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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. 5 — Letting go of Comparison show art Un Moment de Méditation: No. 5 — Letting go of Comparison

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

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No. 4 Un Moment de Méditation — Less Thinking, Deeper Breathing show art No. 4 Un Moment de Méditation — Less Thinking, Deeper Breathing

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

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418: Neighboring — How to Do It and Why It Will Enhance the Quality of Your Everydays show art 418: Neighboring — How to Do It and Why It Will Enhance the Quality of Your Everydays

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

"There's a sense of comfort and safety that can come with knowing [our neighbors] — and building a safe and caring community is a valuable way to stay connected to the place you live." —Diana Opong and Janet W. Lee, in their article "" Being a good neighbor is a daily practice in awareness. Both in what and who surrounds us, as well as how our own choices might affect others. Tune in to episode to discover 7 ways to strengthen your neighboring skills and also discover three significant life benefits when we put them to practice. Find the Show Notes for the episode on The SImply Luxurious...

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No. 3: Un Moment de Méditation — An Ease in Everyday Life show art No. 3: Un Moment de Méditation — An Ease in Everyday Life

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

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No. 2: Un Moment de Méditation — How to Heal show art No. 2: Un Moment de Méditation — How to Heal

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

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417: How Our Relationship with Ourselves Sets the Tone for the Health of All Relationships show art 417: How Our Relationship with Ourselves Sets the Tone for the Health of All Relationships

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

“The relationship we have with ourselves is the most important relationship we will ever have, and we will have to continuously work on that relationship to break through the barriers that prevent us from true emotional intimacy with another person.” —Jillian Turecki With a new year's beginning, the idea of love may be dancing about on our intentions list. But in order to successfully experience real love, we need to build a foundation to be able to identify it, choose it, and then nurture it. Jillian Turecki's successful podcast shares advice on how to build healthy and...

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No. 1 Un Moment de Méditation — Courage and the Mind show art No. 1 Un Moment de Méditation — Courage and the Mind

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

Welcome to the first mini-episode of TSLL's new limited series, Un Moment de Méditation/Moment of Meditation. Find the complete text on The Simply Luxurious Life blog -  

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Introduction to New Mini Series - Un Moment de Méditation/Meditation Moments show art Introduction to New Mini Series - Un Moment de Méditation/Meditation Moments

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

A new limited series begins in 2026, offering guided meditation to help listeners deepen their mindfulness practice. Learn more by listening to this trailer.  Un Moment de Méditation is a weekly limited series that will run for one year, sharing one mini-episode each Sunday afternoon, about 5 minutes in length.  This new mini series is in addition to the regular episodes of The Simple Sophisticate podcast that will continue to be available on the 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of each month.  I invite you to enjoy me when we begin on Sunday, January 4th, both here, where you enjoy your...

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416: How to Find Peace — The Joy and Necessity of Solitude show art 416: How to Find Peace — The Joy and Necessity of Solitude

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"The moment being alone stops bothering you, your whole life levels up." With the holidays upon us, I have come to discover an unexpected gift of enjoying my own company during this time of year - the realization of what I most enjoy about the holidays. And here's the catch: when it is chosen, it is liberating. It's clarifying, and as the quote above acknowledges, it is life-elevating. This doesn't mean we are alone 24 hours a day, or even live alone. What solitude, regularly savored, gives us is the life we say we want, but either haven't yet realized or haven't yet trusted to be dependable...

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415: The Life Nourishing Benefits of Welcoming Art into Our Sanctuary (and how to curate your own collection) show art 415: The Life Nourishing Benefits of Welcoming Art into Our Sanctuary (and how to curate your own collection)

The Simple Sophisticate - Intelligent Living Paired with Signature Style

"Art is a language without words." —Kate Bryan, author of Why art? Why bring it into our lives? Why spend our hard-earned money on it? We often hear about the skyrocketing headline-making prices of paintings being sold at auction, but what's the point of purchasing something if the entire reason is to accrue value to sell later? The primary objective, Bryan shares, in writing this book, is to remove the assumed 'closed doors' or air of snobbery about art that she admits the art world itself has constructed. But, and she makes a strong argument, art, seeing it, appreciating it, making it, is...

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"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.