I started by painting the whole space in a gorgeous shade of stone. And to make this nature-inspired space truly inspiring, I decided on a little something extra on the walls: two big outdoorsy murals one of trees in a forest for the dining room, and one in a river rock pattern for the dining room.I then got started on dividing the space into two zones: the dining area and the living area. There wasn't much room for a table and chairs in the dining room, so I had to get creative. This room is all about nature, so I decided to give them a bit of a rustic element by using hardwood flooring materials to create a dining room table. For seating I installed two striped chairs in nature-inspired tones of rust, bark and moss, and installed a long brown bench against the wall.
Behind the table, I gave Andy and Melinda the storage and display space they needed, but I did it with flair. I installed a cool, wall-hung fireplace that burns ethanol, put up the river rock mural overtop, and then flanked the fireplace with two long cabinets with mirror backing and glass shelves and doors.
Then it was on to the living room, where I put up the forest mural, and put in a beautiful, large L-shaped sectional that is upholstered in spicy red fabric. I put in some wooden block coffee tables, laid a brown suede rug on the floor and even covered up an ugly air conditioning vent with a soothing, waterfall display.
I covered the windows in a stone-colored chenille fabric and naturally woven blinds. I used the same fabric on the door that leads off to the condo's small balcony, where I added a small table and chairs and wooden deck tile flooring.
To lighten up the whole space, I installed puck lights in the bulkhead to accentuate the murals, put up 16 feet of track lighting down the length of the space, and added some pendant lighting over the table in the dining room and the seating area in the living room.
After a few final accents and accessories, this space was complete. By combining space-saving techniques and a host of natural elements, the couple got the condo of their dreams. Now they have a tiny rural oasis smack dab in the middle of a loud, busy city. How divine!
(Interior decorator Candice Olson is host of Home & Garden Television's Divine Design. Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.)