When good taste marries no taste
- Share via
SHERWOOD KIRALY
Patti Jo and I met 20 years ago this month and have beaten the odds
offered at the wedding on how long we’d last (the over-under was six
months). I think it’s because, despite our differences in
personality, we complement each other.
An example: We have contrasting decorating styles which, combined,
make up the interior mosaic of our home. This came to me as I sat
upstairs in my office one night during the recent heat wave.
I am a let-it-be dweller. As a bachelor, when I rented an
unfurnished apartment, I accepted that as a condition. My one
decorating touch was my books, which are always stylish -- you can
stack ‘em, put ‘em in orange crates, lidless boxes, whatever. Always
a treat to the eye.
When we first saw our house in 1996, I thought it was fine. It was
in Laguna, people had lived in it -- how bad could it be? It was
done. All we had to do was move in Patti Jo’s stuff and the books.
Patti Jo, however, saw a different house -- not the one we were
standing in, but the one we’d be standing in after the improvements.
Since then we’ve replaced furniture, doors and windows, installed
bookcases, carpeting and paintings, scraped the cottage-cheese
ceilings, renovated the kitchen, redone one bathroom, put on a new
garage roof and put up a fence in the back yard. I say “we” ... I put
the books in the bookcases. Whereupon, I might add, it all suddenly
worked.
I’d also better add that these changes were not Design Review
Board issues and in no way impeded, detracted from or negatively
altered the view, environment or property value of our fellow
Lagunans.
To continue: They have TV shows now where a professional decorator
kicks the owners out and redoes their home, and when they come back
they have to pretend to like it.
Patti Jo and I are living proof that you don’t need some intruder
to come in to create an interior that shimmers with creative tension.
When you visit, having called first, you’ll find our home
charmingly decorated, cozy yet airy, nicely ventilated everywhere but
in my upstairs office, which is done in my style and provides a
dramatic contrast to the rest of the house, especially in summer.
Here you may sit at sunset, surrounded by stacked books. The
floor-to-ceiling window faces the ocean, so with the blinds up
there’s a toasty greenhouse effect and when they’re down you get a
Cool-Hand-Luke, spend-a-night-in-the-box ambience. Downstairs it’s 78
degrees; up here it’s 140, down from its afternoon peak. This ensures
the occupant the privacy he needs to work uninterrupted, and makes
his visits to the downstairs, or livable area, a welcome change.
Visitors are almost literally knocked out by this room, and Patti
Jo admits she never would have thought to leave it this way. But
that’s our secret: Together we think of everything.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.