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Annie Elliott Design, Washington DC

Annie Elliott Design

Greater Washington DC

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Have you read “Apartment Therapy: The Eight-Step Home Cure?”

Annie Elliott | August 30, 2010

Yes, yes. I am aware that Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan’s book, Apartment Therapy: The Eight-Step Home Cure, is not new. It came out a few years ago.

Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan's book

But  I thought about it again this weekend, as I pulled a muscle shoving a vacuum into the far reaches of under-the-bed land. The clutter in our bedroom had reached an unacceptable level.

There were bags of clothing rejects gathering dust behind a door. Children’s artwork had piled up. And the chair on which my husband throws his clothes…well, let’s just say that it didn’t smell springtime fresh.

In a nutshell, Mr. Gillingham-Ryan’s philosophy is that “The Home is a Living Place.” It deserves to be to-the-core clean, well organized, selectively furnished, and free of clutter.*

light blue bedroom with Galbraith & Paul headboard and natural woven Roman Shade

It also deserves to have you in it: cooking, reflecting, entertaining and living. Your home should be more than a place to sleep and dump take-out cartons.

Benjamin Moore 1646 Lookout Point

So Mr. Gillingham-Ryan was on my mind as I tackled our room. I’m proud to say that now the room is once again worthy of the soothing, beautiful blue I painted it a few years ago, Benjamin Moore’s 1646 Lookout Point. (Unlike the ongoing challenge that is our living room wall color, I love that bedroom blue every single day.)

I do take issue with a few of Mr. Gillingham-Ryan’s suggestions, most notably to keep the colors in a room all cool or all warm. But his concept of purity from the core out is right on.

After all, cleanliness is next to bossiness. Isn’t that what they say?

*It also deserves to be free of pillows made from the same fabric – gorgeous though it may be – as the headboard. Let me assure you that those pillows were there for about 15 minutes.

Annie Elliott – aka bossy color – is an interior decorator and design blogger in Washington, D.C. She has been quoted in publications from The Washington Post to The Seattle Times and is considered an expert on color, residential space planning, and telling people what to do in the nicest way possible.

Category: Bedroom, Color + paint colorTag: Apartment Therapy, bedroom, bedroom makeover, Benjamin Moore, book, books, Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan, wall color

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There’s no other word for it: Sheila Bridges’ pattern Harlem Toile De Jouy has become an American icon. Iconic and ironic: the pattern conflates her experiences as a Black woman living in Harlem with pastoral motifs from 1700s French toile. Delightful and lighthearted at first glance, the pattern gives you plenty to think about. Bridges created Harlem Toile as a wallpaper but later expanded the collection to include fabric, bedding, plates, glassware, umbrellas, and clothing. I strongly recommend getting a piece of this pattern any way you can. @harlemtoilegirl#interiordesign #harlemtoile #patterninspo

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Jun 17

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“Much of the wallpaper [in the Victorian era]—fabric, too—was made with arsenic,’ explains Elliott. ‘There are worse ways to go, I suppose.’”I loved speaking with @allisonpduncan @vogueliving about the art of using two wallpapers in one room. Happy Wallpaper Wednesday!#interiordesign #wallpaper #vogueliving #designopinions #annieelliottdesignSlide 1 📸  by Stacy Zarin Goldberg, Design by Annie ElliottSlide 2 📸 by Leslee Mitchell, Design by Kim ScodroSlide 3 📸 by Donna Dotan, Design by Ariel OkinSlide 4 📸 by Gordon Gregory, Design by Jenny Holladay

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Pink, light yellow, and gold-y tan combine to create a soft, unexpected color palette. The quiet colors are sophisticated together, and the palette will age beautifully as this tween moves through high school and college. (Her parents won’t even have to redecorate if it becomes a guest bedroom someday! But one step at a time…)#homedesign #paintinspo #bedroomdesign

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Jun 10

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Deep down, I believe that a house isn’t a home without wallpaper 😊 My latest blog post identifies five unexpected places you can use wallpaper — and some are small! Wallpapering the space behind your island stools could be your gateway to my favorite home furnishing. If you have other creative spots for wallpaper, I’d love to hear about them!#wallpaperinspo #interiordesign #wallpaper

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It’s Wallpaper Wednesday! This week we feature Paper Trail by Lewis and Wood. Lewis and Wood launched Paper Trail in the fall of 2025 as one of four patterns in their History Papers Collection. Paper Trail was inspired by ancient rock carvings - 600–2,000 years old! - from various sites in America. It was named after the site Newspaper Rock, Utah.You know I love anything with an animal :) But there are 2 genres, right? Juvenile and…let’s call it *versatile*. To me, Paper Trail falls into the latter category, featuring deer, horses, buffalo, and foxes on a background that resembles the texture of rocks. It’s primitive, not cartoonish. I could see using this in a small bedroom; a breakfast nook (why? Can’t tell you, it’s just a feeling); or a hallway, because the pattern isn’t overwhelming.#wallpaperinspo #interiordesign #homedesign

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For those of you lucky enough to have a beach house, now’s the time to start thinking about decorating beyond traditional “costal decor!” Step one? Consider a color palette other than blue and white ;) See my latest blog post for more! 🏖️ 🐚#beachhouseinteriors #interiordesign #eastcoast
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