When I was last at market (in the winter!) I noticed a slight trend towards playing with scale in furnishings. We’ve seen this a bit in upholstered goods in the past, but this time it was all about lighting… 
This room created for the Kips Bay Decorator Show House by Brad Ford reminded me of how intrigued I was by the idea of a huge pendant or chandelier in a fairly normal sized room. I think the ginormous coffee table, and low lying furniture certainly helps make the case for it working. What do you think?
I’ll be in Las Vegas in a couple of weeks for market, and can’t wait to see if the trend has continued… and share with you what else is new!
PS – It happens to be Mr. Ford’s birthday today. Perhaps you should tweet him some well wishes? Happy birthday Brad, from all of us at c+k!















Oh my god.. that coffee table is to die for.
Interesting idea – I wonder how it feels in person? Brad Ford is one of my favorite interior designers though so I had to comment! Happy birthday to him
Beautiful space!!
xoxo, Maryam
http://www.athomewithmaryam.com
I’m going to be the oddball here and admit that I’m not a fan of this. I like a room to be well balanced. While I’ll sometimes choose a feature to highlight, or create a visual stopping point, my eyes can’t move beyond that fixture.
A featured piece should not be so dominating, in my opinion.
i love this! perfect for a beach house xxo
rachel, i LOVE you for speaking up and i think you’re right, especially in this picture, the lighting is hard to get past! i have a feeling it’s partially the angle too, but i do think it’s a BIT dominant. perhaps if it was placed higher??
very beautiful, but the table is what catches me first
)
Playing with scale in a room can give a very interesting result. I love extra large pendants and I love the coffee table in this photo. I’d definitely go for it!
Ooh this is gorgeous, kinda reminds me of those guesthouses in the Japanese countryside.
Andrea x
I think a fixture of that size hanging down into a normal sized room is obnoxious. If there ever were a case for that it would have to be an exceptional piece that was worth giving up all the airspace to accommodate. I try hard to maintain an openness in a room and that just instantly kills it. I don’t see this being a trend.
I am with humanityisbeautiful, I hardly saw the pendant, all I could see was the table. I do like the work on proportions or scale, I am not sure this is the right pendant for it…
omg LOVE this!!