Ottawa Citizen

Metallics for the holidays

Add a dose of brightness and warmth to furnishing­s, fabrics and decorative pieces

- MELISSA RAYWORTH

Holiday decorating is all about adding a bit of cheer and sparkle, a task made easier by the recent popularity of all things metallic.

With winter’s shortage of daylight, the sheen of metallic furnishing­s, fabric and decorative pieces can add a dose of the brightness and warmth so many of us are seeking.

“We love metallics because of the glamour they lend to our lives by catching and refracting light,” says New York-based interior designer Young Huh, adding “there is nothing more magical or festive than metallic touches during the holidays.”

The trick, she says, is not going overboard with too much glittery goodness.

“A little sparkle goes a long way,” Huh says. “If everything is highoctane shine, your home will look a little sad in daylight.”

We asked Huh and two other interior design experts — Massachuse­tts-based Kristina Crestin, and Sarah Fishburne, director of trend and design for The Home Depot — for advice on using metallics in ways that will look great all winter.

SOFT METALS

Fishburne has been seeing a trend toward softer metal shades, which look sophistica­ted.

“A little more white going into them is the best way to describe it,” she says.

The golds are paler and less brassy, the silvers appear a bit whiter, and even shades of rose gold and coppers are a bit less orange.

So even if you’re using several colours of metals, she says, “that palette becomes a bit softer.”

Another way of getting metallic shine in a subtler way: Use mercury glass, which shows a range of soft colours in a metallic sheen when it catches the light.

Huh says mercury glass is her favourite metallic “especially in vintage or retro-feeling ornaments. It’s not too garish and looks well day or night. Buy some boxwood topiaries and pair with mercury glass, and you’ll have a wonderful winter look that isn’t confined to Christmas.”

Crestin agrees: Last year, she mixed in mercury glass candle holders of different sizes with greenery along her mantel, and loved the look enough to do it again this year. They gave off a warm glow even when the candles weren’t lit, she says.

CASUAL COPPER

Last year, after Crestin found a pretty Merry Christmas sign made of punched copper, she began adding more copper items to her holiday decorating. She included planters covered with copper foil (similar to gold leaf ), copper serving bowls for entertaini­ng, and LED lights on copper wire that she wove into holiday greenery.

Crestin brought in a selection of copper ornaments for a client’s tree and mixed other copper items in throughout the room.

“We used half of what she already had and then supplement­ed coppery tones,” she says. The technique works with any type of metal.

“Maybe you edit what you have a little bit,” Crestin says, then supplement with ornaments and decoration­s in copper or another metal.

EASY ADDITIONS

Sparkly metals also look great alongside organic and natural textures, Huh says: “For instance, what’s prettier than silver with burlap?”

Buy a selection of simple terracotta planters or flower pots in different heights, and spray paint some of them in metallic shades, Fishburne says.

“There are so many fantastic metallic spray paints,” she says, in shades of rose gold, soft golds and silvers.

Fill them with poinsettia­s, artificial or real, in whatever colours appeal to you. If the plants begin to wilt, or you get tired of them after the holidays, keep the same pots but switch them out for succulents.

Huh agrees flower pots are a great place to add metallic accents.

“You can switch out some of your usual cachepots or accessorie­s with items that have a bit of glimmer,” she says.

Finally, Crestin says metallic scrapbooki­ng paper from a craft store can be the perfect way to affordably add one more dose of metallic shimmer. Buy several sheets in a colour you like, and use them as a dining table runner with votive candles and little silver-toned planters on top.

For just a few dollars, she says, “it makes such an impact.”

 ?? PHOTOS: KRISTINA CRESTIN ?? To add some unexpected sparkle to a holiday table, interior designer Kristina Crestin uses sheets of raspberry-coloured metallic craft paper as a table runner.
PHOTOS: KRISTINA CRESTIN To add some unexpected sparkle to a holiday table, interior designer Kristina Crestin uses sheets of raspberry-coloured metallic craft paper as a table runner.
 ??  ?? Mercury glass votive holders are paired with silver stocking hooks to bring a warm, sparkling glow. The winter months are the perfect time to embrace metallic decor, but keep in mind that “a little sparkle goes a long way.”
Mercury glass votive holders are paired with silver stocking hooks to bring a warm, sparkling glow. The winter months are the perfect time to embrace metallic decor, but keep in mind that “a little sparkle goes a long way.”

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