Hampton Designer Showhouse, an insider take - 27 East

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Hampton Designer Showhouse, an insider take

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Each room starts out completely bare.

Each room starts out completely bare.

KEITH SCOTT MORTON

KEITH SCOTT MORTON

Lighting fixtures over the table in a dining room designed by Marshall Watson.

Lighting fixtures over the table in a dining room designed by Marshall Watson.

KEITH SCOTT MORTON

KEITH SCOTT MORTON

The library by Kristen McGinnis Design.

The library by Kristen McGinnis Design.

DAWN WATSON

DAWN WATSON

The library by Kristen McGinnis Design.

The library by Kristen McGinnis Design.

DAWN WATSON

DAWN WATSON

The library by Kristen McGinnis Design.

The library by Kristen McGinnis Design.

DAWN WATSON

DAWN WATSON

LLe Dom Contemporary Art Glass.

LLe Dom Contemporary Art Glass.

DAWN WATSON

DAWN WATSON

Abby Modell for Lle Dom Contemporary Art Glass.

Abby Modell for Lle Dom Contemporary Art Glass.

author on Jul 28, 2009

As a rule, showhouses are charitable events created to fund a worthy cause, present the talents of local designers eager to showcase their untethered creativity, and hopefully, bring the community as a whole closer together with a common goal. This year’s Hampton Designer Showhouse—which is on display through September 6 at 179 David’s Lane in Water Mill and benefits Southampton Hospital—is no exception.

As a participating designer, the most frequently asked question is “But what is it like to do a showhouse?”

The answer is both intriguing and complicated. For instance, generally, the showhouse organization must find an owner who is willing to lend their empty house—lock, stock and barrel—for at least four months. The house must be in a reachable location with parking available and the appropriate permits must be applied for as well.

The house must also have a multitude of rooms for the many designers who apply and want to perform their magic. The rooms must be reasonably-scaled and the house should be somewhat attractive to entice designers to participate and the attendees to want to plunk down their sheckles to tour this would-be wonder.

With other similar events, the houses may be run-down or unsalable white elephants. This is certainly not the case at the Hampton Designer Showhouse.

Ofttimes at showhouses, the contractor is in the process of building the structure and cannot meet the deadlines. Luckily, this also was not the case at the Hampton Designer Showhouse where everything worked and the house was in move-in condition.

But no matter what—unfinished cabinets, nonfunctioning appliances, plumbing not installed, electricity wavering, pool not marble dusted, leaks, fires and floods—the show must go on. And go on it does and has.

These challenges, of course, are just some of the headaches of the showhouse management—in addition to the orchestration of 35 designers, some divas and some not, who all want to paint, install and move in on the same day. The logistics are mind-boggling and disasters do happen.

The designer’s perspective is no less straining. Six to eight weeks prior to the opening night, the designer is invited to participate and asked to submit three choices of spaces he or she might like to transform, all of which will be thrown into a hat and drawn at random. The designer will be assigned one space only in the house, be it the kitchen, closet, laundry room, media room or master bedroom.

Once the space is decided, the designer then signs a contract and shells out thousands of dollars in deposits, insurance, room cleaning and various other fees that allow him or her to be included in the Showhouse Journal, of which 20,000 copies are printed and given to each attendee.

Then comes the fun (within reason, of course). The designer can create whatever he or she desires without flooding the house or setting it on fire as long as he or she returns the room to its original (generally bland/bare) condition.

Of course, this is not without cost because furniture, fabrics, carpets, lighting, sound systems, decorative finishes, electrical, plumbing and painting labor do not come gratis. Either the designer funds the purchase and installation for everything or gets on his or her knees and pleads for all the vendors to lend product or labor.

As luck would have it, the showhouse is generally terrific advertising for all involved. So dealers lend their priceless antiques, decorative artists faux for free, drapers donate curtains and hardware, fabric houses discount their fabrics, carpet purveyors literally roll out the red carpet and galleries lend wonderful artwork.

This quid pro quo does not always go so easily though. In my case, for the Hampton Designer Showhouse, I had my heart set on certain fabrics and furniture but alas it was not to be.

The curtain fabrics I wanted proved unavailable so I had to redesign my schemes three times. The dining table I longed for (and even included in my room rendering for the journal), was sold.

Notwithstanding the limited time we have to prepare, designers must submit a rendering of the finished room and a list of all suppliers down to the guy that lent the eyeglass case that sits on the side table!

The designers are not the only ones pressured. I cajoled the always busy and extraordinarily talented Springs-based lighting designer Mark Figuerado to whip up a pool table light whose ingredients would include fresh hand-blown balls, English bee skeps and carved walnut and marine-grade hemp rope. He miraculously produced it and hung it in three weeks.

Additionally, I conceived the idea of a grandly-scaled stencil on caramel shellacked walls that decorative artist Judy Mulligan executed while flying back and forth from a huge job in Los Cabos, Mexico. I also humored Gordon Fergusson to sew up 11-foot drapery panels of linen in a week. And I begged Joe Upholstery, Inc. to reupholster all of my dining room chairs in four days.

Flexibility is always required when designing a showhouse, because one moment you can borrow it and the next moment you can’t. As an example, borrowing one-of-a-kind antiques from renowned dealers such as Amy Perlin (formerly in Bridgehampton—now primarily in New York) was not such a piece of cake, especially with renowned designer John Saladino putting everything on hold for his showhouse room and other designers sweeping in to purchase her unique wares.

In my original design, I wanted to use a deeply knobby abaca (straw weave) carpet, but couldn’t have the proper size woven in time. However, I spied a carpet at Rug and Kilim in Manhattan—a fabulous roughly-textured aloe carpet (yes, aloe, a new, very green renewable fiber). Though not the right size at all, I asked them to add a textured burlap border which increased the spread.

Since the blue of the rug wasn’t in my color scheme, I quickly went back and added blue tape trim from Manhattan-based Samuel & Sons Passementerie to the curtains. That trim would help pull the color vertically into the room.

Of course, once this is all fabricated and assembled, you have to orchestrate the move in—which needs to happen in one day—and install painting and electrical all at once in coordination with the showhouse and the other designers. And you certainly don’t want your delivery men walking across your neighboring designer’s silk Tibetan with muddy shoes or your electrician blowing the circuits in the entire house (as mine did, oops!). And, of course, pray for a sunny day for as smooth a move in as possible.

Once installed, the designers review their rooms for accessories, flowers, pillows or lamp shades and then out they go to beg, borrow and ... well, never steal. Suitably flowered and accessorized, the room is ready for the press to preview before the general public is allowed in.

A fellow designer described this process to me as “the beauty contest,” where members of the media sashay amidst these three-dimensional wonders and cherry-pick, or photograph, or film what is most of interest to them. This goes on for one week, requiring the designers to be present and “en pointe” for eight hours a day.

And finally the opening night gala arrives, where swarms of well-dressed patrons alight to view the delicious presentations spread before them. Kudos are shared and glamour partakes.

The following day, rooms are cleaned by “The Little Elves” (can you believe that name?) and re-primped, re-flowered and refreshed for the curious public who relishes the variation of well-appointed rooms along with the rich cache of creative ideas, some of which they will take home and reappropriate.

Guaranteed, the showhouse management and designers have worked tirelessly and given 1,000 percent to the experience. So when you travel through these rooms, if you enjoy them, compliment the weary designer.

If you aren’t a fan, then please hold your observations until you’re outside the premises as the walls have ears and so do designers.

Now that you’ve learned a bit of the inside scoop on the designer’s perspective of a designer showhouse, please go and enjoy. There is tremendous quality there and a great deal of creativity too!

Marshall Watson is a nationally recognized interior and furniture designer who lives and works in the Hamptons and New York City. Reach him at 105 West 72nd Street, Suite 9B, New York, NY 10023.

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