sleeping

Our dreams have become so frequent lately, we’ve been trying to figure out ways to “catch” and remember them. We keep a little notebook and pen on the night table, trying to train ourselves to write down the details, or even just the essential bits, before waking makes them fade. It’s a kind of discipline, a half-awake awareness that we are cultivating, to remember to jot down the gist to see what the message might be. (Sally once woke from a dream KNOWING that she should cook professionally, although the thought had never crossed her mind before; so that’s what she did).
We find that the notebook is gradually filling; we hope save it in our archive, as we do our I Ching throws (more on that in another post) and diary entrees, to look back on ‘the inside’ of what was going on at the time.
Lately, we’ve been seeing some interesting versions of Dream Books. Our favorite, by Maria Fischer, captures the language of dreams, and the threads of ideas and connections that our dream language makes. It made us wonder why we think that writing is the only way to capture our dreams; why not draw them? Or plot them graphically somehow, as we’ve tried doing with our day… read more…
06.14.11 |
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in art, inspiration books + zines, paths + processes, sleeping |

We can’t remember when we started mentally re-designing things in our heads; it’s been part of our thought process for years, made even more acute by ‘the improvised life’. We look at a design and mentally “try it on”, in an instant envisioning what it would be like to use actually use it, make it, change it. HACK IT.
When we saw Remodelista’s recent post about Commune designer Chau Truong’s cool bed base made from concrete blocks, we actually climbed into that bed – in our heads. We discovered that it has the major design flaw we wrote about a few weeks ago: bigger-than-the-mattress-platforms make it practically impossible to get in and out of bed without scraping your shin. And one made of concrete blocks would be especially painful. Yikes!
So we started our mental redesign: read more…
05.19.11 |
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in cheap + great, d-i-y, furniture, inside, materials, resources, sleeping |

MALIIN STOOR
We love this bed made of shipping pallets that the endlessly clever Swedish designer Maliin Stoor built for her daughters: a chain of LEDs illuminates it from underneath. Here are details, translated from Swedish (we hope accurately enough):
“Lights under the bed…Inspired by a hotel I recently stayed in…I bought a light chain and put it under the bed. (When we cast the concrete slab we made sure to fix a number of electrical plugs in the floors, even one under the bed. I felt smart!) The girls think it’s really nice and hoped that the loop shone all night, but the loop is set on a timer and is on from five o’clock to half-eleven; it works for us …” read more…
03.15.11 |
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in copy this!, inside, inspiration blogs + sites, kids, lighting, resources, sleeping, tools |

David Dubois (photo: Olivier Amsellem)
We LOVE this simple bed on a base of this rough-cut timbers, one longer than the other to extend beyond the bed to make a built-in side table. This bedroom is part of an exhibition at The Villa Noailles, an arts center located in the hills above Hyères, in the Var, in southeastern France. The villa is an early modernist house, built by architect Robert Mallet-Stevens for art patrons in 1925. (It has quite a history.)
Four designers were invited to design a guest room in a wing of the building, conceiving the basic furniture of a room: a bed, a table-office, bedding, a lamp and a vase.
In this bathroom, the walls were covered with artful photomurals, that expand the space (imagining it with plain walls shows the scope of the transformation, do-able in any untiled bathroom.) read more…
11.29.10 |
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in bath, bathing, cool spaces, copy this!, elements, inside, materials, sleeping, walls + windows |

Todd Selby//The Selby
A picture of a chair made out of orange-and-white-striped wooden safety barriers that we saw on The Selby led us to discovering Tom Sachs. He’s an artist who makes elaborate recreations of modern icons: masterpieces of engineering and design of one kind or another, from Knoll office furniture to Prada to NASA (like this hilarious video). The all-seams-showing recreations are made out of ordinary stuff like phone books and Foamcoare welded together with duct tape or a glue gun. As it is clear from The Selby’s pictures of Sach’s living/studio space, the work of this imaginative inventor/artist holds ideas for our own more modest creations…
Although we don’t know what it says, we’re crazy about Sach’s bedspread, and the idea of writing on our own…
….not to mention the wonderful chair… read more…
07.26.10 |
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in art, cool spaces, elements, inside, inspiration, inspiration blogs + sites, materials, people, repurpose, sleeping, storage |

www.dberke.com
For years, my office was a corner of my 20-x-17-foot bedroom. I managed to write a 700 page book there, and numerous articles, as well as pay bills. The problem was that I really never left my work; it was always in view, always calling me to do more. For an urban freelance person, having a separate office, as I’ve had for a few years, is a real luxury, and one that, given the scary economy, I’ve been wondering if I could give up if I had to. IS there a way to have an office AND a bedroom, in one large room? read more…
02.04.09 |
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in elements, inside, reimagine, sleeping, solutions |

Living Etc. via Style Files
I love the idea of this patchwork headboard from Lockwood Design. There are endless possibilities for combining cool fabrics and textures and it’s definitely a do-able project. I can imagine using all sorts of vintage fabrics, which can be found at flea markets and on Ebay. Or buying 1/2 yard of several fabrics from a great fabric store.
It’s basically an elaboration of a basic upholstered headboard like this one made from a tablecloth. (Tablecloths are often made of wonderful hard-to-find fabric. So why not use them like fabric?) Charming tea towels and linen place mats would make great patchwork panels.

via Designer's Library
There’s lots of info on the internet about how to make an upholstered headboard; I recommend reading a few to figure out your strategy. Here’s a start:
How to Make an Upholstered Headboard (sew a panel of patchwork pieces to use as their single sheet of fabric)
How to Make an Upholstered Headboard Using Pillow Shams (essentially a patchwork headboard that you could do with other fabrics).
01.24.09 |
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in elements, free + flea, furniture, how-to, repurpose, sleeping, soft |