Sunday, December 27, 2009

JUST IN!


PAIR OF BEAUTIFUL SWEDISH TEAK ARM CHAIRS
RESTORED TO PERFECTION!

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Glenn of California



Very hard to come by, a Glenn of California
gentleman's dresser.
SOLD

Wednesday, December 16, 2009



FUNNEL is famous for taking vintage furniture and recreating it to feel new and contemporary.
I was lucky to find these vintage chairs from an estate in San Marino.
The chairs are classic shapes with beautiful lines and truly comfortable.
They were designed by Paul Laszlo for Brown Saltman, I'm guessing 40s.
Our adventurous client was crazy about this fabric from John Hutton.
As you can see, they turned out stunning!

Friday, December 11, 2009




SOLD




The benefit to living in California is that you always need patio furniture!
We have four of these vintage modern lounge chairs available.
call for more info...626-395-0141

Saturday, November 28, 2009


Check out Julianne Moore getting cozy
on our custom made polar bear chairs!!!!!!!

In the new movie "A Single Man"
by Tom Ford

Thursday, November 19, 2009




Just got in an amazing pair of stools.
Made from old tractor parts!

Saturday, October 24, 2009



BEAUTIFUL PAIR OF GLAZED CERAMIC LAMPS
FROM WEST GERMANY
SOLD

Friday, September 25, 2009

Kittinger Table



This gorgeous cocktail table is in near perfect vintage condition!

SOLD

Friday, September 18, 2009




THIS GREAT DRESSER
SOLD


Our most recent creations for our lovely client.
It's all coming together!

Monday, August 10, 2009

HELLO...FANS!
Everyone's been asking about FUNNEL and our future plans. As you all know, we are in the process of closing the shop and trying to sell out of all our great inventory. We have three projects in the works. Two small living rooms and one large new construction.
Our goal is to continue to bring you great furniture/ a great look and great quality.
For now, we are playing it month by month.
We are in the process of negotiating a lower rent which just might allow us to stay till December.
Keep your fingers crossed.
If you should need to reach us, call 626-395-0141 or email us at funnel2540@hotmail.com.

Thank you and hope all is well.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009





Who knew ripped posters could be so beautiful!

Crazy for the art of Jaques Villegle.

Born 1926 Quimper, Brittany. He first started producing in December of 1949. Works in mixed media. Famous for his alphabet and symbolic letters from ripped or lacerated posters. His work consists of layers of posters that have been ripped to reveal posters underneath. His work has primarily focused on the anonymous and on the marginal remains of civilization.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Thursday, January 8, 2009

just got this in!
BEAUTIFUL!
SOLD!

Sunday, January 4, 2009

INTERVIEWS

I recently came across a beautiful book by Paige Rense, a former Editor-in-Chief of Architectural Digest. In it she interviews twenty of the world's best interior designers of the time.
The book was published in 1980 and includes words with the likes of Angelo Donghia, Lee Radziwill, Bruce Gregga, Albert Hadley, Mrs. Henry Parish II, Sally Sirkin Lewis, and Valerian Rybar.

Here are some examples of what these designers had to say about their background, client relations, their likes, dislikes and design in general.
ENJOY!!!


ANGELO DONGHIA says....

Formal design education is necessary because...

it gives security to people who want to get into this business. It does not give them the design background, because only experience gives you that.
Design is not a science. It is not factual. Design is a point of view.

Clients were coming to Yale Burge and getting Angelo Donghia instead, well, they had never heard of me. I quickly learned that two things were very important. Integrity and a strong point of view. When you make a statement, you don't say, "Well, we could do it this way or that way." When people are spending a lot of money they want to know they are spending it the right way, that you have thought it through. So I say, "This would be perfect for this room. I've thought about it very carefully, done many trials, and I've found that this is perfect."

Clients must feel that they are number one. They don't want to know that you have other jobs.
You can never be too busy for them. I call my clients daily. Too many people treat decorating like an art form. It's not. Decorating is a business. It's about buying and selling. Along with your tastes, you are selling furniture and the works.


SALLY SIRKIN LEWIS says...

Years ago people were terribly insulted if they were called decorators...

They considered themselves interior designers. True, I do consider myself an interior designer, because I design. Half the items that go into a house, I design, because I don't like to do the same thing twice. They say that a decorator is one who chooses draperies, picks a sofa and picks a fabric. A designer goes in from the beginning with the architect, understands everything drawn on the blueprints, everything about lighting and structure. A designer may say "Let's not use anything that's sold in the marketplace." They design the rugs, the fabrics, the furniture, the lighting...everything.

Amateur designers are frightened with scale. Things are so ditsy. And they usually have no sophistication in color. They'll do the expected, what's seen in the magazines. The "color of the month".
Scale, color and style...those are the three things most people are really insecure about.

If you are doing your own house, do what's important to make the environment right for you. Don't adhere to any rules. As far as I'm concerned, there are no rules. But do avoid "suites" of furniture, don't use sets and try to be loose. It will look more interesting than the pat, set thing.
Study the work of good designers and always buy quality.


MRS. HENRY PARISH II says...

In 1934 I started decorating professionally for reasons of necessity...
With the crash, we knew our whole way of life had to be entirely different. My husband came home Christmas Eve and I knew something had happened. Finally, he said, "My job is changing and we will have to live in a different style, but we will work it out."
The Monday after Christmas I found, in the village, a room in part of the saddle shop for forty-five dollars a month. I took it for my office and went to New York the same day. I walked into what I was told was a wholesale fabric house. There seems to be a lot of indecision on everybody's part about whether it was Stroheim & Romann of Schumacher, but it was one or the other. I went through the revolving doors, panic-stricken. I'd never been through revolving doors, but I asked to speak to the president. No one ever knows how I got to see him. I didn't know his name. I simply said, "Our life has changed and I want to make money and help my husband and I want a charge account". He looked completly baffled. I had the definite feeling that he would give me a card right away just to get me out. And he did.
I thanked him and then said, "Oh, by the way, may I use the telephone? I want to call my children in the country and see if they're all right." He replied, "Lady, this is not a business for you." But I had the card, and I brought aproximately a hundred fabric samples back to my new little office. I set it up right away, brought some furniture in from my own house, put some flowers around, and when Harry came home we went to the village. I asked if he noticed anything different. He didn't, so I showed him the sign, made that day. It read "Mrs. Harry Parish II, Interiors."
And that was the beggining of my career.


more to come.....................

Saturday, January 3, 2009


Sensational pair of double lotus lamps. Blue ceramic glaze.
Monumental in size.

SOLD!