понедельник, 17 декабря 2007 г.

A Blue & White Beach House in Boca Grande, Florida

A Blue & White Beach House in Boca Grande, Florida

This Memorial Day weekend I’m wishing we were in my favorite little hideaway, Boca Grande, Florida on tiny Gasparilla Island. Located about three hours northwest of Miami, Gasparilla Island is seven miles long, and just

one mile across at its widest. Boca Grande epitomizes “Old Florida”style, and it harkens to a bygone era full of Southern charm. There are no high-rises, no fast food restaurants, no chain stores, and no traffic lights.Billboards and other exterior advertising are banned by the Conservation District. And the thing I like most about Boca Grande is that it’s virtually unknown. Even most native Floridians have never heard of it, so Boca Grande is truly a place you can go to disappear… and leave all of your worries behind.


My husband and I fantasize about one day having a beach house in Boca Grande, and I thought I had died and gone to heaven when I saw this one, owned by interior designer JoAnn Barwick and her husband, Fred Berger.

Images and copy below via Traditional Home



Big, showy blossoms of deep pink bougainvillea and hibiscus envelop the homeowners and cheer them along the garden path that leads to the steps of their entry, approached through an old-fashioned wraparound porch.



JoAnn’s trademark blue-and-white palette is much in evidence throughout the house. She is, after all, the author of Scandinavian Country and a furniture designer whose collections for manufacturers reveal her love of 18th-century Sweden’s Gustavian style. Light, painted furniture goes hand in hand with low-maintenance, casual textiles suitable for a cottage at the beach. “All of the fabrics and textures I used are extremely casual, from ticking and linen to seagrass and wicker,” notes JoAnn.



A second sitting area in the living room, whose boundary is defined by the blue-and-white toile slipcovered chair, is just around the corner from the main window-front area. The sectional sofa and overscale ottoman ensure comfort. For the Florida beach cottage, dressing it in her favorite Swedish blue and white worked for a second reason. “The beach is just across the street, and the Gulf is an astounding blue-green. The interior is all about water colors inspired by the surroundings. It was very easy to design, as these are all my favorite colors anyway–all tones of blue, pale aquas, greens, and turquoise. Everything else is light and white.”



The glass shelves allow the built-in lighting at the top of the cabinet to shine throughout JoAnn’s displays of coral, shells, and ceramics.




JoAnn Barwick leans into her favorite furnishing–a painted wine cellar she designed after a Swedish tile stove.



Antique faience chargers are displayed above a painted bench and table. Except for an antique Chinese bamboo cabinet and a newer bamboo coffee table in the master bedroom, the furniture throughout the home is painted–either white, blue, or some combination of the colors. “There isn’t a single piece of unpainted wood furniture in our home,” JoAnn says.



JoAnn found the dining room’s Swedish-style chandelier in Vermont. “Every Swedish dining room has one,” she says.



Outdoor living is a huge part of JoAnn and Fred’s attraction to Florida. When building their cottage, they left room for an octagonal gazebo where they read, relax, and entertain. The small dining table with wicker chairs is a perfect place to enjoy morning coffee or a light lunch overlooking the water–and they can be easily moved in or out of the sun as needed.



The ceiling of the gazebo is painted a soft robin’s-egg blue, which contrasts with the brighter all-weather-fabric striped curtains that include a dash of sunny yellow.


Rockers on the wraparound front porch were designed by JoAnn.


Even the master bedroom is on the first floor for JoAnn and Fred’s ease and convenience. Stripes, checks, florals, and a toile mix serenely in the blue and white palette.



The bedroom’s antique Chinese bamboo cabinet and newer bamboo coffee table are the only unpainted wood furnishings in the home.


Even the antique carpet balls on the bamboo coffee table are blue and white.


Hand-painted more than a decade ago by well-known interior designer Marshall Watson of New York, the bed alcove was a project for a magazine. Adjacent to the guest room, the upstairs alcove was a magnet for the grandchildren as they were growing up.


Click here to see another breath-taking Boca Grande home I recently featured, and here for more on the Gasparilla Inn, decorated by Celerie Kemble’s mother, Mimi McMakin.


Happy Memorial Day! Thank you to those who have fought for our country and for our freedom!


Original article and pictures take www.theglampad.com site

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