More than just a stylish design The founder of Parachute Home teaches you how to design a home that’s not only beautiful but mindful, functional, and uniquely you.
A house is a structure that provides shelter. A home tells the story of who you are.
How to Make a House a Home guides your discovery of what is most important to you in achieving warmth and comfort as well as a functional space. Explore the possibilities of creating an environment that is uniquely yours—one that welcomes, nurtures, and inspires.
Parachute founder Ariel Kaye meets you wherever you are, with actionable tips and advice on how to match purpose with style. Here is everything you need to bring mindful choices into your home to make it completely you, from color palettes to organization, house plants to furniture. Whether you want to update your bedding, redo your living room, or take on the whole house, enjoy the remarkable journey of making your house your home.
Light component-by-component guide for those of us who never learned to decorate. Good housewarming or bridal shower gift for younger people or folks like me that just never made it a priority.
3.5 stars. This was a super cute book that got me excited about continuing to decorate my new house! I gained some good ideas and will disregard some of the things that don’t make sense for me.
A few suggestions felt silly or superficial to me, but I think different things work for different people. I appreciated the variety of topics covered in the book; some of these were not things I had considered much before reading this book.
I don't think I learned anything particularly new, but I did enjoy this quick read and it helped me focus on what I want as I renovate and redecorate my house.
Great advice but nothing new. Suitable for someone who is moving into their first place. Really disappointed there were only illustrations and no actual photos of different spaces.
Lovely approach to envisioning what a home looks and feels like, including suggestions for cultivating daily habits of self care. Will be referring back to it for ideas. Emphasis on creating the feeling of “home”, even when traveling.
(2.5 stars) I felt like this book suffered a bit from being an aesthetically pleasing publication but not having a lot of real content. If this is your first foray into the home design and lifestyle genre then perhaps it has some helpful tidbits but the whole thing seemed to present a lot of very basic content. As I tend to lean more toward intentionalism/minimalism then maximalism/over-consumption, I was a little put off when it seemed like the author would suggest buying ‘stuff’ just because. It felt like I was being told, at times, that every space was a perfect home for yet another thing and every surface was just waiting for the right ‘stuff’ to be stuck on it. At one point the author advised buying things you loved even if you had no use for them at the moment, because you could find a place for them another time. I’m not a fan of stuff for the sake of stuff, so this sort of thing rubs me the wrong way. To each his own though, what works for me isn’t right for everyone, it’s just right for me. However…I will always be a little annoyed when someone suggests using books strictly as decor. Buying thrift store books based on colour alone to use simply as a decor object, a stack of books stacked on the floor to serve as nothing more than a makeshift table et cetera. I swear it makes me die a bit inside any time I hear someone suggest that some books are great as pretty decor pieces and only pretty decor pieces. This book sort of read like a rambling blog post with a just a little bit of really basic content. You know when you read a post from a food blogger and you have to wade through a bunch of fluffy backstory about blueberries vs strawberries and what spoon was used at holiday dinner before you get to the recipe? At times this book felt like a lot of fluffy filler before getting to any sort of recipe.
I read through the first part of this and skimmed through the rest.
I liked the book, especially the few concrete suggestions of scents for certain moods, music to play for certain parts of a party, etc.
Most of the advice is pretty basic stuff, but it is a very pretty little book that isn't too prescriptive. She talks about considering the flow of your home and styling around what you like to do and how you live your life, which is generally excellent, timeless advice.
Wish I had noticed at the library that this was by the founder of Parachute, since it did at times feel like I opened my mind to some not-so-subtle advertising and self-promotion by picking this up. That said, the book was very approachable and gave me some helpful frameworks for setting up my space.
I’ve never seen a book about interior design without photos. The drawings are so simple they don’t offer any inspiration. The lengthy explanations about bedding, pillows and towels are so boring. There are lots of odd tips like putting a mirror above the stove, and turning a pile of books into a table. The book was super boring! This author sounds like a beige mom. The book was super boring!
A visually pleasant read with many little ideas to provoke thought about daily life in your own home. While you could use this to do a major remake and spend a fortune, it was also useful for somebody like me who is definitely not in that life space.
Started off fairly strong but lost momentum. It felt like the last third of the book was added in an attempt to make it longer. Unfortunately, I felt that stretch was the least relatable. I quickly lost interest and ended up finishing as fast as I could.