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About Chadsworth Columns

Chadsworth’s 1.800.COLUMNS, founded in 1987, is a leading manufacturer & distributor of architectural columns representing the orders of classical architecture.

Chadsworth’s Columns Shown in Elizabeth Locke’s Jewelry Store

Credits:  From the New York Social Diary

                Written By:  Carol Joynt

 

           http://www.newyorksocialdiary.com/node/1903513

 

 

This is what happens in Washington when the calendar begins to move toward autumn:  we think of Virginia, especially the verdant Piedmont region, which stretches from nearby Leesburg down to practically the North Carolina border, with the Blue Ridge to the West and the Potomac to the east.  Within these boundaries are sprawling estates, fox hunts, cattle ranches, vineyards, an evolving colony of artists, trees bearing a dozen or more varieties of apples and pears; abundant good food and a ravishing palette of autumn color.  There’s also, I learned over Labor Day weekend, the lure of luxury – in particular, world class jewelry.

 

Manhattanites may claim jewelry designer Elizabeth Locke as theirs, but the truth is the lovely pieces she sells on Madison Avenue – and in stores from Charleston to Beverly Hills – are conceived and designed at practically the banks of the languorous Shenandoah River.  All within a few miles of each other are her home in Millwood and her company headquarters in Boyce.  To say it’s a one stoplight rural area is an understatement.  We’re talking one stop sign and a railroad track.

 

While Elizabeth is a native of the area, which is hard-core hunt country, and her local clients and friends are the landed gentry, her designs are not gold stirrup earrings and horse head pins.  Oh, no.  These are sophisticated baubles for a lux lifestyle:  gems, precious stones, glass intaglios, ancient Roman and Greek coins, South Sea pearls, antique mosaics and lots of gleaming yellow gold.  They reflect the sensibility of Elizabeth, who is, above all, a passport-wielding citizen of the world.

 

Still, home is where the heart is and for Elizabeth and husband John Staelin their 19th century “farmhouse,” Clay Hill, is another beloved work of art, one they just lavished with a complete upgrade and redo. Anybody who’s ever renovated a house knows completion of the project is a moment for celebration (after months of threatening murder and contemplating suicide).

 

For Elizabeth and John the job’s end was reason to pitch a big tent, hire a caterer and dance band, and toss a swell party for more than 100 friends.  An added bonus was that it occurred on one of the more spectacular days of the summer, with dry and cool air, and a painter’s sunset.

 

Elizabeth invited me when she learned I would be a houseguest of our mutual friend Jean Perin who, along with Alison Martin, did the interior makeover of Clay Hill. My friendship with Jeannie dates from the early 80s, when I lived in Upperville and she lived outside Middleburg.

 

Over the years I relocated to Georgetown and Jeannie settled in Upperville, where she created one of Virginia’s most exquisite mini-estates.  Not only is she a gifted interior designer, but also she makes poetry with landscaping.  Garden groups come from all over to admire Les Jardins de Jean Perin.  It’s a treat to be her houseguest.  Each morning I woke to a view that was a landscape painting.

Given the holiday it was surprisingly easy to get out of the city Friday.  I arrived in time for an afternoon swim and a chance to savor twilight, a quiet intruded upon only by birds, frogs and crickets.  A family of deer romped across the field.

 

Jeannie is Bunny Mellon’s next door neighbor, though in this part of the world “next door” can mean separated by dozens of acres, even hundreds.  Her many beautiful views include the Mellon jet landing strip, designed to accommodate the latest Gulf Stream.  Only in the land of Mellon could a private airfield be considered beautiful; even the trees are so artfully tended they define well pruned.

 

In advance of the Clay Hill party Jeannie had some plans for us, but first thing Saturday morning she said, “you must go to see Elizabeth’s store in Boyce.”  Good advice.

 

It’s a sweet town but completely rural and the last place one expects to find a high-end jewelry emporium that’s done up like an Italian palazzo, but that’s what I found, complete with columns, a hand-painted faux-marble floor, swaths of gold silk, an elaborate ceiling and cases of precious gems.

 

Bit of the décor are loopy due to a side story Elizabeth created of an imaginary twin sister who is a wayward Contessa, thus the haute invitations tacked to the mirror in the faux bathroom, an alluring boudoir and a shrine to Elvis.  If you arrive minus appropriate clothing, never fear; the shop sells stylish caftans that go well with palazzos, gold and gems.

 

The store is open on weekends.  It’s less than a half hour from Middleburg and a 70-minute drive from Washington, but loyal customers have been known to fly in private to do their shopping.

 

Nearby in Millwood is the Locke Store (same name but no relation) where I stopped both coming and going, because the peanut butter chocolate chip cookies were that good.  They have other well made prepared foods, including potpie, meat loaf, chicken salad, assorted sandwiches, apple crisp; also wine, beer sodas and coffee.  Carry your food across the street for a picnic by the cascading race of the restored 18th Century Burwell-Morgan Mill.  That would be a perfect autumn day – history, jewels and a picnic . . .

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hooked On Chadsworth Cottage

Chadsworth’s Columns linked to Terry Kearns’ blog — Architecture Tourist!

http://architecturetourist.blogspot.com/2009/03/julia-over-at-hooked-on-houses-is.html

Historical Concepts’ Jim Strickland Selects Chadsworth Columns as “Architects’ Choice” in Residential Architect Magazine

Residential Architect Magazine is known for producing quality monthly issues, and their online counterpart, www.residentialarchitect.com, is equally esteemed.  Once a year, Residential Architect systematically selects first-rate architects to be spotlighted in the section, Architects’ Choice.  This highly anticipated article, featured in the July/August issue, is comprised of architects who produce superior work and have a commitment to exploring new materials and products.  They offer their insight on the industry’s top-level products and the companies which produce them.

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Award-winning architect, James L. Strickland, President & Founder of Historical Concepts (www.historicalconcepts.com) emphasizes the value and excellence of Chadsworth’s products.  It seems that success has a tendency to follow Mr. Strickland, as he and his company were the recipient of the 2010 Arthur Ross Award for the Architecture category.  A superior architect knows superior products, and that is why Chadsworth is grateful to Mr. Strickland for his recognition of Chadsworth’s products.

“When columns are done right, nothing expresses the interrelationship between function, form, and beauty more elegantly,” Strickland says. Chadsworth, he adds, understands the correct cannons of proportion.

www.residentialarchitect.com/products/downright-upright.aspx

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Historical Concepts
Jim Strickland Peachtree City, Ga.
www.historicalconcepts.com

The Architecture and Planning of Windsor

Windsor is an early example of a New Urbanism development by renowned town planners and architects Andrés Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk. This event offers a rare opportunity to spend a day within Windsor’s gates, studying its well crafted architecture and inspirational plan. An informative introduction to Windsor by its Director of Planning, Luis Van Cotthem will be followed by a comprehensive evaluation of its architecture by Scott Merrill. Following lunch, Luis will lead a guided walking tour of the public buildings, allowing time for sketching and photography along the way. The walk ends in the residential South Village where architect Peter D. Moor will guide a tour of a private residence of his design. Visit the Florida Chapter Web site for complete event details.

~ EVENT DETAILS ~

Friday, August 13
9:30 AM–4:00 PM

Windsor, Vero Beach, FL

Turn west onto Windsor Boulevard from AIA, just north of the Wabasso Causeway.

 

$35 for ICA&CA Members ~ $45 for Non-members
 

Attendance is limited and advance reservations are required.

 

Please RSVP by August 6th to chrisb@moorarch.com.

Payment by cash or check only at the door.
Carpooling is encouraged.

INSTITUTE OF CLASSICAL  ARCHITECTURE & CLASSICAL AMERICA

FLORIDA CHAPTER

9822 Tapestry Park Circle, Suite 201 ~ Jacksonville, Florida 32246

(904) 302-9848 ~ www.flclassicist.org

 

 

Allotted on 650 acres of sweeping Georgia countryside, the newly constructed BabyLand General Hospital is the latest “birthplace” for the world-renowned Cabbage Patch Kids®.  Xavier Roberts, Cabbage Patch creator and Georgia native, envisioned a new structure that would foster quality family time along with providing business for the local community.

 

Inside this hospital estate, the culmination of a “Fathers’ Waiting Room,” maternity wards, and even a room containing a sonogram machine used for “Mother Cabbage” allows a fantasy world to transform into reality.  Equally eye-grasping is the hospital’s exterior components.  The front entrance showcases four massive, round 36” x 24’ Fiberwound columns with Tuscan capitals and bases.  The hospital’s architectural elegance does not stop at the front entrance, though.  In fact, throughout BabyLand General Hospital an additional 63 columns can be seen – including within the 20,000 square feet wrap-around porch.  A variety of column sizes contributes to BabyLand’s Southern architectural charm.  Included within, among, and around the hospital are:

 

—  16″ x 12′ PolyStone® columns with Tuscan capitals & bases

—  20″ x 12′ Fiberwound columns with Tuscan capitals & bases

—  24″ x 14′ Fiberwound columns with Tuscan capitals & bases

 

The little world of Xavier Roberts’ classic creations complemented with magnificent columns offers a chance to experience both an interior daydream and an exterior, architectural paradise.