Didier Ludot, The Style Harbinger

 

On 8 July, www.sothebys.com’s Paris, in association with Kerry Taylor Auctions, will stage its first auction of Haute Couture, which gathers together 150 items from the private collection of Didier Ludot.
Didier Ludot, France’s greatest “fashion antiquarian”, surely needs no introduction: his legendary Palais-Royal gallery is a must for any fashion-lover visiting Paris. Specialising and dealing in vintage fashion for more than forty years, he has carefully selected and set aside many of the most important pieces he has handled for his own personal collection.

With designs by Paul Poiret, Yohji Yamamoto, Madame Grès, Christian Dior, Cristobal Balenciaga, Azzedine Alaïa, Jean-Charles de Castelbajac, John Galliano and Comme des Garçons, Didier Ludot’s collection provides a comprehensive overview of 20th-century fashion. The 150 items in the sale are a vibrant tribute to French haute couture and the time-honoured expertise of its craftspeople, including tailors, embroiders, leatherworkers, feather merchants and lace makers. Each piece was carefully chosen by Monsieur Ludot for its technical skill, its beauty, the trademark style of the couturier who created it, or the elegance of the woman who wore it. It is to these women, famous and anonymous alike, whom Didier Ludot owes his vocation. This sale unveils their wardrobes and personal style: Chanel’s sequinned “little black dress” owned by Romy Schneider; the Duchess of Windsor’s psychedelic 60s dress; Loulou de la Falaise’s Yves Saint Laurent hat; Mona Bismarck’s Balenciaga cape; the sculptural dresses Alaïa created for Bettina; the impeccable Dior jacket designed for Josette Day; Barbara Hutton’s Cartier jewel box – and so the list goes on. These elegant women of past and present are an endless inspiration for our fantasies.

The Allure of Modern Design

Park-Laurel-Penthouse
Picture credit: Park Laurel Penthouse

 

Looking at Houses Magazine this morning, I found a picture of a living room designed by a designer named Owens. The house in question is a bungalow from the 1940s that he thoroughly enhanced by providing a modern open plan. You can just imagine what a task it must have been to transform this type of architecture to a complete original space! Pages of images disclosed the distinctions between the old and the new, public versus private – seamlessly. The inclosed spaces are infinitely elegant, with just the right amount of furniture, and style.

The designer’s usage of color went from “the least amount of dose” in order to create a more spectacular effect. The natural materials within this palette were masterfully incorporated. As a designer, I have this fundamental appreciation for simplicity, and believes that simplicity does create a great amount of elegance. Nature provides us with such rich palettes, and coming home to a “zen-like” space certainly relaxes the body, and soul.

Decorating Tips from a Showhouse

Greenbaum Interiors, Mansion in May Designer Show House

It’s been almost two weeks since the Mansion in May, a magnificent show house, opened its doors to the public in Peapack-Gladstone, New Jersey. And this year, the chosen model home is a 62,000-square-foot Louis XIV Chateau-style mansion known as Blairsden. Surrounded by breathtaking rolling hills, this majestic mansion is made of limestone and brick, and features a linear design that is classically made of tall columns, grand hallways, and elaborate carved mantles and moldings. This masterpiece was designed by the renowned architecture firm Carrere and Hastings, which by the way were also responsible for the construction of the New York Public Library, the Frick mansion on 5th Avenue, the U.S. Senate and House office buildings and several large mansions in Newport, Rhode Island.

This grande dame of beaux arts-style mansion was decorated by approximately 50 designers, one of whom I’m very familiar with his work, James Rixner. James designed the grand salon at Blairsden, a beautiful and bright room which was generously decorated with furniture from the Italian company Columbo Mobili. He used elegant design accents from the legendary glass and lighting company, Baccarat, and finished the room with heavenly textiles from Clarence House.

This season, Mansion in May is the show house that is not to be missed. Blairsden is managed by The Women Association, who are now in their 17th year of running this noteworthy charity that benefits the Goryeb Children’s Hosptial at Morristown Medical Center. During their last fund raising for Mansion in May, they’ve raised an impressive $1.2 Million which benefited the expansion of the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, and a new Pediatric Autism and Child Development Center. The Showhouse is open to the general public now until Saturday, May 31, 2014.

Clarence House textiles in one of the guest bedroom
Interior designer James Rixner‘s grand salon 
Scott Seibold of Canterbury Design brought to life the kitchen at Blairsden
Photos by High End Weekly™
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