Modern floral Timeless interiors inspired by nature

Charlotte Coote

Book - 2025

"From designing with floral and antique textiles to color inspiration and ideas for incorporating natural textures, this book demonstrates the endless inspiration that comes from the timelessness and elegance of nature. With mood boards, hand-drawn illustrations, and step-by-step guides, Charlotte demonstrates that finding inspiration in the outside world is always a strong and grounding foundation from which to create"--P. [4] of cover.

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747.9/Coote
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 747.9/Coote (NEW SHELF) Due Aug 2, 2025
Subjects
Published
New York : Thames & Hudson 2025, c2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Charlotte Coote (author)
Item Description
"First published in Australia in 2024 by Thames & Hudson Australia"--Colophon.
Physical Description
223 p. : col. ill. ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781760764791
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 01. The Designer's Eye
  • Chapter 02. Botanicals through the Ages
  • Chapter 03. Designing with Floral Textiles
  • Chapter 04. Antique Textiles
  • Chapter 05. Using Colours from Nature
  • Chapter 06. Introducing Natural Textiles
  • Chapter 07. Working with Flowers and Greenery
  • Art Credits
  • Acknowledgements
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Bringing the outdoors inside. Australian interior designer Coote offers a lushly illustrated volume depicting ways to incorporate natural themes, objects, and materials into home settings. Like the homes featured in publications such asArchitectural Digest andDwell, the rooms Coote shows reflect not only taste, but substantial financial means. We see, for example,Vogue editor Diana Vreeland's red floral sitting room, created by famous American designer Billy Baldwin, and the White House guest bedroom designed by Jacqueline Kennedy with the help of Rachel Lambert "Bunny" Mellon. Some of these rooms are enhanced by handcrafted pieces, such as an attractive butcher's block in a kitchen and floor tiles handmade in Mexico. Coote, who advocates reusing beautiful items, gives advice for sourcing antique textiles, which some designers find on their global travels. She provides tips for homeowners on a budget (cover a pillow, rather than a sofa, with an expensive antique fabric), and she points out the relative inexpensiveness of some natural fibers, such as sisal, wicker, and grass cloth. Chintz, imported from India, became a popular fabric for bespoke curtains and upholstery in the 1600s; by the 1800s, Western consumers were in thrall to the botanically inspired cotton. Favored by many designers, its popularity got a boost from Princess Diana's English-style chintz dresses. While many botanical fabrics and wallpapers feature large, deeply colored designs, Coote suggests ways to incorporate them so that they are not overpowering. Living on an expansive country property, she finds in the changing seasons ever-new ideas for incorporating the natural environment into her home; she devotes separate chapters to the colors that surround her in nature: blues, greens, pinks and reds, and neutral shades of browns. Featuring 308 color illustrations, this book may be inspirational for some readers, aspirational for others. Alluring ideas for decor. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.