Design Crush: Raili Clasen

I love reading about creative people who see the world on a different plane than everyone else. As soon as I spotted this banana yellow piano in Domino, I wanted to see every thing Raili Clasen’s ever designed. Bright color and wild wallpaper are the tools of her trade, and she makes it all look so sophisticated — yet still super fun. It’s very much the definition of “California cool,” and good grief, I wish my house could have a Dutch door like the beach houses she dreams up in Newport.

You know what I noticed? She’s a master at working graphic signs into rooms. Yet it never looks like you just slapped up a “Live, Laugh, Love” sign from HomeGoods on the wall, either. As someone who loves words, this is promising:

OK, I can’t have the Dutch door but maybe I could get inspired by Clasen’s Helvetica “Hello” door signs.

Here’s Clasen’s website for more design stalking!

Dispatches From the Transfer Station

I’m not going to lie, I’m old enough that I sincerely do look forward to a Friday night grocery shopping trip at Wegman’s. But these days in quarantine life, the weekly grocery store really is the only thing going. I can totally understand why all these online group hangout games are popping off, because what fun stories am I going to report back new-wise on the O’Chapin front? “This week, we went to Aldi. Joe purchased some knockoff DingDongs. They were simply called “Cupcakes.’”

In that vein, let me tell you about going to the Fairfax dump. Or as it’s properly referred to the Fairfax I-66 Transfer Station.

I already told you about one of my ill-fated design choices, and I ended up having to dispose of another — I couldn’t even give my jute rug away! I originally got it from a lady on Craiglist, and it’s always funny when you pull up to a house that turns out to be a mansion to come collect their refuse. Although it had the overall look of burlap, the rug served me well before it began to disintegrate.

The owners of our house left a lot of their old paint cans behind, and I’ve been wanting to throw it away for a year and we finally got it done. But if I knew how cool the dump er transfer station was, I would’ve done it sooner.

The whole experience was very orderly: you drive up and tell a worker what you have to throw away and he or she tells you what line to get in. We joked that the guy would see our old Subaru and say, “Sir, we’re not accepting cars at this time.”

That didn’t happen, but we did get confused going through the lines and went through twice the guy in charge of the whole operation was like, "I thought you had some more crap back there in the backseat.” But he said it in a much nicer way.

I was kind of heartened by the fact that we put so much thought into sorting all this stuff. Paint goes here, batteries go here, scrap metal over there. I remember when I went to the dump as a kid at my grandparents house in Upstate NY and you seemed to just hurl everything into a ditch.

There was an entire pile of lawn mowers! And another one of bicycles! With a bicycle-shaped statue to boot.

We sorted our hazardous household material and then drove up to this spot where you take your trash and hurl it down into a dumpster below. There’s no way people don’t get hurt doing this. As we drove up, some bros threw a round glass top to a table and it shattered in the most spectacular way. And that’s what passes for entertainment these days.

Apartment Progress: The Closet Is The Only Finished Room

Hello! So we moved into our apartment in July and I absolutely love it. I've been making "improvements" lately. You be the judge if they are actually improvements. Or if it looks like a demented emo preteen stole Mom's credit card.

For some reason, I am mainly focusing on the closet area. It seems more manageable. And the stakes are lower than the living room. The rest of the apartment is unchanged. Here's what I've done so far, and perhaps that is enough.

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I've loved Keith Haring since high school, and I've always wanted to use wall decals. Better use wall decals before I turn 30, I thought. Thus, I bring you my closet door. Cartoon dogs, I love it! I got the idea of somehow decorating the closet door from the Dos Family house tour in Design Sponge. Their space is the coolest! This is pretty crazy, but not as crazy as their jumping tiger-emblazoned pocket door. 

I bought Blik's decals and they were pretty easy to apply. If you screw up, it can be remedied. But read the instructions first. Not sure why I didn't do that. The videos are a good place to start. 

I emailed a pic to my friend Debie and she wrote: "Your new closet is crazy but I love it!!!  The top two dogs are barking at each other but the third row of dogs look like they're barking at a common enemy." 

So I put the dogs up while Joe was out of town for the weekend. I wish I could've seen his face when he saw it, but i was behind him. "Oh my God," he said. "Are there more?" Haha, no that's it. They are confined to the closet. 

 

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I bought some basic, burlap-inspired Bed, Bath & Beyond curtains to shield our messy closets from prying eyes, and I went on a bender at the Container Store. Would you believe I carried all these boxes (and more) home on the Metro?

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The Frida Kahlo poster from my last apartment is now in the bathroom, and I bought some Jonathan Adler hand towels. I really want a headboard, but channeled that energy into $$ bath towels instead. They had cute little hooks, and I was sold.

Joe said, "Those look like some towels a baby would throw up on." Me: blank stare. I recently showed him a fancy new blinged-out forest green peplum top I bought, and he said, "That looks like a really nice Christmas sweater," which threw me into a fit of despair. But, he was not wrong about the sweater.

I will have the last laugh though, because in case you haven't noticed, everything I've been buying is pink. Poor Joe. I ended up getting the amazing floral sheets I picked out for Racked! They totally match an existing dress I have, to the extent that I'd say one of these companies might have a lawsuit on their hands. 

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Will keep you updated should I move out of the closet in my decorating efforts. xoxox

New Apartment: Before Pics

I promised I would post pictures of our new space, and now I'm making good on that promise. Please keep in mind, these are before pictures. Before. That's why it is so messy and haphazard. Yes, that's why. Hopefully it will get better.

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When you enter the apartment, the "gear wall" greets you. It's basically a particle board wall and then different hooks and baskets that can be rearranged. I don't know why the management company considers this such a big selling point for the apartment, but they do. Of course, Joe actually does have mountain climbing "gear" but I'm not sure if that's what they had in mind. "Here is our gear wall," I told my friend Haerah when she came to check out our apartment. "Ahh," she said. "It's a really nice stuff board."

Stuff board, gear wall, same difference. The question is, can it be made pretty? I will say it is convenient.

 

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The closet is similar. I loved the concept, and it's pretty spacious. There is storage above the two bars. Joe and I need to work on sharing this space though, since I want to hog it all. Check out those sexy acrylic CB2 bar stools. I got them via Craigslist last weekend from a couple who bought them to stage their home to sell it. So they are practically new. They'll hang out in the closet until I can muster up the funds to buy the matching table.

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The kitchen is on the wall with the door, and comes with open shelving and tomato red accent paint. It's pretty cute! I hung up my  Instax photos via the Fred Flare Birds on Wire set that Joe's sister gave me for Christmas. I think I'm going to do a black and white theme in the kitchen area. My plates are ugly, but the glasses are mismatched (all the wine glasses have winery logos), so I don't think I should put them in the open shelves. What do people put in open shelves? Purely decorative items or things they use a lot so they can be lazy and not open doors?

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The TV is along the same wall as the kitchen. A coffee table is acting as a makeshift entertainment unit. I don't think there is anywhere else to put the bookshelves, but I'm not sure what should go above the TV and between the bookshelves in terms of wall art. Maybe a gallery wall. Would that look dorky?

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Speaking of looking dorky, here is a chair directly in front of a couch. Ha. Our apartment is small and this works for the moment. The orange couch has a place of honor. There's a very Japanese-looking glass wall that can slide back and forth to separate the bedroom from the living room. Here you can see where the kitchen table is currently, not a lot of space for that either. BTW I got a new Air Macbook. That's the reason why I can't afford any furniture. I almost started sobbing when the guy rang my credit card, which is not a normal reaction. But I do love it so far.  When I walked into the Apple store, I thought it smelled like body odor. Maybe it was from the geniuses, or maybe it was the customers' flop sweat when their credit cards are charged.

Oh yeah, and that cool little round grey table is new. I got it at the very inspiring H Street mod vintage furniture store, Hunted House. I was convince to buy it by the proprietor who told me that the coffee table would look at home in Roger's office on Mad Men. Sold! 

He probably says that to everyone. No matter. It is the perfect size and I think it's going to look groovy. 

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The bed is squished up against two walls, which doesn't look great, but there's so much more space for my dresser this way. I think it desperately needs a headboard. Remember last time I tried to buy a headboard and gave up? Why are they so expensive?

There are a few interesting other touches, but I'll save them for another day. God willing, it won't still look like this in a year!

Modern Apartment Door Numbers

A new management company took over an apartment down the street from me, and watching the renovations, I thought of something...

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If an apartment building switches over to new numbers in a Helvetica font or similar, I bet you that they raise the rent. That's an amenity. Yuppie urban class-A apartment dwellers can't get enough of sans serif.