Photographer Anna Williams (via desire to inspire)
The preparation to list our condo continues! Today I’ve got a peek into our dining room for you.

Our dining room is the least finished room to me. I’ve never been 100% happy with the layout. We shouldn’t really have the hutch AND the sideboard - but we need the sideboard to hide all of the internet and phone cords and outlets. And we need the hutch for book, movie, game storage, and Sean’s work stuff. The room’s big enough to handle both pieces, but I feel like it creates an awkward corner. I may take one piece out when we begin showing the place so that traffic flows more easily through there.

There are half a dozen other changes I’d like to make, and I think our next dining room will probably be very different. I’d love to use richer colours in my dining room, but this room is in the back windowless corner, and needs all the white to lighten things up.

But whatever. Here you go!
OK, peeps of the inter-webs. I’m gonna drop some science.
(That’s right. I just wrote the nerdiest sentence you will hear today. And depending on your circle of friends, maybe all month.)
There is officially now NO excuse to post pictures without giving original sources and credits. Because the good people of Google have offered up another crazy, how-is-the-Google-so-smart, completely FREE service. It’s been around for a while. And it’s pretty rad. And it is fighting the good fight against people sourcing their pictures to “Pinterest” or “unknown”. *shudder*
It’s so freaking/unbelievably easy. Let me show you.
For starters, let’s dig into my old “home inspiration photo” files on my computer. (Whoa… do you remember life before Pinterest? When we saved pictures ONTO OUR COMPUTERS?!) Long ago his lovely bright picture was dragged (drug?) and dropped into my photo file because I loved it. But afterwards (especially 6 years later) I had no way of ever remembering which website I got it from in the first place. But I’d love to share it with you. But I no longer post pictures on my Tumblr that don’t list at least one of the: publisher, designer, photographer or stylist. Darnitall.

Photograph by Luis Rivera for Real Simple
But wait! I found the source! How did I do it?!? Check. Check. Check it out:
Look at the Google home page. Look up up up to the black menu bar and click on “images”. Now you’ll be on the Google Images search page.
You notice that little camera icon that I subtly highlighted for you? Click on it. You know you want to. And you are magically transported here:

Now, I prefer to upload an image. But you can paste the URL. Whatev’s. I usually drag and drop the image onto my desktop, then click “choose file” and upload it. When I do this the computer cooks up some possibilities of where this image came from. After it does this, you need to sift through the search results with a bit of discretion:

Look for a reliable source first - a big time blog, or magazine site, or the portfolio of a designer/photographer/stylist/etc. If one of these pops up it should either be or list the original creator of the image. SCORE.
If none of these pops up, look at the other blogs that come up, or Pinterest accounts, and see if they included links to the original source. (And give ‘em mad props if they do.)
Now, it isn’t always that easy - and you’ll need to use a bit of savvy and discretion:
- Sometimes the image may be from a hip magazine in, say, Norway. And I don’t know ‘bout you, but my Norwegian’s a little rusty. So you’ll have to try and figure out the source with an online translator. Good luck with that.
- Sometimes the image is not professional. The small-time blogger decorated that room and photographed it herownself. Give that person the original source credits if you’re sure of this. (i.e he/she writes “Check out what I did in my living room!”)
- Sometimes websites are dumb and look somewhat professional but do not actually own the image and do not list any sources. Shake your fist and wrinkle your nose at them.
- Sometimes you will find a whole bunch of people linking the image back to a certain blog - but that blogger did not create the image. It’s just that they posted it, and everyone else got it from them. Boo. You should keep looking for the actual source.
- Occasionally you will find a dead end. Maybe somebody scanned the picture from a book or magazine. Or maybe the original source is now gone. Occasionally you’ll have to abandon posting a picture, because you just can’t find the original source.

Photograph by Steven Brooke for Coastal Living
Mmhmm. And this one…

What a beaut. And this one!

Photograph by Stacey Brandford for House & Home, October 2005, via Design Maze
Yesss. I want a fence like that.
So, go Goog it up.
Design by Nate Berkus Associates, Photograph by Paul Costello + Mikki Duisterhof
I’m featuring some work from Nate Berkus Associates tonight. I love the warm tones that still read as subtle, and the layers and layers of interest in the decorating and styling. Not to mention great floor-planning and layout. Enjoy!











