wall art stores atlanta

FREE SHIPPING ON BEDDING + CURTAINS* WITH CODE  GETCOZYGail Silverstein and Jessica Berinato are the mother-daughter team behind Urban Cottage in Atlanta’s Virginia Highland neighborhood. They believe the right home furnishings and accessories help make a house a home. The shop: Gail opened Urban Cottage in 1997 in a little house in Buckhead’s West Village Shopping area. Ten years later, the boutique relocated to its current location at North Highland Avenue. Silverstein is from Long Island, New York, and lived in Florida for 20 years before moving to Atlanta. A former teacher, Silverstein’s last position was at the Atlanta International School, teaching third-grade English before she changed careers. Berinato attended Xavier University in Cincinnati and Atlanta College of Art, where she took interior design classes. She previously worked at a showroom in the AmericsMart in Atlanta and for her father, a furniture manufacturer, before joining her mother at Urban Cottage.
The main goods: Custom-made furniture (from hutches to headboards), but also furniture lines from Aiden Gray and Currey & Company; creative home decor wall artupholstery collections from Robin Bruce, Four Seasons and the Best Slipcover Company; best exterior house paint color schemesDash & Albert rugs; decorate christmas tree naturallyand lamps from Bungalow 5 and Gallery Designs. Tabletop favorites: Juliska glassware, plus bowls, plates and serving pieces from Canvas Home and Bloomingville (a Danish brand). Popular gifts: Capri Blue Volcano Candle in a white jar ($29); throws/blankets ($59 to $129); barnwood trays with rope handles (made in-house, $45); Breathless Paper Co. greeting cards ($3) and cocktail napkins ($8);
and Milk Glass salt & pepper set ($29). People are surprised to learn: The shop has a clothing room called the ‘Little Black Dress Room” that offers women’s clothing, including tunics, shirts and leggings. … and offers some Atlanta-made home goods including: Heirloomed, including table runners, napkins and aprons. Also intown neighborhood mugs by Devanie Schilpp Ceramics. Always on the hunt: For wall art, especially florals, landscapes and abstracts.and Lark & Linen. - Magazines: Real Simple, Country Living, Coastal Living, Dwell, Southern Living, HGTV and Wallpaper. - Instagram: magnolia made; a house and a dog; style at home, house of jade interiors; and home is where the hart is. - Atlanta home/design stores (other than our own): Bungalow Classic, Pieces and Redefined Home Boutique. Design pet peeves: Greige. We love gray, but not a gray that leans to beige. Current design obsession: Layering rugs. Also mixing old and new pieces. Most unusual request: Design a piece of furniture to hold cat litter boxes.
What’s new: An expanded children’s section, with more books, clothing, games and blankets. Find Urban Cottage at: - Facebook: Urban Cottage Inc. Because we're going to be great friends. Sign up for At Home emails and get fresh décor trends at any budget in your inbox, plus 10% off your next purchase.Every reason to subscribe. We'll never share your information and you can unsubscribe from emails at any time. Thank you for signing up.Based out of Brooklyn, the Leif Store sells curated home goods, jewelry, and lots of affordable original art, like the watercolor above, starting at $24. Tappan Collective is an online platform connecting emerging artists with emerging collectors. Limited edition and exclusive prints are available starting at $20. Visit the site here. J Hill Design has city, state and landmark prints of their own colorful designs. With 8-by-10s starting at $12, the paintings can even be personalized with neighborhoods, names, or text.
Visit the store here. Little Paper Planes is a community of artists curators and collectors that sells and promotes new artists. It sells paintings, prints, photographs, and sculptural pieces starting at $15. Minted sells limited edition prints on archival paper from dozens of independent artists. Prints start at $20, and can also be ordered with frames and mattes. Sebastian Foster is a contemporary art gallery and print studio located in Austin, Texas. Its website sells limited edition prints from various artists starting as low as $25. Michelle Armas is a painter based out of Atlanta. She sells prints and original oil paintings on her website, starting at $35. Started in 2007, Jane Mount’s Ideal Bookshelf Project shows hand-painted spines of people’s favorite books. You can buy prints of existing collections starting at $34, or get your own books hand painted starting at $135. See the collection here. In addition to wallpaper, calendars, and temporary tats, Rifle Paper Co. also has wall prints of its beautiful designs, starting at $24.
See them all here. Thumbtack Press is one of the oldest print sites on the internet, selling digital prints of illustrations, comics, and photography from top artists starting at $19.99. See the store here. The Animal Printshop is the online gallery and store for photographer Sharon Montrose. Portraits of these (real!) animals are available framed or unframed, starting at $25. Society 6 sells screen-printed home decor, clothing, and wall prints from artists like Tina Crespo (above), Wendy Macnaughton, Marc Johns, Karen Hallion, and more starting at $15.50. The recently relaunched 20×200 project by Jen Bekman aims to make art collecting more affordable. Prints start as low as $24 for emerging and well-known artists. Tiny Showcase is an online forum for promoting new artists. For each limited edition print purchased, a portion of the proceeds goes to support a charitable organization of that artists choice. Unframed prints start at $30. Little Collector by ArtStar sells playful art designed just for kids, starting at $40.