Laundry
Rooms That Shed Washday Blues -- Decorating With Wallpaper
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Whether the household laundry is done in a single
weekly marathon session or in stolen hours throughout
the week, keeping the family’s wardrobes and household
linens fresh and clean takes, on average, between five
and seven hours a week. In today’s time-pressed
world, it’s small wonder that laundry rooms have
moved from the dark recesses of the basement to a convenient
location in the heart of the home.
The
trend today is to locate the laundry room near bedrooms
and baths, where most dirty laundry accumulates. Bigger
laundry rooms, with space for folding, mending, pressing
and storing linens, are on most homebuyers’ wish
lists and, therefore, a major trend among homebuilders
and remodelers. Another trend is to give the laundry
room the same upscale decorating attention given to
every other room in the home.
Raising the status of the laundry
room can turn a once-tedious chore into a refreshing
time out -- a relaxing hour or two solely devoted to
taking care of the fabrics of our lives. Today, thankfully,
more and more of those fabrics are washable and keeping
them fresh and clean is another way to pamper ourselves.
To help in this effort, Jaima
Brown Home wallpaper and fabric collections contain
patterns especially designed to cure the washday blues.
One of the most whimsical of these, “Iron, Butterflies”
in the Mah-Jong collection, truly lightens the wash
load. Old-fashioned irons virtually skip across the
wallpaper, playfully tossing their cords behind them
among a flutter of butterflies and a scatter of wooden
clothespins.
The pattern is available on a
crisp, white background, or in a choice of pastels with
punch, such as turquoise, lemon yellow, or cream. A
coordinating border simply lines up beautifully shaped,
old wooden clothespins in a row. Some stand tall, others
tilt, and, together, they become almost personified
-- a band of nearly cartoon-like soldiers, ready for
duty.
For a traditional home, the “Washday”
pattern from the Jaima Brown Home Parasol collection
features images of an antique washing machine and other
vintage washday references, each contained within a
harlequin pattern of laurel leaves. A companion border
shows clothes on a clothesline, cheerfully wafting in
the breeze.
Storage is crucial to today’s
laundry room, which now calls for a variety of detergents,
softeners and stain-fighting treatments. For a room
papered in the Washday pattern, we installed a deep-bowl
sink with a high faucet in a cabinet that contains door
and drawer storage below and tall, windowed door storage
above on either side of the sink. The deep bowl and
high faucet make it easy to maneuver hand laundry. Detergents
are hidden behind closed doors, while the prettier containers
of such popular products as fragrant linen waters, decorate
from within the windowed doors. To showcase them, we
lined those cabinets with a dark-ground coordinating
wallpaper pattern of the laurel-leaf harlequin design
from Parasol. The drawers keep smaller items, like lint
brushes and needles and thread, handy.
You might put a painted ceramic
bowl or mug on the counter to hold the coins, paperclips
and other small objects that inevitably make their way
into the pockets of jeans and shirts. Or, you can use
a piece of the leftover wallpaper border to cover a
small box or coffee can that serves the same purpose.
Folding ironing boards can be
concealed behind tall cabinets. And don’t forget
to include an ample shelf or tabletop for folding linens.
For your comfort, set it higher than traditional cabinet
height --see what’s best for you, and allow enough
space below for hampers or rolling clothes trolleys
that carry the unsightly jumble of laundry into this
room and roll it out again, all sweet-smelling, folded
and fresh. To see more of the fine fabric and wallpaper
patterns in Parasol, Mah-Jong and other Jaima Brown
Home collections, suitable for every room in the house,
call (888) 865-0200 or visit www.jaimabrownhome.com.
Jaima Brown Home collections are available through interior
designers and select designer showrooms.
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