Ottawa Citizen

Comfort is key when designing a home

- REBECCA KEILLOR

Often referred to as Sarah Richardson’s sidekick on HGTV shows such as Sarah 101, Sarah’s House, Sarah’s Cottage and Design Inc., Toronto designer Tommy Smythe is more leading man than accessory with a number of design books under his belt and ongoing guest segments on shows such as The Marilyn Denis Show.

The most important thing, he says, when designing your own home or getting someone else to do it is to think about what you like. “You” being the operative word.

“We talk about notions of courage, in other words being independen­t and not listening to what your mother-in-law or your neighbour says when they come over halfway through the process and throw you into a spiral of self-doubt,” says Smythe.

Preparing yourself for the process is important, he says, and there are some key questions people need to consider before beginning a design project that will help them figure out their personal preference­s and how they really want to live.

“A lot of people don’t spend a lot of time thinking about those things before they come to hire somebody like me and then I say to them, ‘Well, how are you going to use this space?’ And they say, ‘Well, I don’t know.’ And I need to know that, really, in order to do the best possible job.”

Interiors, he says, should reflect the place we live in, offering visual clues that indicate what’s outside the window.

When designing for clients in Vancouver, for example, Smythe says, there are visual clues he follows.

“It’s all about the sea and the natural elements that are available,” he says. “So it’s stone, it’s wood — indigenous wood. I’ve always been obsessed with aboriginal art, but out of all the aboriginal art that’s available coast to coast, if I had to choose a favourite it would be Haida art. I find incredibly inspiring.”

Whether we live in Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver or Calgary, people all want the same thing, he says: to feel comfortabl­e and at ease in our environmen­t and to have our amenities at hand.

Smythe says he inherited his design aptitude from his grandmothe­r, Dorothea Smythe, who became a qualified interior designer in her early 50s, but was designing homes for years prior — her own — and had innately good taste and a love of fabrics and antiques; often taking young Tommy along to antique fairs.

The secret to Smythe’s successful onscreen pairing with Sarah Richardson, which he says is going on 16 years, comes down to the creative freedom they allow each other.

“Certainly the chemistry is there personally and profession­ally,” he says. “We are also very different. Our personalit­ies and our approach is quite different and I think that kind of dynamism works really well for us. I’m not afraid to tell her the truth and she’s not afraid to tell me the truth and we don’t get stuck in an argument, ever.”

 ??  ?? This living room, designed by Tommy Smythe and Sarah Richardson, was featured on the HGTV show Sarah’s Rental Cottage.
This living room, designed by Tommy Smythe and Sarah Richardson, was featured on the HGTV show Sarah’s Rental Cottage.

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