Tag: Dining Room

  • My Pink Dining Room with the Red Ceiling

    My Pink Dining Room with the Red Ceiling

    Oh hey, remember when I was going to make over my dining room because I was inspired by a moth? I did it!

    Pink and Red Dining Room in a Victorian House | Making it Lovely

    I need some art in there still, but I’m waiting to find just the right thing, rather than rush out to fill blank wall space. And I’m not letting that stop me from taking photos of what is a 92% completed room. I saw a post about the life-sized papier-mâché octopus from the 1893 World’s Fair here in Chicago, and I thought to myself ‘I should make things out of paper mâché.’ It hasn’t happened yet, but in my head I know it would be great. Moths for the dining room! Maybe not. But then I do want to make mushrooms that look like they’re growing out of the walls to line the hallway on the third floor, making you feel like you’re a little itty bitty thing in a fairy forest. Normal decorating stuff.


    The room looks pretty much exactly like the mock-up. I’ve gotten good at doing renderings in Photoshop and SketchUp, honing my skills first for fun and for the blog, now just as often for clients to show what their spaces will look like. It’s a weird thing because I can see it in my head coming together just fine, but then I like to make it happen digitally to show others, and then I have to actually DO the work to make it happen. Like, I’ve already done the work of designing it, now I have to do all this other stuff? Blah, fine. I’ll paint for four days.

    Dining Room Hutch Photoshop Mockup | Making it Lovely
    Dining Room (Oh boy, center that light, huh?)

    There’s some unwanted bokeh I don’t know how to avoid (is it dust, or the aperture being open too wide?), and yes that light is centered length-wise on the room but not width-wise. The junction box is in a faux wood beam and it seems like more hassle than it’s worth to move it. It’s probably because I don’t sit at that end, but it bothers me far more in photos than in real life. There are always more pressing/exciting things to do around here than to move that light.

    Another before, rendering, and after. Pretty spot-on!

    Dining Room Paint Color Mockup | Making it Lovely
    Pink Dining Room with Red Ceiling | Making it Lovely

    We have always been able to do the amount of work we do because I do so much of the manual labor, but that doesn’t mean I always want to. We hired out painting a handful of times and it was a dream. Snap your fingers (and spend some money) and it’s done! Voila. I wish it happened more often, but money saved on painters is money spent on an electrician to add sconces where before there were none.

    Vendome Sconces, Visual Comfort, Circa Lighting | Making it Lovely

    The sconces are Vendome, by Visual Comfort. A modern classic. Note the delicate arc of the arms, subtle details, and pretty finishes. If those details are less important to you, you can get a very similar look for a lot less with this sconce.

    Pink and Red Dining Room, Schumacher Blue Bukhara Ikat Tablecloth | Making it Lovely

    The tablecloth was from the Schumacher collection for Williams-Sonoma (sold out, but some of the other items are still available). You can buy the same Bukhara Ikat pattern in their cotton sateen fabric, but I wouldn’t recommend it for a tablecloth.

    Schumacher Bukhara Ikat Wiliams-Sonoma Tablecloth | Making it Lovely

    I found and put in the room very briefly a rug I bought off of Facebook Marketplace. It was pretty, but too plush for a dining room, so I rolled it up and sold it for the same price I bought it for. Hello Calvin, my little model, and thank you for so cutely rocking the haircut I gave you! (I’m getting better at them as I go — I think we’re on round three of at-home haircuts by now.)

    Calvin, Vintage Rug

    The rug we ended up with was me giving up on sourcing vintage rugs solely online during a pandemic and just wanting to be done with that task. Done! It looks great in photos and in person, but be aware that it is printed. I’ll usually opt to invest in something a little nicer, new or old, but in this case an inexpensive rug that’s super easy to vacuum (the flat texture means no food can get trapped in the weave) was exactly what we needed. This is the Loloi Layla rug in olive and charcoal.

    Loloi Layla Rug, Olive and Charcoal

    I talked a lot about the process of this room coming together on Instagram Stories. Did you see the wallpaper I was considering for a client that I ended up falling in love with? And not getting?

    House of Hackney Artemis Blush Wallpaper | Making it Lovely

    I would have loved to paper the little hall between the dining room, kitchen, and bathroom, and also use it to line the back of the hutch. It would look amazing! But I had rolls of Ralph Lauren paper in the basement left from the previous owners (the pattern in the snug) that matched pretty well. I don’t love the pattern nearly as much, but I like it a lot and it was free.

    Dining Room Hutch Wallpapered with Ralph Lauren Paper | Making it Lovely
    Gin and Wallpaper!

    Saving that expense (about $1000) let me put that money toward snake wallpaper for the bathroom which is equally exciting! Oh boy, there’s so much going on here that I need to put into blog form. Good stuff.

    Making it Lovely Design Plans for the Lovely Victorian

    I’m feeling creative and motivated to work on the house again after doing this dining room update. It’s a good feeling! And woe is me for complaining about painting a ceiling, because I’m stripping wallpaper that was applied to bare drywall now and that has proven to be the far more laborious task. Oh, house. You don’t make it easy sometimes! It’s a good thing I love you as much as I do. We’ll get that bathroom looking amazing soon enough. And maybe a kitchen update to follow, hmm?

    Pink Walls, Red Ceiling | Dining Room | Making it Lovely
    Black Spool Dining Chairs | Making it Lovely
  • Spool Dining Chairs

    Spool Dining Chairs

    “Where are those chairs from?” It’s a question that’s asked every time I share my dining room. I’m happy to share, but unfortunately, nobody is selling the same ones anymore.

    Dining Room, Wood Trim, Black Spool Chairs | Making it Lovely

    We used to have Industry West’s Marais A chairs at the table. We still have them stored in the basement — they’re stackable and we use them when hosting for Christmas or other large gatherings.

    Subtle Pink Dining Room with Wood Trim, Making it Lovely

    They’re great chairs and hold up beautifully, but I liked them better in our previous house. I wanted a different look here, and it took a while before we were ready to buy. A full set of 8 dining chairs is expensive! Just as we were ready to purchase and I had decided on Abacus dining chairs by Noir, they were discontinued. I was almost able to get them at a great price because of it, but there weren’t enough left in stock. Next on my list was Redford House’s Abigail chair, but then I came across Baxton Studio’s Heather chair and those are the ones we have in our dining room.

    Dining Chairs with Traditional Details

    The Abacus and Heather chairs are so similar because they’re both reproductions of antique spool chairs. Below are examples from 1st Dibs (chair 1, 2).

    Antique Spool Dining Side Chairs

    So where can you buy them now?

    I started sourcing for this post in hopes of finding similar styles, and there are not many out there. The closest right now would be One Kings Lane’s Barton Spindle Side Chairs.

    One Kings Lane - Barton Spindle Side Dining Chairs

    Ballard Designs’ Livia Spool Chair has similar elements and is very cute. The Redford House Abigail chair I had initially considered is still in production too. I’m not aware of anything more spot-on, but if this were for a client, I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend any of these.

    Ballard Designs - Livia Dining Spool Chairs
    Redford House - Abigail Dining Chairs

    Going vintage/antique is another good option for simimlar chairs, and a coat of black paint on an interesting shape goes a long way. Phrases to search for online in this case: spool, spindle, bobbin, turned, barley twist, Jenny Lind. Spool is the most accurate term, but all of those have the potential to turn up something similar. Searching for other historical styles can be helpful (they’re sometimes mislabeled). Try “side chair” or “dining chair” and Jacobean, Georgian, colonial, federal, empire, regency, or ladder back.

    And whatever chairs you have, if the seats are upholstered I highly, highly, highly recommend getting seat covers to safeguard against kids or other particularly messy people in your life. These are the ones we have (you can see the straps on the chair in the center below). The fabric would be so gross on the kids’ seats if we didn’t have the covers on.

  • Updating the Dining Room

    Updating the Dining Room

    My sister-in-law had a rug in her family room that used to belong to my mother-in-law, and now that she’s redecorating it’s ours. I’ve always liked it, and the colors are ones that I tend to gravitate toward — rust orange, pink, olive, and blue on a warm neutral base. (This rug has a similar color palette and feel.)

    Vintage Rug with Paint and Fabric Swatches

    Ideally, for maximum before and after effect, I would reupholster the dining chairs. Practically though, the beige fabric is still in great shape and I have matching waterproof seat covers to protect the kids’ chairs. They’re fine! The fabric may be a bit on the boring side, but it’s fine.

    Our dining room is always dark though. It faces North and our house is close to the neighbors on that side, so even with two huge windows, there’s not a lot of natural light. Not helping is the antique pendant which, while very cool, has only a single bulb. I’ve always wanted to add sconces.

    I’ve also always wanted to add wallpaper, but sconces first. And now that we’re brining in a new (to us) patterned rug and more lighting, I’m thinking a coat of paint may be in order instead of papering. The walls are a subtle pink that I still like, but would be happy to change for something more fun or dramatic.

    So! Sconces. Honestly, I keep coming back to the same one and have loved it for years. I could overthink this, as is my wont, or I could just move forward with a pair of Vendome double sconces. It’s a beautiful fixture without being showy, and a classic design that looks great in a lot of homes. I’m not beholden to period-appropriate lighting (my Victorian originally had gas lights), but I do like to go either very modern or classic. These sconces are obviously the latter.

    Vendome Antique Brass Double Sconce

    The dog rose botanical print will go elsewhere and the sconces will flank the windows. And I’m excited! I love our home. It doesn’t need constant full-scale makeovers (as fun as those are), and these incremental changes over time always add up to something wonderful and personal.

  • Our Dining Room, Set for Christmas

    Our Dining Room, Set for Christmas

    Our old metal dining chairs were great for kids. Indestructible and easy to clean! So what did I replace them with? Wooden chairs with easily stained beige upholstery seats. Brilliant!

    (I don’t intend to keep the stock fabric on them forever. Keep reading.)

    Someone spotted the new chairs in a recent post, but here they are in full.

    I had been saving up for a long time for new dining chairs and I’d had my eye on either Noir’s Abacus or Redford House’s Abigail. Noir discontinued the Abacus dining chairs earlier this year though, and before I could get them quickly enough at the clearance price, they were gone. But then I found these on Overstock.

    And then I realized that the manufacturer, Baxton Studio, has two outlets — both in Chicago. I was able to get the chairs for just a little over $100 each while they were having a big sale.

    Dining Chairs with Traditional Details

    Until I can get some more kid-friendly fabric on there, I bought a couple of these waterproof dining chair covers to protect the kids’ seats. They blend well and aren’t terribly noticeable (and they really work). The seats are not the easy to recover kind that are just screwed on, and I’d like to replace the nailhead detail with piping. They’ll need a trip to the reupholsterer when I’m ready for a change.

    The table is set with with Ballard Designs’ Jacqueline dinnerware. I photographed the dining room for a holiday campaign they’re running, and I was able to chose a bunch of my favorite pieces to shoot and keep. We always host Christmas dinner, so this is what our table will look like this year! The cups and saucers will be especially cute when we have coffee with dessert.

    A few things are no longer available, but here are the direct links to everything I used from Ballard Designs (and a near match for the vintage silver candle holders on the table, too).

    Ballard Designs Holiday 2017 Christmas Tabletop

    I have so many ideas in mind for where this room could go! I’m loving the mix of traditional/Victorian with more modern and unexpected touches throughout the rest of the house, but I’ve yet to really bring that in here. The new chairs are a great start.

  • My Rug Design in a Dining Room

    My Rug Design in a Dining Room

    The rug I designed for Annie Selke is moving along from it’s initial concept and into the first stages of production. Samples are being created in India (which takes about six weeks), and then we can tweak or move forward to the next step. My design lost its border along the sides to better work for different rug sizes. The ends were also changed slightly, but the fringe remains (yay!) and it’s going to be made as a wool kilim.

    My inspiration and design process is up on Annie Selke’s blog today. I mentioned that I would love to see this as part of a dining room, so I thought I’d pull together a design board to show what I mean. Someone make this room happen! You know. Next year when the rug is out.

    Dining Room Design with Rug for Annie Selke by Nicole Balch | Making it Lovely

    1. ‘Seated Nude’ by Jane Rades, Serena & Lily

    2. ‘Roses,’ Jenny’s Print Shop

    3. Umbra Hub 36″ Round Wall Mirror, Bellacor

    4. Isla Marble Wall Sconce, CB2

    5. Kent Dome Pendant, Ballard Designs

    6. O&G Jenna Buffet Lamp, Rejuvenation

    7. Lexington Carrera Sideboard, Perigold

    8. Bunny Williams’ Flaring Vase, Ballard Designs

    9. Mörbylånga Oak Dining Table, IKEA

    10. Framework Upholstered Dining Chair, West Elm

    11. Wool Kilim Rug by Nicole Balch for Annie Selke, coming in 2018!

  • Setting the Table with Black & White

    Setting the Table with Black & White

    In partnership with Unison.


    Our dining room is on the plain side. I don’t mean that in a bad way, but the whole room consists of plaster pink walls, lots of unpainted wood, and metal chairs that were better suited to our old house. I like the color palette (pink loves brown!), but it does need a bit of oomph. Until we’re ready to change things up on a grander scale, I like to play around with table settings to give the room a different look.

    Setting the Dining Room Table with Unison Home | Making it Lovely

    Mmm, cake.

    I added that ubiquitous black and white striped rug about a year ago to break up the sea of wood, but hadn’t made any other changes. Unison reached out recently about taking part in a little challenge. Decorate a room with Unison, and they’ll be sharing my space along with a few others on Instagram (look for the #UnisonHomeChallenge). That’s coming next week and when they share, the photo with the most likes will win its creator some additional Unison goodies. Fun, right? I was in.

    Unison Dining Table Settings | Making it Lovely

    Black flatware had been on my wish list forever, so I started there and it is amazing. (Dishwasher safe, too!) From there, I started looking at their tableware and I was drawn to the Merchant Charcoal plates. I like the graphic punch of the black plates with the flatware, and they’re going to be fun to mix and match with our other dishes.

    Black Dishes and Flatware from Unison Home | Making it Lovely

    I almost always set a table with a tablecloth, but I challenged myself to do something a little different this time. Instead of bringing in pattern with a tablecloth, I left the table bare to show off the wood and instead used these grid napkins. The black and white pattern works well with the rug, and then I added the striped Omaggio vases and a few smaller black and white vases to flank them.

    Black and White Omaggio Vases from Unison Home | Making it Lovely

    Those waxy yellow flowers — aren’t they cool? Beehive ginger. I had never seen them before. (If you follow me on Instagram, you might have seen me arranging them. They get weird random petals that pop out and have to be removed each morning!)

    Dining Room Table Setting with Black and White Omaggio Vases from Unison Home | Making it Lovely

    I added pink glasses and a cake stand. Together with the flowers, the table feels very ‘spring.’ If you added eggs and bunnies you’d have a pretty cute Easter table!

    Dining Table Set with Unison Home | Making it Lovely

    Dining Room with Unison Home Table Settings | Making it Lovely

    Such a good, modern pieces to work as a counterpoint to the more traditional envelope of the room. They’re going to be fun to work into other settings too.

    You can follow Unison on Instagram, and remember to keep an eye out next week for the #UnisonHomeChallenge posts to go up to see three other takes on the challenge!