Herve Pierre's Home has an Eighteenth Century Sensibility
Tiana Reid — June 16, 2010 — Art & Design
Hervé Pierre, Carolina Herrera's creative director, has a stylish New York City home that was recently spotlighted by interiors photographer Todd Selby.
Hervé Pierre's canopy bed is a sea of gingham drapery--the fabric being a gift from Herrera herself. With porcelain, plastered angels and a curtain tieback made of a stuffed Balmain glove, Hervé Pierre's home has a distinct eighteenth century sensibility.
Implications - The gingham pattern has been reinvented with Hervé Pierre's incorporation into his home. The pattern is no longer seen as "hick" with its use of a deep royal blue and white. The canopy bed looks effortlessly chic in Hervé Pierre's luxurious home and would make anyone feel like royalty.
Hervé Pierre's canopy bed is a sea of gingham drapery--the fabric being a gift from Herrera herself. With porcelain, plastered angels and a curtain tieback made of a stuffed Balmain glove, Hervé Pierre's home has a distinct eighteenth century sensibility.
Implications - The gingham pattern has been reinvented with Hervé Pierre's incorporation into his home. The pattern is no longer seen as "hick" with its use of a deep royal blue and white. The canopy bed looks effortlessly chic in Hervé Pierre's luxurious home and would make anyone feel like royalty.
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