
Bold View. Besides being full of well-edited color choices, Frank Roop's luxurious rooms often feature striped curtains of his own design. The above images are rooms of Frank's Boston duplex that appear in the November issue of Elle Decor...

Bold View. Besides being full of well-edited color choices, Frank Roop's luxurious rooms often feature striped curtains of his own design. The above images are rooms of Frank's Boston duplex that appear in the November issue of Elle Decor...
The curtains on the left are made from linen and velvet � an interesting textural juxtaposition! We love the dramatic look of these tall curtains found in Frank's other work...



(Pics: Eric Roth)
can we ignore the window coverings for a second and discuss the walls? I'd like to do something similar to the second to last image. anyone know where I can get a DIY tutorial on that?
view hipersons's profile
Easy. Get a marble- or another stone-pattern wallpaper and cut into appropriately sized blocks. Or buy brown-paper-bag paper and cut into stone-size blocks and stick them into place with wallpaper paste, etc.
view readingglasses's profile
Although I'm sure these stripes are printed or woven, the looks reminds me of drapes that both Linda Barker and Lawrence Llewelyn-Bowen have sewn for rooms they designed on BBC's "Changing Rooms."
I sewed something similar, albeit with a combination of more girly print fabrics, when I moved before getting around to sewing curtains, and the windows at my new place were significantly taller, thus requiring more fabric than I had on hand. I added stripes of two other fabrics that I had on hand to make my drapes long enough for the new windows. Loved the results!
view bohemiangirlpdx's profile
The second to the last pic looks like a variety of different kinds of metallic leafing.... silver, gold, and variations of those.
Readingglasses, I worked in a Design House where one of the decorators used a speckly deckle-edged paper to create the look of large stone slabs. It looked wonderful.
view btoddster's profile
These look great but I would caution non-sewers and the non-OCD-types that getting horizontal stripes to align between the two curtains on opposite sides of the window is HEINOUSLY DIFFICULT. Getting a look this crisp requires hours of work measuring and re-hanging to get it exactly right.
I would suggest that this is not a great DIY project for a first-time curtain hanger or curtain sewer; stick to vertical stripes (which don't need to align), or no stripes. Or, get some wide velvet or grosgrain ribbon and "tack" (loosely sew) it to solid-color curtains to get a stripe that is easier to estimate and manage and fix if/when you get it wrong.
Cheers!
view scormeny's profile