Saturday, May 30, 2009

Rosanna Summer Warehouse Sale


Love to entertain? Don't miss Rosanna's summer warehouse sale TODAY in SoDo at 440 South Holgate Street. It's a fabulous opportunity to stock up on many beautiful patterns and designs from Rosanna's tableware collection. Over the years I've come away with gorgeous sets of plates, bowls, glassware and serving pieces, all at great prices. Treat yourself and then load up on gifts (think wedding, hostess, housewarming) for friends and family. I may see you there!

Friday, May 8, 2009

Revival Home & Garden Moving Sale

Revival Home & Garden, one of Seattle's brightest new shops for home design, is on the move. Beginning today, visit this Georgetown outpost and take advantage of 30% discounts on everything in the store! Then stay tuned for it's new location.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Out-of-the-ordinary gifts for a one-of-kind mom

If flowers and chocolate don't seem quite special enough for your mom, consider some of the fab finds below, perfect for that one-of-a-kind mom.


This authentic Indian drink caddy, complete with six glasses, will make outdoor entertaining a breeze. Or mom can use it on her desk for paperclips, rubber bands, thumb tacks and the like. $31. Kobo



Transistors bring back memories of breezy youth and this version is sure to make mom smile. This transistor-shaped candle was made by local designer Darin Montgomery of Urbancase. $26. Click! Design that Fits.



Flowers have begun popping up all over town and this modern, single-stem vase is the perfect way to display a beautiful bloom. $12 The Arbour. 425-454-1510.



This charming footed tray from Mexico will look great on a bedside table or Mom (and the whole family) may prefer it for drinks or hors d'oeuvres out on the patio. Colors vary. Glasses not included. $35. Red Ticking.

Friday, May 1, 2009

50% off at Veritables


Veritables is combining its two shops on East Madison, saying good-bye to its original outpost (which has been around for some 16 years) with a fabulous 50% off sale. Stop in often, as new merchandise with be added throughout the month. I came away for a great engagement present for my sister, and don't forget Mother's Day just around the corner.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Orla Kiely back in stock

Orla Kiely was Target's latest star designer for their home furnishings department. Unfortunately, stock was very limited here in Seattle, and I gave up hope of ever seeing her pieces first-hand. But she's back! Today the Issaquah Target restocked a nice selection of her pieces, including the complete set of hard-to-find canisters. Don't miss out!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Muji online, finally!

I have been waiting with baited breath to announce the new Muji online store. Ever since Muji opened its first full-fledged Muji store stateside (in NYC) in 2007, I knew it was just a matter of time before they went online. Their new website is up today, with only a few hundred items, but more are sure to be added in the near future. A boon to all all budget-conscious, design-minded shoppers!

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Cool kitchen storage

Smart grocery shopping, along with eating at home, can save your budget big bucks. But only if you take good care of your purchases once home.

Ever reach for the garlic only to find that it has dried into a knobby mass? Have you foraged in your fridge to unearth dessicated sage? Or the worst offense, observed wiggling larvae in the flour? Keep your ingredients at their peak and at the ready with these kitchen storage containers.

Produce bins
These vintage-style bins for holding garlic, onions and potatoes are reminiscent of simpler times. Just what we need in our hectic lives. $21.99 to $29.99. Amazon.com







Herb keeper

This simple herb freshener will keep your herbs snappy for up to three weeks. Herb keeper. $9. AKitchen.com










Pantry canisters

What a deal! These old-world canisters for pantry basics are an amazing buy. Set of 4, $59.99, on sale $19.99. Amazon.com











Salt cellar

Keep salt at-the-ready in this lovely, glass salt box. $7.95. Crate and Barrel







Bread box
Bread, the staff of life, deserves a home of its own. This retro bin will add a punch of color to your kitchen. Not yet available in the U.S., but coming soon!



Pasta container

If you love spaghetti, linguine and capellini, you'll need a very tall canister to fill the bill. This cool modern option fits perfectly. $15.50, on sale $13.90. Amazon.com









Butter crock

For an old-fashioned butter crock, this version has a sleek modern twist. $9.99. Amazon.com









Cookie jar

Chocolate chip? Oatmeal raisin? Peanut butter? Iced molasses? Fill this country crock with all your cookie favorites. $25.99. Target

Friday, March 20, 2009

Adirondack chic water bottle

I started saving big on my grocery budget awhile back when I stopped buying bottled water and started carrying my own filtered water in refillable bottles.

If you want to give it a try, do it in style with this trompe l'oeil, rattan wrapped aluminum water bottle. It's got Adirondack chic and is perfect for summer. $10. Pottery Barn.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Thank you Velocity Art and Design

I am just returning from Velocity Art and Design where I had an opportunity to speak at their Creative Business Growth Workshop. A big thank you to all who made this possible, including the many people who missed the inaugural Sounders game to attend!

As a now former Seattle Post-Intelligencer columnist and a PR specialist, I was excited to offer my perspective on how to promote one's self and one's company in these extraordinary times, including how to reach out to the media, what to say in an email and how to use blogs to further promote products and services.

For all those in attendance, since we didn't have time for a real Q & A, I am happy to take your questions via email at tracyschneider@comcast.net

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Home decor from the grocery store

Has your budget for home furnishings dried up? With an eye on design, I've gone grocery shopping and found some great treats that will stay with you long after the foodstuffs inside are gone.





Hip restaurants are using old fashioned bottles to serve their water, and you can too. Enjoy this sparkling lemonade and use the empty bottle - with its hinged cap - in perpetuity. Rieme sparkling lemonade, $4.59. Metropolitan Market











Whether you're stashing buttons and beads or screws and nails, everyone needs small containers to corral their things and maintain their sanity. My favorites are the Bonne Maman preserves jars. First feast on bread and these great preserves. Then make this squat, ten-sided jar with a tattersall lid a part of your home organization system. $5.29. Safeway









Mood lighting in the 70's meant a bottle of Chianti topped with a candle. The quality of Chianti has improved over the years, but mass production means their classic straw-wrapped bottles are a rarity. Don't miss this twofer! Bell'agio Chianti, $$16.49, on sale $11.98. Safeway














It's no secret that small glass juice and water bottles can be turned into great-looking vases. Restaurants use them all the time. My favorite is the fat Orangina bottle with its citrus peel texture. This vase looks good with any decor and holds a single blossom (another cost-saver) beautifully. Pack of 4, $4.29. Metropolitan Market











Turn a magnum of your favorite wine or champagne into a fab lamp. And I'm not talking rec room decor. A visit to Cafe Campagne will show you just how chic this DIY project can be. Magnum of Cook's Brut California champagne, $6.99. Costco

Have your own favorite home decor from the grocery store? Share it with me.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Welcome "Hot Finds, Cool Prices" readers!

Thank you, Seattle Post-Intelligencer readers, for letting me know how much you've enjoyed sipping your Saturday morning coffee with with me and "Hot Finds, Cool Prices". I appreciate your interest, enthusiasm and suggestions these last 2+ years, ever since I originated the column in the Home section of the newspaper.

It takes some doing, but fabulous, accessibly priced furniture and home furnishings can be found in the market, and I hope you will continue to spend Saturday mornings with me to learn about them, albeit online. Don't see what you're looking for in a current post? Check out all of 2008's past "Hot Finds", now in one spot. I'll be posting earlier "Hot Finds" over the next few weeks.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Design for the masses

Let's hope our current economic times bring about a new wave of "design for the masses" as suggested in Michael Cannell's article in today's New York Times.

Design Loves a Depression

Few of the arts benefited from the late economic boom more than design. After all, when the wealth is flowing, people don’t covet the concerts you see or the books you read. They covet the couch you bought, and then they buy a cooler one.

In the recent giddy years, signature architects and designers came to be known by their first names — Rem, Philippe, Zaha — and they were photographed as prolifically as Bono in new design hotbeds like Miami and Dubai. Brooklyn designers became the apotheosis of indie cool (thin portfolios notwithstanding), and the British collective Established & Sons and other skilled maneuverers learned to breed their self-conscious furniture selectively into limited editions that sold for the kind of prices more often found in the art world. All of which was chronicled in self-celebratory books like “S, M, L, XL” by Rem Koolhaas, a 1,300-page monograph as lush as glazed fruit and weighty as firewood.

Looking back, those of us with front-row seats might have known that this design surge would not sustain itself. Two years ago, at the Milan furniture fair, Marcel Wanders, a Dutch designer known for arty provocations, held a thumping party to show off his 15-foot-high lamps and other furniture of distorted Alice-in-Wonderland scale. Never mind that his work was upstaged by his girlfriend, Nanine Linning, who hung upside down half-naked while mixing vodka drinks from bottles affixed to a chandelier. Form followed frivolity. Function was left off the guest list.

Now, given that all those slick Miami condos are sitting empty in the sky, designers like the Campana Brothers, with their $8,910 Corallo chair, and Hella Jongerius, with her $10,615 Ponder sofa, might have a harder time selling their wares. Already designers are biting their knuckles over the damage reports. The American Institute of Architects reported that last month’s billings index, a gauge of nonresidential construction, reached its lowest level since it began collecting data in 1995.

The pain of layoffs notwithstanding, the design world could stand to come down a notch or two — and might actually find a new sense of relevance in the process. That was the case during the Great Depression, when an early wave of modernism flourished in the United States, partly because it efficiently addressed the middle-class need for a pared-down life without servants and other Victorian trappings.

“American designers took the Depression as a call to arms,” said Kristina Wilson, author of “Livable Modernism: Interior Decorating and Design During the Great Depression” and an assistant professor of art history at Clark University. “It was a chance to make good on the Modernist promise to make affordable, intelligent design for a broad audience.”

The most popular American designer of that era was probably Russel Wright, who acted as the Depression’s Martha Stewart, turning out a warmed-up, affordable version of European modern furniture, tableware and linens for a new kind of informal home life. A bentwood armchair cost $19.95. “They were not just cheap, they were beautiful, and that was a powerful combination,” Ms. Wilson said.

Design tends to thrive in hard times. In the scarcity of the 1940s, Charles and Ray Eames produced furniture and other products of enduring appeal from cheap materials like plastic, resin and plywood, and Italian design flowered in the aftermath of World War II.

Will today’s designers rise to the occasion? “What designers do really well is work within constraints, work with what they have,” said Paola Antonelli, senior curator of architecture and design at the Museum of Modern Art. “This might be the time when designers can really do their job, and do it in a humanistic spirit.”

In the lean years ahead, “there will be less design, but much better design,” Ms. Antonelli predicted.

There is a reason she and others are optimistic: however dark the economic picture, it will most likely cause designers to shift their attention from consumer products to the more pressing needs of infrastructure, housing, city planning, transit and energy. Designers are good at coming up with new ways of looking at complex problems, and if President-elect Barack Obama delivers anything like a W.P.A, we could be “standing on the brink of one of the most productive periods of design ever,” said Reed Kroloff, director of Cranbrook Academy of Art.

On the other hand, the design community talked up its role in safeguarding the world after 9/11, with little result.

Modernism’s great ambition was to democratize design. Ikea and Target have shown that the battle for cheap design can be won. The emphasis will most likely shift to greater quality at affordable prices. This time around it will be the designer’s job to discourage consumers from regarding that $30 Ikea side table as a throwaway item.

If household furnishings are to avoid landfills, says Julie Lasky, editor in chief of I.D. magazine, they must be capable of withstanding the vicissitudes of fashion — like the Aalto stool, but at a fifth of the price. “It will be about finding the sweet spot between affordability and durability,” Ms. Lasky said. This kind of innovation means rethinking the economy of production and distribution so that goods are made cheaply closer to home (or in the home, if the most radical ideas are to be taken seriously).

One way or another, design will focus less on styling consumer objects with laser-cut patterns and colored resin and more on the intelligent reworking of current conditions. Expect to hear a lot more about open-source design, and cradle-to-cradle, a concept developed by William McDonough and Michael Braungart that calls for cars, packaging and other everyday objects to be designed specifically for recycling so that their parts and materials are used and reused without waste.

The old paradigm — epitomized by shelter magazines like Architectural Digest and Dwell — that found romance in single-family homes, each with its own lawn, detached garage and septic system, may crumble under the weight of its wastefulness. One challenge will be for designers to coax us to a more efficient way of living, as the architect Lorcan O’Herlihy is doing with his light and airy schemes for multifamily dwellings in Los Angeles, a city where backyards and driveways are all but a birthright. Fewer buildings will go up, and the stock of mid-century buildings nearing the end of their lifespan will be thoughtfully reworked to make them efficient and in keeping with principles of sustainability.

If Ms. Linning’s dangling from the ceiling was a cultural moment now passed, we can look forward to others for an age in which beauty and austerity go together.

Michael Cannell is a former editor of the House & Home section of The Times and founder of thedesignvote.com.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Tumi look-alikes at Target

If your New Year's resolutions include traveling, you may be in the market for luggage that will take you (or your things) where you want to go - and back.



I'm on a tight budget so a Tumi is not in my future, but these Tumi look-alikes, a 3-piece set at Target for $174.99 and now on sale for $124.99 with free shipping, look like a great option.