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Live with Objects: A Guide to Meaningful & Royal Interiors

Live with Objects: A Guide to Meaningful & Royal Interiors

$ 98.11

Note: This is not a reprint. The original paperback or hardcover edition has been purchased directly from the authorized distributor or publisher. The book purchased has been carefully bound in genuin...

Description

Note: This is not a reprint. The original paperback or hardcover edition has been purchased directly from the authorized distributor or publisher. The book purchased has been carefully bound in genuine leather to enhance its durability and extend its shelf life. Please be assured that no content or pages have been altered or reformatted during the leather binding process. Product Information: - Title of Product: How to Live with Objects: A Guide to More Meaningful Interiors by Monica Khemsurov [Royal Edition] Author: Monica Khemsurov Number of Pages: 320 Publication Year: 2022 Language: English Book Synopsis: - From the editors of Sight Unseen, an anti-decorating book that champions a new approach to interiors?simply surrounding yourself with objects you love.?A refreshing, and necessary, counternarrative to shop-this-look consumerism and the aesthetic sameness that afflicts so many interiors.??VultureIn the modern home, it matters less whether your interior is perfectly appointed and more if it?s authentically personal, unique, and filled with the objects you feel a connection to. Through inspiring home tours and practical advice on how and what to collect, Sight Unseen editors Monica Khemsurov and Jill Singer take you on an educational and highly visual journey through the questions at the core of their design philosophy: ? What makes an object worth having?? How do our objects impact our lives? Khemsurov and Singer guide collectors, design lovers, and novices alike toward a more intentional and skilled mindset in acquiring and living with objects. The book acts as a detailed primer on how to maximize the visual and emotional impact of your space, regardless of your space limitations, style preferences, or budget. From a deep dive into the world of vintage-hunting to anecdotes about favorite objects from creatives like Misha Kahn and Lykke Li to expert styling tips, How to Live with Objects is an indispensable tool for anyone who wants to make their house a home. Author Overview: - Monica Khemsurov and Jill Singer are cofounders of the online magazine Sight Unseen, one of the most influential design publications in the United States. Former editors of I.D. magazine, they also work as freelance writers, curators, and consultants. Khemsurov is a contributing editor for T: The New York Times Style Magazine and a contributor to Bon App?tit, Bloomberg Businessweek, and W, while Singer?s writing has appeared in PIN-UP, Elle D?cor, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, W, and more. Both live and work in New York City.Excerpt. ? Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.IntroductionWhat is it that defines a home? Is it the perfectly chosen paint colors? The moldings, the archways, or the beams? Is it the matching nightstands, the puddled curtains, the tiled bathrooms, the oak-plank floors? For years, shelter magazines and design books defined a home that was worth having?and, by extension, a home that was worth showing off to the world?as one that was decorated just so, that paid attention to those kinds of details, and that was often brought to life by someone with professional expertise in such matters. And while those homes were often beautiful, they sometimes evoked an uneasy sense of anonymity; you got the same feeling from looking at them as you did from flipping through the catalog of a big-box furniture store. You wondered, ?Who, exactly, lives here??When we founded our online magazine Sight Unseen more than a decade ago?with the mission to provide readers with a highly personal look at design objects and the creative people behind them?we made a conscious decision to approach interiors from a radically different point of view. We believed, and still do, that while layout and fixtures and fabrics can all play a part in making a space aesthetically pleasing, it?s the objects you surround yourself with that truly give your home its soul: the vintage Danish chair you found at a flea market, the indigo vase you bought from an LA ceramicist, the candlesticks a friend brought back from Mexico, the side table you?ve been saving up to buy from a designer you follow on Instagram. These objects are the story you tell to the world about your personality and your obsessions, your experiences and your memories, your desires and your intentions. Infused with your personal narrative, they provide a catalyst for conversation when friends visit (or virtually view) your home, and a comfort for when you?re cooped up inside, as so many of us were in recent years.At the start of 2020, three weeks into quarantine, we got an email from a literary agent in New York asking if we might be interested in writing a book; stuck at home, people were looking for inspiration and new ways to think about their interiors. A Sight Unseen book was something we?d thought about?and been asked about?for years, but had never pursued, partly because the idea of putting together a compendium of our past stories, or our favorite homes and design studios, never really felt momentous enough to us. But the pandemic brought us a whole new perspective. When we thought about what we were collectively going through at the time, and how our objects were such a huge source of comfort in isolation, it became clear that we had to write this book: How to Live with Objects, a comprehensive guide to incorporating meaningful works of art and design into your home. The book would be expansive enough that its ideas could remain relevant for years to come, and it would allow us to combine all of our interests, and everything we?d learned over the course of our careers, into a single volume. The idea that you should accumulate, not decorate. The idea that opposing forces, like contemporary and vintage, ought to live in harmony in your space. The idea that it?s okay to think about your home not as something to be completed, but as a forever work in progress, in the same way that you yourself probably are. Plus, everything you?ve always wanted to know about objects: why they?re important, who makes them, what makes them valuable, how to acquire them, and, ultimately, how to put them together in a way that?s warm, inviting, and extremely personal?without a hefty budget or the help of an interior designer or decorator.These ideas have always felt personal to us, because it was objects that paved the way for our interest in design. Neither of us studied design in school?we?re both trained as journalists? but both of us had formative experiences with design by way of the domestic items we grew up with. When Jill looks back on her suburban Midwestern childhood, she remembers the tulip-patterned Marimekko sheets, the wooden highboy engraved with yellow flowers, the lamp depicting a unicorn resting in a garden, and the sofa embroidered with tropical florals. Monica, growing up in Ohio, actually lived with some design classics, like Breuer?s Cesca and Wassily chairs. But as a lover of all things colorful and sparkly, her bedroom as a five-year-old consisted of wild Memphis-style sheets and a funny collection of Swarovski crystal animals that her dad brought her each time he came home from a work trip. These objects remain firmly implanted in our memories and represent the first time we experienced a strong emotional connection to our physical environment.As a child, when you live with things someone else has chosen for you, you either don?t feel anything for them at all or you ascribe meaning to them via your imagination. Things also tend to hold more meaning when they act as your introduction to something, which is why your favorite album is often the first one you heard by that band, or why your first love sticks with you for so long. As you grow older, it?s important to keep intact the magic of those childhood things. If you can choose your objects with care, educating yourself about where they came from and making the experience of acquiring them part of the story?rather than, say, throwing a bunch of stuff into your cart as you browse a Target late at night?your relationship to objects can become exponentially more meaningful as you age.At its core, that?s what this book is about, and it?s an idea we?ve been exploring ever since we founded Sight Unseen. In the early days, when we would visit one of our creative friends for the site?s popular At Home With column, we focused on objects partly out of necessity. We often couldn?t afford a photographer, and we weren?t adept enough image-makers to create the kind of perfect sweeping room views readers want to see in their home tours. But we were also inherently more interested in our subjects? possessions than in how well coordinated their living rooms were. We?d ask them to show us their favorite books, or tell us more about the objects on their shelves that may have played a part in inspiring their work. We?d beg for the history behind architect Rafael de Cardenas?s vintage Ikea chair, or ask to peek inside the pages of creative director Joseph Magliaro?s Alessandro Mendini?designed Casabella magazines. The goal of Sight Unseen has always been to tell the stories behind the stuff? both the things people have made and the things they?ve acquired?and that always felt like the best way to understand our subjects on a deeper level. Objects were the perfect conduit for our storytelling.At the time of Sight Unseen?s founding in 2009, we were one of the only publications doing the work of demystifying the world of design for people outside the industry and focusing on the importance of objects and how they?re made. Design was still a niche interest when we started, one much lower on the totem pole of cultural relevance than fashion or art. Our friends working in those industries didn?t pay too much attention to what we were doing, nor did they really seem to understand it. But over the past decade, we?ve watched the world tilt in our direction. Provenance?the idea that knowing where something came from makes it inherently more valuable?was always a thing in the vintage furniture market, but it was around that time that people started to truly be interested in throwing back the curtain on all of the possessions they sought to acquire. This curiosity had its roots in the slow food movement, but it soon expanded to areas such as beauty, fashion, and contemporary design, with a raft of online magazines suddenly popping up to interrogate the building blocks of our closets, our medicine cabinets, and our domestic spaces.It was probably social media, though, that created a perfect storm in terms of accelerating the personal style revolution and the ascendancy of design in popular culture. Instagram debuted not even a year after we started Sight Unseen, and people began obsessively documenting the world around them, then turned their cameras on their own homes. Social media is how a six-foot-tall, neon-pink Ettore Sottsass mirror went from being a luxury reserved for people like Karl Lagerfeld to a selfie spot at New York?s Opening Ceremony to the ultimate influencer accessory (and subject of a 2019 New York magazine profile). It?s how terrazzo took over the world, as people began posting photos of the floors beneath them on their travels, a look that soon translated into housewares and accessories. It?s how a series of previously under-the-radar archival chair designs?ranging from Mario Botta?s metal rollback Seconda to the spidery ?80s-era Ekstrem to Herman Miller?s gum-inspired Chiclet?became status symbols and household names. ?To own one was to buy a new kind of social media bragging rights?a sign of in-the-know sophistication,? the fashion trade magazine WWD wrote about the phenomenon. Product Description: This exquisite book is crafted exclusively for discerning readers and collectors who seek to elevate and preserve their literary treasures. Bound in GENUINE LEATHER, it showcases the finest craftsmanship with luxurious GOLDEN LEAF DETAILING adorning the spine, front cover, and back cover. The elegance is further enhanced by EDGE GILDING, giving the book an opulent finish. Customize Your Leather-Bound Edition with Color Options: - 1. Select from a wide array of leather colors at no additional cost. Share your preferred leather color with us via email. 2. Choose from a diverse range of leather colors with colored marbles (endpaper), including Brown, Crimson Red, Forest Green, Royal Blue, Rich Black, Hot Pink, Yellow, And Tan . 3. For a truly unique touch, request Multi-Color Labels to complement your custom leather-bound book spine. 4. Own a timeless masterpiece that adds sophistication to any collection! Artisan Quality and Dispatch Information: - ● We appreciate your understanding that these Leather-Bound Books are meticulously crafted works of art, requiring significant time and attention to detail to achieve their exceptional quality. ● Our standard handling time for dispatch is 35 business days, as each book undergoes various stages of production. However, we do accommodate special & requests for specific occasions. ● We offer additional customization options upon request, subject to extra charges. Additionally, we handle both printing and leather binding for all books. ● Product Disclaimer : Please note that as Leather is a Natural Material, minor variations in color or texture may occur.

Specifics

Author

Monica Khemsurov

Book Title

How to Live with Objects: A Guide to More Meaning [Royal Edition]

Country/Region of Manufacture

India

Features

Premium Leather Bound

Format

Premium Leather Bound

Genre

Arts & Photography>Architecture

ISBN

DoesNotApply

Intended Audience

Adults

Language

English

Note

Indian Artwork by Renowned Craftsman, Shipped from the USA

Original Language

English

Pages

320

Personalize

Customization Option available with nominal extra charges.

Publication Year

2022

Topic

Arts & Photography>Architecture

Type

Book

gtin13

DoesNotApply

Reviews

  1. Jailman Tough

    Absolutely PERFECT transaction! I ordered this book mid April, and when I hadn't seen any activity for a few days I decided to contact the seller (normally items paid are usually shipped within 2-3 days and this was going a week, so it raised a red flag). Due to my own ignorance, I was reassured immediately that the book's cover was being hand crafted and would take time, explaining the extra time. Long story short, this was worth the wait!Very responsive seller, HIGHLY recommended. THANK YOU!

  2. Ravindra Kumar

    Everything is fine, but the seller told me I could have an engraving placed on the cover. I sent them a picture of the engraving, and they acknowledged they got it, but when I got the item they never did it. In addition they claim they never got my picture which is not true, seeing I have their email response. I was disappointed by this, but I would have gotten this book even without the engraving, so all is well.

  3. Alexandre Beaupré

    I was very happy to see how well packaged my book I ordered was, double rain-proof, because it was left on the steps and was quite wet from heavy rain. But, inside double wrapping, it was very dry and in great condition. Very happy with seller!