In Metropolitan Home, she discusses the ways that working on her own home benefits her work. We had to chuckle at one of her quotes from the article on this subject - she says, "feeling vulnerable about spending buckets of money really keeps me in tune with my clients" !
Photos shown above, left to right:
1. According to the article, Hoppen's new living room occupies the entire second floor of the townhouse. Our favorite features: The black lining on the gold silk drapes, the fireplace wall covered in a reflective glass and the small sculptural Christian Liagere tables.
2. This black & white kitchen manages to look both fresh and just a little bit 80s (in a good way, of course). The vintage stools look fantastic and the sliver globe lighting is classic.
3. The dining room is slightly more rustic and homey, while still keeping up the glam. It features pendants by Kevin Reilly and Christian Liagere seating.
Check out the entire feature (by Linda O'Keefe, photographed by David Garcia) in the December issue of Metropolitan Home, on sale November 17.
(Images: David Garcia/Metropolitan Home)
I really struggle with Kelly Hoppen's work... on the one hand, she uses some of my favourite pieces -- all that Liagre... But somehow, the interiors she does impress me as boring.
I think she goes too sleek with Liagre, never adds inexpensive elements. Then it just becomes like too much buttercream -- just too rich.
Liagre himself uses his pieces in more humble interiors, and is more textural in his approach (and even introduces bold colours on occasion.). His work is typically and identifiably French I find. Kelly Hoppen's is like an updated Dynasty...
Oh, give me Ilse Crawford instead.
Am I alone in this critique?
view mschatelaine's profile
I'm with MsChatelaine on this one... while the apartment doesn't have any element I actively dislike, I just find it overstyled and cold.
I'm imagining it on a grey London day and it's making me want to turn the heat up.
view AnastasiaBeaverhausen's profile
mschatelaine: You are not alone.
view suzy8track's profile
Portobello Road is colorful, vibrant, eclectic and artistic. It exudes history while remaining current.
This place is not worthy of its milieu.
view mirandabee's profile
I agree with all the previous posts. This place is essentially uninspiring and boring.
view Wishin' I was in MIA's profile
Does the dining room look like a catalog setting for Pottery Barn to anyone else?
view bepsf's profile
mschatelaine and bepsf are right on the money.
Kelly Hoppen has been doing the same old thing for well over a decade now. There is no freshness -- just the same old nailhead and taupe and orchids and dark wood -- nothing old or quirky or surprising in the mix.
And so, yes -- even Liaigre manages to look dull.
I'm surprised she is still going.
view JoJenks's profile
LOL bepsf, "Pottery Barn" is the first thought I had when I saw the dining room! Everything looks so "off the rack."
view mirandabee's profile