TODAY’S CREATIVE LOVING PROFILE

City girl, country girl

New York transplant in an Avondale Estates townhome
Published 06.05.03
Shannon Wright
Linda Amaru
Two years ago, native New Yorker Linda Amaru lived in a tiny studio apartment. Her life was tres NYC: a fashion career, an ex-husband and 300 square feet to call home.

But things change: Amaru shed that skin and moved to the South as a single gal. Last fall, she bought a roomy townhome that's bigger than her last two NYC apartments combined. She marshaled her fashionista instincts and developed a clear theme for every room: contemporary, Betsey Johnson-esque, Art Deco.

She lives in Avondale's Stratford Green Townhomes, the antithesis of "cookie-cutter" development: Each townhome has a unique exterior, and there's a slew of available floor plans.

Creative Loafing: After NYC, why Avondale?

Amaru: I was kinda looking to slow down a little bit. In New York, I was married to a musician and it was all about rock 'n' roll. I was in the fashion industry and everything was in high gear all the time.

I wanted to find a place that was beautiful, but also had that city-urban feel to it. I like nature and the city. That's what really struck me about Atlanta. Here I am living in Avondale, which is just minutes from downtown. And I have this really cute community, with trees, grass, birds and a garden.

Your living room has a clean-line "contemporary" feel: black-and-white Hollywood photos, stark shelves. But the wall color -- is that "mustard"?

It's called gold. I know contemporary is about stark, but I wanted to warm it up a little bit. My shelf unit is actual shelves, painted black, with cinderblocks.

Trying to avoid that "picture-perfect Pottery Barn" look?

I am a thrift shop/garage sale junkie. I go with my parents every weekend. It's in our blood, actually. When I was a kid, it used to embarrass me, you know, "My mom goes to garage sales!" And now, I mean, that's what we do on Saturday mornings.

Gotta ask about the blood-red dining room. Recently, I helped a friend paint a room red -- and failed. After three coats, it resembled sticky lip gloss. But yours looks great.

At Home Depot, they said five coats max, if you do the primer and do everything [they] say, which I did. But after five coats, it looked almost like pig's blood. I kept thinking of The Amityville Horror. I'm like, "OK, I have pig's blood on my walls." It was clotting, and I was almost in tears one night, thinking it will never look good. It took me seven coats and a week, because I had to wait 24-hours between each coat. Insane.

Describe this "Betsey Johnson-meets-antiques" vibe in the dining room.

I want it to be over-the-top gaudy. I want to get a really big gaudy chandelier for over the dining set.

After living in a studio, you must relish all these rooms to decorate.

It makes it more fun for me, because I can collect different things. I'm not stuck in that one mode of "I only collect red glass, and that's all I collect."

But you do collect red glass. It's sitting in the red dining room.

I do [laughs]. But now, if I go to a garage sale, there's always something to find: gaudy Indian/Asian fusion, contemporary, cutesy Pottery Barn stuff for the kitchen. Every garage sale is a good garage sale.

cityhomes@creativeloafing.com

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