Los Angeles Times

Ideas for creative living

- By Bill Shapiro Ted Vadakan and Angie Myung with Gregory Han Photograph­s by Ye Rin Mok Chronicle Books: 272 pages; $35 Bill Shapiro is the former editor in chief of Life magazine and the author of “What We Keep.”

Creative Spaces: People, Homes, and Studios to Inspire

Readers of interior design books are typically met with slick, saturated images of highly styled rooms convenient­ly free of the people who live within them.

But Los Angeles-based photograph­er Ye Rin Mok shot “Creative Spaces” — a new book about creative people and the unconventi­onal spaces they inhabit — in an unconventi­onal way. She took the book’s 258 airy, sun-washed photos on the fly, with no stylist, no assistant, no hair and makeup pro and, significan­tly, no special lighting.

The book, from the founders of Poketo, the design accessorie­s and housewares store that’s become a mainstay in the DTLA creative community, leads readers inside the homes and studios of ceramists, architects, authors, textile artists, designers and entreprene­urs, not to mention a DJ, a woman who works with knots and an artisan soba noodle maker.

Photograph­ing primarily in L.A. (with a smattering of Vancouver and Brooklyn locales) allowed Mok to use available light, which gives “Creative Spaces” a casual, accessible feel that embraces Poketo’s “art for every day” approach.

“Nothing was preplanned or directed,” says Ted Vadakan, who founded Poketo 16 years ago with his wife, Angie Myung. They collaborat­ed on the book. “We’d walk into a space and while I’d be doing the interview, Ye Ri would cruise around and explore the house and capture these little moments.”

The enormously talented Mok offers plenty of “little moments” — unexpected materials, interestin­g juxtaposit­ions, surprising color combinatio­ns — that can inspire those of us who tend to borrow design ideas rather than create them ourselves. A few examples: A dozen wooden cutting boards of different shapes and sizes look spectacula­r when stacked alongside each other. Repurposed military-issue windsocks make jaw-dropping lampshades. A jar of colorful origami cranes perks up a side table. A chair wedged into a fireplace induces double takes. Tall, skinny houseplant­s make a room look less cluttered, more spacious.

It must also be noted that these creatives keep almost nothing on their kitchen counters.

Poketo’s four L.A. stores serve as community gathering spots, exhibition spaces, workshop sites and networking hubs, so it’s not surprising that “Creative Spaces” is as much a book about relationsh­ips as it is about straight-up interiors.

Nearly everyone featured in the brightly designed pages has collaborat­ed with Poteko in the past, and the text often recounts how they were first swept into Poketo’s orbit.

The book also explores the relationsh­ip these people have with the spaces they live in and with the objects they make, as well as those that they treasure. And that, of course, will likely inspire readers to do the same.

 ?? Ye Rin Mok ?? CERAMIST Helen Levi is among the artists visited in “Creative Spaces,” which finds spontaneou­s creativity in their surroundin­gs.
Ye Rin Mok CERAMIST Helen Levi is among the artists visited in “Creative Spaces,” which finds spontaneou­s creativity in their surroundin­gs.
 ?? Poketo ??
Poketo

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