CARITHERS' TABLETOP TUTORIALDon't worry about the table looking appropriate for brunch, for fall or any specific time. Just make it pretty. |
Entertaining should be fun and easy. That's what design guru Dan Carithers wants amateur entertainers to remember. “Don't think too much,” Carithers implores. Of course, that's easy for him to say; his fall tabletop looks good enough for lunch with the First Family. But that's the point. People tend to make table setting harder than it needs to be.
Where does Carithers begin? In this case, with the flowers. He spotted these cheery orange dahlias and hit the ground running. “I am totally driven by color and lack of color,” Carithers explains. He added a few ranunculus and sprigs of boxwood from his garden, tucked them into small spun-bamboo pots and the tone was set. The Creamware plates, from the notable collection that he's amassed over the years, not only complement the flora, they also speak directly to two of Carithers' passions: Creamware and collecting. “I buy what I like when I see it,” he says. “And that's the way everyone should shop. If you buy pretty things that are good quality, it will all connect.”
Carithers has literally searched the world over during his extensive travels, and most of his possessions come with a story. The plates were made for him by an Italian ceramicist, the chairs he found in Paris, and he picked up the checked fabric in London. And the fruit cooler that graces the table between pairs of 18th-century candlesticks? It brings him back to a friend's wedding in Norway and the antique shop he discovered while there. “I wanted everything in it,” remembers Carithers, who was still negotiating when he returned to the States. In the end, he netted 69 pieces of a Creamware supper set, all for an excellent price.
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DESIGN DETAILS
Dan Carithers
2300 Peachtree Rd. NW, Suite C-120
Atlanta, 30309
(404) 355-8661