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home office

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Home Office

While the last several years have seen a shift to more people working from home, the summer season typically always means logging a few more hours in the home office. We’ve been designing a lot of these spaces lately, and with more nooks and crannies to contain the trappings of a typical office. One of our primary aims in a home office is address practicality, but also provide a cozy space that still feels like home. It can be done!


Whenever possible, we always start with built-in cabinetry to tuck away small printers and wiring.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

When space allows, it’s always nice to have a spot to to read or review away from the desk. (Or, enjoy a cocktail with a visitor!)

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

Offices provide great opportunities to display books and personal items, making the space unique to homeowner.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

Often, there are areas of the home where a small space to work is helpful, but a full office is not necessary. Little work areas can be tucked away almost anywhere!

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

Lastly, if you scroll back through all the photos, you’ll notice we always add art. Vintage or original art goes a long way toward warming up an office space and making it feel like a natural extension of home.

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0 In Inspiration

Home after the Holidays

The holiday decorations have mostly disappeared back into their bins. Bye-bye tartan plaid pillows. See you later reindeer. Till next year Christmas tablescapes. But, anyone else find the emptiness left in the wake of the un-decorating to be a little bleak? To spruce things up, our team put together a wintery cocktail table for inspiration. And that got us thinking, how else can we continue to embrace winter in our homes? After all, here in the Midwest, we’ve got a lot of it left! Below, a few of our favorite tips for sprucing up your winter decorating after the last strand of garland has been tucked away.


1. Plants!

Just because the tree and garland are gone, doesn’t mean you have to forego the green again entirely. Visit your local plant shop (here in Chicago, we love our neighbors at Good Roots!), and bring home some green that lasts forever. A plant adds life to a room in a singular way. Even the teeny-tiniest plant can liven up a room that’s feeling a little naked after the holidays. Have a black thumb? At Collected we carry beautiful faux botanicals, from stems and branches to tabletop flower arrangements to large fiddle leafs. The construction and attention to detail on these is painstaking. You won’t be sorry.

You can go big…

…or small…

…or somewhere in between!


2. Accessorize

When we decorate for the holidays, we are basically accessorizing to the max. While you’d eventually grow accustomed to the pared-down version of your home after the holidays, there’s no reason you can’t still embrace the winter season through accessories. Incorporate lots of candles and be sure to light one with a winter scent. Bring some cozy texture to your throw pillows with boucle, velvet or chenille. Lean into winter whites and navy blues. Drape a fur or cashmere blanket over an armchair or sofa, or at the end of your bed. Change out your artwork or display books. This may also be a good time to switch up the patterns in your accessories; a change of pattern can make the whole room feel like new again. Little changes can make a big difference!


3. Light a Fire

Use that fireplace to create ambience in your home reminiscent of the inherent warmth and coziness of the holiday season. Add a basket with blankets near the fireplace so you can really settle in. Change up your mantle styling and coffee table to help things feel fresh. This is often the room where we spend our down time, so focus your attention here if you’re really wanting to amp up winter style after the holidays.

Sufficiently inspired for the refresh? Shop some of our favorite items for livening things up after the holidays in the gallery below.


Post-Holiday Decorating

0 In Inspiration

Home after the Holidays

We’ve been gradually making holiday decorations disappear back into their bins. Bye-bye tartan plaid pillows. See you later fair isle stockings. Till next year Christmas tablescapes. But, anyone else find the emptiness left in the wake of the un-decorating to be a little bleak? Here are a few tips for sprucing up your winter decorating after the last strand of garland has been tucked away.


1. Plants!

Just because the tree and garland are gone, doesn’t mean you have to forego the green again entirely. Visit your local plant shop (here in Chicago, we love our neighbors at Good Roots!), and bring home some green that lasts forever. A plant adds life to a room in a singular way. Even the teeny-tiniest plant can liven up a room that’s feeling a little naked after the holidays.

You can go big…

…or small…

…or somewhere in between!

Refer to our blog post on Houseplants for tips on how to care for those beauties once you’ve got them home.


2. Accessorize

When we decorate for the holidays, we are basically accessorizing to the max. While you’d eventually grow accustomed to the pared-down version of your home after the holidays, there’s no reason you can’t still embrace the winter season through accessories. Light a candle with a winter scent. Bring some cozy texture to your throw pillows with boucle, velvet or chenille. Drape a fur or cashmere blanket over an armchair or sofa, or at the end of your bed. Change out your artwork or display books. This may also be a good time to switch up the patterns in your accessories; a change of pattern can make the whole room feel like new again. Bring in the outdoors by using the warm rusts, greens and browns found in nature. Little changes can make a big difference!


3. Light a Fire

Use that fireplace to create ambience in your home reminiscent of the inherent warmth and coziness of the holiday season. Add a basket with blankets near the fireplace so you can really settle in. Change up your mantle styling to help things feel fresh. This is often the room where we spend our down time, so focus your attention here if you’re really wanting to amp up winter style after the holidays.

Sufficiently inspired for the refresh? Shop some of our favorite items for livening things up after the holidays in the gallery below.


Post-Holiday Decorating

0 In Room Reveals/ Uncategorized

Kildeer Office

Park and Oak office

When we went over to our client’s home and she showed us her office, it was immediately intriguing. It’s in a turret so it’s round and a round room presents a lot of questions. What do we do with a round office? How will the windows treatments work? Where does the desk face? So many things to consider, but we’re always up for a good challenge.

Here is the before photo:

Our client loves gray/blue tones so we decided to paint the walls and the trim Benjamin Moore Boothbay Gray. When you paint both the trim and the walls the same color it instantly elevates a space from something ordinary to something more unique. Given the size of the room, the scale is very important and required a larger desk. For lighting, we added the Morris chandelier because the geometric lines felt like it fit right in the space.

Window treatments were tricky, but we wanted them to go to the ceiling and actually be functional. The Shade Store did a great job with the rod placement and the drapes are able to close on all windows. Due to the room’s unique shape, a traditional rug wasn’t going to work so we decided a cowhide provided the perfect shape and texture in the room.

Overall, our client was very happy with the transformation!

0 In Inspiration

Moody Rooms

You may have noticed … we like a moody room at Park & Oak.

Now, we have no beef with light and airy (see some of our favorite whites as proof), but some rooms call for drama. We like to walk into a home, spy a jewel box room, and think … oooo, what’s back there?

Below, we’ve shared some of our favorite dark and moody rooms. You’ll see that a large number of them are cocktail rooms, and with good reason. For us, a cocktail room is the ultimate place to inject a little mood. To settle in, let the room envelop you, and breathe easy after a long day. Oftentimes, in older homes, these cocktail rooms were once formal living spaces. Today’s families live a little differently, so instead of entertaining in a room you only use for guests, why not make it an inviting space for everyday? For reading, having your morning coffee, planning a vacation, or, of course, cocktails.

But, dark and brooding doesn’t have to be the domain only of the cocktail room. Teenager’s bedroom, perhaps? Or as the enviable real-life zoom backdrop of an at-home office? Touches of dark, rich hues in a kitchen are a bold departure from all-white. And in a pantry or mudroom, they can help disguise all manner of messes.

Take chance, be brave. Go moody.


Cocktail Rooms


Offices


Bathrooms & Bedrooms


Kitchens, Pantries & Mudrooms


Dining Rooms, Family Rooms & More

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Contrasting Wood Tones

We get a lot of questions about how we decide which wood species and stains to use in a space, and how to ensure that everything will add up to a cohesive look. While every project and every room is different, we have a few rules of thumb to share that will help you on your way.


Mix it up!

Much like our approach toward contrasting metals (go for it!), we always try to use a variety of wood species and stain tones in each individual space. When everything matches, it’s difficult for the eye to know where to land, and all your woods start to blend together. When you introduce different tones in same space you create a layered effect, and the eye can rest for a bit on each piece and take a moment to really appreciate each individual element as part of a cohesive whole.

The bones of the #POglenviewreno home below included beautifully detailed trim and casework that we highlighted with a darker stain to contrast the lighter white oak floors. The hickory island is a foil for both.

via Park & Oak

White oak floors, a warm wood ceiling and a burl desk all work together in perfect harmony in the #POhinsdalenewbuild office.

via Park & Oak

The original trim at #POlagrangehome is peeking out from the background. Working around that trim was important, so the island and floors were chosen to provide contrast.

via Park & Oak

Know where to start.

In room that may have a large number of different wood tones, knowing where to start is key. In a remodel, we suggest starting with your floors. Often, you won’t be replacing those throughout an entire home, so you need to work with what’s there. Re-staining is always an option, but you’ll want to choose that stain first — and know how it behaves with the species you are staining — before you move on to other considerations. Be sure when selection stain for floors that you see it in your home in different light. Once you’ve chosen your floor stain, bring a sample with you when you go choose any other elements.

via Park & Oak

In a new build, we suggest starting with the kitchen island. This is a big impact point in any home, as kitchens have become a central feature of modern living. An island can also be built from a variety of wood species — hickory, walnut, ash, cherry, oak — while new build floors are nearly always oak. Once your island has been designed, you can choose a custom stain that plays well with that particular wood species and that you will love as a prominent feature of your home. Floor stain can come next, and then any additional wood elements later.

via Park & Oak

Think high contrast.

Contrast is your friend, especially for wood elements that touch each other, such as a floor and kitchen island, as in many of the examples above, or floor and fireplace, as below in the #POgrovenewbuild. Contrast helps the choices look purposeful, and lends the layered look that helps a home feel cozy and lived in.

via Park & Oak

Staining the interior of a built-in or bookcase is a great way to highlight the pieces held there, and provide the kind of contrast that makes wood elements interesting. #POglenellynstudy

via Park & Oak

Working with beautiful original wood details that would be difficult to re-stain? A rug can help break up wood elements that are too similar, as below in the #POsouthbendlawoffice.

via Park & Oak

A final thought on contrasting wood tones: often homeowners steer away from mixing wood tones and wood species out of a desire for perfection. But, if everything matches just so, you can wind up feeling like you are living in the pages of a magazine rather than a real home. We are here to say: embrace imperfection. Mix those woods. You won’t be sorry.

0 In Updates

Women’s History Month

Maybe you are a woman who owns a business, like us. Maybe you stay home raising kids. Or have a corner office. Sit on the boards of charitable organizations. Write. Speak. Research. Calculate. Collect. Whatever you do, however you do it, we will be thinking of you and celebrating you this month. We try to be champions for women whenever and however we can, and we love that there is now a whole month centered around amplifying the voices and stories of women.

The opportunities available to women have changed dramatically in the last 50 years. There were trailblazers before us who led the way, but there is more work to be done.

We’ll be covering some of the women’s voices and stories who led the way in the blog this month, so stay tuned here for more.

Here’s to women!

Chris & Renee

PS – can you spot our favorite male team member in the above photo??

0 In Room Reveals

Reveal: Wheaton New Build

We’ll get to this dramatic back kitchen later in the post. First, let’s talk arches. Specifically, the jaw-dropping stone arch that is the centerpiece of this new build home. We came onto this project after the plans had been drawn up by the architect, Derrick Architecture, and right away noticed the exterior would feature some stone accents. We knew immediately that we would want to bring this natural element indoors, as well, and worked with our very talented builder, Muellner Construction, to choose a stone with enough variety of scale, texture and color to really give this room an echo of the outdoors. The stone wraps all the way around to the interior of the kitchen, so regardless of whether the family is relaxing by the fireplace, or getting ready for dinner, the stone arch greets them. The wood beams on the soaring ceiling also help bring warmth and a coziness to this large space.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

With a kitchen open to the main living areas of the home, we needed to make sure there was a happy marriage between the spaces. Carrying the stone onto the kitchen side of the arch helps achieve this, and by using a variety of natural stains and finishes and neutral elements, the kitchen serves as a dramatic focal point beyond the show-stopping arch.

We especially love the soapstone backsplash that covers the length of the space behind the range and accompanying cabinets. Soapstone is porous, and will pick up character marks along the way. But, treating occasionally with mineral oil will help keep its beauty intact as it ages. We like the way this dark piece anchors the large kitchen.

via Park & Oak

Two islands mean there is plenty of space for family and friends to gather during get togethers. The seating island — made of flat-cut white oak — is stained with a custom black stain. Stools on the kitchen side are backless to easily slide under the island when not in use. The woven leather adds a touch of texture to the kitchen. The sink island is constructed of rift-sawn oak in a custom stain chosen to coordinate with the floors and doors. Vintage art — one of our favorite accessories to add in a kitchen — helps add patina and originality to the new home. A brass Waterworks faucet and pot filler add a little flair.

via Park & Oak

What’s through those doors? On the left-hand side (besides our tripod 😉) is the mudroom and garage access, plus a craft room and powder room. Through the right-hand side door is a small office for one of the homeowners. All these rooms connect through a hallway near the garage access.

You can see the back kitchen peeking out in the photo below beyond the built-in refrigerator (full-size matching freezer is opposite, not pictured), so let’s talk about this high-drama space. (Side note: what’s the difference between a back kitchen and butler’s pantry? You’d probably get a slightly different definition from anyone you ask, but we define a back kitchen as a fully functional kitchen space. And boy, this one has it all!) Because everything in main areas of the home is light, bright and airy with lots of height and natural light, we wanted to insert a little mood into the nooks and crannies of the home. The entire space is painted in Benjamin Moore Racoon Fur, and is especially dramatic as you enter the space through a hall of built-ins displaying the owner’s collection of family heirlooms and handmade pottery. Because the owners wanted to keep the main kitchen open, with few walls, many of the appliances are housed here in the back kitchen, including ovens, extra dishwashers, and a microwave drawer. This space is also home to a coffee bar, mixer lift, refrigerator drawers, ice maker and steam oven. A library ladder makes reaching the upper cabinets a breeze. Zellige tile wrapped around the room adds a bit of lightness. Counters are the same leathered-finish aria stone marble as the main kitchen.


The main floor laundry has plenty of storage and practical touches, like the rolling hampers to make separating laundry easy. She’s a real looker, though, too, with the zellige tile backsplash, display shelves and beautiful cabinetry painted in Benjamin Moore Ranchwood.

via Park & Oak

Finally for today, the mudroom. We love designing rooms with special details for furry friends. The dogs come in and out of the yard via this mudroom, so it was important to think of them when planning the space. Built-in dog crates with custom made-to-fit dog beds lie behind mesh inserts, leaving plenty of air flow and allowing the homeowners to have occasional-use crates tucked away. A space for dog bowls is built-in to the island, with a marble backsplash to make cleanup easy. A vintage rug warms everything up.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

There is so much more to this beautiful home that we hope to bring you sometime soon, so stay tuned!

0 In Room Reveals

Reveal: Hinsdale Outdoor Oasis

Gosh, we love this home’s outdoor living spaces. Everything came together here in just the right ways for an end result that feels relaxing, special and purposeful.


In this project, we were lucky to start with gorgeous exterior architecture and expert landscaping, providing a striking backdrop in the outdoor living areas. This is such an excellent example of the impact landscaping can have on a project, as it lends natural beauty to the space, while also serving the critical function of creating privacy for the homeowners, as you’ll notice in the photos.


There are two distinct zones to the outdoor living areas for this home, the main patio and living room patio.

Main Patio via Park & Oak
Living Room Patio via Park & Oak

The main patio serves as a spot for entertaining guests, and also to relax while watching kids at play in the yard beyond. It’s accessible through the home’s kitchen and main family room, making for easy transitions when guests are over. Orientation of furniture in this space was carefully considered to allow the homeowners to entertain guests while also keeping an eye on kids.

We love the Summer Classics teak dining table and chairs for the warmth they lend to the space, and performance fabric cushions means guests can linger at the table and relax.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

When the meal concludes, everyone can retreat to the sofa and chairs beyond, tucked into their own little alcove.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

Where the main patio is meant for guests and everyday living, the living room patio is designed as a private retreat for the homeowners. It is surrounded on three sides by the home, and the beautiful architecture and privacy landscaping makes lounging in this space a treat. The homeowners can step onto this patio via “her” office, the living room or the sunroom, which means there are ample opportunities to duck outside for a few minutes of sunshine and respite throughout a busy day.

via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak
via Park & Oak

We are so glad the season of outdoor living is finally arriving in the Chicago area. Go enjoy those outdoor living spaces!


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