loader from loading.io

365: How to Have Good Taste when it Comes to Décor, inspired by interior designer Heidi Caillier's Memories of Home

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Release Date: 09/20/2023

Un Moment de Méditation: No. 17 — A Curious Mind’s Gift show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 17 — A Curious Mind’s Gift

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
Un Moment de Méditation: No. 16 — Relaxation as the Byproduct show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 16 — Relaxation as the Byproduct

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
424: Talking with Sharon Santoni about the Art of Antiquing in France show art 424: Talking with Sharon Santoni about the Art of Antiquing in France

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

"The key is to enjoy the moment, and never stop learning along the way." —Sharon Santoni encouragement to explore France's many antique and vintage markets, fairs and shops France. The history, the ambiance, the food, ahhh, and the antiques and vintage treasures. If you've ever dreamed of traveling to France or have traveled to France and have wanted to know how to navigate the many brocantes, antique fairs and markets, a new book has been written for you. Sharon Santoni, founder of - the blog, the magazine, the travel tours and the seasonal boxes filled with treasures, has spent years...

info_outline
Un Moment de Méditation: No. 15 — The Easiest Task of All show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 15 — The Easiest Task of All

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
Un Moment de Méditation: No. 14 — Give Yourself Patience show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 14 — Give Yourself Patience

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
423: How to Live in Sync with Your Inner Compass show art 423: How to Live in Sync with Your Inner Compass

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

My niece is graduating from high school this year, and as an aunt, it is a practice in letting go and trusting the amazing person that she is that she will find her way in life. If I were her parent, it would be different, as there is more direct support involved. This has been a great practice in exemplifying what is talked about here on TSLL: Living with intention, having clarity, being loving and kind while honoring our integrity in all interactions, but not clinging, controlling or manipulating. Our life is our own, and every other person has their own life journey to travel.  Often,...

info_outline
Un Moment de Méditation: No. 13 — Becoming the Chooser of Our Thoughts show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 13 — Becoming the Chooser of Our Thoughts

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
Un Moment de Méditation: No. 12 — What Seeds Are You Watering? show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 12 — What Seeds Are You Watering?

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
422: How to Embrace Uncertainty and Why It Leads to a Fulfilling Life show art 422: How to Embrace Uncertainty and Why It Leads to a Fulfilling Life

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

“We might think that security is everything. But to secure something is to bind it. To keep it still. In contrast, in embracing uncertainty, we discover an ever-changing freedom and flow.” —Andy Puddicombe   An unexpected event. From startling good news that seems to come out of the blue or devastating loss, these events and anything in between that occur outside of what we imagine or have forgotten could happen or believed wouldn’t happen for some time, provide a powerful medicine to bring out a deeply fulfilling life. These events that shake us awake to the reality that we...

info_outline
Un Moment de Méditation: No. 11 — Our Daily Life: Compost for the Mind show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 11 — Our Daily Life: Compost for the Mind

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Find the text for this mini-episode on The Simply Luxurious Life -

info_outline
 
More Episodes

"Our world is dominated by algorithms — by data collection that steers us toward a limited set of products and designers who have paid for the privilege of coming up first in our search. The result is that our taste has gotten . . . only more homogeneous, more limited." —Rachel Tashjian, style contributor to The Washington Post, in her article Whatever Happened to Having Taste?

The primary reason I wanted to begin with this quote is because the reality is all too real: good taste is often hard to find, and much of it has to do with remaining inside the box. Often this 'box' is the one we see frequently on Instagram, Pinterest or TikTok.

Enter interior designer Heidi Caillier, someone who didn't and doesn't play by the rules of social media, who didn't follow the trends, and trusted her own voice and eye.

To walk into a home curated by someone with exquisite taste, time seems to vanish, and the primary emotions one feels are comfort, awe and appreciation even if we don't know at all how they did it. Somehow, it all just works. A symphony of hues, textures, pieces, and details that appear as though they just belong together to welcome the residents of the sanctuary home each time they cross the threshold.

I remember seeing interior designer Heidi Caillier's work for the first time. It was the cover story of Rue Magazine in 2019. Caillier had designed a Seattle cottage guided by the charming Scandinavian aesthetic - simple, yet cozy, unique, yet functional, and with thoughtful touches of vintage to create a feeling of nostalgia. I became even more intrigued when I saw her work on a handful of Arts & Crafts houses both in California, Oregon and across the country on the east coast. Heidi was speaking my language (she embraces wallpaper!), as she incorporated the aesthetics that reminded me of English country with modern sensibilities for living well and thoughtfully. Check out a few of the homes here (one of my favorites - the kitchen!), here and here. And her entire portfolio here.

As Caillier is also someone who lives in the Pacific Northwest, in Tacoma, Washington, part of my intrigue was her home base as rarely had I seen an interior designer from PNW that has their own aesthetic that wasn't wed to the stereotypical Portland or Seattle modern trends that never quite captured my definition of timelessness or comfort, or even warmth. With delight and immediate appreciation, I began following her on Instagram as she share glimpses into her projects as they begin, are in progress and eventually are completed. As she shares in her new book, just released on September 5th, Memories of Home, the portfolio shared in the pages of the book tells stories that are "nostalgic, romantic, creative, playful but sophisticated, and so incredibly comforting." All the boxes in my ideal of a sanctuary are ticked with that sentence, and indeed each home showcased demonstrates her objectives have met their desired results with each client's home shared, including her own.

As timing would have it, the topic of good taste, and the seeming lack thereof arose this month in an article written by style contributor to The Washington Post Rachel Tashjian, as I was pouring through the pages of Heidi's new book, it became immediately clear she understands and brings forth good taste in each of her homes, but how does one do that? Even if we don't hire someone or are unable to work with the talent and expert Heidi provides, how do we curate a home, and in very much the same way, curate a wardrobe and a life that is not guided by algorithms? Well, I think that question in and of itself is a great place to start. Let's take a look at eight key aspects of curating good taste when it comes to our décor.