NEW!! At-Home with Frances Schultz at Beautiful Bee Cottage!
Isn’t it fun to make a new Hamptons friend who is unlike anyone else you know? Enter Frances Schultz: a journalist, tastemaker, television personality, world traveler, hostess, cook, Sunday painter, fledgling gardener, and owner of one of the more charming homes on the East End~ Bee Cottage!
A mutual friend and East Hamptonite, Chesie Breen, kindly introduced me to Frances, and I was thrilled when she agreed to share her haute Hamptons home with KDHamptons readers. Topping off the design dream day, Newell Turner, Editor in Chief of House Beautiful, popped by Bee Cottage to visit with his pal Frances, and glean some gardening tips for his upstate home. [Frances is also a contributing editor at House Beautiful, for which she chronicled the remarkable renovation of her fairytale Hamptons cottage].
Ever the charming Southern hostess, Frances served sweet tea with fresh mint from her garden, clad in an Hermes scarf effortlessly tied around her hair and a Saint James striped dress. As I chatted with fabulous Frances [who is also busy planning her wedding!], I wondered which hat she feels most happy in? She shares, “Honestly, I love them all~ and the one I feel happiest in, is the one I’m wearing in the moment!”
Get inspired by Frances’ KDHamptons Diary below, and be sure to visit her blog at FrancesSchultz.com…
KDHamptons: What do you love most about the Hamptons?
Frances Schultz: Arriving there, getting out of the car and smelling the ocean. After that, I love everything about the Hamptons but the traffic. So I ride my bike!
KDH: You are such a busy girl~ is there one project that you are currently focused on?
Frances: Actually, yes. A book about Bee Cottage, my home in East Hampton. Part memoir and part design, the subtitle could be “decorate, pray, love.” It won’t be, but it could be. The title is Just Bee and the subtitle is Starting Over From Right Where You Are. Does that sound good?
KDH: What does a perfect Hamptons day look like to you?
Frances: It’s so simple that it makes for boring copy, but great real life! I have several scenarios of perfect days, but one is I get up early, meditate, read, write, frutz around in the garden, exercise – play tennis, walk, swim. I keep saying I’ll go hit golf balls and play a few holes, but I keep not doing it. I also am dying to paddle board. Okay, but back to the day: After exercise, I shop for dinner and visit my favorite farm stands. Round Swamp and Petes. I make supper for a few friends – mostly things I can do in advance – and set the table. I fix flowers from the garden for the house and table if I haven’t already. Then I try to relax completely for an hour or so before company comes. I put my feet up, read, doodle or draw or paint, maybe jump in the pool. That refreshes and energizes me, so I’m relaxed and happy even in the midst of last minute preparations before my guests’ arrival. Because once they’re there, it’s all about them.
KDH: How did you discover Bee Cottage? Could you describe your home in one sentence?
Frances: I first saw it from the street. It was first on the market about a year before I bought it. There was a sign out front. I walked over and took pictures of it because I thought it was so charming. I never dreamed I’d end up in it. Another man was there looking at it with me. He liked it, too. Funny. I’d describe it as a little stucco cottage with pretty blue shutters and a big heart.
KDH: Which is your favorite room in your home and why?
Frances: Easy! It’s the outdoor room [below], the terrace, because it looks onto the garden, which is the best part of the house. And it’s heated, so we can be out there til November, when the awning comes down.
KDH: Share a fun design story about Bee Cottage?
Frances: I have these huge bronze dolphin cheniers that were my mother’s and look like they came from some grand, gilded age Newport mansion, which I think they did. And here they are by my little ol’ fireplace in my little ol’ house. Talk about fish out of water. But my designer and friend, Tom Samet, suggested we make them into lamps, and they’re great!
KDH: What inspired the color palette of Bee Cottage? Did you work with an interior designer?
Frances: I’ve always been a green-and-white girl. It’s so fresh and crisp. For the bedrooms I went into the blues and grays, with a tiny splash of red in the guest room, just for fun. Atlanta designer and friend, John Oetgen, several years ago helped me pull together the green and white stripes for first Bee Cottage, and they carried over to this current Bee. New York designer Tom Samet has helped me with today’s Bee Cottage, and I bless the day he agreed to do it. As for design inspiration, I think of it as a glorified garden shed with a great aunt in the Cotswolds and a cousin in Provence.
KDH: Do you have a recent design purchase you are obsessed with?
Frances: OMG absolutely! The HUGE armillary I found at the East Hampton Antiques Show. I had a space in my garden just waiting for it, and it finally appeared….
KDH: Which are your two favorite antique/home stores in the Hamptons?
Frances: The Monogram Shop is the best for hostess gifts and special, personalized presents for special friends – or that one chic pick-me-up accessory for your own house. And I love Mecox Gardens, always.
KDH: Whom do you think has the chicest home in the Hamptons?
Frances: Are you asking me to name my favorite child? There are too many, and too many are my friends. Talk about a high-class problem!
KDH: You are often referred to as THE best hostess in East Hampton~ can you share three tips that we should all entertain by?
Frances: You might need to check your sources, but thank you. Okay, here’s three~
1. Keep it simple and remember above all that people are there to see you, and you them. They don’t care if you’ve frozen rose petals into the ice cubes. Have simple food and lots of it, and if you have more than eight and it’s a buffet, make sure what you serve “holds” well~ that it can be made in advance, and it’s good at room temperature. That takes a lot of pressure off you; and when you’re relaxed, everyone else will be, too.
2. Make it pretty. Keeping #1 in mind, use one or two kinds of flowers and lots of them. Use your silver, your linen napkins, your pretty china. Use lots of candles. Votives with tea lights are inexpensive and always effective.
3. Know that something will go wrong and decide in advance not to let it rattle you: It will pour rain. The bartender will not show. The dog will eat the steaks. You can always, respectively: Move indoors. Recruit a guest to man the bar. Send out for pizza!
KDH loves House Beautiful Editor in Chief Newell Turner’s take on design and entertaining….below, he shares his musings on Frances and her beloved Bee Cottage:
Newell shares, “Bee Cottage is the most charming little hideaway in East Hampton. It may be little in size, but it’s a house that definitely allows you to live large. Frances has decorated it in a way that is full of personality and life. You can’t help feeling happy there.”
KDHamptons: What do you love most about Frances’ style and aesthetic?
Newell Turner: I love the fact that Frances has the confidence to love decoration. So many people are afraid of color or pattern. She’s also lucky to have so many interior designer friends who are generous with their advice. In the end, though, it’s all been distilled through her style and sensibility. So, it’s definitely very Frances.
KDH: You attend many dinners chez Bee…what makes Frances such a wonderful hostess?
Newell: She makes it look so easy! The covered terrace behind the cottage pretty much doubles her entertaining space, and it’s the most lovely outdoor room. In the end, though, a wonderful dinner party starts with a smart, confident, elegant hostess, and that would be Frances Schultz.
KDH: Do you have a favorite room/element of Bee Cottage?
Newell: Well, I love her terrace and outdoor living room. It’s perfect. But, I love the warren of little rooms inside. Would you think I’m crazy if I said her little butler’s pantry? She uses it in a number of ways: to display collections [her sand collection, below], as a flower arranging station, storage, and last but not least, as a place to serve a buffet dinner from.
KDH: Share a gardening tip you picked up [pictured below, Newell & Frances in her garden] from Frances that you might incorporate into your home gardens upstate?
Newell: Her flower borders are really gorgeous. They’re a riot of colors and very English. I’ve been planting a long perennial border this summer, and I really like the way Frances uses a few annuals to fill open spots and layer in more color.
*All photos by Kelli Delaney