Design Assistant
Get inspired with thousands of photos from Sunset and more of your favorite magazines
Rooms
Room Detail
Solutions
HOUSE PLANS
Find A Plan
Idea Houses
CONTESTS &
EVENTS
Visit our Marketplace
Sunset Wine Club
Special Events
Tour Our Idea Houses
Travel Getaways
and Deals
House Plans
Sunset Store
    
  ENLARGE IMAGE
Dining nook
Thomas J. Story
Homeowner Cynthia Warren with boyfriend Marc Duncan
Decorate with your favorite things
Get some secrets to adding color and charm to even the smallest of spaces

The tiny footprint of Cynthia Warren's Oakland bungalow, a modest 926 square feet, doesn't bother her one bit. "I didn't want a bigger space," she says. "This house feels cozy, and it had everything on my list — wood floors, a fireplace, and a gas stove."

For Warren, a graphic designer whose work ranges from elaborate party invitations to special-event menus for restaurants like Chez Panisse in Berkeley, making beautiful things by hand holds endless appeal.

Each corner of her house displays evidence of her talent for creating an ambience both fanciful and romantic. The intimate dining nook (with benches and a table of salvaged Douglas fir built by Warren's boyfriend, Marc Duncan) pays homage to Frida Kahlo, replete with photos of the Mexican artist, pressed-tin ceilings, and eye-popping hot pink paint. "This was the beginning of real color in the house," Warren says — a trend she continued from room to room.

 
The art of display
Strategies for hanging family photos
Jewel case art display
 
 
Simple collections, thoughtfully displayed, become art installations and focal points throughout the home. Industrial items are juxtaposed with the unabashedly feminine, travel souvenirs are grouped together for the feel of a far-flung bazaar, and even rusty old tools become a stylized collage. As Warren says, "Arranging objects is my way of making something beautiful just for myself."

7 GREAT IDEAS TO STEAL

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Hanging hearts

Thomas J. Story
1. Bold backdrop

A lipstick red wall sets off black-and-white family photos on a living room table. Handmade valentines dangle from a picture rail.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Scientific vase

Thomas J. Story
2. Perfect chemistry

A rack of 24 test tubes is repurposed as a centerpiece. The glass vials contain elegant lisianthus blooms and fragrant rose geranium leaves plucked from Cynthia Warren's garden.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Red bed

Thomas J. Story
3. Salvage chic

Originally a pocket door, this headboard got a dreamy update with bright white paint, decorative molding, and delicate sconces that cast a soft light.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Pans and more

Thomas J. Story
4. Everyday art

In the kitchen, citrus walls and white cabinetry add a nostalgic feel to neat groupings of colorful, useful items. Salvaged metal drawers keep small wares accessible but out of view.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Fun finds

Thomas J. Story
5. Global treasures

Souvenirs and found art — including an Indian mirrored shirt, a Thai horse puppet, a Oaxacan rattle, and framed moths — share space on a persimmon-colored wall.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Card art

Thomas J. Story
6. Visual aids

Like a clothesline of ideas, three 18-foot cables on the wall of Warren's studio hold previous designs and bits of inspiration to spur the creative process.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Working pegboard

Thomas J. Story
7. Tool time

"Girly macho" is how Marc Duncan refers to Warren's graphic and playful juxtaposition of rusted vintage tools mounted on pink pegboard in her garage turned workshop.

Design: Cynthia Warren Design

More: Transform with color

Published: February 2008