SOFT NEWS Redecorated White House

NC Susan

Deceased
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/wor...ma-revamps-Oval-Office.html?ito=feeds-newsxml



Churchill out, Martin Luther King in: First glimpse at President Obama's revamped and thoroughly modern Oval Office



After18 months as President, Barack Obama has finally put his own stamp on The Oval Office.
And if the results are anything to go by, he is hoping for a golden era in the White House.
Americans got their first look at the revamp last night when the President addressed the nation about the end of the combat mission in Iraq.

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How it used to look: The old-fashioned coffee table has gone, as have two paintings. The Oval Office rug featuring spokes has also been replaced as has the Churchill bust on the right

In the redecorated Oval Office, two plump mustard corduroy sofas take pride of place, facing a boxy, modern coffee table covered with marble-looking tiles.
The pale wallpaper of the Bush era has been replaced with a two-tone stripe of beige and gold.

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Putting your own seal on it: Mr Obama has gone for a more understated President seal



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Old times: President George W. Bush speaks to school children. The old presidential seal, designed by former first lady Laura Bush, featured radiating spokes



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Staying resolute: The famous old desk, carved from the timbers of a British warship, will remain in the office


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Revamped: The new-look Oval Office also features modern lamps and office-style chairs for visitors
And the distinctive sunburst rug designed by Laura Bush is gone. In its place is a rather more muted rug, which is ringed with five quotations – four from former presidents and one from civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Mr Bush’s old pale cream and gold couches have been dispatched to the White House storeroom. Modern ceramic-based blue lamps and office-style chairs finish off the redesign.
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New addition: This bust of Martin Luther King has been added to the Oval Office, but there's no place for Winston Churchill




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Treasured moments: The family photos displayed at the Oval Office



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Open house: Photographers document the new carpeting, wallpaper and sofas for posterity


The bronze bust of Winston Churchill that adorned the room during George Bush’s tenure is long gone, replaced by one of Martin Luther King.
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Fresh attitude: President Barack Obama walks to Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington on his way to visit troops at Fort Bliss, Texas

It is not clear whether the President or his fashion-conscious wife Michelle was the driving force behind the makeover.

But some fixtures have survived the redesign.
Portraits of Lincoln and Washington remain, as does the Oval Office grandfather clock. The President’s historic Resolute desk, carved from the timbers of a British warship, also keeps its place by the floor-to-ceiling windows.
A gift to President Rutherford Hayes, the desk was installed in the Oval Office by John F. Kennedy and has been used by Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and George Bush.
White House officials would not say how much the revamp cost, except to point out it was ‘in line with’ what Mr Bush and Bill Clinton spent putting their mark on the office. Taxpayers are not picking up the bill. The overhaul was paid for by the White House Historical Association.
The quotations inscribed into the rug were all chosen by President Obama and include Franklin D. Roosevelt’s declaration: ‘The Only Thing We Have to Fear Is Fear Itself’.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
New Oval Office rug made in Michigan

Wesley Lowery / The Detroit News

It took 30 Scott Group craftsmen and more than 570 man hours to produce the Oval Office rug in Grand Rapids. Its outer edge, extending beyond the executive desk, is ringed with quotes selected by President Barack Obama. (J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press)
Michigan craftsmanship shared center stage with President Barack Obama on Tuesday night.
Beneath the president's feet in the newly renovated Oval Office was a 23-foot-by-30-foot rug handcrafted by the Scott Group, a Grand Rapids-based custom luxury carpet company.
Made of 100 percent wool, the blue, cream and wheat oval rug features the presidential seal and famous quotations from former Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy and Theodore Roosevelt, as well as civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Obama chose the quotes.
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New presidents typically make cosmetic changes to the White House. The Michigan-made rug replaces one featuring a yellow sunburst and blue presidential seal installed by former President George W. Bush and designed by first lady Laura Bush.
The Obama administration declined to divulge the cost of the office makeover but said it was comparable to what other presidents have spent. It took 30 craftsmen and more than 570 man hours to produce the rug at the Scott Group. The rug, installed last week, contains 25 percent recycled wool and uses natural colors and undyed thread as part of the office's all-natural theme.
"This is really a 'Made in America' story," said Mike Ruggeri, president and co-owner of the Scott Group, which also specializes in customized carpets made of silk and cashmere.
The Scott Group made the Oval Office rug designed for then-President Bill Clinton, as well as rugs for the White House State Dining Room.
The company, which employs 140 people, also has offices in New York, Dallas, Chicago and Phoenix.
Ruggeri said his company did not charge the White House for the rug and arranged the gift through Obama's interior designer Michael Smith.
"We have had a relationship with Michael in the past, and he wanted to make sure the rug was American made," said Rich Ruggeri, Scott Group co-owner and vice president.
The company began discussing the rug with the White House in January 2009. Its lead designer, Mary Van Kaaften, drew the final rug design based on sketches provided by Smith.
"The quotes really make it unique compared to previous Oval Office rugs," Van Kaaften said. "It's been quite an honor as an artist to be involved in a part of American history."
Scott Group officials hope to see the rug in its new home.
"The last time we saw the rug, it was here," Mike Ruggeri said. "But we hope we have the opportunity to see it installed."
The quotations Obama chose for the rug were:
• "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." -- Franklin D. Roosevelt
• "Government of the people, by the people, for the people." -- Lincoln
• "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice." -- King
• "No problem of human destiny is beyond human beings." -- Kennedy
• "The welfare of each of us is dependent fundamentally upon the welfare of all of us." -- Theodore Roosevelt
 

vessie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It looks very nice and tasteful, warm and inviting. I like the golden colors which even on a gray rainy day makes the room look sunny. V
 

Bones

Veteran Member
It loos like a pimp suite in a low budget casino....where everyone is a 'V.I.P.'.
 

GingerN

Veteran Member
Not thrilled with it, but it could have been a WHOLE LOT WORSE. I was afraid of reds and purples every where or green/gold/red/black. Bland works here.
 

jba48

Veteran Member
I think it looks great. In the grand scheme, who cares what the office decoration looks like. I'm more worried about the policies that come from the office!

Thanks for posting these pics, though. It was cool to see what it looks like.
 

brokenwings

Veteran Member
I thought Bush's design was very classy and looked more formal as it should be. Obama's looks like a family room instead of a stately President's office. I don't like it at all. I think it speaks to how he feels about his office. As he has dressed while on his many vacations, sloppy and non presidential.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
We didn't have to pay for it. Money used for redecorating the White House comes from an nongovernmental fund. The design is different but not garish. I see nothing inappropriate and personally like earth tones. Considering his philosophy is it any surprise he got rid of the Churchill bust? That it has been redecorated to me is a nonissue. There are just more important things to be concerned with; like can I get all these %^&* peaches canned before they rot. I'm glad I don't have to sit behind that desk and would not want the job.
 

Josie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Since I didn't have to pay for it, I think it's okay. Maybe a little too casual for the status of the room but then again, I don't have to hang out there.

BTW...I'd lose the busts of both Churchill and King. I don't think either one is good and they kinda freak me out!
 

wsuprmn42

Contributing Member
I like the Bush seal and carpet better, but all in all, it doesn't look as bad as I thought it would.
 

FREEBIRD

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I have no problem with what it looks like. However, the corduroy sofas are going to be a lint problem so everyone may need to be provided with Official Presidential Lint Rollers.

All in all seems like lots of kerfuffle over nothing. The first phrase that occurred to me, even before seeing the pictures, as "rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic".
 
I like it with the warmer colors. The previous Bush couch looked cold and uninviting and the rug a bit of a power play. Clinton's style looked a bit whimsical...not sure if I really like it but it is interesting. The Obama design I suppose is more appropriate Depression style- a bit dressed down but warmer colors. Interesting. I do wonder the "psychology" reasoning behind each of the designs.
 
there is so little difference between the couches. why couldn't he just reuse bush's? the rug was probably freakin' expensive. if he was smart he would have changed the accessories and made frugality the point.

but he's not.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
same room........different styles.......

updated correcting the office:
UPDATE from CHRISSY: The offices aren’t labeled correctly. It seems the redecoration of the Oval Office is routinely done sometime around the middle of the second year, just as it has been for the Obamas, so presidents in their early photos are sitting in the offices designed for their predecessors.

The middle one is George H.W. Bush’s rug.
The upper right is the Clinton rug.
The lower left flowery carpet was actually designed for Ford, who only used it briefly. Carter did not redecorate during his term and Reagan used the flowers until his new office was completed.
The Reagan and Bush 2 pics are correctly labeled.
In reading about the Ovals, I came across a really sad bit of trivia. Kennedy’s office was being done over … with a blood red rug … while he was in Dallas. He never saw it."... http://hillbuzz.org/2010/08/31/ques...ly-designed-and-had-made-for-the-white-house/

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Dex

Constitutional Patriot
Not that I liked Bush or anything but out of all of them his looked like it had the most class and proper decorum for the high level of the office.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
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The new Kennedy Oval Office in 1963, completed while the first couple was visiting Dallas
and dismantled after the assassination, before Mrs. Kennedy returned (Kennedy Library)
 

Amaryllis

Inactive
It's not bad. Kind of 70's-ish looking (ironically appropriate), but it looks fine. I liked Bush's better for some reason though.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
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The new Oval Office flooring, 2005 (Rode Bros. Flooring)
The President’s Floor

Since its original construction in 1934 under Franklin Roosevelt, there have been four floors in the Oval Office. The original floor was made of cork. However, Dwight Eisenhower was an avid golfer and destroyed the floor with his golf spikes. Lyndon Johnson had the floor replaced in the mid-1960s with wood-grain linoleum. In 1982, fed up with the linoleum floor, Ronald Reagan had the floor replaced by the same contractors who had put the floor into his ranch in California with white pine and oak in a wagon-wheel pattern. In August of 2005, the floor was replaced again under George W Bush in almost exactly the same pattern as the Reagan floor.




The OVAL OFFICE HISTORY PAGE: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/west-wing/oval-office-history.htm
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
I would have done the walls in magnolia and got people to handcraft the rug at low expense, prints on the walls

or perhaps left it as it was..........
 

Bumblepuff

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Obama-Michelle-finger-pointing.jpg


"I know from personal experience that it's impossible to please you
people, so I just don't let it bother me anymore because I'm married
to the most powerful leader in the world and you're not. Ha! So there.
Nyah nyah nyah. I spent many hours planning how the redecorations
would look, and I took special care to be politically correct. The Oval
Office has two themes, the first being what you see, moderate and
presidential, and the second, not open to the public, which displays
tribal masks and shrunken heads from my private collection of dumb
idiots with no fashion sense who dared to criticize my exquisite taste."
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Not that I liked Bush or anything but out of all of them his looked like it had the most class and proper decorum for the high level of the office.

I AGREE its the best historically! of the last 80 years. Here are more from the history link

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Hand-tinted photo of the William Howard Taft's original Oval Office
in the center of the West Wing, circa 1909 (White House Historical Association)


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Herbert Hoover in the rebuilt Oval Office in 1930 (Corbis)
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Aftermath of the Christmas Eve fire in the old West Wing, 1929 (Library of Congress)
 

NC Susan

Deceased
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Gerald Ford in the Oval Office, circa 1974 (still using Nixon's decor) (Ford Library)
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Richard Nixon with comedian and golf-enthusiast Bob Hope in 1973 (NARA)
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Richard Nixon talking with the Apollo 11 astronauts in 1969 (NARA)
 
Somehow, suspect we'll like it even more after the NEXT POTUS redecorates.

Now THAT'S change we can really hope for.


Almost time for the 'F'ing Report Cards for the One Party Rulers in DC.
 

cleobc

Veteran Member
I agree that it seems rather informal (corduroy just isn't a formal fabric), but that would be in keeping with people who lack respect for tradition or conservative tastes.

Glad to see the Remington bronze is still there, though. If they decide they don't like it, they could pitch it this way...
 

Bumblepuff

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Richard Nixon talking with the Apollo 11 astronauts in 1969​
oval-office-1969-apollo.jpg

"Hi, guys. Henry Kissinger told me your team experienced a weird gravitational
shift and traveled forward in time to the twenty-first century, but he said I
had to hear it directly from you, or else I'd say he was crazy. Okay, go ahead.
(45 second pause) What? You went to the year 2010 and saw that one of our
nation's Presidents will be a black liberal Democrat Islamic Marxist? You're
shitting me, right? No? Just where in hell is this country headed? Gee, guys,
after hearing this news, I'd rather resign than be followed by this lame joker!
What? I will? Damn it all, I need a stiff drink! Okay, I'll keep this just between
you and me and Henry. He's right. Nobody will believe it anyway! Thanks for the
warning! I promise I'll have my secretary erase this tape-recorded conversation!"
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
The former was period appropriate and respectful of the house. Our house.

Sorry, but the new design looks like somebody's basement TV room. I'm not surprised.

At least he didn't throw the Remington out. Or send it back.
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
One thing I'd like to see....

Get Your Feet Off The Desk, Show Some Respect.

Pretty much what he is doing to America.



The problem with public housing is that the residents are not the owners.



The people that live in the house did not earn the house, but were loaned the property from the true owners, the taxpayers. Because of this, the residents do not have the "pride of ownership" that comes with the hard work necessary. In fact, the opposite happens and the residents resent their benefactors because the very house is a constant reminder that they themselves did not earn the right to live in the house. They do not appreciate the value of the property and see no need to maintain or respect it in any way.



The result is the same whether you are talking about a studio apartment or a magnificent mansion full of priceless antiques. If the people who live there do not feel they earned the privilege, they will make this known through their actions. The picture illustrates the point...

The Resolute Desk was built from the timbers of the HMS Resolute and was a gift from Queen Victoria to President Rutherford B. Hayes. It is considered a national treasure and icon of the presidency.



Mr. Obama, with all due respect, get your damn feet off our desk.
 

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NC Susan

Deceased
Get Your Feet Off The Desk, Show Some Respect.

Pretty much what he is doing to America.



The problem with public housing is that the residents are not the owners.



The people that live in the house did not earn the house, but were loaned the property from the true owners, the taxpayers. Because of this, the residents do not have the "pride of ownership" that comes with the hard work necessary. In fact, the opposite happens and the residents resent their benefactors because the very house is a constant reminder that they themselves did not earn the right to live in the house. They do not appreciate the value of the property and see no need to maintain or respect it in any way.



The result is the same whether you are talking about a studio apartment or a magnificent mansion full of priceless antiques. If the people who live there do not feel they earned the privilege, they will make this known through their actions. The picture illustrates the point...

The Resolute Desk was built from the timbers of the HMS Resolute and was a gift from Queen Victoria to President Rutherford B. Hayes. It is considered a national treasure and icon of the presidency.



Mr. Obama, with all due respect, get your damn feet off our desk.

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