Western Living Magazine
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Pamela Anderson’s Ladysmith Home Is a Whimsical, ‘Funky Grandma’ Dream Come True
Before and After: Stunning Photos from a Vancouver Beach House Renovation
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6 Recipes for Your End-of-Summer BBQ
5 Perfect Recipes for Your Next Summer Garden Party
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Wildfire Resource Guide: Essential Links for Live Updates, Personal Preparedness and More
Local B.C. Getaway Guide: Hidden Gems on Vancouver Island’s East Coast
Fired Up: 5 Barbecues Perfect for End of Summer Grilling
Rebellious, Daring and Dramatic: The New Lotus Eletre
Trendspotting: Highlights from Milan’s Salone del Mobile 2024
It’s Back! Entries Are Now Open for Our WL Design 25 Awards
Announcing the 2024 Western Living Design Icons
You’re Invited: Grab Your Tickets to the 2024 WL Designers of the Year Awards Party
She'll never go out of style.
Trendy, Coco Cran was not. The grand dame of Calgary designers grew up in Europe with a diplomat father (he was Norway's consul general to France), and even after relocating to Alberta in the early 1970s, she never lost that touch of continental glamour.
In the four decades in which her designs appeared in these pages, there'snary a project that screams dated. No walls of glass blocks, no cringe-worthy sea of pastels, no white on white on white. Instead there'sa studied vein of classicism through every room: Persian rugs, heirloom furniture and wonderful art adorning the wallsas in this Calgary home that ran in our December 1997 issue.
It was all texture and warmth, and made even the newest space look like it had its very own history. It was elegance without the snobbery, class without the classicism. But trendy? That would have been strictly amateur hour.
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