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Becoming an Interior Designer
Becoming an Interior Designer
Becoming an Interior Designer
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Becoming an Interior Designer

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A revealing guide to a career as an interior designer written by New York Times bestselling author Kate Bolick and based on the real-life experiences of the cofounders of the acclaimed Brooklyn firm Jesse Parris-Lamb—required reading for anyone considering a path to this profession.

Becoming an Interior Designer takes you behind the scenes to find out what it’s really like, and what it really takes, to become an interior designer. This artful profession combines visionary creativity and taste with architecture, engineering, and business savvy. Acclaimed Brooklyn-based studio Jesse Parris-Lamb specializes in crafting warm, textured room designs shaped by the people that inhabit them. Bestselling author Kate Bolick shadows founders Amanda Jesse and Whitney Parris-Lamb to show how this dream job becomes a reality. Visit their studio as they as they map out new projects. Watch as they inject beauty and atmosphere into open air lofts and historic brownstones. Decide on the perfect shade of blue that will complete a serene reading room. Gain professional wisdom as Bolick traces the founders’ paths to prominence, from attending design school and starting a studio, to building top-tier clients and planning landmark redesigns.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 19, 2021
ISBN9781982138844
Becoming an Interior Designer
Author

Kate Bolick

Kate Bolick’s first book, the bestselling Spinster: Making a Life of One’s Own, was a New York Times Notable Book. A contributing editor for The Atlantic, Bolick writes for a variety of publications, including The New York Times, The New Republic, The Wall Street Journal, Cosmopolitan, Elle, and Vogue, and hosts “Touchstones at The Mount,” an annual interview series at Edith Wharton’s country estate, in Lenox, Massachusetts. Previously, she was executive editor of Domino and a columnist for The Boston Globe.

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    Becoming an Interior Designer - Kate Bolick

    1

    Several moments ago, it was an otherwise ordinary Monday at the offices of Jesse Parris-Lamb, if unseasonably humid for Brooklyn in June. The founders of this residential interior design firm, Amanda Jesse and Whitney Parris-Lamb, had been crouched on the floor, poring over a series of computer printouts of images of chairs and tables, shuffling them around like playing cards, looking for the just-right combination. Every so often one of the two would leap up to pull another image from the folder on the table beside them and introduce it to the mix. They were in the early stages of designing a two-story home library in Connecticut, and the folder contained the results of months of scouting and sourcing ideas. Now it was almost game time: by the end of the following day, they needed to overnight the client a packet of images of their final selections for furnishings and lighting, as well as paint swatches and fabric samples, in preparation for their final meeting the following week.

    To a layperson such as me, it was impossible to detect any rhyme or reason to the options spread out on the floor: a pair of pale-pink wingback chairs, a wooden chair with a green seat and a tall windowpane back, a pair of low-slung armchairs in beige, a klismos side chair covered in rust-colored velvet. As someone who writes often about design, I know how to describe what I’m seeing, but actually pulling together all those disparate elements to create a space that’s beautiful, comfortable, functional, and original requires abilities that are many leagues beyond me. For a few minutes I tried to imagine myself into the minds of Amanda and Whitney, to see what they were seeing, and failed. (Who wouldn’t want to live with every single one of these beautiful chairs? I’ll take them all, thank you!)

    Then Whitney walked away and returned with a rug sample. The large square of tufted beige wool depicted the head of a giant black-and-brown snake, mouth open wide, seizing what looked like an orange jellyfish between its spiky jaws. Was that a green leaf also sticking out of the jellyfish? I couldn’t see what the snake had to do with anything else arrayed before us.

    When I expressed my bafflement, Amanda called out to Neala Jacobs, their studio director, at her desk across the room and asked her to find the image they’d been using as inspiration. Neala has been working at Jesse Parris-Lamb (JPL, for short) for only two years, but she’s so seamlessly woven into Whitney and Amanda’s dynamic that it feels as if she’d been there since day one, five years ago. Neala found the image, printed it out, and walked over to hand it to me.

    They’d originally found the image on Pinterest—a reliable source of gorgeously designed living spaces for ideas and inspiration. (That Pinterest is the backbone of our image sourcing is the dumbest thing, Amanda said, rolling her eyes. I prefer when we’re paging through actual books. But Pinterest provides such an easy way to collect images and share them with the office internally.) The image was of a dining room, not a library, with bare dark-brown wooden floorboards laid down in a chevron pattern, and a pale wooden pedestal table at center paired with midcentury-style molded-plastic hunter-green chairs. Long kelly-green drapes hung at the window, and a pitch-black ceiling light with three long, thin ectomorphic arms hung above all of it, like the most graceful of arachnids. The room was lovely, but I couldn’t see what it had to do with the images I was looking at on the floor. Reptilian refinement? Elegance with an edge?

    While I was trying to puzzle through their creative process, Whitney’s smartphone buzzed, and she answered it. She walked out of the room and into the hallway they use as a concept board, then walked back out into the studio, then back into the hallway again—quickly. Back and forth. Full-on pacing. Amanda began to look concerned.

    Head lowered, ear pressed to her phone, Whitney was speaking in a gracious, confident tone that completely belied her obvious anxiety. Tall and rangy, she wears her wavy brown hair in a short crop, which, as she paced, fell over her forehead, obscuring her eyes. As she paced, she looked anywhere but at Amanda—at the floor, at the ceiling. Amanda, unable to read her business partner’s expression, returned to her desk, where she sat still as a mouse, and seemed to be doing her best to absorb the contents of the call through osmosis. Across the room, Neala worked quietly at her computer, oblivious of the drama silently unfolding behind her.

    Since joining forces to found their firm in 2014, when they were in their early thirties, Whitney and Amanda have amassed an impressive client list of successful executives and artists across all creative fields, from the founder of OkCupid to a famous novelist or three. Along the way, they’ve developed the communication habits of a long-married couple. They are nearly always together, and when they’re not, they are talking on the phone or texting. When they are together but for whatever reason can’t speak directly—because one of the duo is locked in a delicate telephone conversation, for instance—they rely on various nonverbal methods, whether reading each other’s body language or simply hazarding educated guesses. As I’d come to see, maintaining this constant stream of contact allows them to collaborate on every decision, which ensures they remain equal partners, always working in concert.

    Their studio is in a giant redbrick building in a gritty sliver of South Brooklyn known as Gowanus. During the 1800s, this tiny neighborhood was a major hub of industry and manufacturing. So much so that the nearly two-mile-long Gowanus Canal—a narrow creek that slithers inland from New York Harbor, passes within shouting distance of their studio, and terminates just several blocks north—became so polluted with industrial runoff and sewage (and, allegedly, the corpses of Mafia victims) that in 2010 it was designated a Superfund site.

    The canal’s cleanup and renewal is slow and ongoing, but the massive, long-vacant industrial buildings that line it have over time found new life as loftlike apartments and creative spaces. JPL’s building, at 543 Union Street, has the company name NATIONAL PACKING BOX FACTORY painted in massive white letters across the facade, a vestige of its former identity in the nineteenth century. Just above the final two words of the sign is JPL’s corner studio, on the third floor. The space is a serene oasis of original details and minimalist furnishings. Welcoming, orderly, understatedly chic, and completely lacking in pretension, the layout and decor beautifully embody the firm’s reputation for creating warm, textured interiors shaped by the lives that inhabit them.

    The brick walls and exposed beamed ceilings are painted white (Benjamin Moore’s White Dove to be exact, JPL’s go-to white paint), and the antique pale floorboards left bare. The furniture is simple and streamlined. Set against the walls, each of the four desks—natural-wood tops on simple white metal frames—is paired with a utilitarian white rolling chair. Extending from the far wall into the center of the room is a white Parsons table set with four wicker-and-bentwood chairs. A sleek chrome-and-pony side chair, and another in chrome and black leather, are pushed against opposing walls, waiting to be called into service. A tall white-oak bookcase holds all manner of design books, both new and historical, neat stacks of Architectural Digest and Elle Decor, an orderly array of tile samples, and just a few choice accessories—a pair of intriguing silver candleholders, an unusual glass paperweight, a mystifying metal object that could just as easily be a modernist sculpture or a piece of curtain hardware. On the floor, two big woven baskets brim with fabric swatches in every color. Six tall windows with plain white shades look out onto the street below, where horns honk and sirens scream, as if protesting the heat wave as well as the traffic. A lone globe-shaped glass terrarium is suspended from the ceiling with a length of rope.

    The duo’s individual wardrobes seem of a piece with their environment, striking that difficult balance between comfortable and professional—clothes that allow for whatever the day may hold, whether hoisting an armchair up a flight of stairs, or sitting down at a business meeting. Today Whitney is wearing fashionable high-waisted, wide-legged jeans, a beige T-shirt, flat brown leather open-toe sandals with gold-buckled straps across the top, and a simple gold cuff bracelet. Her round, brown-framed glasses accentuate her intellectual aspect. Amanda

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