Decorating
With Wallpaper
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By Jaima Brown
True decorating
distinction lies in details -- little finishing
touches and unusual twists that make a room entirely
unique. To put your personal mark of creativity
in your home, do what many professional interior
designers do: Head for the border.
Wallpaper borders
are among the most versatile of decorating tools.
Furthermore, they are affordable and easy to install.
Nearly any wall takes on a more finished look
with the addition of a border. But to achieve
real distinction, think beyond merely adding a
border along the top of the wall. For new ideas,
look up and look down.
Consider, for example,
placing a decorative border on the ceiling itself,
connecting that often-ignored overhead expanse
to the walls. Decorators often refer to the ceiling
as "the fifth wall," another palette
on which to apply their art. By surrounding a
room, at the ceiling, with a continuous, unobstructed
border, you create a "tray" effect that
visually holds the room together.
Nowhere is this
technique more useful than in the kitchen. Kitchens
typically contain permanent appliances and cabinets
that separate wall space. By installing this elegant
leopard print border above the crown moulding,
the overall space has been unified while also
giving the room greater depth and height.
The border also
provides a visual transition between the kitchen
and the living room beyond it. Both the leopard
border and the banana leaf wallpaper are from
the Winnetka collection from S. A. Maxwell Co.
Like all Maxwell collections, Winnetka is arranged
in groups according to color. This assures easy
coordination among patterns within the same room
and from one room to another. All design groups
in collections by S.A. Maxwell contain several
borders in different widths.
Double-bordering
more than doubles your creativity. By combining
two borders from the Winnetka collection, we created
a truly custom border in the living room. The
four-inch leopard border, placed along the outside
perimeter of the ceiling, is the "anchor."
Banana leaves on the die-cut border repeat the
theme of the wallpaper pattern, while their sculptured,
outlined edges reach into the room.
Die-cut borders
provide sculptured-edge detailing that was once
only achieved by tedious hand-trimming around
a pattern. To install a double custom border,
combine the two patterns on a table, positioning
them exactly the way you want them to overlap
and join. Measure their combined width. Beginning
at the point where the ceiling meets the wall,
make a light pencil mark on the ceiling to show
how far your custom double border will extend
onto the ceiling. Install the straight border
first, then overlap it with the sculptured design.
This idea works equally well along the bottom
of walls, at chair rail height, or wherever else
you want to surprise the eye with something special.
Double borders
don't have to be joined together to give a room
a lift. In a guest room, we ran two different,
sculptured ivy patterns parallel to each other,
20 inches apart. Both are from S.A. Maxwell's
Wicker Park collection. The large basket and ivy
border runs just beneath the crown moulding at
the ceiling, and the diminutive die-cut ivy border
"underlines" it 20 inches below. Even
more layering is possible. You might add a vertical
stripe wallpaper between the two borders and even
place the coordinating ivy trail wallpaper from
the same collection under all these layers.
Now you're on a
roll. So why not use your border leftovers to
decorate a hat box or a group of shoe boxes and
make the inside of your guest room closet as appealing
-- and unique -- as the room you've created?
Courtesy
of ARA Content
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