The Witching Hour: 10 Times a Broom Doubled as Decor, from the Archives - Remodelista
This is Halloween, Remodelista style.
In their so-called “Soot House,” Anthony Esteves and Julie O’Rourke display an antique broom over their bed.
Photograph by Greta Rybus.
Photograph by Beth Kirby.
A charming hand broom hangs among kitchen tools and drying herbs in a kitchen.
A broom echoes the wood tones of the chair to create a quiet vignette in an open-plan Brooklyn loft (a finalist in our Considered Design Awards).
A charmingly crooked broom does double duty as a tool for sweeping the entryway and a display piece in this Australian cabin.
Photograph by Earl Carter.
Also in Australia, an architect displays a black-accented broom that complements his home’s dark facade.
Photograph by Murray Fredericks and Prue Ruscoe, courtesy of Romaine Alwill and Michelle Orszaczky.
At Canterbury Shaker Village, brooms are displayed on Shaker peg rails (where else?).
Photograph by Erin Little.
A red-handled broom provides a point of contrast to the white brick wall in Picture Room owner Sandeep Salter’s Brooklyn kitchen.
Photograph by Jonathan Pilkington.
Photograph by Marc Krause for Lappalainen.
A display-worthy child’s broom stands next to a child-sized worktable in a Hanau, Germany, loft.
A hand broom hangs among natural decor in a Catskills farmhouse.
Photograph by April Valencia.
While, admittedly, it probably doesn’t live here full-time, a Custodian broom with a luxe fabric-wrapped handle looks at home in blogger Erin Boyle’s bedroom.