High Point Market Trends: The Dining Room
High Point Market Sketchbook
-- Home Accents Today, 4/1/2009

Equal parts soulful and sleek, a serene environment strikes the right chord for relaxed entertaining without sacrificing on style. Spare, elegant forms achieve tranquility and balance through temple-inspired motifs and lush botanical imagery, resulting in divine, stylistic fusion. — Tracy Bulla

Elegance and drama converge in Nova's Tripod lamp, softly blending straight lines with gently rounded curves.
The Debruar Dining table's contrast center heightens the tension between the leanly elegant form and extra-wide, grooved legs from Accents by Design.


Lux-Art Silks extends the Urban Living Collection with a fanlike spread of snake plants in a sleek woven planter ($450).
Mottahedeh debuts the Red Dragon Dessert plate in a lacquered ode to the Orient ($50 to $85).


Available in natural oak or walnut veneered bent ply, these charming School chairs rock the elementary school version with a tad more seat room from Gus Modern ($275).
Freshened with a limed finish, the Chen console from Arteriors Home infuses classic temple design with a thoroughly modern slant ($1,129).


Giant koi punctuate an exquisitely patterned porcelain vase from The Van Cleve Collection ($195).
Inspired by a vintage Japanese kimono, this decadent floral rug evokes both tranquility and exoticism at once from the Carol Gregg Collection by Red Egg.


Cool rivulets drip down this triptych of abstract prints from Paragon, creating the illusion of rain ($132 each).
Hebi Arts molds fiberwood into metallic egg vases, lending a sculptural element to the table with or without flowers ($195, set of two).

High Point Market Trends



























