DOGS & Designer Labels: What’s In A Name?

Suzanne Kasler is one of the Top Dogs in Interior Design today.

 

Known for her serene, elegant and sophisticated designs, Suzanne has a decidedly European accent. 

 

Many call it a French accent, because Suzanne like, so many of us, is in love with Paris. 

 

But Suzanne’s work defies conventional labels…

 

 

Suzanne Kasler House Beautiful

Image: House Beautiful Magazine

 

 

Her Inspired Interiors appeal to admires of traditional and modern style.

 

Suzanne doesn’t like a room to look decorated she believes it should be collected.

 

Mixing “mutts” with pedigreed objects is nothing new for Suzanne. 

 

Her merchandising ventures have followed the same high-low path.

 

Suzanne Kasler’s designs have recently gone to the Dogs…

 

 

Suzanne Kasler Designer Dog Bed, Interior Design Hound

 

 

Suzanne Kasler has added a Canine Collection to her line up at Ballard Designs.

 

 

The Dog bed cushions are designed in her signature serene color palette of heavy-duty hemp cotton fabrics. 

 

 

Suzanne Kasler Dog Beds Interior Design Hound

 Suzanne Kasler Dog Beds. Image Ballard

 

 

 

Her love of natural fibers also inspired the Dog Bed Basket, which is created of natural water hyacinth.

 

 

 

Kasler Dog Basket, Ballard

Dog Basket Suzanne Kasler Interior Design Hound

 

 

The only thing missing on Ballard’s Suzanne Kasler Dog bed is a “private label.”

 

 

The intertwined S & K with the quatrefoil would have been a nice touch, instead of the big, black Harry Barker label.

 

 

Suzanne Kasler Dog Basket

 Dog Basket & Cushion. Image: Ballard Design

 

 

 

The quatrefoil, which makes an appearance on Ballard’s website, is a Suzanne Kasler signature design element, often seen in Suzanne’s Interiors.

 

  

 

The Alexandra Chair, named after Suzanne’s daughter, features a wonderful quatrefoil back in her furniture collection by Hickory Chair.

 

 

 

Image: Hickory Chair

Alexandra Side Chair Quatrefoil

 

 

 

I dunno, maybe it’s just me…

 

 

But if you’re going to charge more for a Dog bed “designed” by Suzanne Kasler…

 

 

 

Suzanne Kasler Dog Bed Cushion, Interior Design Hound

 

 

 

Shouldn’t you at least change the label?

 

 

 

Harry Barker Dog Beds

 

 

 

 

Later, I’ve got to let the Dog out,

 

 

Cynthia Waldenmaier, Interior Design Hound, Pet Lifestyle & Design Expert

 

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Elsie de Wolfe: Passion for Pekingese

 

Elsie de Wolfe, the tastemaker famous for her unerring good taste, was always ahead of the pack when it came to style. 

 

 

Known as a Fashion Hound long before she became the Top Dog of Interior Design, she understood the importance of the perfect accessory.  

 

 

Her Dogs were no exception. 

 

 

Elsie de Wolfe Pekingese, Interior Design Hound

Dogs In Society. Image: Interior Design Hound.

 

 

Every Dog has its day, and Vogue magazine devoted plenty of space to report on the “must haves” in the Dog world. 

 

 

Reporters, like Johnny McMullin, wrote about which breeds were no longer popular and had:

 

 “met with social reverses recently.”

 

 

So, I guess when  French Bulldogs  became sooooo last century, the Pekingese became the Dog de Jour for Elsie de Wolfe in the early 1900s.

 

 

Pekingese Style, Dogs Interior Design Hound

 

 

The portrait of Elsie de Wolfe and one of her precious Pekingese Pups (below) fetched $2530 at a Christie’s auction in 1999. 

 

 

Taken by Baron de Meyer, the 7” x 9” framed print was given a date of “circa 1900.”

 

 

Elsie de Wolfe Pekingese Wee Toi, Elsie de Wolfe Dogs.jpg

Elsie de Wolfe & Pekingese.  Image: Christie’s

 

 

The first Pekingese came to America in 1898 and the breed was admitted to the A.K.C. registry in 1906.  

 

 

Wee Toi of Downshire, Elsie’s Pekingese, was from the Downshire Kennels founded in 1905 by Mrs. Morris Mandy.

 

 

Tsang of Downshire Pekingese,  Interior Design Hound

Tsang of Downshire. Image: Art & Life

 

 

My research documentation has Elsie de Wolfe touring with her French Bulldog Fauvette until at least 1902.  So, either Elsie had both a Pekingese and French Bulldogs at the same time or the photo was taken at a later date. 

 

Both Elsie and her Pekingese on the sofa look remarkably similar to the first photograph from 1913, don’t you think?

 

 

Elsie de Wolfe Pekingese, 2 Dogs, Interior Design Hound .jpg

Elsie de Wolfe.  Image: Libray of Congress

 

  

The Inaugural Pekingese Exhibition was held at the Plaza Hotel in January of 1911.  According to the New York Times, the Dog Show “attracted scores of society folks.”

 

Miss Elsie de Wolfe’s Pekingese, Wee Toi of Downshire, made quite a showing.  Weighing in at under 8 pounds, the Dog took 1st place in:

 

  • Open Class
  • Novice Dogs
  • Open Class, Dogs under 8 lbs.
  • American-Bred Pekingese, Red

 

 

Fashion Hound Pekingese

 

 

In December of 1911, “members of society interested in the development of the Pekingese, the latest pet of Dogdom, gathered at the Plaza Hotel for the second annual show held by the Pekingese Club of America.”

 

 

The “members of society” included J. P. Morgan and, of course, Miss Elsie de Wolfe and her prize winning Pekingese.

 

 

By December of 1913, “the largest bench of the ultra-fashionable breed Pekingese Exhibition” was held at the Plaza Hotel with over 250 Dogs. 

 

 

Elsie de Wolfe Mendl, Pekingese, Interior Design Hound

Image: Hoyningen-Hune, Vogue.

  

 

The competitive nature of the exhibition had extended beyond the show ring to the decoration of the Dogs’ pen or kennels: 

 

 

“Many pens were decorated with grotesque and elaborated embroidery work,” according to the New York Times.  No doubt beautiful  Chinese embroidery.

 

 

A House In Good Taste, indeed.

 

Elsie de Wolfe's Book The House In Good Taste

 

Wee Toi lived in the style that all of Elsie de Wolfe’s Dogs would become accustomed to: 

 

“I love to house my little people happily-my dogs and my birds and my fish.   Wee Toi, my little Chinese Dog, has a little house all his own, an old Chinese lacquer box with a canopy top and little gold bells.  It once was the shrine to a little Chinese god, I suppose, but Wee Toi is very happy in it, and you can see it was meant for him in the beginning.  It sits by the fireplace and gives the room a real feel of hominess.” A House In Good Taste, 1913  

 

 

How I’d love to see a photograph of that Chinese lacquered Dog house!”

 

 

Here’s the only Dog bed of Elsie de Wolfe’s that I’ve managed to find:

 

  

Elsie de Wolfe's Dog Bed, Interior Design Hound

 

 

It looks like the Dog basket I wrote about here.

 

 

No matter what Elsie de Wolfe’s Dogs slept in…..

  

Elsie de Wolf's Pekingese Mural, Interior Design Hound

Elsie de Wolfe with her Pekingese Dogs in tow painted on the ceiling of her Library at Petit Trianon in Verailles, France.  Image: Elsie de Wolfe: A Decorative Life  

 

 

…you can bet they were living the high life!

 

Later, I’ve got to let the Dog out,

 

Cynthia Waldenmaier, Interior Design Hound, Pet Lifestyle & Design Expert

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