FINALLY! Bunny Mellon Style is here.
I am pleased to announce the book so many of us have been waiting on has arrived: Bunny Mellon Style by Linda Jane Holden, Thomas Lloyd, and Bryan Huffman with forward by Tory Burch. Just in time for gift season with a drop date of December 7, 2021 from publisher Gibbs Smith, this book finally shares with us the personal homes of style icon, Bunny Mellon. While books released in the past few years have been great, they left me wanting more, even the stunning Sothebys auction catalogs. This book answers that need. I remember thinking "Wait, what about their Paris apartment?" -now there is a chapter and personal photos devoted to the spaces. The book is an intimate look at Bunny told by those who knew her best. Through interviews and letters you get a look inside her family homes as well as her closet. Above, Bunny is in her Sunday kitchen at Oak Spring in a photo by her grandson, Thomas Lloyd. The perfect painted floor and white kitchen!We all have become acquainted with Bunny's gardens through previous books and while briefly discussed in this book, it focuses more on the houses and collections themselves. I love this shot from Thomas Lloyd of Bunny giving a tour of her Basket House (now part of the Oak Spring Garden Foundation). A close up shot of the sink in her famous garden room by designer Bryan Huffman gives a close up look of the trompe l'oeil work of artist Fernand Renard. One of the many personal photographs from Thomas Lloyd of Bunny at home at Oak Spring Farm above. Tory Burch, now a style-setter herself, writes a fascinating foreword about what she's learned about style from Bunny as the now owner and steward of the Mellon's Antiqua estate. See more about that from Vogue in 2018 HERE. I cannot stress how much I enjoyed this book, I nickname it the Bunny Bible! With everything you could possibly want to know about her secrets on home and entertaining, Bunny Mellon Style is truly the gift of the season and a must for any design library. Pre-order your copy today!Cover image courtesy Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris. Used with permission of Isabelle Rey. All other images from the book by Thomas Lloyd with the exception of the image of the garden room by Bryan Huffman, and the Antiqua garden structure by Daniel Sutherland.
I am pleased to announce the book so many of us have been waiting on has arrived: Bunny Mellon Style by Linda Jane Holden, Thomas Lloyd, and Bryan Huffman with forward by Tory Burch. Just in time for gift season with a drop date of December 7, 2021 from publisher Gibbs Smith, this book finally shares with us the personal homes of style icon, Bunny Mellon.
While books released in the past few years have been great, they left me wanting more, even the stunning Sothebys auction catalogs. This book answers that need. I remember thinking "Wait, what about their Paris apartment?" -now there is a chapter and personal photos devoted to the spaces.
The book is an intimate look at Bunny told by those who knew her best. Through interviews and letters you get a look inside her family homes as well as her closet. Above, Bunny is in her Sunday kitchen at Oak Spring in a photo by her grandson, Thomas Lloyd. The perfect painted floor and white kitchen!
We all have become acquainted with Bunny's gardens through previous books and while briefly discussed in this book, it focuses more on the houses and collections themselves.
I love this shot from Thomas Lloyd of Bunny giving a tour of her Basket House (now part of the Oak Spring Garden Foundation).
A close up shot of the sink in her famous garden room by designer Bryan Huffman gives a close up look of the trompe l'oeil work of artist Fernand Renard.
One of the many personal photographs from Thomas Lloyd of Bunny at home at Oak Spring Farm above. Tory Burch, now a style-setter herself, writes a fascinating foreword about what she's learned about style from Bunny as the now owner and steward of the Mellon's Antiqua estate. See more about that from Vogue in 2018 HERE.
Cover image courtesy Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris. Used with permission of Isabelle Rey. All other images from the book by Thomas Lloyd with the exception of the image of the garden room by Bryan Huffman, and the Antiqua garden structure by Daniel Sutherland.