Funky Tosh & Abby Chic
Privacy Policy | Books On Decorating |
Disclaimer: Funky Tosh & Abby Chic are in no way associated with Rachel Ashwell or Shabby Chic.
Chic funky shabby dress forms | Funky Bedding | Funky Christmas Music

Old Iron Beds are great for you Decor

A Dinning Room Coming to Life.
 

 

 

 

Hot Pink, Black & White Funky Zebra Full / Queen Girls Teen Childrens 3 pc Bedding Set by JoJo Designs

I like this but not sure how quickly I would get tired of the look. I would guess mainly a look for people who change decor look fairly regularly.

The Zebra look is a good look. I used to carry rugs with the Zebra look.

More Information on this Funky Bed Set.

 

A most cool primitive funky item we sold out of our store back whenever. Still have the picture. And still like the look.

The After Picture

This is the before picture.

Either looks good depending on how you are decorating. Buy an inexpensive coffee table like we sell at inwoods.com and if the color isn't right when you are decorating you don't need to be afraid to spray paint it. No. The finished product will not be perfect. The odds are that there will be some running paint places. If you are lucky you will have some speckle areas. With this style of decorating imperfection is a good thing. Of course if you are sticking with the traditional look then the cherry or oak color is also a great look.

This is a great look.

 

Disclaimer: In no way associated with Rachel Ashwell or Shabby Chic.


Funky Chic or Country Shabby or Funky Shabby or Country Chic??? Do the terms really matter and of course we know the term not to use because of copyright and trademark issues. :-)

Country Chic

Country Chic is a term a lot of ebayers use instead of that other term. I kind of like the term granny chic. White or Soft Colors are important for the look whatever you want to call it. The goal of doing a room with an item such as above is to make it perfectly imperfect.

Say you use the above item like a sofa table behind the couch. So how can you make sure the couch will fit with the look.

No, you probably don't want your dog to piss on the frilly slip covers of the couch to create that perfect stain but give your toddler a glass of tea and sit them on the couch. Course, don't you know it. Your toddler will probably have stopped being clumsy. Where is that dog at anyway? :-)

Can you make the look work? Your aiming for the quiet warmth of elegance but with items that in themself aren't elegant. It is not an easy look to achieve.

Anyways...........

So what is Funky Chic? God, I hope no one has trademarked the term. Some Grannies got funk in the 70's. Think orange. Think Lime Green. Well, mainly think 1970's. Where are my orange bell bottoms?

And Country Shabby. What the heck is that. Think Depression Era furniture. Also can be primitives. If the above item was painted green or blue or perhaps even left wood color it might qualify as Country Shabby. Say a Depression Era Bed is left with a maple or whatever look. It will still fit with what I consider the Country Shabby look. I wouldn't say I tend to lean toward the Country Shabby but I do like Depression Era furniture with a mix of new furniture or reproductions.

And Funky Shabby. Think Primitives, painted or left wood color. Is it furniture or is it art? Okay, so like dude what were you smoking when you built that coffee table. And like that purple book case or is it an entertainment center looks so freaking cool. In my book Funky Shabby has a more modern look than Country Shabby. I go through phases when I like this look. Some people might suggest that with the way I dress I'm always into funky shabby and it so totally doe not work for me..


 


This reproduction whatnot or wall stand is a great decorative item. Besides the warm memories of grandma's house and a place to put your collection of small collectible curios it is a good decorative item. Even though it is a reproduction and not 1930's it will go with the Country Shabby look very well.

 

 

 

 

 

Books on Decorating



Books on Decorating

Country and Funky and Lots Between Chic Lovers



 
Country Living Country Chic: Country Style for Modern Living

 
Reviewer: kathehemmer2 from Syracuse, NY United States many decorating ideas and styles within the framework of Country. Although, I turn to this book when i am about to paint a room and need to study the effects of a color.Another person might find it useful to learn the skills of simplifying a type of decor. It starts with the stark simplicity and ulitarian work of the American Shaker and brings in English Country and proceeds to modern Cubism. The pastel colors in this book are a feast to the eyes, in their subtle combinations. This book shows how details of life are important, but in natural way without clutter prevailing in a room. Except for the Bazaar Style and the Ethnic section, most of it would be welcome in your home. It even spruces up a trailer for those who prefer to live on wheels.I highly recommend this refresing look at Country "Chic."


 
Rachel Ashwell's Shabby Chic Treasure Hunting and Decorating Guide

 
By now most readers even marginally interested in home decorating are familiar with the democratic principles of decorating elaborated in Rachel Ashwell's first book, Shabby Chic: namely, that well-made vintage furniture and home accessories can add a cozy grandeur to your home, even if the paint's a little thin or the fabric a bit faded. In her second book, Rachel Ashwell's Shabby Chic Treasure Hunting & Decorating Guide, Ashwell shares her processes, from a stall-by-stall description of a flea market trip to pictures of her design boards scattered with photos, fabric swatches, and paint chips. Ashwell doesn't skimp on details: she tells how to decide on a fair bargaining price at flea markets, how to clean old items without harming them, and (step by step) how one ugly glass-fronted cabinet topped with old linoleum and mismatched shelf paper became an attractive, roomy storage piece that houses her daughter's books, dolls, and bedding. This is a friendly, intimate book in which Ashwell shares pictures of her own home and those of her friends--some of whom live in roomy beach houses and some of whom live in 450-square-foot cottages, and all of whom use the main Shabby Chic concepts of comfort, function, and beauty in deciding which objects to share their space with. Fans of the original Shabby Chic will find this follow-up every bit as useful, attractive, and accessible.

 



 
Retro Revamp: Funky Projects, from Handbags to Housewares

 
Book Description So the dresser doesn't match the nightstand, the four kitchen chairs are from four different sets, and the necklace is no Tiffany's original. Well it doesn't mean you can't have style, and how. Thanks to Retro Revamp's fun-filled ideas, you can turn anything so-so into so, so fabulous. Filled with gorgeous, full-color photographs, and decorated throughout with bright, nostalgic collage art and illustrations, this book is a treasure in itself. The projects inside range from necklaces to nightlights and are made from a variety of materials that are readily accessible. For an evening out, you'll need a Holly Golightly's Dream Bag fashioned from ribbon scraps, and a made-in-a-minute Chopstick-do hair accessory to keep your tresses intact. Indoors, a nostalgic Mystery Date End Table and some Ugly Chair First Aid helps you entertain with elan. And the Car Carma Dashboard Shrine and Mr. Potato Head Beach Bag will help you take your style on the road. You don't have to know how to knit, and you don't have to be a psycho-crazy coke bottle hoarder. All you need is some extra junk you don't know what to do with, and one copy of Retro Revamp.

 



 
La Casa Loca: Latino Style Comes Home 45 Funky Craft Projects for Decorating & Entertaining

 
Latino style is a huge and growing trend in home decorating and fashion. Latina personality Kathy Cano-Murillo takes the explosive colors and iconography of Latino style and merges it with pop art to create an inspirational craft book with a hip, contemporary sensibility. The twist: readers can create their very own casa loca crazy house by hand. Cano-Murillo offers a fabulous array of easy, inexpensive projects to liven up the interior and brighten the garden, to throw killer fiestas and take restful siestas, to live—and look—the Latino style. Use T-shirt fabric to make toss pillows with fringe or turn inexpensive soft-drink bottles into fabulous glittery vases. Use a glue gun to transform an ordinary garden into a Mexicali masterpiece complete with a Bonita Birdfeeder and Milagro Tree Ribbons. Heighten the hues in any home with Margarita Candles and Campy Terra Cotta Patio Lights. Ditch standard party fare for playful Loteria Wine Glass Charms, spicy serving bowls, and Frida Kahlo placemats. This is the stuff of La Casa Loca—an ethnic treat for the senses that brings the exciting, classy-meets-campy Latino style home to hip decorators everywhere. Kathy Cano-Murillo was named one of the "10 Latinas to watch" by Latina magazine in July 2001. newspaper. She lives in Phoenix, Arizona.

 



 
Fresh Paint: Fun & Easy Ways to Decorate Your Home (The Fresh Paint Series)

 
Reviewer: Susan Boos from USA I'm pretty familiar with books on painting and decorating and have quite a few. This book will soon become one of my staples. Not only are the decorating ideas fresh and good looking, but he gives whole room views instead of a little color swatch of what the finish looks like. I ordered 10 painting books at the same time and this was the only one I kept. I'm starting on my first big project out of this book next month. I would even rate this book and author higher than Debbie Travis because his instructions are easier and his projects are less "primitive" looking than hers. She was my previous mentor so this is saying a lot.

 



 
The Shabby Chic Home

 
Most people are familiar with the hallmarks of Rachel Ashwell's shabby chic style: fabrics in pastel florals and stripes, chintz sofa covers, antique-store and yard-sale finds turned into home furnishings and accessories. At the heart of this breezy style is a very practical idea: don't buy new--use what you have or can find at thrift stores and secondhand shops and enjoy the old-fashioned charm that only aged pieces acquire. The same idea goes for houses. The Shabby Chic Home shows how an older home can take on a shabby chic appeal by being brought up to date without sacrificing any of its charm. In The Shabby Chic Home, Ashwell walks readers through the renovation of her own 1920s home, from the purchase of the originally dark and gloomy house through the repainting (using layers and layers of white paint) of the home and the rebirth of the garden, yard, and pool, to the final decorating of the home for herself and her two kids. Along the way, readers receive advice on how to choose from among the thousands of paint colors, how to decide whether to live with the old or buy new, and why remodeling an older home might not be such a good idea. The latter part of the book explains how to add touches of shabby chic style to every room of a home--old or new--for a finished look. The result, shown in dramatic before-and-after pictures, is a home that's comfortable enough for a family to relax in, but still elegant and beautiful. Don't let the floral patterns and chenille bedspreads fool you: Ashwell's advice throughout is common-sense and economical. For instance, she recommends not wasting your time looking through every decorating option--if you like the first idea, color, or plan well enough, save yourself the time and stress and go with it. She also suggests resisting the immediate desire to throw out the old and bring in the new; try living with things as they are for a while, and you may find yourself surprised at how well you've come to like the funky tile in the bathroom or the noisy glass-door refrigerator. Here lies the appeal of a shabby chic home: sometimes old has a charm and lived-in look that can't be purchased from a home improvement store. --Kris Law

 



 
Shabby Chic

 
Reviewer: motherlodebeth from Northern California Contrary to what one reviewer wrote, while the book is a few years old it is still very much useful in 2001. Maybe one has to have lived in France, rural London or even in Greece to fully appreciate the authors wisdom. And page 141 has the ONLY non-fitting slip cover that could be described as "loose fitting and shabby". Fact is the 7 Chapters are well written and well photographed. The topics of each Chapter are: Diverse Styles; Rooms; Hidden Treasures & Inspirations; Fabrics; Seating; Lights & Lighting; and Flowers. Have used the crisp and very neat fitting slipcover ideas she has on page 23 and 27 as well as the setting idea on page 27 where two same covered, sofa's are used in the viewing/screening room of a clients home. Now... I am the only woman/female in this family. So with a husband, sons, male cats and dogs I love to save money as well as have furniture that men like and which looks good as well. Ms Ashwells book wins on all counts. Showing what works and what doesn't and why. She isn't just a woman who pays others to do what she says, she does it herself. The flea market piece and photos reminded me of the awesome Pasadena flea market that is so awesome! It is also nice that she shows a variety of living styles from country garden homes, to zen simplicity, to more a seaside or Mediterranean mode. She offers wonderful information on choosing the right fabric for the piece of furniture and home environment. And information that even I did not know about picking paint. Appreciated the section on furniture restortaion and the photographs that remind me of my favorite haunts in SF and Oakland. The book is one that you will actually pull off the shelf and read often. In my opinion it is worth the price

 



 
The Art of Faux: The Complete Sourcebook of Decorative Painted Finishes

 
Aimed at professionals and dedicated amateurs, The Art of Faux is packed with gorgeous examples of faux finishes. Internationally acclaimed, award-winning decorative painter and instructor Pierre Finkelstein covers every aspect of the art form in tremendous detail, beginning with extensive specifics on all tools, materials, supplies, and planning, and including preparation and cleanup considerations. Each of the other 10 chapters concentrates on a wide variety of faux finishes in different categories: marble, semiprecious stone, limestone and sandstone, wood, patinas and textures, metals and gilding, tile, organic materials (such as ivory, leather, and mother-of-pearl), stenciling, and trompe l'oeil. There are even instructions for uncommon faux finishes, such as bamboo, Delft tile, snakeskin, and damask, that are not generally taught in other books on the subject. Every finish is presented as a complete recipe, and the list of ingredients includes not only paints, glazes, and tools, but also difficulty ratings and lists of preparatory exercises for techniques that are part of the complete finish. People seriously involved in any aspect of faux finishing--particularly people considering careers in the field--should invest in the information-packed The Art of Faux.

 



Shop inwoods.com for Quilt Racks, Hall Trees, and other Great Items

Funky Tosh and Abby Chic Notes:

No current Notes.