What We Loved from Around the Web…
Margherita Missoni’s home is teeming with color and playful patterns—exactly what you’d expect from a member of the famous Italian fashion family.
A photographer takes us inside a neoclassical 18th-century château in the French countryside.
Filled with rich hues, charming prints, and more sophisticated design details, Southern Living’s 2018 Idea House in Austin, TX, is a must-see.
Tour a New York City townhome that exudes endless comfort and calm.
This inventive pizza recipe is perfect for an end-of-summer dinner party.
J+G Design gives a New York apartment a fresh new look for a young couple. Photo by Genevieve Garruppo.
Marie Flanigan Interiors makes over a dated Texas home. Photo courtesy of Marie Flanigan Interiors.
What We’ve Been Up To…
We’re lucky to have partnered with some of our favorite A-list designers, dreaming up special product collaborations, touring their homes and gardens, and hitting them up for their expert advice. We also feature client projects from talented up-and-comers who create gorgeous homes as luxurious as they are livable. For a dose of inspiration, check out some recent work by Tharon Anderson, J+G Design, Marie Flanigan Interiors, Pappas Miron Design, and Kati Curtis right here.
Interested in having your own work featured on One Kings Lane? Send a few photos and a summary of a recent project (preferably one that has not been featured elsewhere) to editorial@onekingslane.com.
Photo by Lesley Unruh.
A Parting Piece of Knowledge…
As a medium for artistic expression, colored glass has been around for quite some time: Elaborate stained-glass windows have adorned churches for more than a millennium, the Venetians mastered glassmaking on the island of Murano in the 13th century, and Louis Comfort Tiffany perfected the art of leaded glass with his iconic lamps in the late 1800s.
And while handblown glass can cost a fortune, machine-made glassware can be just as alluring—and a great place to start when building your own collection of colored glass. In an effort to enliven Depression-era households, glassmakers in the early 20th century began producing colorful transparent glassware that could be given away for free or sold at a very low cost. Today Depression glass is prized for its unique colors and etched patterns, and collectors seek out favorite patterns in vintage and antiques shops across the country.
Whether in the form of a simple tumbler or an elaborate chandelier, try out colorful glassware in your space to bring home home the boldly beautiful appeal.
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