Category Archives: General living and fun stuff

Upholstery tips


I could do with a bit of advice.

My husband and I have 6 dining room tables that we love. The current upholstery however has seen better days. The colour is still fine, and it looks OK from a distance, but a closer look learns that it might be time to have them redone.  I myself am thinking of a velours or heavy cotton/wool type fabric with a rich texture in a light or maybe dark grey.

Dining room chair

Dining room chair

Then we have this antique arm chair. It came from my parents old house and they don’t have room for it in their apartment. I believe it used to belong to my late grandmother. We love the wood and style but are not too pleased with the colour of the fabric on the seat. I think a big floral pattern in maybe a heavy silk or rich cotton mix in blue/green/grey or, to match the red corduroy sofa, a red floral pattern would look great.

arm chair

arm chair

What do you guys think?

How to score cheap antiques or design online!


The internet has allowed us to serve our ever increasing demands and needs faster than ever before. If you decide you want a Queen Anne chest or Louis Seize sofa in your bedroom, you can easily get it within a week. In the pre-internet days you had to wait until your local antiques store stumbled across one. Or you had to drive to France, the home of real flea markets. An alternative was to take a sudden and feigned interest in your great aunt so that when the old lady finally decided to kick the bucket you would inherit her furniture. Glad those days are over right?

Now, there are online auctions and flea markets like eBay and for Dutch readers; Marktplaats.
Surely there are German, French, Italian, English and other equivalents so please read on.

A good tip when cruising the web for great finds is to misspell what you are looking for.
Instead of Louis Seize search for Louis Seise or Lois Seize. People that make such mistakes usually don’t know the value of antiques so might think $100 is a huge deal for that old steh-im-weg in their basement or attic.

If I type Louis Seise in Google I get around 150 hits. One of them brings me to this website http://home19.inet.tele.dk/furnitur/Contentframe.htm#Chairs which is the private collection of a certain Mr Hansen from Denmark. Mmm… maybe he does know his way around antiques…However, it looks like all these chairs could be well made replica.

I really like this Louis Seise chair!

Painted Louis 'Seise' chair

Painted Louis 'Seise' chair

And this Gustavian piece. Nice!

Gustavian arm chair

Gustavian arm chair

Let’s look at the Dutch site Marktplaats. Louis Seise doesn’t return any hits. ‘Antieke sofa’ (antique sofa) secures 31 results. On of them with a vague picture of a sofa that looks like it rolled out of an Eastern European furniture factory yesterday! The kind that was all the rage for spoiled children’s rooms in the eighties. Dear sellers, just because it’s old and made of wood doesn’t make it an antique!

I did find this fantastic sofa that is listed to be a Biedermeier…. I’ll have to do a bit of research but if that is true, the asking price of €895 is a good deal!

Is it Biedermeijer, Biedermeier or Neithermeier?

Is it Biedermeijer, Biedermeier or Neithermeier?

Then let’s look for a true designer piece; the Barcelona Chair by Mies van der Rohe. Unfortunately everybody on Marktplaats knows how to spell Barcelona…. The differences in asking prices are vast though. Ranging anywhere between €450 and €2500… Make sure it’s genuine when you score one for under €1000!

Looking for Philip Starck or Phillipe Starck brings back a few hits too. In general the rule is to be creative and try other key words than the actual name of the designer. Instead of Barcelona Chair type in modern leather chair or design chair. Also, don’t be scared of a little drive to the other end of your country or state. Remember; in the end it will be all worth it if you can tell your friends that yes, that is a genuine Charles Eames and yes, you bought it for €350 and drove 3 hours to get it.

Happy hunting, and please share your stories with me!

Divine Design with Candice Olson


God bless cable, and God bless digital TV even more! Discovery Travel & Living brings us Dutch viewers the godess of design: Candice Olson wit her show Divine Design! In a mere few days this Canadian lady turns around entire hooses to little design Edens. With contageous enthousiasm and a great sense of humour she brightens up my day every time I see her. 

6 feet of design genius
6 feet of design genius

Somehow her site is no longer accepting members so the most exiting bits, the member areas, remain forbidden for me. This means that her site actually leaves quite a bit to wish for. Check it out anyway; www.divinedesign.tv

There are some bits and tips on there that might be helpful.

Her show however is truly one to watch. If you need quick, handy, easy to use and not too expensive tips on how to decorate your hoose, make sure to tune in. Her site should tell you where and when it airs in your area. If you are not sure, there’s always Google.

Candice also has her own line of furniture with Norwalk Furniture. Unfortunately not yet available this end of the pond but our North American readers should be able to find a retailer not too far away.

The cool thing about her furniture is that you get to customize it to your personal taste.

You can check out their website on www.norwalk furniture.com.

Candice, please branch out and come to Europe!

Candice Olson line sofa. Photograph courtesy of House of Oak and Sofas
Candice Olson line sofa. Photograph courtesy of House of Oak and Sofas/Norwalk Furniture

Try securing a bit of outside space in an Amsterdam monument…


My husband (gosh, that still sounds weird) and I bought an amazing two story apartment on the top two floors of an Amsterdam city council monument in a quiet street in the very heart of the city. When we bought it, we thought we might be able to create a roof terrace. The stairs were already there as was the sky-light with access to the roof. However, as it turns out, the 2 degree slope in our ceiling makes it too sloped a ceiling for permission to build a roof terrace. It is out of the question. That means we have to explore other options.

It could have been so wonderful.......

It could have been so wonderful.......

In the back wall of our living room we have a big door opening up to a french balcony. As this door is by no means monumental we now hope the council will allow us to change the door and maybe add a little balcony to the back. There is a Dutch designer called Pieter van Gendt who designed an alternative for  balcony. It is called Tea for Two which just has the nicest ring to it! 

However, the people of the Amsterdam monuments and archeology department are not that smitten with these balconies.  I am drawing several options such as an iternal loggia/balcony, a french balcony with a bit of a ledge to at least put plants on and maybe a small table and several drawings with the aforementioned Tea for Two balconies.  With all drawings I take into consideration the age and era of the house and the materials they used in those days. This way I hope to show the monument people that I mean well and would like to respect the house with whatever we do.

It might turn out to be a story with a longer tail than we are hoping for, but I am persistent and am not resting until I can have a glass of wine on my own little space of outside.

An example of a wrought iron balcony attached to the wall.

An example of a wrought iron balcony attached to the wall.