Mélange Travel & Lifestyle Magazine October 2016 | Page 40

What is your home’s design style? Do you have a favourite room? My home is my haven. It is very West Indian. It’s a simple, single-story beach house that looks out onto the piercing blue ocean and to a small offshore island called Prickly Pear island in the di stance. The colours that surround us are sensational and change dramatically throughout the course of the day, and according to the weather – from deep greens of the foliage, to vibrant blues of the sea and sky to touches of white from the surf and occasional cloud. We’ve allowed nature to speak for itself in our home – to maximize the beauty of the landscape by keeping things clean and simple and in tandem with the tropical landscape. There’s no fuss and frills. It’s all clean lines and understated elegance: found objects from the beach, shells, driftwood, petrified wood and art. Lots of art. Caribbean life is all about outside living and we’ve recreated this spirit in our home. We have several different outside ‘rooms’: a couple of secluded areas for quiet contemplation; another that is hidden away and embraced by tropical greenery; and then a couple of larger spaces for lounging, dining, entertaining, chilling and listening to music. The outside is an extension of the inside, which in turn is framed by the jaw dropping seascape. Everything in my home holds a special meaning for me and my husband and represents something important, whether a memory, an experience, an achievement, or a specific person, place or situation. I remember where we’ve purchased each piece as well as the emotion associated with that experience – the thrill and happiness. When I think of a home in the Caribbean, two words come to mind – colourful and relaxed. What tips can you give to our readers who may want to create 36 that atmosphere in their non-Caribbean homes? Wall colours are really vibrant. You’ll also find a two-toneness in the wall colour, so it’s not perfect. You can have a chair rail with two tones of colour on a wall. A really vibrant, ocean blue on the bottom, and then on top you have a light turquoise or white. You find that kind of look in the Caribbean quite a bit. Also, use sheers and whites for curtains. Make sure the window treatment fabric is airy and breathable. We love pottery and woven baskets. So pottery in different places and just get really ethnic with it. So if you have something that you’re really drawn to from a certain island, display it. And, add bold island artwork. Make sure that the woods feel quite warm, or distressed - not sleek. You want to make sure there are some knots and some wormholes in the woods that you choose or that they are painted to look as though they are worn, old and distressed.