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Country Craving: American Country Décor Is Not Just a look--It's a Lifestyle


Article # : 14546 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 3 / 1988  1,739 Words
Author : Gail Greco
Gail Greco is the author of the just-released Bridal Shower Handbook (Wallace-Homestead, 1988).

       Tea-time guests are welcomed in their hostess' foyer by the warming sight of an old church pew draped with a star quilt and a shelf overflowing with herbs and splint baskets. Inside the living room--with its rustic, low-raftered ceiling--they are invited to rest beside a nineteenth-century blanket chest with its original red milk paint worn down to the bare wood. The trunk serves as a coffee table, crowned with a classic assortment of colonial sweet breads and relishes served on a delightfully mismatched collection of china.
       
        Surveying the room, one guest remarks, "We've stepped back in time. I don't know what it is, but I like it." The visitor's observation is typical for someone who experiences the American Country style of decorating for the first time. It is easy to become instantly enamored with country décor. In fact, millions of Americans are trimming their homes with country accents whether they live in a city high-rise apartment, a brand new suburban subdivision, or an authentically refurbished farmhouse in the backwoods.
       
        Although it has been around for some time, American Country entered the mass market scene twelve years ago and became widespread only within the last six years or so. Now, comfortably nestled in as a decorating scheme, home décor businesses forecast that it is an evolving style and here to stay.
       
        Signs of country décor's popularity include Time-Life Books' series on American Country (due out next fall), popular home magazines featuring the style (including Architectural Digest), a bevy of country decorating magazines appearing on the newsstands, and at-home parties selling country furniture and accessories (à la ... (1999 of 10784 Characters)
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