print press coverage - york wallcoverings · so after ringing in the new year and taking down your...
TRANSCRIPT
Issue 36
Print Press CoverageVisit us at www.yorkwall.com.
York, Ink.www.facebook.com/YorkWallcoverings
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Southern Lady
January/February 2011
Circulation 155,000
Giraffe–Delicate Document Damask in Pink (from Just Kids collection) by Three Sisters Studio; York Wallcoverings.
Southern Lady, continued
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Frames–Illuminata in Brown (from Walt Disney Signature collection) by York Designer Series, Grata in Brown (from Dolce Vita collection) by Antonina Vella Designs, and Pussywillow Branches in Spa Blue (from Veranda collection) by Ashford House; York Wallcoverings.
Continued on next page
Southern Lady, continued
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Books–Alessa in Teal/Yellow/Green (from Dolce Vita collection) by Antonina Vella Designs, Small Scroll in Dark Brown *from Color Expressions collection) by Three Sisters Studio, and Celia in Teal (from Dolce Vita collection) by Antonina Vella Designs; York Wallcoverings.
Romantic Homes
July 2010
Circulation 244,000
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
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Summer TimeThe living is easy for these seasonal stand-outs that have classic appeal.
Old House Journal
March 2011
Circulation 167,708
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Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Denver Magazine
January 2011
Circulation 50,000
january 2011 denvermagazine.com 41
York dolce vita edda wallpaper, $55 per roll, at moda antica in the denver design district
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Green Scheme: Take a cue from nature and bring this crisp, verdant tone indoors.
marcel wanders for Baccarat kings of the forest green
vase, $3,950, baccarat.com
Color Playthese five fresh hues add instant impact to anY interior. by Katie Woolsey
madeline weinriB mandala tiBetan 6'x9' carpet, $4,000, madelineweinrib.com
cuiora recYcled paper Bowl, $170, gretelhome.com
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750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
York Dolce Vita Edda wallpaper, $55 per roll, at Moda Antica in the Denver Design District.
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Monaco Wallpaper From Ronald Redding Designs, www.ronaldreddingdesigns.com.
At Home in Arkansas
January 2011
Circulation 25,000
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Continued on next page
805 Living
December 2010
Circulation 30,000
62 DECEMBER 2010 805living.COM
Tips From a Pro
UpgradesBy Mallory McCreary
DECK THE WAllSDazzle the home with wallpaper luxe enough for the holidays yet practical enough for every day.
“In the seventies we were wallpapering everything—every wall, every room,” says Karen Montoya, co-owner of Dandy Walls in Camarillo (dandywalls.com). But today’s designs—which sport exotic materials such as feathers, jewels, and beads; use eco-friendly papers, inks, and pastes; and are easier to remove than their decades-old cousins—are also “much more forward-thinking,” Montoya says, citing a wallpaper resurgence among young couples and families looking for something new. Wallpaper can be used only on a focal wall, or to create a bed “headboard,” or as framed panels or a mural. “You might wallpaper an entire powder room,” Montoya says, “but in large rooms it’s better to focus. [Panels are] like having a painting as opposed to a continual wall. The panel becomes a piece of artwork, whereas a whole wall creates a mood.” Panels can also defray costs. “[For papers with a] high price point, one full wall would be unaffordable. But you can do panels with much less wallpaper and get the same effect.”
Though many of Montoya’s customers are do-it-yourself types, she recommends hiring a professional installer for designer papers with “flocking, glass beads, sands, different substrates. They’re not easy for the average homeowner to hang.”
With 200 patterns in stock and an extensive library of custom-order papers, Dandy Walls offers an array of choices that can be overwhelming. “It is a process,” Montoya says. “I do have a few customers who come in and know what they want,” but she says for most people it’s a multi-day decision. Montoya recommends that people bring in items from their home that they want to match or complement. She’ll select some styles and patterns for the customer to review and will even go to people’s homes for a consultation, if needed. “Wallpaper is another medium to work with to bring color, texture, design, and balance into the home and into the room,” she says. “It really stands out and enhances the home.”
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Handmade square sheets of Wallteriors DAMASK wallpaper in Mimosa ($72 per square yard) shown here in a classic installation can also be custom cut (free of charge) and randomly installed to create a more abstract design; Designs of the interior, Westlake Village, interiordesignwestlake.com.
805 Living, continued
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
64 DECEMBER 2010 805living.COM
1. The delicate swirls in York Wallcoverings’ CinnibAR in Pewter ($65 per 27-foot roll) add whimsy while maintaining an upper-crust attitude. Dandy Walls, Camarillo, 805-482-9000; or Decor Color & Design, Thousand Oaks, 805-495-7097; or yorkwall.com.
2. York Wallcoverings uses sand to add dimension and texture on eco-friendly, non-woven papers. On wall, bOXWOOD in Off-White with sand ($85 per 27-foot roll). Also shown: bOXWOOD in Gold, CRACKED EARTH in Gray ($75 per 27-foot roll), and CObblE in Champagne ($140 per 27-foot roll). Dandy Walls, Camarillo, 805-482-9000; or Decor Color & Design, Thousand Oaks, 805-495-7097; or yorkwall.com.
3. Paintable wallpaper allows for custom colors on top of existing design, as in Graham & Brown’s JUDE ($30 per 32.8-foot roll); Astek inc., Van Nuys, astekwallcovering.com; or grahambrown.com.
4. bAMbOO FlOCK On SilvER ($450 per 11-yard roll) from Cole & Son is a nod to papers of the past; Gail Claridge interiors, Westlake Village, gailclaridge.com; or Astek inc., Van Nuys, astekwallcovering.com.
5. The artisans at Belle Chasse Home hand-paint graceful Chinoiserie designs on silk to create the custom paneled look of high-end art: gREEn SilvER-lEAF PAnElS ($4,200); Cabana Home, Santa Barbara, cabanahome.com.
6. The ombre effect in Kreme Life’s ACORn gATE in ivory ($195 per 16-foot roll) adds a new dimension to a geometric pattern; kremelife.com.
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Upgrades
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Wallpaper backing blue cabinet Large Floral Trail in Taramia #VL9017-543–York Wallcoverings; 800/375-9675; yorkwall.com.
Continued on next page
Better Homes and
Gardens, Storage
Spring 2011
Circulation 450,000
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Wallpaper backing blue cabinet Large Floral Trail in Taramia #VL9017-543–York Wallcoverings; 800/375-9675; yorkwall.com.Continued on next page
Better Homes and Gardens, Storage, continued
Better Homes and Gardens, Storage, continued
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Wallpaper lining bookshelves and media cabinet #FP2691 from the Ashford House collection–York Wallcoverings; 800/375-9675; yorkwall.com
New Jersey Examiner
December 22, 2010
Circulation 43,222
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Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Welcome Back Wallpaper
In...out...in...out...back in and BETTER
than ever! Gone are the days of decorative
wallpaper borders and your grandmother’s
florals, the wall-coverings of today are that
of a new dimension. From grasscloths to
wall murals and gold-leaf to jewels there is
a potpourri of elements to choose from.
Many homes along the Jersey shore feature
grasscloths. Durable and appropriate for
most any room, these natural fibers come
in an array of colors and textures to
complement your decor. While some
people may feel they are harder to hang,
the free form and natural beauty this look
provides relieves you of the need to
intricately line up seems. However, if you
are a perfectionist and cannot live with the
variation and visible seems, this may not
be the product for you.
For more formal settings, such as dining
rooms, music rooms, and master
bedrooms, wallpaper wall murals portray
the appearance of an actual hand-painted
scene. These designs are created in a series
of say ten panels. The buyer decides
which panels he or she likes best and
provides the company with the dimensions
of their wall(s). From there the creator
essentially stretches the designs of the
specified panels to fill the wall(s). The
individual panels are then hung much like
wallpaper. Stark Wallcovering (www.
starkwallcovering.com) is a industry leader
in successfully designing this product.
Since authentic 14k gold-leaf is rather
expensive, especially now a days. Many
companies have created their own versions
of gold-leaf and silver-leaf patterns.
Though still appropriate for walls, these
unique papers look ‘outstanding’ when
applied to ceilings and in panel boxes.
Not to mention, reflective surfaces can
give the illusion of a room appearing
larger than it actually is. Though other
companies have their own variations, New
Jersey’s own Phillip Jeffries (www.
phillipjeffries.com) has a selection that will
captivate your eye! (Please note they have
a wide variety of naturals (i.e. grasscloth),
prints, silks, and vinyls as well.)
And if that’s not enough for you, cross
the state border and support our neighbor
Pennsylvania’s York Wallcoverings (www.
yorkwall.com). From traditional to
contemporary, residential to commercial,
and everything in between, they have it
all! But what’s sure to impress today’s
transitional consumer is their jewel
embellished products (see example on
left). These truly are 3-dimensional
embellishments applied directly to
the paper.
So after ringing in the new year and taking
down your holiday decor, your walls are
sure to look bare. Rather than
rearranging the furniture or hanging up a
new picture, consider treating yourself to a
unique wallcovering that exudes your
personality!
“Starburst” embellished wallpaper by York; Photo: York Wallcoverings
Las Vegas Review-Journal
January 20, 2011
Circulation 172,366
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Versatile Honeysuckle adds warmth, sense of excitement
Not everything is black and white --
especially when it comes to fashion,
whether it’s for your wardrobe or home
décor. And this year, things are particularly
rosy.
Honeysuckle, a warm shade of pink, was
recently named the color of the year by
Pantone, the global authority on color and
provider of professional color standards for
the design industries.
“When we make a choice in color, a lot of
thought goes into why we choose what we
choose,” said Leatrice Eiseman, executive
director of the Pantone Color Institute and
author of a blog about color. “It’s not
arbitrary that we make a hot color and
that’s the end of story.”
According to Eiseman, Honeysuckle was
selected as the color of the year to help
alleviate the general malaise caused by the
state of the economy and world around us.
“We wanted something uplifting that gets
your adrenaline pumping. All the things
you can say about red, you also can say
about this pink. It has all the energy and
dynamism of the mother color but it’s
more complex than the mother color.
We’ve taken red, a primary color, and
added some fun to it.”
The name of the color also evokes other
emotions, including taste and smell.
Before being named the color of the year,
Honeysuckle was just starting to appear in
fashions and designs from Europe.
“What happens in fashion ultimately spills
over into every other area,” Eiseman said.
She said awareness of pink and the pink
family has taken on a new quality beyond
the pastel pink associated with baby girls,
Barbie dolls and breast cancer.
“Men are more open to a hot shade of pink
in their ties, shirts and sportswear, as well
as sports equipment -- especially younger
guys who will buy a piece of equipment,
such as a snowboard, with hot pink on it.”
“When I heard Honeysuckle was the color
of year, I wasn’t that excited. I thought
‘Pink again.’ We had seen pink not that
long ago. However there’s a lot to this
color,” said Carey Vizzi Jacobs, an interior
designer with Carey Lind Designs of Hunt
Valley, Md., and wallpaper designer for
York. “It’s not just pink, it’s a great pink
because it’s extremely versatile.”
Vizzi Jacobs said the color has become
mainstream and is being used in a greater
variety of applications.
“I can’t think of a pink combination that
doesn’t work. Pink and red. Pink and navy.
Pink and turquoise. It’s a great
complement to any interior,” she said.
“But you don’t have to dump pink
everywhere.”
The warm shade of pink pairs easily with
navy and orange, she added.
Pantone suggests adding a lively flair to
interior spaces with Honeysuckle patterned
pillows, bedspreads, small appliances and
tabletop accessories, or painting a wall for a
dynamic burst of energy in the family
room, kitchen or hallway. Other ways to
incorporate the color include place mats,
table linens, colored glassware and candles.
It’s also a good color to cover up shabby
kitchen cabinets or for knobs and drawer
pulls.
“The easiest ways to bring color into your
home is definitely with accessories, pillows
and seasonal items,” said Vizzi Jacobs. “But
for me, what I personally enjoy doing is
wallpaper. I like that feeling of color
hugging you and putting its arms out on
the walls, surrounding you and giving you
that nice warm hug.
“Honeysuckle is really warm. It makes you
happy. I’m not sure how you can say pink
and not be happy,” she said. “It’s a happy
color and who doesn’t want to be happy
these days?”
The emotional response to pink is a natural
reaction to the role color plays in our lives.
“Color suggests a mood and helps you
express your feelings, even though it may
not be overtly obvious,” Eiseman said.
“Color can affect us emotionally, and when
decorating our homes, it’s a great way to
express ourselves.”
“I believe it affects your mood, and think
we all, or most of us, want our homes to
reflect a bit of our personality, be our oasis
and something to be proud of. Color is an
extension of our personalities,” agreed
Vizzi Jacobs.
For more information about the color of
the year or color in general, visit Eiseman’s
blog at www.eisemancolorblog.com.
New Jersey Star Ledger
January 7, 2011
Circulation 350,000
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Home trends for 2011: Smaller houses, vivid colors, 3-D entertainment
With the economic future still uncertain,
the new year’s slogan could be “Make Home
Heaven in 2011,” as home for many will
continue to be the setting for recreation,
money-saving dinners, relaxation and
budget entertaining.
And while tight-fisted consumers continue
to watch the economy for signs of recovery,
the challenge for homebuilders, furniture
makers, appliance manufactures and others
will be to generate products that satisfy the
demand for value when buyers finally do
decide to part with their carefully guarded
dollars.
The lagging economy, a slow housing
market and still higher than normal
unemployment rates all have contributed to
what members of the National Association
of Home Builders, the American Home
Furnishings Alliance and the International
Housewares Association have observed as a
new frugality among buyers. It applies to
everything from house size, to the cost of
furnishings and the features of home
appliances. The same consumer caution
that brought us the “staycations’ of the
previous decade will continue to drive many
of 2011’s home-related trends.
York Wallcoverings
“People are still spending, says
International Housewares Association
spokeswoman Lisa Casey Weiss, “but they
are limiting what they are spending on.” In
many cases the spending will be on
improvements to make home more
comfortable, she said. Others will spend
only as needed. If an essential appliance
breaks, for example, the replacement will
likely need to be a high-performer, with
greater value in terms of both pricing and
function, Casey Weiss said. “It’s got to be
more for your money.”
Manufacturers are responding by creating
more multifunctional products, she said.
Two recent examples: Fagor’s energy-
efficient halogen tabletop oven that not
only bakes, but grills, roasts and steams;
West Bend’s Versatility slow cooker has a
base that doubles as an electric griddle while
its oval-shaped crock also can be used on the
stovetop or in the oven.
Here are a few of the other trends we can
expect for 2011, according to industry
experts.
Smaller houses: The McMansion has been
shrinking bit by bit since the peak in 2006
when the median floor plan of a new home
was 2,259 square feet, according to Steve
Melman, spokesman for the National
Association of Home Builders. By 2009, the
median new home size had dropped to
2,103 square feet (still not small, considering
that the average home in 1970 was about
1,400 square feet, according to census data).
Thinking in terms of chunks of square
footage, the loss of about 150 square feet
could mean giving up a laundry room, a
bathroom or a bedroom. But Melman says
builders have not approached it that way.
“The trend is removing walls,” he said.
Doing so not only saves the laundry room,
which the association’s 2009 survey of
builders found to be one of the most
sought-after home features, but creates
homes with the popular open floor plan.
“You can have a smaller footprint because
you have no wall between the living room
and dining room,” he said, “but you can
still distinguish the rooms, the home
doesn’t seem smaller and you get more
light.” Smaller houses also have the appeal
of being more energy efficient and therefore
less expensive to maintain, he said.
As of the third quarter of 2010, the median
square footage for new housing starts had
risen slightly to 2,157 square feet, which
Melman says indicates that house sizes are
unlikely to continue to drop. The
association expects the median size to
remain around 2,200 square feet, easily the
size of a spacious 4-bedroom, 2 1/2
bathroom house, including a master
bedroom, a two-car garage, a laundry room
and walk-in closets.
Staying put: While real estate pros are
advising that low prices make this a great
time to trade up for those who have the
means, many homeowners say they will
remain in their present homes instead of
taking on the challenge of trying to sell and
upgrade in a slow market. The trend will be
to make improvements that will make one’s
present home more livable and hopefully
more valuable,” according to IHA’s Casey
Weiss.
“Consumers are realizing that if they put
some money into their home, it just might
be worth more when the economy turns
around,” she said. “They are putting in
upgrades throughout the house.”
Give me color: Even if remodeling isn’t in
the cards, the desire to save money also has
more of Americans looking for ways to
enjoy themselves at home. And even if the
economic outlook seems dreary, the house
doesn’t have to be. Bold patterns and vivid
Continued on next page
New Jersey Star Ledger, continued
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color will be the trend for everything from
upholstered sofas and chairs to accents such
as lamps and pillows, says Jackie
Hirschhaut, spokeswoman for the American
Home Furnishings Alliance. “There’s a
really wide range of updated florals, there
are plaids,” she said. “It’s also exciting to see
the wood finishes taking colors as well,” she
said. “Consumers are looking for a bright
spot to boost their spirits at home.”
The same thinking is behind the Pantone
Color Institute’s selection of the optimistic
pink hue honeysuckle as the color of 2011.
“In times of stress, we need something to
lift our spirits,” explains Leatrice Eiseman,
executive director of the institute, which
helps determine the colors that will be
important for fashion, home design and
even automobiles. “Honeysuckle is a
captivating, stimulating color that gets the
adrenaline going – perfect to ward off the
blues,” Eiseman said in a statement
announcing the color.. Honeysuckle derives
its positive qualities from a powerful bond
to its mother color red, the most physical,
viscerally alive hue in the spectrum.”
3-D hits home: Where some turn to color,
others will turn to home theaters for relief.
The trend for home entertainment systems
will be following the movies with 3-D
televisions, Blu-Ray players and digital
cameras that will make way for a richer
home viewing experience. But for early
adopters awaiting the issue of 3-D content
for home viewing, this is no small
ticket-buy. While the low sale price was
about $850 a television, the price tag jumps
to about $4,500 for the 60-inch Sony
Bravia, adding 3-D to the alphabet soup of
this LED LCD HDTV. According to the
Best Buy website: “By purchasing a
3-D-ready product, you’ll be preparing for a
future in which 3-D content for movies,
gaming and cable/satellite TV is almost
certain to be a major form of
entertainment.” Panasonic recently
introduced the Lumix G series camera,
which has a 3-D interchangeable lens,
allowing users to create their own 3-D
pictures and video for viewing on 3-D
televisions. The LUMIX G2 is available at
Unique Photo, 123 U.S. Highway 46 West,
Fairfield. The price starts at $530.
Get back to basics: With technology that
can bring home 3-D movies, who would
have thought that the second decade of the
21st century also would see more of us
returning to old ways like putting up
provisions? Preserving food at home,
known as canning, is an outgrowth of the
number of Americans who over the last few
years started home vegetable gardens both
to save money and to reduce their
environmental impact, according to Casey
Weiss. “A lot of it stems from the
economy,” she said. “Consumers are
looking for ways to cut back.”
Canning has now become a type of culinary
cheap chic, with designer jars (from Weck)
new products that simplify the process
(from Ball) and recipes updated with fresh
herbs, unexpected combinations and exotic
spices. “People are becoming more
comfortable with canning,” Casey Weiss
said of what had previously been considered
the too-time-consuming predilection of
frugal grandmothers who had lived through
the Great Depression. In the Great
Recession, the thinking is that an
investment of time will save money,
produce a more healthful or flavorful
result, and save time later.
In addition to canning, expect to see a
return of the old-school potluck as a form of
budget entertaining. But in 2011, those
filling the pots will likely be aiming for
restaurant quality in friendly competition
among participants to produce impressive
dishes.
Save my time: In its consumer surveys, the
IHA consistently hears that time-saving
products are important, said Casey Weiss,
and with many working longer hours these
days, the need is even greater.
Slow cookers, while a very traditional
product, have become more popular not
only because they help save money by
making it easier to prepare meals at home
but also by being surprisingly energy
efficient. Perhaps more important, they
drastically cut kitchen time because
ingredients thrown in before work can be
transformed into a meal by day’s end. The
number of recently published cookbooks is
also supporting this trend, with a
higher-than-average number being
produced, and on very specific topics
ranging from holiday cooking to vegetarian
cooking, to specific ethnic cuisines such as
Italian and Indian.
Good buys: Manufacturers and retailers
have long known that consumers enjoy the
idea of making a difference in the lives of
others through their purchases. Furniture
companies are expected to do more of that
in 2011, with several having chosen charity
partners to help raise funds for worthy
initiatives, according to AHFA’s Hirschhaut.
“When you know that you can make a
purchase and it helps your family while at
the same time others are being helped, for
some people, that could be a tie breaker,”
she said. One example is the ribbon-back
dining chair from Designmaster. Inspired
by the breast cancer awareness ribbon, the
$972 pink chair comes with a $10 donation
to Through Healing Eyes, a Hickory, North
Carolina non-profit that provides financial
assistance to underinsured or uninsured
people with breast cancer. Other furniture
companies partnering with charities include
Kincaid Furniture (Habitat for Humanity)
and Aspenhome (City of Hope, a Los
Angeles-area research and treatment center
for cancer, diabetes and other life-
threatening diseases).
Senay Blog
January 4, 2011
Readership 1,060
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Colour of the Year 2011
“In times of stress, we need something to lift our spirits. Honeysuckle is a captivating, stimulating colour
that gets the adrenaline going – perfect to ward off the blues. Honeysuckle derives its positive qualities
from a powerful bond to its mother colour red, the most physical, viscerally alive hue in the spectrum.”
explains Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute®.
I was very happy when I saw this announcement from Pantone. This dynamic reddish pink I think it’s a
beautiful, eye catching hue for both fashion and home. Honeysuckle represents confidence and courage.
Be courageous!
Here are a few inspiration images for you.
“Honeysuckle” is colour of the year 2011.
Nanette Lepore Spring 2011
bestbridalprices
York Wallcoverings
HA+D Online (Hospitality
Architecture + Design)
December 2010
Audience 15,000
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Candice Olson Contract for York Contract Wallcoverings
Introducing the latest from Candice Olson:
Candice Olson Contract for York Contract
Wallcoverings, thoughtfully designed
wallcoverings with a touch of irreverence, all
destined to become modern classics. These
wallcoverings subtly capture light with recycled
glass beads; add dimension with embossing; and
radiate warmth with a palette of luminous hues.
“Wallcoverings are essential to create a mood
and add soul,” said Olson. “They have the
power to truly transform any space.”
Brilliant FiligreeSweet Dreams
Brilliant Filigree, Sweet Dreams, Allure
750 Linden Ave.York, PA 17405-5166
Tel: 717-846-4456www.yorkwall.com
Wallpaper: Esprit DP1165, Tassa DP1190, Pompeii Stripe DP1285
Commercial Interior Design
September 2010
Circulation 13,873
Weranda
October 2010
Circulation 38,050
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Tapety Ronalda Reddinga (Poland)
Wallpaper: Harrison, Graham