Paige Minear gets a thrill from frills.
In the style blogger’s Atlanta home, a ruffled skirt
with a green bow print adorns a bedroom vanity. In the family room sits a
chintz ottoman with a ruffle along the bottom; ruffled throw pillows rest on
the armchairs.
اضافة اعلان
“I think ruffles just add that edge,” said Minear,
52. “That little bit of whimsy.”
You could call it a comeback: Ruffles and their
close cousin chintz — the often bright floral fabric with a glossy finish — are
returning, partly in rebellion to the minimalist aesthetic that has dominated
interior design for so long.
Anna Marcum, an
architectural historian and preservationist in
Brooklyn, laments the recent
“gray-washing” of interiors associated with modern minimalist décor. “There’s
nothing about this sort of monochromatic gray that brings people joy, in a
sense,” she said. “There’s a lot more joy and interest to be found in a more
maximal interior.”
Those in search of such joy and interest need look
no further than the ruffled pillows of the revived brand
Shabby Chic and the
frilly linen napkins of British interior label Amuse La Bouche. Ditto the
shower curtains at Perigold and duvet covers at Serena & Lily.
Where
there’s a ruffle, there’s likely chintz
The sight of a
chintz-covered room with ruffle trappings might evoke flashbacks to the
excesses of the 1980s. Whether it was the high-end maximalist approach of
designer Mario Buatta, also known as the “Prince of Chintz”, or the cozy
cottage-style of Laura Ashley, ruffles played a starring role in the English
country-inspired aesthetic of the time.
In the 1980s, “everything was trimmed, and the
ruffle was a form of trimming,” said Susan Crater, the president of Sister
Parish Design, a wallpaper and fabric company in New York. Parish, Crater’s
grandmother, began decorating during the Depression and had high society
clients in the 1970s and 1980s. She was known to take, say, a rose and peony
patterned chintz fabric, and use it to make both curtains and chair coverings
for the same room. Ruffles would often get thrown into the mix.
Eliza Harris, the creative director of Sister Parish
Design (and Parish’s great-granddaughter) said, “When you add a ruffle to a
curtain panel or a ruffle to a bed skirt, you can pick apart the fabric and use
what you want and apply it in a way that’s interesting.”
For Harris,
chintz, which originated in India as a hand-painted fabric and became popular
in
England during the Victorian era when it became mass-produced, represents
the “anti-trend.” “It’s something that’s just tried and true,” she said.
Whenever she sees patterns from a traditional brand like Colefax and Fowler, “I
feel instantly comfortable and at ease.”
How
ruffles made their way to America
When Marcum thinks about ruffles, she draws upon the French Rococo period which
roughly started in the early 1700s and lasted until the 1770s. Ruffles didn’t
necessarily adorn the curtains and shams of the time, but the era was known for
using natural elements like flowers and seashells in bright, ornamental ways
and the dresses of the time put ruffles on display. (See: One Marie
Antoinette.)
The
English-country style was influenced by French Rococo, said Marcum, and the
English aesthetic has inspired much of the ruffly décor in the United States.
“Something that I think that English countryside style does is sort of take it
down to a more accessible, natural level,” Marcum said. “It makes it a lot more
romantic.”
Ruffles have been
most popular in the
United States during the Gilded Age and the 1980s, Marcum
said, and the common thread among these time periods is the heightened wealth
gap associated with both eras.
“It’s interesting
to see how this excess spoke to them,” said Marcum, referring to upper-middle
class American consumers. “But also, it was when excess was in some ways more
readily accessible to the general population.” In the Victorian era, for
example, people could order chenille and ruffle-trimmed drapery from catalogs.
‘Kind
of a shock’
Ruffles are even winning over the once-ruffle reluctant. Nina Long, an
interior designer in Atlanta, grew up with a Laura Ashley bedroom. “I had the
matching wallpaper and the curtains and the bed skirt had ruffles on it.” Like
so many, she then eschewed those bed skirts for a while, but “now I love them
again.”
Today, Long and
her design partner, Don Easterling, have found that the 30-something-year-old
children of their long-standing clients are requesting the traditional style
that they grew up with.
“They want the
ruffles. They want some mahogany pieces mixed in. They want the antique art,”
Long said. “At one point that was kind of a shock for me, and now I’m just kind
of used to it. I love the style myself, so it’s been fun to be able to do that
for other people.”
Read more Lifestyle
Jordan News