On March 3rd I decided I needed a learning journey and took myself to the Armory Art Show, an international art fair that is a great cultural event in New York. The fair spotlights about 300 galleries from all over the world. Though I did not have time to attend anything but the shows, there are art tours, lectures and panels, receptions, open galleries—especially all over Chelsea—and with the right card, visits to private collections.

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I have wanted to write this post for a while but I thought I should do a bit of research first. There is no question that art in the bath looks great. However, steam, water and humidity can deteriorate the integrity of a picture over time. So I would not recommend hanging your most precious and fragile art on the walls. But, pictures add charm, personality and dimension to any space so finding the right art for a damp environment is an important final step in completing the design process.

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Thomas Jayne, friend and decorator extraordinaire, has written the outstanding new book: The Finest Rooms in America. It celebrates the decoration of fifty American rooms from the 18th century to the present. He writes about places he knows personally—from grand houses to small apartments—and the elements that contribute to the success of each room. Thomas, himself a Winterthur trained classicist and connoisseur, has deliberately featured a cross section of rooms from California organic to unexpected, elegant and stylish spaces for living and sleeping, relaxing and entertaining. The rooms have been decorated over time and demonstrate the changing preferences for certain colors from the vivid schemes at Mount Vernon, to Mark Hampton’s silver papered bedroom, to the earth tones in Rose Tarlows’ house.

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Erick Rexrode, our Outside Sales Consultant in the Philadelphia area, is our resident soap expert. He has written this post for The Perfect Bath. Thank you Erick:

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