Blog News December 17, 2014

Holiday Hosting Made Easy

 

ChecklistUse This Quick Checklist To Get Your Home Party-Ready

Between holiday shopping, baking, and events, hosting a party can be the straw that breaks the busy camel’s back. With a quick and easy cleaning checklist, getting your home ready for guests doesn’t have to require intensive labor. If you get off work at 5:00 p.m. and have guests coming at 7:00 p.m., these guidelines will keep you on track for preparing your house and yourself.

  1. Do A Walk Through: Clean from your front porch in. Your front door and entryway will be the first part of your home your guests see, so they should be a priority when it comes to house cleaning. Don’t forget to make space in your coat closet as well.
  2. Touch Up the Bathrooms: You will have a lot of traffic through your bathrooms by the night’s end, so it’s best to start with a clean slate. Sanitize your surfaces and make sure there is extra toilet paper easily accessible.
  3. Freshen Up: Don’t put getting yourself ready off until the last minute, or you may run out of time. When you’re tidying up the bathroom, take the time to touch up your makeup and hair so you can be party-ready without stress as the hour approaches.
  4. Make Space: Empty out your garbage, recycling container, dishwasher, and fridge. You’ll want space in the refrigerator for drinks, in the dishwasher for dirty dishes, and in all available waste containers.
  5. Set The Mood: Put on your party playlist, dim the lighting, and do a final walk through to get everything prepared. If you have time, do a final dusting and de-cluttering run through the home so everything will be picture perfect.

No party would be complete without a great venue to host it in. Contact real estate agent Betsy Dittman, an expert in California Luxury Real Estate Properties, for all of your Beverly Hills, Conejo Valley, San Fernando Valley, and Los Angeles luxury real estate needs.

Blog News November 14, 2014

Home-Buying Checklist to Find the Right Home

Buying a new home is one of the most exciting times in your life. It can also be stressful, making sure that you find the perfect home to fit all of your needs. To ensure that you invest in the right home for your family, keep this checklist in mind.

  • Look for flow – look for a home that has a good indoor-outdoor flow, which can make your home seem even bigger. It can also make entertaining all of your loved ones easier and more enjoyable.
  • Consider the size of the rooms – look at all the sizes of all the rooms in the home, not just the bedrooms.
  • Get the right layout – the layout of a home can have a big effect on everyday life. Look for narrow passages, sharp corners, and shut off rooms that could become an issue in your daily life.
  • Brighten up – consider the amount of natural light that is let into the home. If you are seriously considering a few houses, make sure to visit them at different times of the day to get a feel for the natural light.
  • Look at the driveway – many homebuyers overlook the driveway. However, it is important to make sure that all of your family’s cars will fit to avoid having to park on the street.
  • Stairs – while two story homes allow for more square footage, they could also be a problem if you have small children or elders living in. Make sure that the steepness of the stairs will work for everyone in your family.
  • The neighborhood – there are many factors to consider when looking at the neighborhood, including the school districts, proximity to your work, and closeness to family.

For all of your home buying needs in the Conejo Valley and Los Angeles area and to ensure that you find the perfect home for your lifestyle, contact Betsy Dittman.

Blog News August 5, 2014

The Most Beautiful Summer Home

With her collector’s eye and passion for beauty, a renowned decorator imbues her summer house with an artful grace.

BY MIMI READ (http://www.veranda.com/room-decorating/charlotte-moss-summer-house?src=email#slide-9)

view

A Great View

Twenty-five years ago, Charlotte Moss walked into an airy spec house with postmodern columns and track lighting. She had been looking for a captivating old East Hampton house and garden for years and couldn’t find the right one, so the real estate agent had finally started showing her new houses on bald lots.

But the siting of this one was sublime.

In the living room, oversize objects and symmetrical pairings anchor the soaring space. Ottoman, Colefax and Fowler Antiques. Mirror, estate of Tony Duquette. Sofa and club chair in a Brunschwig & Fils fabric by Charlotte Moss. French armchairs slipcovered in an Arabel Fabrics silk. Photographs, Charlotte Moss.

Charm

Warmth & Charm

“From the front door, I could immediately see right into the living room and out that big, beautiful window, all the way to the backyard,” Moss says. “I thought it was the antidote to city living.” She and her husband, Barry Friedberg, bought the house and have never looked back.

Imari lamps by Vaughan provide lighting for two areas where Moss often works: the Louis XV bureau plat on which they stand, and the sofa in front of it. Louis XV fauteuil in a Claremont fabric. Curtains in a Fabricut fabric..

books

Stacks of Books

A blue-chip decorator who has created some of the most comfortably elegant houses of our era, Moss is the sort of driven woman who dreams big but also attends to the tiniest details with the focus of a surgeon. These traits have gradually transformed the house into a full-blown paradise that’s quintessentially Charlotte, which is to say a cheerfully split personality.

Sofa, Restoration Hardware.

Anti

Collection of Antiques

It’s Jackie and Marilyn—a classically well-bred and meticulously turned-out summer residence, but with powerful come-hither enticements. A collage of engaging patterns, from ikat to leopard, enlivens the living room; a voluptuous canopy bed with billowing fabric softens the bedroom; and curvy upholstery throughout beckons like an invitation.

Every corner has been considered and filled, yet somehow it never looks fussy or cluttered. “I’m a collector,” Moss explains. “You know when you lock eyes with a person? I’ve been locking eyes with objects my entire life.”

The play of textures and hues in slight gradations warms up the dining room. 19th-century English lantern. Custom reclaimed-wood table. Louis XV fauteuils slipcovered in a Brunschwig & Fils fabric. Rug, Stark. Art, Rogers Turner.

kitchen

Leaf-Green Kitchen

The living room ceiling is a daunting 22 feet high, but Moss has suffused the salon-like expanse with outsize warmth and charm. A plump sofa is upholstered in Digby’s Tent, a scrolling linen stripe with a Middle Eastern lilt that she designed. Two antique French bergères are covered in raw silk slipcovers with tabs—they’re fetching little sundresses that let the mahogany frame peek through. “Why cover up the pretty parts?” Moss asks. “To me, it’s all about showing a little leg.”

In the kitchen, hardworking surfaces—granite countertops, a limestone tile floor—are enhanced by decorative flourishes, such as a scroll-shape backsplash and custom pendant light.

 

Colors

Soft Colors

During cocktail hour, however, the real people magnet is the large gros point ottoman with long bullion fringe, where everyone seems to want to sit once the magazines are whisked away. Moss found it at Colefax and Fowler Antiques in London—an ecstatic moment in her annals of collecting. Since the large room doubles as a library, she spends hours there on quiet days, too, seated at the provincial bureau plat illuminated by a pair of richly patterned Imari lamps. She loves paging through her collection of garden books—20 or so packed shelves of them.

Antique French botanical paintings, porcelain flowers, and wallpaper in a delicate floral motif add romance to the master bedroom. Chandelier, Niermann Weeks. Bedside tables, Charlotte Moss for Century Furniture. Bed, estate of Evangeline Bruce. Canopy in a Ralph Lauren fabric. Rug, Stark.

flower

Flower Room

Gardening is one of Moss’s consuming passions, and garden-related objects and themes are woven into every part of the house. Rooms have carefully composed garden views. The terrace’s dining table basks in a scenery of cloud-shape boxwood and spires of arborvitae. The master bedroom celebrates garden imagery with watercolors of flowers and porcelain hollyhocks by Moss’s friend Clare Potter.

In the flower room, Moss creates lush arrangements inspired by whatever flowers are in season.

 

outside

Outside Entertainment

Is it any wonder that in such a setting, the arranging of flowers would become the chatelaine’s art form, and even her therapy? In the intimate candlelit dining room, Moss’s delftware collection is massed on the shelves of a Louis XVI–style painted cabinet. She loves picking out jardinieres and composing tablescapes of flower arrangements. All the clipping and sprucing is done in a designated room off the leaf-green kitchen, where baskets are strung from the ceiling and a thousand vases are categorized according to material.

Entertaining moves outside during warmer months. China, Richard Ginori.

garden

Garden View

“It’s my wind-down from the city, the first place I go after I kick off my shoes,” says Moss of her flower-arranging sanctuary. “After all the business travel, the meetings, the clients and projects, making bouquets is heaven. It calms me down and connects me to the place, because I’m creating beauty for each room.”

A view of the gardens from the house.

 

View full article here.