17 February 2010

Johnny Grey is on the ground


In 2004, I was working as a designer in a high end studio for the first time in my life. I was well on my way to discovering my voice as a designer and my job then taught me a lot that I still rely on today. I worked very closely with my boss who was the studio's creative director and he had a reference library I coveted. I started collecting design books with a vengeance then and one of my first real acquisitions was Johnny Grey's Kitchen Culture: Reinventing Kitchen Design.


Kitchen Culture had a profound influence on me and it started me on a path I'm still on. I never fully understood the relationship of function to form until Kitchen Culture fell into my lap and I still refer to it regularly. I'd never really considered, or more accurately re-considered, why kitchen designers do what they do. It's easy to rely on industry standards, too easy. The truly great practitioners of my discipline dig deeper, into the realms and meanings that sit underneath those standards. It's inspiring to see someone apprach the lowly kitchen that way and it's endlessly satisfying when I can channel some of that creative energy into my own work.


When I brought my copy of Kitchen Culture to work to show my boss he and I spent about an hour reviewing and discussing it. He and I had been talking a lot about using marble as a structural element at the time and both our hearts skipped a beat when we turned to page 52 and saw this.


I'd never seen a piece of Carrera so beautiful and so structural at the same time. Never. What that is is a single slab of marble, it's about six inches wide, 42 inches tall and six feet deep. It's also been cut and polished  as a radius. I cannot imagine how that was cut, how it was positioned and who had the onerous job of moving it. Six years later and I still look at that image in wonder. And something approaching awe.


I attended kitchen designer/ blogger conclave hosted by Brizo in New York last weekend, and it was peopled by 19 kitchen designers who are also bloggers, one of whom was Johnny Grey. Johnny is something of a rock star in our world and to have sat in a conference with him as a peer was an experience I'll never forget. Ordinarily, he's the guy giving a talk in an auditorium. I'd go see him do his thing at a convention or maybe get a book signed. But interact as a peer? It's not something that's ever appeared on my radar.


Well as I'm very fond of saying, behold the power of the blogosphere. Johnny's a pretty cool guy and after the thrill wore off, it was really great to just talk. He may have revolutionized the industry, but at the end of the day we're engaged in similar work.


Kitchen Culture: Reinventing Kitchen Design remains a singularly influential book in the world of kitchen design, and if you're a design aficionado, you need it in your library. If you'd like to know more about Johnny Grey's work, check out his website and then his blog, Grey Matters. If that weren't enough, he'll be doing a guest blog gig right here. And soon. Now how cool is that?





All images courtesy of Johnny Grey Studios.

16 February 2010

Special shout out and thanks to DH Designs


Donna from DH Designs presented me with a Best Blog award this morning and I am touched. Hurray Donna, hurray for the great work you're doing on your blog and thank you thank you thank you! Gang, head on over to Donna's and see what she's got cooking.

You have been warned


No snow globes. For your safety. Indeed.

How to put your clothes away. This is no joke.


On 1 February, the undergrads over at Apartment Therapy ran a piece it's taken me more than two weeks to be able to talk about. The headline read, How to put your clothes away each day. I'm not kidding.

I get it that their readership is skewed pretty young. But really? How to fold your clothes? I'm waiting for a blistering expose on people who don't separate their whites and colors conscientiously. Am I just being cranky? Do people really need this kind of advice?
I'm usually so exhausted by bedtime that the the best I can do is throw my clothes at the end of my bed or on a chair. But I've recently employed a new head game with myself that actually seems to be working.

It's simple and might sound strange — when I'm tempted to just chuck the clothes somewhere, anywhere, I just start calmly counting seconds in my head. This started as an exercise just to see how long it would actually take to just put the clothes away. I learned that it only takes about sixty seconds to hang up and fold whatever I'm wearing. But this counting practice, which I employ whenever I'm convinced that I'm too tired to put my clothes away, has turned into a successful and oddly meditative pre-bedtime ritual.
Seriously. So far, this piece has collected 40 comments. In a quickie run through of them, I saw little more than praise for the author's cleverness. How is adult behavior clever and since when is behaving in an expected, responsible way praiseworthy?

Maybe next month we'll be treated to something equally insightful like "How to wash your hands after making stinkies --every time!"

15 February 2010

Fame! I'm gonna live forever!


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