Let's Meet Elena S. Boiardi

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Please meet my wonderful friend Elena S. Boiardi. I’m sure you’ve seen my beautiful pink shagreen box. It’s delicate and so special because Elena created it just for me!

Elena lives in Wellesley, MA with her husband and their three sons aged 8, 6 and 3. She grew up in Washington DC and spent every August on the Cape in Hyannisport with her mom’s side of the family, grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins. The Cape, is her happy place so she and her husband decided to make a move to Massachusetts pre children so they could raise a family and summer there.

Elena with her parents and siblings

Elena with her parents and siblings

Can you share a bit about your youth: My parents Deborah and Mario are both creatives, he’s an architect and she is a former art teacher and all around I can do anything and make it look good while having fun person. Everything I am I owe to those two, because they saw what I just knew from the beginning, I’m an artist, that’s what I want to do and they fueled it wholeheartedly. We had an easel in the kitchen, markers, beads to string, glitter, I took ballet and learned to be inspired by music and dance, I had the tools available to me to constantly stoke the fire. I am the oldest of three my brother George and sister Caroline and I spent a lot of time outdoors in a dead end street where we could ride our bikes and not worry about traffic. The five of us love each other, are each others favorite people, I lived a blessing of a childhood, so very lucky.

Oil painting of Italy

Oil painting of Italy

What does being an Artist mean: I always wanted to be an artist, like they say “I was born to be” it’s that, I don’t remember a time where color and making things wasn’t what I felt I was blessed to do. Funny thing is I can be totally out to lunch at times but I remember every artwork I have ever made, as in standing there with it in the moment creating it, that painting mom saved from preschool, a vase of flowers, I remember the teacher coming to pick up the class but I hadn’t finished the work, the art teacher Mrs Dinsmore said “let her stay, she just needs a few more minutes, I will bring her back to the classroom” and I remember adding the purple details to the pink vase like it was yesterday.

Art, it’s me at my absolute best, in fire with so much to give with complete clarity of mind and focus.
— Elena Boiardi
Oil painting of Italy

Oil painting of Italy

Elena attended Miami University in Ohio, she was a studio art major with a focus in painting and minor in ceramics. She is passionate about art, children’s art and teachers. One of our first exchanges was regarding my sons art as part of large gallery wall here in the Chalet.

I have to take this opportunity to talk about teachers, because my art education started from the beginning and my art teachers were my champions. From preschool through high school I had a great number of art teachers, who saw me and made me feel like I could do anything. I wasn’t the best student in terms of math and grammar, it frustrated me but I didn’t feel stifled by it because I had that place to shine. My art teachers individually were amazing people and my most valued allies. Also worth noting that I decided to go to a liberal arts school instead of a designated art school because I wanted a variety of people around me. The most important thing Miami gave me was a year abroad in Florence Italy, THAT certainly shaped my love of color, and appreciation for art history. So yeah, Florence Italy actually happens to by my favorite place on earth, but the Cape is a close second and much closer to my family. Florence gave me a permanent sense of wonder, to live in a place so rooted in art history, to go to the art store and see fresh ground pigments and binders made and used in the same way as hundreds of years ago, Florence sort of developed an awe of color but children were really what taught me about color.  

The Yellow Dress - an abstract Elena painted during college. The Yellow Chiffon dress belonged to her grandmother and Elena was wearing it the night she met her husband!

The Yellow Dress - an abstract Elena painted during college. The Yellow Chiffon dress belonged to her grandmother and Elena was wearing it the night she met her husband!

Enter the year after a post baccalaureate program at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (now known as SMFA Tufts) and I’m back home in DC going, OK I’m an artist but where to apply this to a day job that will pay the rent. I phoned my elementary art teacher Pam Jones and asked if I could talk to her about teaching, showed up and Pam said we need a sub from time to time, I said “but I don’t have any experience teaching” and she said “but you LOVE art so it’s just going to happen organically” a month later I took over a maternity leave in the art department and taught right there next to Pam.

Landscape of the Potomac River

Landscape of the Potomac River

I kept up with painting upon graduation from undergrad, and teaching allowed me the summers to really focus and I would spend the time painting plein air on the banks of the Potomac River and August on the Cape, my Jeep was a moving studio, I always had paint ready and would often pull over to get a quick painting in. 

After moving to Boston I had a shared studio space at Vernon Street Studios in Somerville. After having my first child making art in the traditional sense was put on the back burner. There was a period of about six years where I had to be comfortable with the notion that creativity takes on many forms. As a mother I no longer had the time or really the energy needed to make oil paintings but I learned not to let myself get discouraged by this and instead accept that the energy I had left to create art might find its way into an array of things like cooking, small watercolors, going on walks and observing color and making mandalas (transient natural installations) and taking visual notes. I felt a huge sense of relief when I embraced that life goes through seasons and the season of very young children meant adjusting my art-making to things that were accessible and viable, allowed me to feel success in small ways instead of overwhelmed by not making paintings. I have had this discussion with various mother/artists about “letting go” and setting yourself up for some success creatively while being a mother to young children who need so much of your energy and time. I didn’t truly get back into art until a year and a half ago when I stepped into that paint your own pottery studio and thought “I could make something here” and got bitten by the shagreen bug.

The first piece of Shagreen Elena created

The first piece of Shagreen Elena created

Elena’s most used Hashtag on Insta is #ihavethisthingwithcolor and you will see the multitude of colors she creates in her work. She is constantly adding to her color repertoire.

Elizabeth HOME

Elizabeth HOME

Tell me how you moved into selling your work: Selling my work has largely taken place on Instagram. It’s no secret I love Instagram for a tool to connect and promote work. People direct message me with interest and I get back to them with images and pricing. I have sold pieces at the Wellesley Marketplace and last spring as a pop up at Wellesley Kitchen and Home Tour. Both events are through the the Wellesley Hills Junior Women’s Club. Elizabeth Benedict has carried a variety of pieces in her studio Elizabeth Home.

Elena jokes that she’s 40 going on 24! Look at her excitement during a photo shoot for Honey + Fitz Collection.

Elena jokes that she’s 40 going on 24! Look at her excitement during a photo shoot for Honey + Fitz Collection.

The largest selling experience has been my partnership with Dina Holland. I had long admired Dina’s work on Instagram and knew she was in the next town over Needham, I hoped to meet her and considered mailing her a piece but through the beauty of Instagram she contacted me with interest in carrying my work as part of an e-commerce shop. Dina is a savvy business woman and recognized that her large Instagram following wouldn’t be able to hire her - so she curated the Honey + Fitz Collection - making art and decor available to fans of her design work. Dina was also my first opportunity at professional documentation by photographer Jessica Delaney and the opportunity to talk about the work. I learned a lot and am so thankful to Dina for the opportunity.

Elena and Kristen Rivoli

Elena and Kristen Rivoli

In October of 2019 Elena collaborated with Kristen Rivoli on a Table Design for the Heading Home to Dinner event. The event is hosted by the Boston Design Community - participants design tablescapes or bar carts. Ticket sales for cocktails and dinner as well as the auction of the bar carts and sales of items from the tables all go to Heading Home which provides emergency, transitional and permanent housing and supportive services to homeless and formerly homeless families and individuals in Boston, Cambridge, Chelsea, Everett, Malden, Medford, Quincy, Revere and Somerville MA. I had seen the event through Instagram and asked how to get involved and was told there would be a kick off meeting the next year, so when it came up I went. I went with the idea that I wanted to partner with someone to make a table setting, plates etc. in shagreen. So I showed up with a dish and lingered after the meeting asking if anyone knew of someone who might be interested in my work. I was blessed to meet with Kristen Rivoli who is one of the founding members of the event, she said she loved color, and would like to partner. Kristen had a concept to use boldly colored glass vases and goblets by an Italian designer, we talked about color, I made the plates and she gave me the liberty to make eggs for the the table in an array of colors. The table was called “To Italy with Love” the concept came together beautifully, not too many elements, just bold color, modern shape and ethereal wispy flowers to compliment. The event raised $177,000.00.

Getting back to art for me was about taking a look at the time I have as a mother and being honest about what it was I could do, i.e. setting myself up for success. The shagreen is ceramic, but for me it’s really another form of painting, I buy premise white forms, they are my canvases and I build color by brushing in layers of glaze, not the same color glaze but different colors that will ultimately meld together when heated in the kiln. The repetition of pattern and placing each dot is truly a meditation, it’s not like I can carry out a conversation while I’m doing it, I don’t use a stencil, everything is deliberate and I am focused but that’s an important part of the work because if it’s going to be the same pattern on everything I want it to be meticulous and deliberate. I have thoughts of where the pattern could go, ideas for drawing, sculpture and then eventually oil painting but that will come with time, or when there is a little more of it, my boys are all in an 8am-3pm time-frame and those are the hours I can count on to work but, right now there is A LOT of work being made after they go to bed, it’s quiet and they don’t need me.

Elena told me it is pure joy when unloading the kiln!

Elena told me it is pure joy when unloading the kiln!

Elena recently held her first pop-up shop and it was brilliant success! She shared: I have a lot of questions I am tying to figure out about sales. I know I want to have a website as a landing page for contact info, pricing and images but I am more and more intrigued by the pop ups I see on Instagram, a short sale of a small body of work. I don’t have the time right now to handle a huge volume of work, the dots take a lot of time, so perhaps controlling the volume myself by only offering a set amount of pieces every month is the answer, it’s something I’m trying to figure out. And I will say I don’t think pop ups on Instagram devalue the integrity of art. There is a British ceramic artist I adore, Hannah Billingham, her pieces are high art and she has “curated online shows” every so often after she has completed a body of work it goes up for sale.

I love the amazing colors Elena captures and then replicates in her work: Color inspiration is largely from nature but also randomly from fashion, spray paint marking on the sidewalk, clouds, I like bright color, saturated color that makes you stop and look. In fact I truly believe wearing color can change your mood, I don’t believe there are “good or bad” colors for anyone, if you like yellow, wear yellow it will change how you look because it’s a color that makes you feel happy. Wear the colors you like. Also my color influence as said is largely due to spending time in the art room with children, learning to mix color from the beginning from primary color and importantly which I haven’t said, I don’t love black, a painting teacher early on said never to use black paint because it would muddy all of the other colors. Black has its place sure, it can be a chic monotone fashion look but put black with any bright color and I feel it kills the vibrancy. Color to me is intoxicating, can’t get enough, there are endless discoveries.

Visual Notes is what Elena calls all the magnificent images she captures and uses as inspirations for the many incredible colors she produces in her work. Her pieces are multi-functional - a lovely dish or tray is as pretty and useful (food safe) in the kitchen as on a coffee table.

Find Elena on Instagram or contact her via Email

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Til next time.

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All images courtesy Elena S. Boiardi

Designing Duo!

I’m excited to share my chat with the talented ladies of Trim Design Co.

Annabel Joy and Jen Dulac

Annabel & Jen

Annabel & Jen

How did you meet? How did Trim Design Co. come to be?

Annabel: It started when we began working together at an interior design firm; we bonded immediately over our shared background as teachers and our love for vintage kilim loafers.  We realized there was a huge gap between the available design models of eDesign and full-service. That a huge swath of the population wasn’t being served, people who want homes not dominated by dorm room leftovers or kid’s toys (we’ve termed it Frat House Syndrome). We felt we could bridge this gap. We could offer more than a cookie-cutter eDesign - a more accessible option than a traditional full-service model; although we offer that as well for clients who desire it. 

Jen: Annabel and I were working for a designer in Boston when we met. We both loved vintage furniture and decided to strike out on our own, always keeping our love of vintage at the heart of all our designs!

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Annabel and Jen created Trim Design Co. as an answer to the mass-market "churn-it-out” rooms typically associated with eDesign, their model fuses the convenience of eDesign with the best aspects of traditional full-service interior design including close designer-client collaboration, impeccable attention to detail, and customization. They include vintage and artisanal items in all their designs to create homes which are soulful and sustainable. For us, interior design is all about making a home one-of-a-kind and ensuring it is an extension of our client’s personality and lifestyle.  In addition to our  Luxury DIY eDesign Packages, we also offer a  5 Hour Design Package as an a la carte option for the client who wants to do most of it themselves, but wants guidance. 

Let’s learn more about this accomplished pair.

Annabel & Kean

Annabel & Kean

Annabel lives in a Boston condo with her husband Kean, their french bulldog Mona and Baby girl is arriving in April 2020!

Annabel: Growing up in Arlington, Virginia I was very close with my mom.  I was an only child and my dad died when I was four, so it was always just the two of us and I definitely get my eye for design and my love of antiques from my mom.  From an early age she took me with her to go antiquing and taught me how to help with her various decorating projects around our house.  She also set an example for me in terms of hard work and taking smart career risks.  She worked as a lobbyist on Capitol Hill before I was born, and stayed home for the first few years of my life, but when my dad died, she needed to take care of me full time and support us, so she reinvented herself as the office manager of my K-8 school and also worked part time at a local stable so that I could take riding lessons.  When I graduated, she left that job to start a real estate business and today she’s one of the top producers in the state.  

Annabel: We had to downsize the summer before I started high school and she bought a small fixer upper in a great neighborhood.  When we moved in I had to sleep in the semi-finished attic for the first six months, because the ceiling in the second bedroom had collapsed.  With that house, she really taught me the power of having a vision for a space and bringing it forward into reality. I have fond memories of pickling the wood paneled walls in the basement and using straight razors to peel layer after layer of nicotine stained wallpaper off the walls.  She still lives in that house and it is absolutely gorgeous.  It will always amaze me that she was able to envision what it could become when it was all wall to wall shag carpet and linoleum.

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Jen Dulac and her husband Andy have three daughters Kate 14, Elise 11 and Sophie 8; after overseas stints in Singapore and Tokyo and living stateside in Arlington, VA, Portland, OR, Portsmouth, NH and New York City they now live in Marblehead, MA.

Jen: I’m the youngest of four children. From early on, my parents gave us what I think just might be the best gift someone can receive: the gift of travel.

The first big trip I remember was when I was four. We all piled into our Chevy Suburban: four kids, my parents, my grandparents and our golden retriever. The 8 of us (plus the dog) set off for a 6-week road trip from Long Island, New York all the way across the country to California and back. We saw it all: Mount Rushmore, the Badlands, Devil’s Tower, Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, Los Vegas, the California Desert. So many amazing places. Despite the car air conditioning dying in Arizona and me being in the way-back with the dog and windows that didn’t roll down, I got bit pretty bad by the travel bug. Travel is hands down my biggest source of inspiration for design. I like to describe my style as a bit of a global nomad—I love when rooms pull in pieces from different points on the globe and different eras in history. The stories these varied pieces tell make a room lively and inspired.

Everyone I interview has a passion for their work as children - so tell me did you move your bedroom furniture around, decorate clubhouses or dollhouses when you were a child?

Annabel: My mom was really great about including me in the design process from an early age.  I remember “helping” her pick paint colors and fabrics since I was very small; she would teach me how to build a color palette and what made certain pieces classic or special.  She also let me design my own bedroom and bathroom and I still laugh when I think about how strong my personal aesthetic was even way back then.  I chose a toile wallpaper for my bathroom with matching curtains in the same pattern.  Then for a bit of an edge, I insisted on leopard print towels.  It was very Bunny Williams of me.  For my bedroom I selected the palest blue wall color and a vintage iron bed frame painted cream with a mosquito net canopy.  I had the most incredible antique dutch dresser that my mom found at an auction. It’s absolutely massive- 5 feet wide and 5 feet tall. It’s still at her house and I’d steal it if it would fit in my car!   Annabel added: As an only child, I was really good at playing by myself and my favorite thing to do was play with Playmobil.  I wouldn’t act out scenarios with the people, I would just set up their houses over and over again in different combinations and styles.  Looking back, it’s pretty obvious that I was designing even at that young age.    

Jen: I did - I loved decorating my doll house. I remember birthdays when I’d ask for a gift certificate to the nearby doll house store (I don’t think those types of stores exist anymore!). It was so much fun to go in there and look at all the miniature furniture and pick out different pieces to bring home and set up. My mom also used to bring home discontinued books of wallpaper from a local paint shop. Not only did I enjoy wallpapering the rooms in my doll house, but I also loved just thumbing through those books, looking at patterns and feeling the different textures. I still love doing that when I get wallpaper samples now!

trim design client

trim design client

What did you study in school?

Annabel: For undergrad I majored in Women’s/Gender Studies and double minored in Literature and Italian.  I went to grad school for a teaching degree in Secondary Education, English Language Arts.  I never trained formally for a design career. 

Jen: I majored in American History and German language. Kind of a random combination, but I wanted to learn a foreign language so I could study abroad my junior year (that darn travel bug again!), so I took German. As for American History, I especially loved studying social history. Not the history of wars and politicians, but history’s unsung narrative: diaries of women at home during the war, stories of the working class, children, and immigrants. I really like the underlying tapestry that sets the scene for the major events that get the chapter headings in history textbooks. The power of the sleeping bear I guess. I think it’s why in design, I love rooms filled with pieces from different times and places. Each of those pieces has its own unique story tied to it—it’s own little piece of history that I think makes a room so much more interesting than if you go and buy stuff from a single website or catalog.

Trim Design Client

Trim Design Client

How did you land in the world of Design?

Annabel: It’s been a winding road, but to be honest, the more small business owners and entrepreneurs I meet, the more I realize that having a nontraditional background is totally the norm! And I actually think my experience as a teacher has made me a better, more holistic designer. Long story short, art and design were always a passion, but it was only a few years ago that I had the light bulb moment that I could do it for my actual job. I majored in gender studies for undergrad, thinking maybe I’d pursue a career in academia or public policy. Unfortunately the recession hit as I was about to graduate and I panicked that funding would dry up for what was then a “fringe” discipline.  An advisor suggested I consider teaching since I had a literature minor, so after graduation, I moved to Boston for grad school (Boston College) and got my teaching license. I spent six years teaching English and special education at a public high school, and I loved my students and coworkers, but I was becoming emotionally drained and I spent all my free time designing our apartment and those of friends and family. Then, at a launch party for a design startup, I met a interior designer who, to my shock, ended up offering me a job. I took it and jumped into the design world feet first. It was there that I met Jen!

Jen: My husband and I were teachers and spent a good part of a decade living and teaching overseas. We got to see the world. It was the best experience ever. First we lived in Singapore and taught at the Singapore American School and then moved to Tokyo and taught at the American School in Japan. Singapore was where I fell in love with vintage rugs, furniture and decor from different countries. I especially loved going to Lim’s, a furniture store down the road from where we lived in Holland Village that specialized in antique Chinese furniture and some Indonesian pieces. We’d just meander through the store, admiring the different woods and the beautiful rattan work. You could haggle over prices there, which my husband liked, so we’d admire a piece and then see if we could get it for a decent price. I loved going to see the vintage rugs at the warehouses on Dempsey Road too. I don’t know if these places even exist now—Singapore has changed so much. At the time, my in laws lived in Beijing, and my mother in law really got into learning about Chinese pottery and antiques. When we’d visit she’d take us to the Ghost Market and the Dirt Market and we’d find all sorts of treasures. While I didn’t bring home nearly as much from my time in Japan, I did love scouring the Shrine Sales on weekends, when vendors sell all sorts of vintage pieces and textiles. Then my husband took a major career change - he received his Masters in Real Estate Development (that's what brought us back to NYC from Tokyo). A few years ago, he was showing warehouse space to an interior designer, who had recently relocated to Boston and was planning on re-launching his design firm and home staging company (the warehouse space would house staging pieces). They got to talking and Andy mentioned how much I loved all things design and how I'd fully taken charge of our own kitchen renovation and other home projects, etc. and before I knew it I was working for this designer and before Annabel came on board, I was his sole assistant. I got to wear a lot of hats and I learned a ton about the ins and outs of the design business - sourcing, ordering, managing projects, working with clients and the trades … all that good stuff! And that's where I met Annabel!

Trim Design Client

Trim Design Client

Annabel’s kitchen

Annabel’s kitchen

Annabel’s condo is in a historic building filled with high ceilings, a working fireplace, hardwood floors, big windows and lovely moldings. Jen lives in a center hall colonial with period details including beautiful corner cabinets in the diningroom and a graceful entry foyer - and although both of these structures are different both designs are signature Trim.

Jen’s family room

Jen’s family room

Goals for 2020?

Annabel: Finishing the nursery! I know it doesn’t need to be done before the baby comes because she won’t even really use it in the beginning, but the designer in me wants to have it all squared away and beautiful before the chaos of a new baby descends on us.  I am perpetually trying to strike a healthy work/life balance which can be especially tough when working from home.  When you’re working for yourself it can be hard to force yourself to stop and be present for your family.  I am also going to have to figure out being a new mom while running a business which is going to be quite an adventure, I’m sure!

Jen: To continue to grow this baby of a design business and help people incorporate vintage and artisanal pieces into their homes, creating soulful and sustainable spaces. 


Annabel & Jen

Annabel & Jen

I love how this Millennial and Gen Xer have taken their unique design vision and blended it together - I love their work.

You can follow Trim Design Co. on IG and Pinterest and sign up for their Blog to receive inspiration right in your inbox! They also have a shop full of wonderfully curated pieces - click here.

And you MUST take their Style Quiz: What’s your design style?

Our homes embody our signature “bohoditional style” (boho-modern-meets-traditional). As former English teachers, storytelling is close to our hearts and there’s nothing like the patina of a vintage piece to evoke emotion and bring a sense of history and gravitas to a space. Ladies everything you touch resonates with your unique style. I loved getting to know more about each of you and learning about your boutique interior design firms vision.

Til next time!

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Photography by mboothphotography.com / Annabel Joy / Jen Dulac