Parisian at Heart

by Robin January 9, 2012

Mark your calendars everyone because….

I am so excited for the launch of my curated collection of home goods at Joss and Main and it is starting tomorrow!

I love Paris! I must be Parisian at Heart because I always feel at home when I’m there. This collection is my way of sharing this passion with you. The essence of Parisian at Heart isn’t about one particular style, era or color. It’s about having that je ne sais quoi…that innate sense of chic…and the confidence to go with it!

 

One of the reasons I love Paris is because I love the hunt…finding just the right thing for my home that makes me happy and inspired. Sometimes the best finds are those you weren’t really looking for. I always say buy it when you see it and don’t second guess yourself. Inspiration comes not from your head, but from your heart.

These are all hand selected pieces that I truly believe will bring out the FABULOUS in your life and in your home. So visit my collection at Joss and Main tomorrow and see what inspires you because Confidence Begins at Home!™

Stay tuned for more exciting news about the collection tomorrow!

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Translating Trends: The Monogram

by Robin January 4, 2012

Embroidered, stamped, woven or sewn, no matter the method, monogramming is an extra special way to personalize items for your home and life. Have a great pillow that’s been passed down through the years? Add your initials, or your grandmothers, in a lower corner! Below, a round-up of my favorite monogramming resources to help you personalize…just about everything…in just about every room in the house!

 

In the Bedroom

When monogrammed, Pottery Barn’s simple, lovely Plaza linen collection is dressed up just a touch. Monogramming just one element in a room, like these shams, adds a slightly traditional touch. Remember…a little initial goes a long way!

In the Kitchen

This cute monogrammed cheese plate and cheese knife (also monogrammed!) from C Wonder would be an adorable wedding gift for a gourmand couple. This funky new shop, started by Chris Burch (yes…Tory Burch’s ex), is chock full of bright, preppy pieces for your home and wardrobe. Many of them come with the option to truly make your own.

In the Living Room

West Elm’s menswear-inspired herringbone throws can be monogrammed for an ultra personal touch. This simple, understated monogram is a single letter in a less-traditional cursive font. So pretty and modern!

In the Bathroom

For those lucky enough to live near Savannah, GA, Number Four Eleven has a storefront where you can see their gorgeous inventory in person. Everyone else will have to browse their collection of furniture, home accessories and bed and bath linens on their web site. For the items that can be monogrammed, like these gorgeous Matouk Cairo Towels, you can choose from a wide array of font style and thread colors…the world is your oyster!

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New Years Resolutions for the Home

by Robin January 2, 2012

Hello 2012! Many people set New Years resolutions, but do you set New Years resolutions for your home? Now is the time to start new and fresh. Your home should be a place that you can relax and recharge before you go out and take on the world. Remember…Confidence Begins at Home!

Here are my recommendations for ways to start 2012 off on the right foot!

 

1. Get organized!

This seems to be on my list every year. Remember, clutter isn’t just unsightly, a cluttered home means a cluttered mind. Get organized and start your year off right.

Simplifying Fabulous

 

2. Think light, bright and happy

Add a fab new standing lamp or table lamp to an area that needs more light or that just needs a new spark. It doesn’t just give off light, it adds visual interest and fresh energy to a stale area of a house.

New Years Resolutions | Simplifying Fabulous

3. Feng Shui-ify Your Place

Give your home (and life), a holistic boost. Hire a good feng shui consultant and put your new year on the right path!

 

Feng Shui consultant Alex Stark | Simplifying Fabulous

4. Try Something New!

This is the year to push yourself outside your comfort zone. Paint the wall behind your sofa or bed a bright new color. Who knows, you may start to see things in a whole new fashion. It  may push you  to see things differently in the new year.

Simplifying Fabulous

5. Rotate Your Wall Art

Shape things up in the new year. Change the look and feel of room by framing aspirational photographs or art of places you want to go, things you want to see, or of abundance to help encourage that in your life. (lush trees, etc.) This can help shift your energy and help you start 2012 off in a positive light!

 

What are YOUR New Years resolutions for the home?

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ELLE Decor, Best Rooms of 2011

by Robin December 26, 2011

What better way to end the exciting, whirlwind of a year that was 2011 than to have ELLE Decor ask me to be one of 30 contributors to their “Best of” 2011 slideshow. I was asked to choose my favorite one image from one of their featured projects of 2011. It was a lot of fun to browse through ELLE Decor’s online lookbook for THE space.

It didn’t take long to come across actress Keri Russell’s Brooklyn brownstone that she shares with her husband and son.

I love the mix of old and new in this industrial glam space (see the image below!)  The combination of exposed brick and reclaimed wood with modern light fixtures, airy drapes, and modern art creates an unexpected, warm look.

Keri Russell brownstone, Elle Decor | Simplifying Fabulous

 

And it seems that I wasn’t the only one… Sarah Firshein, the editor of Curbed thought that “Keri Russell’s kitchen/breakfast area in her Brooklyn home is comfortable yet elegant, and I can imagine it’s the kind of space people just want to hang out in. I love the glassy, gorgeous Ochre chandelier and the way the urban-feeling metal of the wire chairs plays off the wood table, walls, and cabinets,” and Bradford Crowder of The Bedlam of Beefy also chose it, saying that the project is “a great mix of styles and textures. I can easily envision myself inhabiting this space, relaxing over a cup of coffee or clinking cocktails at a cozy soiree.”

Keri Russell, Elle Decor, Simplifying Fabulous

What a charming dressing room…

Elle Decor, Kerri Russell, Simplifying Fabulous

…attached to a stunning and super peaceful master bedroom! I love how Keri Russell and her husband have a great mix of high and low… An antique chandelier  hangs over an IKEA sheepskin rug. The walls are painted a gorgeous Benjamin Moore neutral called Stone Hearth.

 

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Fab Friday: Collector, Bill Indursky

by Robin December 16, 2011

Simplifying Fabulous! with Bill Indursky

ABOUT Bill Indursky co-founded VandM.com, one of the largest vintage, antique, and design e commerce websites on the internet. VandM features over 16,000 amazing items from around the world and their DESIGNinTELL magazine is filled with informative articles and inSIDERS profiles.

Bill also utilizes his great eye for design for his own media-worthy home, which has landed on three Top 10 lists on design site Apartment Therapy (best small space, best apartment 2010, best spaces NYC), and on The Huffington Post‘s real estate house tour section.

Robin Baron: What inspired you to start VandM.com?
Bill Indursky: I think most people accidently fall into the jobs that they do in order to make a living.  The trick to finding success, especially for creative people, is one part undying ambition, one part luck, one part timing, and a large part strong motivation to push us to keep trying.

When I started VandM.com, I had been designing websites, running my own small struggling 10-year-old web firm. I was looking for a way out. By chance, a man I had worked with one time called me to be part of another project.  That project did not work out but we both thought that there was something we could work on together – VandM was born.

Chris and I worked relentlessly during the first 2 ½ years.  We practically starved. But I never give up – ever – even if I probably should.  Perhaps it is my ego, control issues, or simply I am naïve, but no matter what, I never give up. Several years, and two more owners later, our company is now about to be worth millions.  But both Chris and I had to put up with almost unimaginable bull and endless work and sacrifice.  He left our company recently to pursue some other dreams but I still hold the torch for both of us now.

I never thought I would be working in the antique and home décor industries – it seems like most people, I fell somewhat into it.  But you see, as long as you are open, ambitious, have a little luck, have a little timing, and of course NEVER give up – anyone can do it!

RB: What are a few of your favorite pieces on the site right now?
BI: That is like asking me to pick my favorite child, which, like most parents, I could do, but might not be fair. What I think I love most is that we have items at all sorts of price points that all represent a great value.  I love the fun flea market quality of the site where you discover something new each time – a real gem where you think… my god, why has no one snatched this treasure up!  With over 16,000 items to buy on the site, 300-400 items new each week, it changes so often that it is like a dream never-ending flea market.

RB: How would you describe your personal style?
BI: As a child my personal style was often called “different” and “unusual,” which I believe is the nice way of saying “ugly.”  I like to mix apparently two disconnected things. For example, I called a recent outfit “Farnsworth Bently (P. Diddy’s former man servant)” meets “a Christmas leprechaun.” All my design is like this; two disparate things creating something new in a fresh and fun way.  My own apartment is “London bachelor pad” meets “urban Adirondack.”

RB: How did your passion for home design start?
BI: I got my undergrad and graduate degrees in Architecture.  I knew I always wanted to be an architect but it was really sealed for me when I was fourteen years old.  I went to the Holy Seplica in Jerusalem where Jesus was taken down off his cross and cleaned, then brought into the interior of the early church to be laid out. When we entered the church I saw just how cavernous and soaring the interior was. Light at the dome clearstory windows gently shimmered against small gold tiles embedded into the mud walls.  It was the first time I ever FELT architecture.  It was the first time I thought space could move you.  After that I was committed to creating moving spaces that people noticed.  How many spaces do we go into and never notice?  I would say most of them.

RB: You showed me photos of your fabulous Apartment Therapy-featured apartment! From the dark walls to the edgy art collection, it’s clear that you’re a risk taker! Where did this come from?
BI: The funny thing is that I never think of it as odd or edgy. My apartment may be atypical, but to me all this is normal.  I don’t know what that says about me but I guess my normal is edgy and risky!

RB: What do you love most about your home and why?
BI: I love that my home is actually warm, relaxing and comforting.  Not words you would normally put together with all black space with skulls, but there you are!  I think it is important to have a wonderful balance between soft and hard furnishings. I think most architects are obsessed with cold, hard, structure and don’t ever explore the softer side of design. It is important to have a balance. My home has comfy chairs (from my own site but recovered in new upholstery) and hard furnishings like desks as well. Comfort is both.

RB: What is the one thing in your home that everyone always comments on?
BI: I think everybody comments on the “bombs” the most.  It is a ceramic prototype from an Argentine artist (that I also got from my site).

RB: If you could start from scratch with your place, what would you do?
BI: I live in my 350-square-feet of heaven with my longtime boyfriend and dog. They have shaped the look of the space as well. I designed it with all of us in mind. It was a lot of give and take. If I had to do it over for myself it might look like a 16th century Venetian Palazzo.  Who doesn’t love Venetian Palazzos? I am Italian, gay, and Jewish, so if I was left to my own devices the place might look some Rococo fantasy – gold gilt everything, murals, face it with the trifecta too much can never be enough with that combo!

>images courtesy of VandM, Apartment Therapy and MRK Style

Each Friday Simplifying Fabulous! presents Fab Fridays, an up-close-and-personal look at how one of our community members simplifies fabulous in their own life. Is there someone you’d like to see featured? Email your submission to info@simplifyingfabulous.com.

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Organize with Style: Lacquer Boxes

by Robin November 30, 2011

Lacquer blurs the lines of retro and modern and has a lustrous glamour that few materials can project. Because a little lacquer goes a long way, one of the easiest ways to incorporate this material is via fabulous and functional lacquer boxes that will help you to organize your home in style! Over the past few years, thanks to shops like Jonathan AdlerWest Elm, and CB2 who have been offering affordable lacquer options the past few years, these beauties have been adding bursts of colors everywhere from catalogs to blogs.

Want to bring a bit of lacquer into your home? Use lacquer boxes to hide tech eyesores in the living room or to keep your dressing room baubles at bay. Put them to work in an enchanting vignette on an entryway table, or to turn your bathroom from blah to spa! In the end, they really work everywhere…every room in the home deserves a dose of dazzle!

Stackable Storage
Stacking lacquer boxes, whether small or large, is a great way to make a statement. It’s all about versatility; You can’t do wrong with decorative items that double as organizational storage!

> Photo via Design*Sponge

Jewelry Box
Lacquer boxes are a stylish way to keep your baubles at bay, though be sure to either use one that’s lined and compartmentalized, such as this one from West Elm, to keep your precious jewels from turning into a tangled or tarnished mess.
> Photo via West Elm

Visionary Vignettes
Vignettes are like three-dimensional artworks that you can change whenever the mood strikes. Stack lacquer boxes as the base of your vignette to add a pops of color and texture into these stylized settings. The stacked boxes can help hide and organize while acting as a stage for other favorite  trinkets and treasures.

Top photo via Interior Design Musings; bottom photo via Sweetie Pie Style

 

Office Space
You’ll have no problem finding inspiration (whether it’s writing or paying bills) when your office space is organized with shiny lacquer boxes, seen here in The Coveteur’s beautiful images of Who What Wear’s LA headquarters.

 

> Photo via The Coveteur

 

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Fab Fridays: Designer Albert Sultan

by Robin November 18, 2011

Simplifying Fabulous! with Albert Sultan of Sultan Chic

ABOUT Albert Sultan creates interiors that make you stop in your tracks. With an eye for the unusual, Sultan scours the globe for rare vintage pieces of sensual shape and form and refashions them into show pieces, bold accent statements that complement an overall design scheme.  “I take an existing piece that is already novel, and pair it with exotic materials to create something wholly new,” explains Sultan. Typically, each element of one piece of furniture comes from a different part of the globe – the fabric from Australia, the chair from Minnesota, etc. The artful fusion of time, place and pattern is what gives way to his vision. An Art Deco-era chair becomes a throwback to the 70s; a classic French Napoleon chair is given a pop rock feel. I mean…does it get any more fabulous than that?! See below!

Robin Baron: What is your signature look?
Albert Sultan: My spaces are layered in pattern and color. Shapes play off of shapes.  A sexy retro chair can inspire a similar shaped pattern on a wall. Bold colors are used fearlessly. Break the rules! Einstein reinterpreted physics as we know it. Similarly, I aim to make you look at ordinary things you may have seen everyday in a whole new light. And like Einstein, my first name is Albert!


RB: What are you up to right now?
AS: I am proud to share some before and after pics of my designed reading room at the Old Westbury Gardens showhouse. My theme is Winter Solstice. Think of a reading/cigar room in Superman’s North Pole Ice palace. This is a luxurious retreat that retains an inviting accessible charm. Almost everything in the room has been hand refinished in some way by me. The Tony Duquette light fixture, on loan from Remains Lighting, is a showstopper!! Given my own penchant for theatrical and fantastical design, using a fixture by this legend of stage and film design was appropriate.  Old Westbury Gardens Showhouse, through Sunday, December 18, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm


 

RB: What project in your portfolio are you most proud of?
AS: The project in my portfolio I am most proud of is an apartment I did in Miami. The client was going to sell this space and gave me a minuscule budget to make magic. I refinished furniture and created interesting paint details on the walls that brought up the level of the apartment from drab to glam. In the end, they were so proud of the result they kept the apartment and sneak off on regular holiday weekends from New York.

 

RB: What do you love most about your work?
AS: I actually love being hands on. I like getting dirty. I am often covered in paint and plasters. I tell my clients after the first meeting they will never see me in a blazer or collared shirt again. They, in turn, feel confident that they are getting that personalized result that comes with my touch.

RB: What impact has working in the design industry made on you?
AS: Working in the design industry has had an enormous effect on who I am as a person and how I relate to people socially. I started my business at age 24, shy and inexperienced.  I learned the hard way that talent is not enough to get by in this business. Communication skills and service are essential every step of the way. The first impression you make is often the thing that will make a potential client take a second look at your portfolio.  I’ve also come to embrace the unknown and even enjoy the unexpected. Believe me in this field, juggling a million details, there is always changes and deviations that take place. Being calm under pressure is a skill that can be learned through experience. Often times, a problem in the process—discontinuation of a fabric, an awkward space, can lead to more creative solutions. Tension is the secret ingredient of success.


RB: What’s your design mantra?
AS: After a designer show-house I participated in this summer on the Jersey shore, I was overwhelmed by the positive response I received to my work from both my colleagues and the public at large. One designer commented that given my hands on approach my work represented to her “A New Conversation in Design.” In this one simple sentence she helped me clarify who I am as a designer. I am not content to fill a client’s home with just things and pieces. I want their home to be a transformative experience. We all have bad days and mundane days and we are looking to escape and recharge. A special room, or a whole home filled with energy and spirit can uplift the soul and give one the stamina to face the responsibilities of family and work.  I’m addicted to the look of wonder and pride of the faces of happy clients; Knowing that when I leave them, they feel special and hopeful for another day.

This three story Sultan-designed stairwell was a showstopper in a New Jersey Shore designer showhouse last summer

RB: How would you describe your own home décor?
AS: My own home décor is bold, eclectic, sexy and layered. As an artist and designer I need constant stimulation to be creative. My philosophy at home is “More is More!” Almost every piece in my home has a history. The “Tulip Chairs” in my living room are a pair of 1950s parlor chairs. I paired them with a fabric from an Australian company. The pattern on the fabric mimics the unusual shape of the chair frame. I look at these chairs every day and get excited. The soft feminine lines of the chairs are a counterweight to the two bold industrial landscape panels carved out of scrap metal I have hanging on my living room walls.

RB: What do you love most about your home and why?
AS: My home was originally owned by my grandmother for decades. The space stayed on in the family serving as a home successively for my sisters before they married and now me. I can still remember as a boy visiting my grandmother on the holidays and the fresh scent of middleastern foods wafting throughout the apartment. This space is infused with generational love.

RB: What is the one thing in your home that everyone always comments on?
AS: People always comment on my zebra stenciled doors. People often times will paint walls, wallpaper them and adorn them with art. But doors? They are relegated to being obscured, necessary evils of functional living. To me they are just another surface waiting to be transformed.

 

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Picking a Great Neutral: Taupe

by Robin November 2, 2011

I’ve been reading a lot of paint SOS messages from our Simplifying Fabulous! readers and on Benjamin Moore’s Expert Exchange app on Facebook. Choosing bright colored paints is often more difficult than choosing a neutral, as there are sooo many types and shades. For me, one of the best neutrals is taupe. The color “taupe” is an umbrella term, as you can have taupes that tend more toward the grays or the browns, greens or even purples! Taupes are warm, homey and very versatile!

Q: I’m moving into a townhouse and am painting the entire main floor. The ceilings are soaring. The trim and the mantle of the fireplace are white and the hardwood floors are light. The kitchen has espresso cabinetry. My look is cottage-y with several shabby chic antiques. I need a great taupe neutrall. HELP! Thank you! - Lori K.

Ask Robin | Simplifyingfabulous.com

A: Taupe sounds like the perfect color for what you’re describing. Here are three of my favorite taupes from Benjamin Moore. This is three shades of the same color, as I’m not sure how deep you want to go: BM 1550 Cumulus Cloud, BM 1551 La Paloma Gray and BM 1552 River Reflections. For the walls, I usually like to use the an eggshell finish.

 

Robin Baron | Simplifyingfabulous.com

a gorgeous taupe I used in a recent kitchen project!

 

 

How high off of the dining table should a chandelier hang? How large should an area rug be? What is the best way to integrate antiques with modern furniture? Have your design questions answered…Ask Robin! Your question will be answered here on the blog, added to our Ask Robin archive, and posted on Facebook!

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Decorating the Bedroom: Tips of the Trade

by Robin October 31, 2011

There is a lot to consider when decorating a bedroom, but don’t fear…I’m here to help! I headed over to the Edward Ferrell + Lewis Mittman showrooms in the D&D Building to illustrate some of the basic tenements of decorating a bedroom. Watch how your choice of bedroom furniture, color and texture can make a world of difference!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JukeKIEOFWE&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]

 

1. Mix Materials: Textured fabrics, wood and metal studs

2. Great Design is in the Details: Mix-and-match accessories and furniture to create personality and just a bit of visual interest. Don’t go too overboard though…a bedroom should be tranquil, not overwhelming.

3. It’s All About Balance…not symmetry. Although this bedroom has two different end tables here, the space is tied them together with a pair of the same lamps.


[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7gvCoeNmXs&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]

 

1. Go Exotic: Add Asian-inspired elements to the room to transport you to another place. If you’re not ready to go all the way, just infuse a few touches.

2. Infuse your Favorite Color: The bedroom is your sanctuary. It should scream YOU!

3. Form and Function: Your bedroom should not only be beautiful, it should be useful! Think about what you need first: Add a desk, add lots of storage, even add a TV if that’s your thing!

 

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AyPsJ0HwRuk&feature=related[/youtube]

 

1. Texture, Texture, Texture: Adding texture helps to keep a traditional space from looking boring.

2. Go for the Unexpected: Interesting shapes and untraditional furniture placement adds some “wow” factor!

3. Pop the Color: Go bold or go home! Love the pop of purple in this space via the velvet aubergine chair.


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Designer Eco Friendly Light Bulbs

by Robin October 26, 2011

Leave a comment below about how you go green in style for a chance to win a C. CRANE True Color GeoBulb II (Limited Edition!) and a Soft White Geobulb-3! (A total value of $50!)  We’ll randomly select one winning commenter at 10am ET on Friday, October 28th.

Cool, design-y light bulbs may be all the rage in commercial spaces like hotels and restaurants right now, but they are awful for the environment. Although going green has surpassed being trendy and is now a part of everyday life, a new trend is cool looking light bulbs that are excellent in both form and function. Some of these designs are only in concept. Some of them look so good they can stand alone without a shade. But all of them will cast a flattering glow on you—and your checkbook. (See the bottom of the post for a chance to win two stylish eco-friendly bulbs!)

PLUMEN
The plumen 001, the world’s first designer energy saving light bulb, uses 80 percent less energy than the traditional incandescent bulb, and last about eight times longer. Designer Sam Wilkinson knew that the traditional light bulb wasn’t the only possible way to light a space, so he created something with an innovative design that looks great with or without a shade.

 

Photographer, Ian Nolan; Stylist, Poppy Norton

SWITCH
Switch bulbs last for 20,000 hours. The bulb has a metal base that disperses heat and an intelligent system that monitors the bulb’s temperature, so they never get too hot, and therefore last for an average of 20,000 hours. The Switch comes in 40, 60, 75 and 100 watt-equivalent models. The 75, the blue bulb is perfect for a reading lamp, or to light a work space. The 60, the orange bulb shown here, is the most suitable for everyday use. These brand new bulbs are still getting their finishing touches, but will be available in late 2011 or early next year.

IKEA
Ikea offers a number of bulbs with interesting shapes as well. The company’s line of SPARSAM bulbs includes many low-energy options in a range of interesting forms. You’ll no doubt find one to suit every need, and at IKEA prices, you can buy an armful for every lamp and light fixture in the house.

ikea | Simplifyingfabulous.com

C. CRANE
The LED GeoBulb-3 from C. Crane is super-efficient and comes in three finishes. It’s rated for up to 50,000 hours, and the graceful design looks almost like a floating orb.

CCrane | Simplifyingfabulous.com

WAC LIGHTING
WAC Lighting, a company that’s really on top of energy-efficiency, is offering this Festoon lamp for your lighting pleasure! Though it’s called a lamp, the Festoon is actually less than 2 inches long, and is rated for 50,000 hours, compared to regular bulbs, which last only 5,000. If you’re looking for something really different, this is the one for you!

Wac Lighting | Simplifyingfabulous.com

INSIGHT
The insight bulb, from Belarus-based designers Maria and Igor Solovyov, is only in concept, but the bulb is energy-efficient and totally cool-looking. When this goes into production, we’ll be the first in line to snag one—or more! It even looks smart, doesn’t it?

VAKA
The VAKA bulb from Ian Bach is also only in concept, but we hope it will be on the market soon. These rechargeable silicon bulbs can be displayed on their wooden tree charging station, or removed and used alone in other rooms. When you need to recharge, just put them back on the tree, and when you need some light elsewhere, pluck one off and take it with you! They can also be turned on and off with a squeeze.

Vaka | Simplifyingfabulous.com

 

So whether they’re currently on the market or just fresh ideas from great design minds, energy-efficient light bulbs don’t have to be drab. Switch out your old bulbs today, and you’ll see a decrease in your energy consumption, and an increase in design cred!

And in fact, the fab C. CRANE will help you get there! They’re giving away one True Color GeoBulb II (Limited Edition!) and a Soft White Geobulb-3 (total value of $50!) Leave a comment below about how you go green in style, and we’ll randomly select one winning commenter at 10am ET on Friday, October 28th! Good luck!

 

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