L.A.s design tastemakers go shopping on a budget
Al Seib / Los Angeles Times
Renowned interior designer Kelly Wearstler goes discount shopping at Cost Plus World Market at the Los Angeles Farmers Market.
When Philippe Starck, Brooke Hodge and Kelly Wearstler go digging around the discount aisles, penny-pinching doesnt seem so bad.
By David A. Keeps
Is that design diva Kelly Wearstler pushing a cart past shelves of discount sushi plates and $14.99 rugs? Is that Museum of Contemporary Art curator Brooke Hodge casting her discriminating eye on the sale vases at Tuesday Morning? And could that really be Philippe Starck, arguably the most famed product designer in the world, buying childrens furniture at closeout emporium Big Lots?
Yes. Yes. And, oh, yes.
In the spirit of the times when excess is out and recession decorating is in the Home section asked these L.A. tastemakers to hit some of the citys budget-minded stores and see just how far a dollar can go. What do they find? For one, sticking to a budget isnt easy. But more important, following years when luxury and ornamentation defined in-home furnishings, the recent economic free-fall has sparked a new austerity in décor.
In a time of financial crisis, we must go back to timeless objects and rediscover the elegance of basics, proclaims Starck, the designer behind L.A. hot spots such as the restaurant Katsuya and the new SLS hotel. Tag along as Starck, architecture and design curator Hodge and Hollywood style queen Wearstler embark on their shopping expeditions. We trail them through the clearance aisles, compare what they purchased and ask the ultimate question: How do you spend less without sacrificing style?