Just Leave Everything to Me

Over the holidays, I helped redesign my sister and brother-in-law’s home in Phoenix. They have an elegant, casual, Southwestern style house.

The mission: update the house with new, modern pieces.

Barry Goralnick, Interior Design, Phoenix Home, Circa Lighitng, Visual Comfort

Newly appointed living room in Phoenix home

The directive: only use leather on the upholstery, so they don’t have to limit visiting grandchildren, plus desert sand makes cleaning a constant challenge. They prefer clean modern lines for the furniture, and requested new carpets to anchor the seating groups.

We also added seating-level lighting to complement the existing overhead lighting.  All the existing architectural lighting is 18 feet above, which casts shadows on guests and makes it difficult to read.

My sister’s favorite color is red, so naturally that had to be expressed in a few key spots. Oh yes, they wanted it done right away – and in a cost effective way.

Barry Goralnick, Interior Design, Phoenix Home, Circa Lighitng, Visual Comfort

View toward the fireplace

We removed all the furniture except the vintage posters that they have been collecting for years. We shopped local retail outlets, and for lighting I installed my own designs from Visual Comfort at Circalighting.com. One of my favorite pieces is the live-edge console with polished chrome legs at the entry.  The rooms are large, so I chose carpets with large, over-scaled patterns.

Barry Goralnick, Interior Design, Phoenix Home, Circa Lighitng, Visual Comfort

Room details featuring: Goralnick Visual Comfort Lighting, live-edge console, and red leather chairs.

Barry Goralnick, Interior Design, Phoenix Home, Circa Lighitng, Visual Comfort

Goralnick for Visual Comfort Diana Floor Lamp and Selene Table Lamp, both in Nickel

They’re very happy with the result, and we are now moving on to other rooms. This is a sneak peak of the family room below.

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The New Year is getting off to a good start.

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The BoY from Ahs

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Cindy Allen presents Barry Goralnick the Best of Year for his Norma Table for Vanguard Furniture

Nearly 1,000 guests joined Interior Design to celebrate the winners of the 2016 Best of Year awards last week. Interior Design Editor-in-Chief, Cindy Allen and Publisher, Carol Cisco started the night by announcing the winners in the product categories to a packed house (view all winners here).

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This is the 11th edition of Interior Design‘s Best of Year Awards (aka The BoY awards), which honors the very best design to emerge in the past year.

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The IAC Building in Chelsea

The Boy Awards were presented at the IAC Building designed by Frank Gehry, who was my last professor when I studied at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

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Nearly 1,000 people attended

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Interior Design‘s Editor-in-Chief, Cindy Allen and an array of BoY awards

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Cindy Allen announces the Norma Cocktail Table as the winner

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Barry with Helen Oberman, Managing Editor of Interior Design and Keith Gordon

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The Best of Year winning Norma Cocktail Table from Barry Goralnick for Vanguard Furniture

New York Interior Design Boy Awards Barry Goralnick

Other winners and celebrators include: (from upper left clockwise): Andréa Rubelli of Donghia, Lori Weitzner, Jeff Frank of Brentano, Lee Mindel, Enrique Godoy Ynzengo and Arturo Alvarez, Patrizio Chiarparin and John Jerken, Anastasia Su and Martin Lesjak, and Cindy Allen and Andrew Dent of the Material Connexion. Photos by Erik Bardin and Keith Claytor/Time Frozen.

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The Norma tabletop made of polished French brass and Agaria marble inlay

 

Photos by Erik Bardin, Keith Claytor/Time Frozen,  Wendy Silverstein, Keith Gordon.

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A Little Style on the Side

They’ve been around for centuries, but over the course of a couple hundred years, they’ve been called different things – petite salon tables, urn stands, telephone stands, cigarette tables and martini tables.The latter stuck as a popular label in the 1930s, the era when Dashiell Hammett’s Nick and Nora were swigging martinis in and Art Deco style especially suited this namesake table. These pieces stuck around in mid-century models, but after came decades of gap years, especially when cocktail tables trended to greater scale.But in the past few years, there’s been more than a blip on the home decor radar. And the popularity of the television series “Mad Men” resurrected talk about a drinking culture lifestyle from the 1960s and 1970s, according to Michelle Lamb, founding director of The Trend Curve, a forecaster for the home furnishings industry.

Barry Goralnick Vanguard Furniture, Hedy Martini Table, Brass and Chrome,

Hedy Table for Vanguard by Barry Goralnick

“Suddenly there were home bars and all these drink tables. If you think about how millennials live—everyone with few exceptions has a home bar. They’re doing cocktails, designer drinks. They live in environments that often are quite temporary. These tables are perfect for that. Perfect for entertaining.”

The clever mostly tall-and-thin drink tables also are nostalgic to baby boomers and compelling for Generation X, says Lamb.

“Martini tables are the perfect size to rest a drink, book or the remote,” says Bob Williams, co-founder and design director of Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams. “They take up a small footprint and add interesting shape, texture, color and style to a room. They even become a focal point, though they might be the smallest piece in the space. Mitchell and I feel every sofa and chair needs a table beside it (or one in between two chairs), and these tiny tables are the perfect solution. You get tremendous bang for your decorating buck as they are so practical, stylish and are usually not the most expensive piece, so using them is an opportunity to show off your style sense without taking big risks.”

Last fall, San Francisco designer Jay Jeffers included five martini tables in a collection he designed for the Dallas-based lighting and furniture manufacturer Arteriors. The group includes entertaining accoutrements such as trays, bowls and ice buckets in his “collected cool” style.

Barry Goralnick Vanguard Furniture, Hedy Martini Table, Brass and Chrome, Vittorio Table

Vittorio Martini Table from Vanguard by Barry Goralnick

In the spring, New York architect/designer Barry Goralnick introduced 15 16- to 18-inch martini tables in a line for Vanguard, part of his take on “Blended Modern.” What’s noteworthy is that they’re not just variations of wood or metal finishes. They are well thought out, with specific design references, definitely shaken and stirred up.

“Each has its own story,” says Goralnick. “There are different looks — something for everybody. They become kind of jewelry. A piece that makes a room look finished attracts the eye, with a little sex appeal. It makes a room feel good about itself. And as we joke, they’re small enough you can throw one into your SUV or an Uber.”

They range from really tiny, 8-inch-square or round surfaces to about 18 inches, sometimes larger if the base is slim. Many have pedestals or tripod bases (with up to eight legs, straight or splayed), or even open caged looks. They’re priced from under $60 to $3,000. Retailers range from Target to RH and high-end designers, where you may find solid bronze models as pricey as $8,000.

Barry Goralnick Vanguard Furniture, Hedy Martini Table, Brass and Chrome, Bracelet Table

Bracelet Table by Barry Goralnick

At the high end, there are upscale figured woods like macassar ebony, gilt or silver leaf finishes, brass, stainless steel, glass or acrylic materials. There even are rustic models, like the live edge acacia wood slab tabletop over tripod that looks like branches and actually is crafted from brass from Hooker Furniture. One classical shape from Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams in acrylic with a glass tops is dressed up with stylish bands of gold. One of Kelly Wearstler’s designs features figured marble with its black-and-white pattern a part of the design. Jay Jeffers pays homage to color blocking and Mondrian with his slim black-and-white table. There are Eastern inspirations and industrial styles as well as edgy motifs. One table from the (East) Indian company Geometria has a black skull inlaid with bone and wood veneer on tapered legs striped in turned wood and brass.

Some new wrinkles: tiers and removable trays. Chicago designer Julia Buckingham even designed an acrylic trinket table for Global Views, available in pale purple, blue and clear, with a jewelry-like box in a chain link frame that extends to its legs. It’s 11 1/4 by 15 3/4 inches and stands 22 3/4 inches.

Williams recommends contrasting materials, textures and colors. “If you have wood case goods in a room, use a martini table in a shiny metal. If you have a lot of metal, choose one in wood or acrylic. You can even change out with your mood or with the seasons,” says Williams.

As small as they may be, so many of these martini tables have supersized personalities, and it’s pretty easy to find one to suit your style.

“We’re always coming out with new pull-up tables each season,” says Williams. “The scale is perfect — whether your room is small or large. There’s always a space and a need.”

“In the last year,” says Kim Shaver, a spokeswoman for Hooker Furniture, “martini tables have been in all of our major collections. They’re as essential as an end or coffee table.”

Goralnick says that these accent pieces are called spot tables in the industry — “because they hit the spot.”

Spot on.

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