Let It Snow
Writer Meg Fox | Photographer Patricia Burke | Designer Patricia Burke | Location Colts Neck, NJEverything is warm, white and toasty inside
When it snows, Pat Burke—one of the most prolific photographers featured in Design NJ—is almost always on the scene. While she has an eye for capturing the beauty in any season, there is something about the photographic opportunities of winter—the way snow falls softly or icicles glisten—that makes everything seem fresh, magical and unique to the moment.
“I love snow,” says Burke, who has spent many a family vacation hitting the slopes with her husband, Peter Elliott, and their sons, Alexander and Graham. With the boys now young professionals living and working out West, those trips are less frequent. No surprise, perhaps, that her holiday design scheme is reminiscent of that snowy splendor expressed in a soothing white palette.
“I turned to a basic white scheme after getting visually overloaded from photography,” Burke says. She cites one particular assignment where she shot vignette after vignette of holiday decor in a vivid array of colors and embellishments that left her head spinning. “I came home and yanked the slipcovers off of everything” in the family room, she recalls, stripping a sofa and chair down to the bare muslin base with no patterns or colors to distract. A friend joked at the time that her furniture looked like it was in its underwear, she says with a laugh. New white slipcovers, however, keep it looking fresh—and dressed.
That same year, she found a beautiful artificial flocked tree at Sickles Market in Little Silver, New Jersey—one that stood tall for over a decade. “I prefer flocked trees,” says Burke, who gave up on live versions years ago because of allergies. Knowing that trees are cut weeks before they arrive in garden centers and can develop mold, she tried other options, including having a fresh-cut tree delivered or the family cutting down a tree. But once the tree entered the house, so did her headaches. “I said, ‘That’s it!’”
Burke found the family’s latest flocked beauty when she wasn’t even looking—while visiting a friend in Pennsylvania—at a Terrain store, a division of Anthropologie. “They have beautiful Christmas décor and an amazing garden center,” she says. Decorated with “itty-bitty” LED lights, “I didn’t think it would look good with regular-sized Christmas lights because there is so much open space between the branches,” she says.
Once upon a time, when Burke “tried to be Martha Stewart,” she had three trees in the house, two in the kids’ rooms—all with different themes. These days, it’s one and done. Ornaments—from heirloom pieces to furry white birds and silvery snowflakes—have been edited down to her favorite or most meaningful. A vintage choirboy, for instance, belonged to her mother. A collection of glass ornaments—gifts from her sister—feature painted scenes of Norwich, Connecticut, where they were raised.
When decorating the tree, “I start with my favorites so they are always in a place where I can see them,” Burke says. At night with the tree lit, she may redistribute ornaments here or there, but “I’m not obsessive about it.” Her approach to giftwrapping, which she always does with special care and attention, may be a different story. “I love to wrap and research [different] wrapping paper,” she says. “I always want to choose one wrap, but then can’t help myself.” The ribbons may vary to complement the paper, but the fresh wreath on the front door is almost always tied with a red bow. “My mom always loved red velvet ribbons at Christmas time.”