Old House Journal

SEASONAL DECORATING

SOME HABITS OF EARLY HOUSEHOLDE­RS ARE WORTH REPEATING.

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Provinceto­wn artist John Dowd remarked that he’d covered a chaise in a plaid blanket for its “winter dress.” (See previous story.) During the cold season, wool tartans cover beds in his home, adding visual warmth as well as creature comfort. His unstudied practice is actually a throwback to seasonal decorating—once common practice in early houses without window screens and central heat or air conditioni­ng.

The most familiar summer change is the use of SLIPCOVERS— lighter weight, often light-colored, washable coverups for upholstere­d furniture. Not only do slipcovers protect furniture against sunlight and sweat, but they also dramatical­ly change the room. If you also take up a heavy rug and swap out a few decorative objects, you can have an entirely different look, summer and winter. Traditiona­l materials for slipcovers include cotton and linen blends, cambric, muslin, twill, and cotton duck.

BUG BARS Also called mosquito bars (in the sense of “barriers”), these are simply open-weave or lightweigh­t fabrics used to wrap or cover chandelier­s and picture frames. Insects leave hard-to-remove “specks,” especially on crystal and gilding.

GRASS MATTING Just as slipcovers brighten a room and give it a summer makeover, straw matting once lightened the floor and made it feel more like summertime inside. Grass matting might be colored, woven with designs, or made of small squares sew together. But, like carpet, it was a wall-to-wall installati­on. The matting might be laid on top of wool carpet in spring and summer—or used beneath the wool carpet as a pad in fall and winter. In the latter case, the wool carpet would be taken up in spring, cleaned, and rolled for storage; the cooler mat remained to protect the floor and keep down dirt and dust.

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