“Less is More” Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
A few years ago, a friend sent me this picture. 
The house, located in downtown Toronto, Canada, was about the size of a postage stamp. It was, at the time, for sale.
This immediately captured my attention. I was intrigued, wondering what it could possibly be like to live in such a tiny space. I found the challenge of maximizing the living space in a house this size, and creating a warm and inviting interior, to be exciting!
Now, I realize that a miniature dwelling of this scale just doesn’t cut it for most of us, including myself.
If nothing else, it certainly puts things in perspective, especially if you’ve ever felt you don’t have enough room and need a bigger house.
You’re not alone.
The thing is, you can move to a larger home, but if won’t be long before you’ve once again run out of room.
Because the problem isn’t lack of room, it’s that you have too much stuff.
The bigger the house, the more things you can accumulate, and the more you accumulate, well, sooner or later there might not be room to store it all.
So the problem, or challenge, is simply to get by with less in the first place.




when common sense flies out the window and we knock ourselves out trying to produce the ‘perfect’ holiday memories for our families.
Since we aren’t planning on having sixty guests over for dinner, I don’t need to decorate the house from top to bottom. Who would I be knocking myself out for?
When it comes to Interior Design, what does it mean to be ‘Green’?
On a recent summer’s day, I had the ideal opportunity to visit Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright’s masterpiece located in Bear Run, Pennsylvania.
