How Designer Ellen Van Dusen Lives In Technicolor

This article is part of Healthyish at Home , a collection of tips, recipes, and stories about making our living spaces (still) feel great.

If months of staring at my living room walls didn’t weaken minimalism’s appeal, one look at designer Ellen Van Dusen ’s gloriously over-the-top Brooklyn brownstone did. The founder of the beloved, ultra-saturated brand Dusen Dusen is practically a professional maximalist, and her design sensibility is guaranteed to spark joy.

“Bringing in color makes me feel happy and at home,” says Van Dusen. “Not everyone has the same relationship with color, but fun little objects can really shift the whole mood of a room. It’s an easy and noncommittal way to change things up.” She sticks to white walls and neutral appliances to keep the little, colorful objects from being overshadowed, then decorates with aplomb. Here, she outlines how she uses patterns, colors, and playful objects to lighten up her living space.

Photograph by Laura Murray
Use every surface

That's not a print or painting above the mantle: Van Dusen used a dowel rod to hang this silk scarf from Massif Central , designed by painter Jonas Wood . “Massif Central does limited, artist-edition scarves, so I have a couple that I’ve bought from them over the years,” she says. “It's a great way to ‘buy the painting’ if you can't afford a painting.”

“I have gotten into having flowers during quarantine—they make the room feel fresh and they’re just pretty,” says Van Dusen. The black and white striped vase from ceramicist Isabel Halley features a rotation of fresh and funky blooms from local shop Bohaus .

Photograph by Laura Murray
Put it all on the table

One easy way to skip the monochrome look? Bring in color with trippy mismatched napkins. Van Dusen designed the full set of patterned textiles to mix and match without clashing. The stackable Heller plates were an eBay score!

Photograph by Laura Murray
Get a little silly

“I love this shark by my friend Lorien Stern ,” says Van Dusen. “She also painted my bathroom downstairs! We connected on the internet because we both love sharks and watermelons, and we’ve become good friends since then.”

Photograph by Laura Murray
Mix and match (then mix some more)

Van Dusen used broken tiles —which are often salvaged when pieces break in the kiln and don’t require additional cutting—to cover the Victorian-era fireplace’s original damaged tiling with a freeform mosaic inspired by artist Niki de Saint Phalle . Steal this trick to upgrade dowdy bathrooms or alcoves (but get permission if you’re a renter).

Stick to simple white walls to make a perfect canvas for hanging colorful objects. Sure, that Dali-esque resin clock by Italian architect and designer Gaetano Pesce is functional, but it’s also fun.

Shop Ellen Van Dusen's apartment:

Buy it: Dusen Dusen Set of Four Napkins, $42

Buy it: Watch Me Clock, $300



Source : food

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