The Petal House, originally built in the 1950s, was renovated and expanded by Eric Owen Moss in 1982.

Homes by Frank Gehry, Eric Owen Moss, Neil Denari open for tour

"Tip the world on its side and everything loose will land in Los Angeles," Frank Lloyd Wright reportedly said. That looseness -- a spirit of experimentation, a refusal to be bound by convention -- will be on display June 23 when the MAK Center for Art and Achitecture hosts a tour of groundbreaking modern homes by Frank Gehry, Neil M. Denari Architects, Eric Owen Moss and artist Peter Alexander. 

The tour was organized in conjunction with "Everything Loose Will Land," an exhibition at the landmark Schindler House in West Hollywood that explores the design conversation among Los Angeles...

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Blackberries ripen on vines, a thornless variety developed by horticulturist Luther Burbank.

Growing blackberries: Sweet fruit, minus the thorns

The thornless blackberries in Mary Steffens' backyard in Echo Park are going on three years, and one of the plants is finally setting fruit -- big, purple-black globes of nearly seedless, sweet-tart juiciness.

Steffens got the plants from a friend at Ocean View Farms, the community garden in Mar Vista, but her initial planting site was too sunny. So two years ago she moved the plants to a spot that got late afternoon sun but was shaded during the hottest part of the day.

“This is basically a Northern Californian berry,” she said. “They don’t like heavy heat. The first...

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Matt Winter sits in the doorway to his temporary interior design studio on Rose Avenue in Venice.

Matt Winter installs latest pop-up design studio in Venice

Culver City designer Matt Winter is known for creating vintage-inspired restaurant interiors and his new pop-up design studio in Venice is no exception.

For the next six months, the designer plans to use a salvaged 1939 Quonset hut as a temporary office for his M. Winter Design Studio, as well as a retail space for his surplus of vintage treasures. Sharing the property with Winter is the Styleliner, a pop-up shop of unique jewelry, bags and other accessories.

This is the second time that Winter, 28, has installed the two Quonset huts on a vacant parking lot. Last year, he set up shop on La...

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A transcendent perch in the Silver Lake Hills

A transcendent perch in the Silver Lake Hills

Every house is a reflection of its owner. Some owners are just a bit more complicated than others. Tim Tattu is still settling into his new house, designed by Los Angeles architect Tom Marble in the steep hills overlooking the Silver Lake Reservoir. It is an explosion of angles, steel and outsized ambition. But the house is also filled with small spaces, contemplative moments and simple materials. It's an epic study in contrasts, as is Tattu himself.

Tattu grew up in Hermosa Beach, studied art in the early '90s at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena and at the prestigious Städelschule in...

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Micro apartments in Los Angeles: 'How Small Is Too Small?'

Micro apartments in Los Angeles: 'How Small Is Too Small?'

With condo buildings sprouting from vacant lots and talk of lifting height restrictions on its high-rises, Hollywood offers one of the best illustrations of Los Angeles' push toward population density. In the heart of this quickly changing neighborhood, in an appropriately tiny storefront gallery, two exhibitions show the direction of L.A. through studies of micro apartments and multifamily apartments.

"How Small Is Too Small" and "By-Right/By-Design," running until Aug. 4 at the WuHo Gallery, examine a future that, the exhibits propose, is already partially here.

A micro-unit, here defined as...

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The new store features a free Design Lab where customers can "create" their own bedroom or dorm room using drag and drop technology at one of the store's computer stations.

PBteen opens first Southern California store in Thousand Oaks

Anyone who has searched in vain for a backpack during August or agonized with college-bound freshmen over dorm-room furnishings knows that now is the best time to shop for back-to-school supplies.

Parents and students charting their course to various stores and malls may want to add one more stop on their itinerary: PBteen has opened its first brick and mortar store in Southern California at the Oaks Mall in Thousand Oaks.

The new store kicked off with the early release of the PBteen gear collection, a graphic assortment of backpacks, messenger bags and lunch totes, as well as the PBdorm...

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The David Harris cultivar of <i>Echeveria gibbiflora</i> was beautiful, sure, but its longevity was what made the plant stand out.

Tribute to a late brother: A plant named 'David Harris'

Santa Barbara horticulturalist David Harris noticed an unusual succulent growing a few years ago in a client’s backyard in Ojai. Harris, a founding member of the Santa Barbara Cactus & Succulent Society, thought the plant was unlike any Echeveria gibbiflora he knew, most notably because it didn’t bolt into a flower like many do. Instead, the plant almost never flowered -- usually the final flush before death for a gibbiflora. It simply put out a stalk topped by a new rosette.

The succulent retained its good looks in the wintertime, another rare attribute. It was long-lived. And it...

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The Lollibook made by Clei is shown at left with the bed (the white panel above the doll shelves) flipped up. At right, the loft bed flipped down. The design starts at $4,800 through Resource Furniture. A similar design called the Poppi Book positions the bed below the shelves.

Resource Furniture Los Angeles: New store for the space-deprived

At Resource Furniture, the newly opened Los Angeles store of the New York-based company, you don't have to be a Transformers-loving kid to appreciate the genius of the Poppi Book, a shelving unit that converts into a loft bed.

The loft bed is just one of the space-saving products by the Italian design firm Clei available through Resource Furniture, which specializes in streamlined, multifunction storage and sleeping pieces for lofts, studios and small rooms -- perhaps the home office that has to double as a guest bedroom.

I admit to being a bit mesmerized by the company's videofor the...

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Interior designers Lawrence Lazzaro, left, and  Nicholas Hertneck have opened Nicholas Lawrence Interior Design Studio and Fine Home Furnishings in the heart of Brentwood Village this month. Here they are pictured at the Los Angeles manufacturer that produces their collection.

Nicholas Lawrence design showroom opens in Brentwood

Home offices might be a trend, but interior designers Nicholas Hertneck and Lawrence Lazzaro grew tired of running a business from their personal residence. In early June, the decorating duo moved their business, a division of the Beverly Hills firm Piper Hertneck Design, to the second floor of a Brentwood Village storefront.

On the lower floor, they created Nicholas Lawrence, a retail space with herringbone hickory floors and Venetian and plastered walls. The Vermont soapstone sales counter, Lazzaro said, "was designed to look like it was salvaged from an Art Deco movie theater."

The space...

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Furniture designer Reeve Schley, photographed in his Pico-Union workshop, has launched an online store under the name Seed Furniture.

Seed Furniture: Reeve Schley's new bar carts, dressers, cabinets

When Reeve Schley launched his online company, Seed Furniture, four months ago he hoped people would go for pieces he calls “modular, customizable and re-purposable.” His nursery chest, for instance, has whimsical puzzle-piece-shaped doors that can be switched out for plain symmetrical doors as baby grows.

There is also the Queen Mary bar, whose top, modeled after the captain’s bar on the 1936 ocean liner, is fitted with bottle-sized slots to steady your favorite pours. Should one’s landlubbing life require it, that top can be removed via a sliding dovetail system and a...

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DIY decorating for renters: A new L.A. at Home series

DIY decorating for renters: A new L.A. at Home series

Dorothy said, "There's no place like home." I disagree. Every place can be home. Even that place with the bare walls, the wannabe DJ next door and the A/C unit older than your first car.

I've lived in six apartments in seven years. From a studio with blue carpeting to an old Victorian with soaring ceilings, every one of those places I have made my home.

That's the point of this new column and video series: to look at design through the eyes of the space-starved, budget-minded renter. My monthly tips and projects won't be DIY just for the sake of being crafty. They will be designed for renters,...

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The checkout area of Land of Nod, the sister store of Crate & Barrel devoted to children's decor. The wall in back, which looks like candy-colored subway tile, was painted by the store's creative director.

The how-to behind the Land of Nod's rainbow wall

Earlier this week we posted one more sign of the American retail recovery, the expansion of the Land of Nod at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. Times photographer Allen J. Schaben's shot of the brick wall at the checkout counter prompted us to ask Land of Nod creative director Danielle Kurtz about her painting process. Kurtz finished the design by herself in 15 hours. Our edited Q&A with Kurtz:

You started with a background coat of white?

We first had the wall painted a solid, very pale, mint green. I knew that was the color I wanted as the "grout," so we used that as our starting point.

How...

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J.C. Penney's overhaul of its home store has brought a fresh look to an old brand. The new collections include, clockwise from top left: Design by Conran's metal lamp, MarthaCelebrations' spiral candles, Happy Chic by Jonathan Adler's arrow bookends and walnut veneer TV cabinet, Michael Grave Designs' toaster, Bodum's tea carafes and Design by Conran's upholstered chair and oak dining table. For a peek at more products, with prices, click to our related photo gallery.

J.C. Penney, new home for Jonathan Adler, Conran, Michael Graves

Can new home decor collections save J.C. Penney? The struggling department store threw a housewarming party Thursday in New York, heralding new lines from an impressive roster of designers: Jonathan Adler, Conran, Martha Stewart, Pantone, Bodum and, freshly jumped-ship from Target, Michael Graves.

The first impressions, based on the electronic "look book" of merchandise sent to media and a stealth walk-through of a J.C. Penney home department as it staged the new merchandise in the Arcadia store recently: Surprise, surprise. J.C. Penney has itself a winner. Several of them, actually.

PHOTOS:...

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Psychiatrist and serial killer Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen, left) and FBI profiler Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) talk in the doctor's chambers, based on an old library room in a North Carolina state building.

'Hannibal' on TV: In decorating, he's a man of good taste

"Hannibal," the recently renewed NBC drama about psychiatrist-serial killer-cannibal Hannibal Lecter, may be as fiendishly gory as TV gets, but the interior decorating is undeniably elegant. Series creator Bryan Fuller, a partner in L.A. design store Fuller + Roberts, hired production designer Patti Podesta and set decorator Jaro Dick to bring Lecter's deadly lairs to life.

PHOTOS: The delicious decorating of "Hannibal"

Podesta, whose credits include "Cinema Verite," provided L.A. at Home with a detailed postmortem via email on the show's stylish and atmospheric interiors for this edited Q&A:

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Enjoy 30% off <a href="http://usstore.marimekko.com/fabric/fabric-sale-2013.asp"> Marimekko</a> fabrics through June 17. In-store and online.

Home decor and garden sales alerts

Our latest picks for shopping deals include Marimekko, Flor and Bauer Pottery. Check out these posts and share your leads with us at home@latimes.com. Keep clicking to see the latest ...
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'On the Road' project turns U-Hauls into pop-up design galleries

'On the Road' project turns U-Hauls into pop-up design galleries

The yearlong "On the Road" series showcasing contemporary architecture in Southern California kicked off Sunday with a pop-up exhibition at the corner of Temple and Alameda streets in downtown Los Angeles. More than a dozen firms showed projects as installations in rented U-Haul trucks, creating an ephemeral gallery-on-wheels.

Future events in the series, curated by design journalist Danielle Rago, will highlight emerging talent while putting the spotlight on venues around the city.

"We haven't announced our next event," Rago said, adding she and her fellow organizers want the series to take...

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Growing the etrog citron, a tree full of symbolism

Growing the etrog citron, a tree full of symbolism

The etrog citron (Citrus medica) is a fruit with thousands of years of human use, much like the related Buddha’s hand fruit.  Both are famous for their pleasing, room-filling aroma, but only the etrog is an integral ingredient in Sukkot celebrations that follow Yom Kippur. Only etrog is waved with the date palm, the myrtle and the willow during the Jewish holiday.

Some believe the Garden of Eden fruit is etrog, not an apple. Its association with eternal life may come from its own longevity: The fruit of some varieties lasts three years on the branch without dropping. Originally from...

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Designers Cisco Pinedo and John Robshaw will premiere their new furniture collaboration June 6 at Cisco Home in Los Angeles.

John Robshaw for Cisco Brothers furniture line launches

The new John Robshaw for Cisco Brothers collection will premiere Thursday at the Cisco Home store on Melrose Avenue before hitting other retailers in September. The collaboration pairs textile designer Robshaw's soft, romantic block prints with the warm, sustainable furniture of Los Angeles-based designer Cisco Pinedo.

The new line includes the Babur Chairs shown here, beginning at $2,400, as well as a chaise, a sofa, a screen, a trunk, an ottoman, a bed and a daybed. Pieces will be available in linens and cottons as well as four Robshaw fabrics that are exclusive to the Cisco collection.

PHOT...

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Shopper in training: Oliver Hong, left, 1, of Aliso Viejo, exhibits excellent command of his miniature cart ($69) while Owen Lee, 2, of Irvine, plays in the wood and canvas teepee ($149) in the new Land of Nod store in Costa Mesa. The blue Locking Blocks cotton rug comes in sizes ranging from 4-by-6-feet to 8-by-10-feet, $99 to $299.

Land of Nod store opens at South Coast Plaza

The Land of Nod has come to the Mall of Malls: South Coast Plaza.

The children's decor store, part of the Crate & Barrel empire, opened its first West Coast store over the weekend in Costa Mesa. Discriminating toddlers with a taste for the modern can make-believe in play houses and pedal around play cars while moms and dads browse bed ensembles, coat racks, gliders and rugs. 

PHOTOS: Land of Nod at South Coast Plaza

The 4,255-square-foot space, on Level 3 of the shopping center's Crate & Barrel wing, follows three Land of Nods in suburban Chicago and one in Seattle. In the E-commerce era, when...

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Rachel Klauber-Speiden posed a daunting challenge to architects Tryggvi Thorsteinsson and Erla Dogg Ingjaldsdottir of Santa Monica-based Minarc: Transform a 1962 apartment building into a single-family home. The kitchen is the heart of the house for Klauber-Speiden, who loves to cook and entertain. There are no upper cabinets; all storage is underneath the counter, behind doors made of recycled rubber. Klauber-Speiden says she saved $7,000 by going with an induction cook-top rather than buying gas and installing a new gas line. To create the orange backsplash, Klauber-Speiden painted the back of clear glass instead of buying more expensive colored glass. [ <a href="http://www.latimes.com/features/home/la-hm-klauber-speiden-pictures,0,6305807.photogallery">Full gallery</a> ]

Kitchen design ideas: Cabinets, countertops, islands and more

Looking for kitchen design ideas? Start here. L.A. at Home has been developing Home Inspiration galleries where you can see what Southern Californians have done in their new homes and in their remodeling -- from custom cabinetry to Ikea installations, from premium stone to DIY countertops, plus backsplashes galore -- ceramic tile, sheet glass, stainless steel and more. We've peeked inside hundreds of homes in Los Angeles, Orange County and beyond. Keep clicking for design ideas that might fit your style.

HOME INSPIRATION PHOTOS: The kitchen

When you're through in the kitchen, check out our...

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Is it a style? A period? A store? All of the above? Early American Landfill sells clothing, cards and art.

In Joshua Tree, shopping for vintage, handmade, eclectic and cool

Joshua Tree first cast its spell on nature lovers and New Age spiritual seekers. Then the high desert community seduced musicians, artists and other urban refugees with affordable real estate. Now the frontier town has yet another draw: The retail backwater is an emerging shopping destination.

New stores — some opened, some on the way — are making Joshua Tree a more interesting detour not only for junkyard discoveries but also for handmade goods by the growing community of artists who now call the area home. A short stretch of the Twentynine Palms Highway (California State Route...

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The concept art for the kids' ramshackle DIY house in "The Kings of Summer" shows a second-story sleeping loft and a front entry made from the door of a portable toilet. Click to the gallery to see what the production crew ultimately built for the movie.

'Kings of Summer' movie set: A DIY castle for kids

School’s out, your parents are annoying and suburban Ohio is totally boring. For the three teenage protagonists in "The Kings of Summer," there’s only one antidote: Build a house in the woods.

For the CBS Films coming-of-age comedy, which premieres in Los Angeles and New York on Friday and will roll out across the U.S this summer, director Jordan Vogt-Campbell envisioned a scrap-pile sanctuary -- one that young people could have realistically built on a bare-bones budget. The result is a charming, patchwork example of ingenuity and craftiness.

To create the house, production...

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Since the Eames side chair was released in fiberglass in 1951, it hasn't been available in wood until now. From the left: walnut, santos palisander, white ash. More options in the chair legs can be seen in our related photo gallery.

Eames Molded Wood Side Chairs: 1951 seat gets a 2013 update

Ray and Charles Eames started their experiments in molded plywood back in the 1940s, but the couple’s famous molded arm and side chairs never were made in anything other than fiberglass or polypropylene because the curves of the seat couldn’t be manufactured in wood.

Now, 62 years after its initial release, the Eames Molded Side Chair has conquered that technological divide: The piece has just been reissued in walnut, white ash or santos polisander (a species of sustainably harvested Bolivian rosewood), thanks to a newly developed process for creating pliable wood veneers.

Traditio...

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Wanted Design, a showcase for the latest creations by emerging furniture and lighting designers, drew huge crowds to the Terminal Stores building in New York.

Wanted Design 2013: The coolest and newest from young designers

Wanted Design 2013, the independent home furnishings show that ran concurrently with the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York this month, reported an increase in visitors this year: More than 10,000 people stopped by the Terminal Stores building in Chelsea to check out emerging talent from around the globe.

From the packed opening night reception May 17 that drew lines around the block (exhibitor Evan Crane joked that he struggled to get his father into the show) to the ICFF floor at Javits Center, the positive buzz was strong.

"I like how they put together big names with...

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The powder-coated foosball table by Mars Made is made to order in Rhode Island. "It's furniture you can play with," said the company co-founder, industrial designer Justin Sirotin said. Price: $12,500.

Foosball, ping-pong and chess tables: Furniture built for fun

At the 2013 International Contemporary Furniture Fair, the annual May expo that is the heart of New York Design Week, one big trend was pieces meant to bring family and friends together: foosball sets, ping-pong tables, chess tables and party-ready vinyl music stations. Here's a sample of the fun and games spotted at ICFF and related events.
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A. Quincy Jones show at Hammer Museum: Meet the curator

A. Quincy Jones show at Hammer Museum: Meet the curator

We hear it from the owners of A. Quincy Jones houses all the time: "The house just feels good."

In organizing and designing "A. Quincy Jones: Building for Better Living," the new exhibition on one of L.A.'s beloved residential architects, the Hammer Museum wanted to convey that idea -- how Jones was a master at shaping space, turning architecture into an experience and making a space "just feel good." But how? How to convince museum-goers when you can't move a house into the Hammer?

Jennifer Dunlop Fletcher, the guest curator behind the show, offers a hint at the partial answer in this video...

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The facade of the Craft and Folk Art Museum in Los Angeles has been covered in crocheted granny squares.

Yarn Bombing L.A. covers craft museum in granny squares

When the group Yarn Bombing Los Angeles extended an open call for granny squares in November, the group was hoping to collect enough of the traditional crocheted pieces to cover the facade of the Craft and Folk Art Museum. 

After The Times reported on the plans and word spread, the collective was bombarded with an astonishing 15,000 granny squares from 50 states and 25 countries.

"We couldn't be more surprised or happy with the outcome," said the project's organizer, Arzu Arda Kosar.

Now that the squares have been installed, Kosar said the group is left with a surplus of squares. What to do...

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Students try out the You & Me table designed by <a href="http://apo.pw/">Antoni Palleja Office</a> during the International Contemporary Furniture Fair, the most important U.S. show for modern home design, held at Javits Center in New York.

ICFF 2013 and New York Design Week: The hot look in decor is happy

New York Design Week and the 2013 ICFF -- the International Contemporary Furniture Fair, the nation's most important expo for modern home decor -- that wrapped up this week will be remembered more for its cheerful mood than cutting-edge designs.

Although designers continued to push boundaries with materials (recycled refrigerator plastic, thermo-formed Corian) and explore 3-D technology, the new looks were more about color, luxurious finishes (copper was king) and a sense of fun (look out, Jonathan Adler).

"Right now, people are more tempted to take a risk and buy something that makes them...

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The Arpa chair from London-based S&eacute; takes the organic lines of rattan, bends them into a sleek, modern form, and then translates the look in powder-coated tubular steel. Keep an eye out for more; the company is still developing California distribution. For now, Arpa ($8,130) can be ordered from <a href="http://www.se-london.com">S&eacute; online</a> or the company's two U.S. distributors, New York-based <a href="http://mondocollection.com/">Mondo Collection</a> and Chicago-based <a href="http://www.ateliergarylee.com/">Atelier Gary Lee</a>.

Rattan chairs: 7 modern riffs on an old summer favorite

Say hello to an old friend. The rattan chair is back, wearing different looks these days: some earthy and old-school, some sleek and styled for a new generation. Some aren’t even rattan but rather metal versions that play with the familiarity of the form. As part of The Times' Summer-by-the-Numbers package, here’s a sampling of what’s on the market now or headed your way soon ...
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Kontextür, the design firm behind the X3 metal watering can by Paul Loebach, touts not only the aesthetics but also the function of the new design: The right angles in the handle provide one easy grip for watering and another easy grip for carrying. The white, green, red and blue cans are $49 through the <a href="http://www.kontextur.com/store">Kontextür store</a>, and the copper ...

Modern watering cans: 5 new twists on an old tool

Think of them as hand-held water fountains: Little pieces of sculpture that happen to be functional (and in one case, cleverly upcycled). As part of The Times' Summer-by-the-Numbers package, we present five modern riffs on the old watering can.
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Daniel Monti designed this Venice house for his parents. The living room, dining room and kitchen unfold in one long, continuous space where appliances are hidden in the walnut storage wall. For more living rooms -- large and small, in all types of styles -- click to our <A href="http://www.latimes.com/features/home/la-hm-inspiration-living-room-photos,0,2858856.photogallery">Home Inspirations gallery</a>

Living room design: Decorating ideas, inspiration, strategies

Looking for design ideas specifically for the kitchen? Or the kids' bedrooms? Or space-crunched bathrooms? The L.A. at Home team has been developing Home Inspiration galleries where you can click through, see different types of rooms and borrow inspiration (and perhaps a shopping resource or two) from real Southern Californian houses, condos and apartments. Today we're starting with the living room.

HOME INSPIRATIONS PHOTOS: The living room

Bookmark L.A. at Home and look for more Home Inspirations galleries featuring other rooms of the home in the days and weeks to come.

Join us on Facebook , T...
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"La Casita." 2013, 12 by 16 inches, cardboard, paper, acrylic.

Ana Serrano: Everyday L.A., captured in cardboard and paper

Los Angeles artist Ana Serrano creates vibrant neighborhoods filled with color and complexity, yet she produces them out of the most humble materials: corrugated cardboard, construction paper, glue and paint.

These worlds will be on view starting this week in "A Daydreamer's Street," an exhibit at the Vincent Price Art Museum in Monterey Park.

Inspired by real-life blocks around L.A., Serrano's cityscapes celebrate the vernacular structures that instantly feel familiar to most Angelenos: the hand-painted signage, the concrete block, the barbed wire fences.

PHOTO GALLERY: Ana Serrano show at...

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How to grow your own coffee: It's easy, sort of

How to grow your own coffee: It's easy, sort of

Growing coffee isn’t hard. It’s the time-consuming extraction of the beans that defeats would-be backyard growers.

Every season when the coffee bushes hidden in the shade of the Wattles Farm community garden in Hollywood start to produce cherries, one of the gardeners volunteers for the process of peeling the shells, removing the fleshy pulp along with the interior parchment, and washing and air-drying the tiny beans within.

“They’re very enthusiastic in the beginning and are still enthusiastic at the end because the coffee is very good, but they swear they’ll...

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