We are still excited to share that Glen Lusby Interiors has been recognized in the annual Luxe interiors + design Magazine national GOLD LIST . The GOLD LIST represents interior designers, architects, builders, and landscape architects who had their projects featured in the”Home Features” editorial section of the Luxe interiors + design Magazine. Luxe will feature the GOLD LIST annually in the summer edition of their magazine. You can see the Luxe article featuring our work on this Geneva Lake Home with interior photos and information about furnishings on the second page of our website just click on ( Glen Lusby Interiors ) , then click on the Luxe Magazine icon on the second half of the page.
As part of the Chicago Merchandise Mart Properties Designer on Call Program, we invite you to shop on 4 floors of Trade Only Showrooms in Chicago’s Historic Merchandise Mart in the heart of downtown Chicago, The Design Center is the worlds largest resource for custom home furnishings and interior design. Over 100 Trade Only Showrooms offer the finest lines and brands available to interior design professionals.
Call or email us and ask for The Designer on Call Program and request open dates to visit the Merchandise Mart. Glen Lusby Interiors – Designer On Call, will act as you’re buying agent. You will receive a complimentary Design Consultation and enjoy a one time discount including any showroom & manufacturers price reductions. Anything purchased on your Designer On Call visit will be provided to you at 20% over our cost with no interior design fee, of course, you will be responsible for any sales tax, shipping/delivery charges or special upgrades or handling requested by you. With any purchase we also will provide a complimentary design consultation in your home within 100 miles of Chicago.
If you have any questions about the Geneva Lake Home project or have a deign question please click on “Contact Us”.
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The Clark Sickle Leaf Carpet is 6’5” x 8’9” and dates back to the first half of the 17th Century. It was likely woven during the reign of Shah Abbas I (r. 1587-1629) during an era when carpet weaving as an art form was at its pinnacle and the export of carpets for purchase and use by wealthy Europeans gained importance in the market. The carpet, although it does not depict a vase or vases in its design, is known as a “Vase” carpet, because it is included in a group of carpets all made using the same weaving technique, some of which do depict vases between the motifs of curving vines and leaves. “Vase” carpets are attributed to the 16th and 17th centuries, and the prior record setting Comtesse de Behague carpet, which also had a motif of curving vines and leaves with “serrated” edges, was part of this group. Both the Clark and de Behague carpets are believed to have been knotted in Kerman, Iran, which had a reputation for producing very high quality carpets dating back to at least the 15th century. Kerman not only had a readily available supply of fine, lustrous wool at the time, but the city was also known to have organized weaving workshops where rugs with extraordinarily beautiful and artistic designs were being made.