Scalamandre: Haute Decor
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About this ebook
A formidable textiles house and decorative tastemaker for more than 80 years in the world of high-end interior design. Scalamandré is revered for its comprehensive offerings of fabrics, wallcoverings and trims available to-the-trade through design centers across the United States, Europe, and Asia. The Scalamandré touch has also been applied to compelling collections of china, crystal, flatware and gifts along with ultra-luxury bedding and related decorative accessories showcased in fine stores worldwide.
Scalamandré: Haute Décor celebrates the world of Scalamandré as seen through the eyes of the international design elite while paying homage to the people, places and events that contributed to the nearly cinematic Scalamandré story. All those who appreciate and cultivate beauty in their lives will enjoy this insider’s look at this interior design treasure.
Steven Stolman, designer, writer and all-around style provocateur, was born in Boston, raised in West Hartford and attended Carnegie Mellon and Northwestern Universities before graduating from New York’s Parsons School of Design. Known for his lighthearted use of decorative fabrics in apparel design, he now serves as president of Scalamandré, bringing the legendary American textiles house into its future. He divides his time between homes in Florida, New York, and Wisconsin.
Steven Stolman
Steven Stolman, designer, writer and all-around style provocateur, was born in Boston, raised in West Hartford and attended Carnegie Mellon and Northwestern Universities before graduating from New York's Parsons School of Design. .
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Scalamandre - Steven Stolman
CreditsAcknowledgments
Introduction
My love affair with the House of Scalamandré began, unbeknownst to me, in peppy, preppy, suburban West Hartford, Connecticut. Our imposing brick Georgian colonial house came semi-decorated—with sparkling crystal chandeliers and a grand circular staircase with a hand-painted mural of Hyde Park complete with nannies pushing prams. Actually, it was just printed wallpaper, but someone went into it with a paint brush afterwards and added beige accents. This was in total contrast to the furniture my parents owned: mid-century modern stuff bought as young marrieds at the Herman Miller outlet in Boston—wonderful pieces like an Eames molded fiberglass rocker, which I now have, and a pair of Jens Risom chairs, which they still own and use to this day.
My mom hired an interior decorator right out of central casting—tall, erudite and (it was the late ’60s, remember) practically incandescent. Our mid-century treasures were banished to the far reaches of the house and in their place arrived glowing Baker gallery tables, a champagne silk striae loveseat, an apricot linen velvet bergère and a long, low sofa covered in tobacco silk damask that I now know was Scalamandré. Oh, and there were also champagne silk moire curtains with swagged valences. I thought it was pretty—fussy, but pretty.
I loved that Scalamandré sofa. It was soft and cushy and smelled faintly of Norell perfume, lipstick and scotch—that evocative smell that filled the house when company came over and the good china and silver came out. Those memories of good food, lively conversation and stylish surroundings set the stage for a lifetime spent as a serial entertainer. Nothing pleases me more than the elements associated with gracious hospitality, and nothing says gracious hospitality more than Scalamandré. So when I was asked to serve as president of this most august of companies and help escort it into its future, I honestly had no choice but to say, Yes!
My Bar Mitzvah, 1970.
Our wonderful brick Georgian in West Hartford, Connecticut.
Cartoon by Helen Hokinson.
Eames molded plastic rocker bought by my parents at the Herman Miller Outlet just prior to my birth. I still have it!
One of a pair of Jens Risom chairs still living in my parents’ house.
Gabriel
silk damask in tobacco brown.
I loved that Scalamandré sofa. It was soft and cushy and smelled faintly of Norell perfume, lipstick and scotch. . .
Beginnings
The New York that Italian immigrants Franco and Flora Scalamandré found was that of a swirling, Charleston-dancing metropolis fueled by the Jazz Age and giddy with the rapidly inflating stock market. The beginning of 1929 bore no hints of the financial disaster that lay ahead. Indeed, glamorous art deco towers such as the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building had recently opened, and all looked optimistic as the conventions of modern living took hold, zooming New Yorkers to new heights in high-speed elevators.
It’s ironic to note that so many American heritage companies were born in 1929. While the Scalamandrés were making a name for themselves in decorative textiles, Mrs. John L. Strong started a social stationery business that continues to occupy the top tier in its classification, and Macy’s opened its doors. Who’da thunk it?
Franco Scalamandré came to America in 1923, in the wave