Let me introduce you to Amina Micciolo, aka Studio Mucci – and it’s safe to say that she might just be the queen bee of color!
Although the flower wall is what people love the most about her home, she said she feels the best when she looks at her mistake-turned-masterpiece. We did it all for the... nevermind. I never asked that of anyone.
The designer has taken the Internet by storm after she transformed her apartment into a rainbow.
Since then, Cloudland, which she shares with her husband and business partner, Salvatore, and their two dogs, has been featured on TV shows, magazines and websites. Like a kid waiting for Santa, I pulled an all-nighter. But she pulled it off very well!
I think they see me as someone they can easily steal from and roll over because I don't have the same resources that they have. At least her condo is.
'” So she used the leftover paint to splatter the wall and create the rainbow statement she dreamed of having. "We begged and pleaded and they said, 'If you make this hard, if you try to fight it we're going to make it hard or impossible for you to rent another place in L.A., but if you surrender the keys we will go easy on you,'" Mucciolo said. ** Statistics provided by research group Tubular LabsDesigner Has The Most Colorful Apartment You’ve Ever Seen (Picture: Studio Mucci) Cloudland is a magical place filled with marble print bedsheets, lights in the shape of cacti, pastel kitchen appliances, and cosy chairs in sky blue and grassy green. "It's the worst nightmare of any creative person, especially in this era, where you're sharing your work in good faith.
Maybe they're trying to protect themselves in some way by making sure they have the only space like this. Returning to the cement jungle below was sobering but as I walked to the car in my furry rainbow leg warmers, I felt at home among the Fashion District storefronts displaying their sparkly, multi-colored fabrics.Paging Captain Obvious: Hotels.com's branding was heavy-handed and one of the drawbacks of the experience.
Hotels.com denies the allegations. Mucciolo says she noticed similarities between the two spaces: color block kitchen cabinets, toys in empty spaces, quirky gallery walls, a hot pink armchair and a white cafe table with a neon pink chair. I’m currently putting together a comprehensive faux flower tutorial with detailed info about how I made the jacket and other useful tips and tricks that I’ll be uploading to my youtube channel soon! I made it! That could never work." My time in the Lisa Frank multiverse was so brief and the apartment so otherworldly that without photographic proof it had happened, it would seem like a dream. But she keeps the motif well, and the apartment is cluttered. About The Jacket .
Two years prior, in 2017, the Mucciolos were involved in an eviction action at the same address, according to Regarding the 2019 eviction claim, Hotels.com says it didn't lobby the Mucciolos' landlord to evict them or anyone. "So What Does All Of This Have To Do With Mucciolo's Eviction?
With light purple walls, pastel cabinets, a flower wall, a hello kitty microwave, and colorful paper cranes hanging from the ceiling – the apartment reflects Mucciolo herself as she’s often rocking things like rainbow braids, colorful clothing, and glitter makeup.“It’s really important to me that where I live is a reflection of me and my personality, and also of my husband,” Mucciolo told Dailymail.
I glued a bunch of flowers from Afloral onto a cheap bomber jacket that I had lying around. One California woman is living out all your wildest unicorn and mermaid fantasies by turning her downtown Los Angeles apartment into a rainbow, bubblegum dream.
She now seeks to promote love and kindness and inspire others to accept themselves for who they are. Inspired by spring, nature, Care Bears, My Little Pony and, yes, Lisa Frank, Mucciolo decorated her pad in 2017.
The company finally messaged me to say the error had been fixed and a few single nights were still left.
For two weeks (October 11 to 27), guests would be able to book a night in a downtown L.A. loft tricked out to look like a Technicolor wonderland.
Your No-Panic Guide To LA Life, And The New (And Changing) Coronavirus RulesIn California, A Vocal Minority of Asian Parents Helped Defeat Affirmative Action Once Before.
We'd hoped to relax in the rooftop hot tub but we had a pretty full flashback itinerary.I had '90s playlists ready to go from my 33rd birthday party (and everyday life) so I started us off with I put on furry neon rainbow ears and we ate our dairy-free, gluten-free mac and cheese and veggie nuggets in front of the TV.
Capital Foresight never made their media relations person available to speak to LAist. "Mucciolo doubled down on the claims of creative plagiarization: "I don't know whose idea it was to rip me off but they're all culpable in my opinion." Then again, the Lisa Frank Flat was a rare opportunity that demanded to be documented.
Then we saw that it looks suspiciously similar to our own home, Cloudland, that I designed and shared in 2017. In it, she claimed her landlord was trying to evict her "so that they can capitalize on my idea and recreate it with Lisa Frank and Hotels.com.
Every time we tried to say, 'Let's email about this,' they'd show up at our door to answer an email," she told LAist.Mucciolo claims that when she and her husband tried to pay their late rent for August, the management company refused to accept the money and told her the building's owner wanted her out.
Besides, if anyone needs to get in touch with their inner child, it's grown-ups.
(You check in at 5 p.m. and check out by 11 a.m. although I pushed it to noon.)
As a result of the eviction notice and the last-minute hunt for a new home, the rainbow-haired blogger is selling pieces from her colorful closet. She's got some serious interior design skills!
The flat is being hosted in an existing short-term rental property and is not located in the same building. And most importantly, we will continue to make art and add as much color, love and positivity to the world that we can. Her aggressively colorful designs adorned the clothes, stickers, pencils and Trapper Keepers of pre-teen girls everywhere. At least her apartment is.