut from interior design to folk art collecting to the classics, but I wanted the space to be more than a book depository. I wanted to surround myself with the collections that I cherished the most.

    Designing a library in the traditional sense often calls for open shelves lining the walls of the room. But in a storied home something more out of the ordinary is desired—and expected. That’s why I threw design rules to the wind in favor of a more conversational version, beginning with an 1800s bookcase that once belonged to a Civil War soldier. I fell in love with it for its impressive folk-art details, expert craftsmanship, and immaculately preserved surface, and just as much for its story.

    WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME

    On April 9, 1865, twenty-year-old Sargent William Franklin Pierce lay down what had been his uniform throughout eleven battles of the Civil War and began his trek homeward to the one-hundred-acre war-damaged family farm in Obion County, Tennessee. For four years he had been a part of the Company H, 47th Tennessee Infantry Regiment of the Confederate States Army organized at Camp Trenton in Gibson County. His claim to fame was the part he played in the infamous two-day Battle of Shiloh from April 6 to 7, 1862.

    Although the war was officially over, Pierce must have felt he was still amid the tragedy. The campaign had taken its toll on West Tennessee farms as soldiers had marched through the fields and trampled crops, often burning what was in their way. Yet Pierce set about rebuilding the family homestead, mending fences, and planting crops. The farm was declared a Tennessee Century Farm, a designation given to those continuously farmed by a single family for more than one hundred years.

    I love how this contemporary space now feels like an old library. The antique New England tilt-top tea table in original black paint was a steal at $75 and now holds the antique Bible collection I had stored away in cardboard boxes for years.

    A unit of shelves should hold so much more than books. It can also serve as a perfect spot to intermingle keepsakes from family travels, special mementos, family photos, and children’s artwork among favorite design and reference books. One of my most prized collections is these memory jars. They are a constant reminder of good times spent with our family. We never leave our walks along the seashore without collecting a sand bucket full of shell fragments.

    CREATE A TINY LIBRARY ANYWHERE IN YOUR HOME

    Whether you have an entire room or a cozy nook, a library should be a personal space. Think of it as a place to intermingle priceless only to you family collections. Start by making your bookcase or shelf a focal point. Stray from the traditional by searching out an unexpected vintage or antique piece such as the Civil War bookcase, a china cabinet, or cupboard. Because these types of pieces were often passed down through families, they may come with a story to add to your own. With an antique piece you will want to make sure that the shelves can support the weight of books. Never choose a piece with glass shelving for a bookcase.

    NEW TWISTS ON OLD TRADITIONS

    In our family, it’s a tradition to draw names for Christmas gifts. One year, our little granddaughter Giuliana came up with the sweet idea that instead of buying a gift, we should do something nice that didn’t cost money. There were a lot of heartfelt gestures that Christmas Eve, in the form of handwritten notes of love to the guys doing dishes. Our daughter Andrea took a creative approach in thanking David for the love he had shown throughout her life, creating a dozen handwritten personal messages on construction paper and placing them in a large jar. Beginning that day, David selected one note to read and continued the ritual for each of the eleven days that followed. The handcrafted style of the notes and loving sentiments brought the messages to life and smiles to the whole family.

    Something as simple as a child’s naïve drawing from a family celebration—like this treasured paper leaf in our library—can become the inspiration for a room.

    SAY GRACE

    The invitation came by way of a tiny little voice: Mammie and Pawpaw, will you come to Thanksgiving dinner with me at my school? It was passionately delivered with sparkling eyes and a crooked-tooth grin—an invitation no grandparent could refuse. The decorations on the dinner tables told the story of the first Thanksgiving, with Pilgrim hats handmade from coffee cans and colorful fall leaves cut from construction paper. It was a huge gathering, with little feet scurrying to find a seat so families could all celebrate together. I wondered if for some this would be the only Thanksgiving meal they would enjoy this season. A little red-haired boy sat across from us, alone and quiet. We asked him to join our family. In our hearts we felt the reason for the season and were thankful that we could be a part of this little life that means so much to us. Before we scooted away, I picked up a red paper leaf and carried it carefully in my hand. It would be a memory of this moment. It hangs on my wall

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