Sunday, October 11, 2009

Morticia would like these

http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/S79829370

AKURUM Base cabinet with shelves
Our floor color ended up being more of an orangeish/brownish with a hint of red, which I actually like better than the Santa Fe Red Mr Wright used.

I had been worried that our greenish/teal oriental rug in the living room would mean we'd be living in a perpetual "Christmas mode" but this will be fine. It also means that we had to rethink the kitchen cabinets and we opted for the brown/black cabinet drawers and doors, which also means we saved nearly half of what we planned to spend down there because our first choice was, of course, the most expensive. And at IKEA, you can opt for drawers rather than shelves inside the cabinet. One of my sisters, BB, has drawers rather than shelves and I have coveted them for years...

I don't know what Frank would think of black cabinets in the kitchen, which he refused to label kitchen in his blueprints, preferring the term workspace.
I find that whenever we talk about doing anything, we spend an inordinate amount of time wondering if Wright would approve of it, and even though he's not here to give his opinion one way or another, we are just like his paying clients. We want to respect his work.

On our tour of the Rosenbaum house in Florence, Alabama, we were all marveling on how tiny the furniture was. It turns out that Wright designed all the furniture for what he considered an "average" person-5'8 1/2"-exactly his height. This would have been fine, except that the Rosenbaums, both mother and father and their sons were all tall... Julia Child tall. But, they used his tiny chairs, squeezed their basketball player thighs under the low dining table and never thought twice about it. When asked why on earth they just didn't get furniture more suitable for their frames, Mrs. Rosenbaum replied, "Mr. Wright wouldn't like it."

I don't think I'd be uncomfortable for 50 years to please the man, but I would like to think he didn't hate the choices we're making.

No comments:

Post a Comment