What weâre binging now: âGet a Room with Carson & Thomâ
Fashion expert Carson Kressley and interior designer Thom Filicia, two of the original cast members of âQueer Eye for the Straight Guy,â reunited on Bravo with âGet A Room with Carson & Thom,â a show Kressley describes as, âa sassy, best-friend buddy comedy with a hearty dose of great information about interior design.â (Missed it? Season 1 is re-airing now.)
We caught up with the slaying superheroes of style to get their take on the crimes of interior design, lessons learned during shooting, advice for beginners and more:
Strike out on your own
Leave the âthemedâ spaces for Disneyland. âPeople tend to get thematic,â Filicia said. âThey buy a midcentury house and then everything they buy is midcentury. ⌠Itâs no different than going to an early American museum. It tells the story of the theme instead of the people who live there.â
Donât chicken out. âThe other thing I see very often is that people know what they want ⌠but when they go to execute it, they back out,â Filicia said. âThey donât follow through and trust their instincts. ⌠That can lead to a very ho-hum interior, something thatâs not terribly interesting or authentic. ⌠It doesnât have any energy.â
When bad is better than none
âI always say I would rather someone have bad taste than no taste, or lame taste. ⌠Itâs more interesting than just being bland,â Filicia said.
Aha! moments
âFor a successful interior you need two things ⌠your floor plan, all of your measurements, how tall your ceiling is, how wide your room is, what kind of furniture is going to fit. ⌠Having that physical plan is your road map,â Kressley said. âIt will help prevent you from making big, expensive mistakes.â
âThe other part of that plan is to know the overall concept or vibe,â Kressley said. Create a concept board to keep your style on track.
Words of wisdom?
âMy biggest piece of advice is just get started,â said Kressley. âThereâs temporary peel-and-stick wallpaper, which is amazing. We used a brand called Tempaper on the show, and it was so fun and easy. We put it on the ceiling of a closet, the inside of a bookcase ⌠those small triumphs can motivate you to tackle bigger projects.â
Sixth sense
âOne of my very first projects [on the show] was creating a work space for a psychic,â said Kressley, âand we were getting advice from the great beyond. The woman who had owned the space before was the clientâs late mother-in-law, and we were checking in with her. So there were moments where we were kind of designing for two people, one who was alive and one who was dead.â
And what you wonât see
Hereâs one moment that we wish were captured on âGet a Roomâ cameras, especially since it ended without injury or lawsuits:
Kressley said while driving around a particularly beautiful neighborhood for the show he hopped out of the car to take an aspirational selfie. âI heard some screaming,â said Kressley, âand by the time I finished my selfie I realized I hadnât put the car in park, so it was rolling downhill with Thom buckled in âŚâ
Bonnie McCarthy contributes to the Los Angeles Times as a home and lifestyle design writer. She enjoys scouting for directional trends and reporting on whatâs new and next. Follow her on Twitter @ThsAmericanHome
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