NATALIE
WEINSTEIN
Creates
a New Look for Long Island: Noted educator, interior designer,
lecturer, author, columnist and radio talk show host launches her Home
Decorating Club's "Green University"
Story by Maureen Traxler
COVER
PHOTO Credit: Christine Conniff Sheahan

For
Natalie Weinstein, president of Natalie Weinstein Design Associates,
empowering her clients to a better life through good home design became
a passion that needed to be shared. So in 2001, after a lifetime of interest
in home decorating and nearly three decades in the business of interior
design, Weinstein founded the Home Decorating Club. Today, over 15,000
Long Island homeowners who are club members have access to Weinstein’s
recommended sources with preferential treatment like discounts and perks,
and enjoy a club newsletter, opportunities for consultation, workshops
and free seminars.
This
past September, Weinstein launched her Home Decorating Club’s Green
University and held the Club' s first Green Summit and Source Expo, "Amazing
Secrets for a Greener Home." Her students attended educational talks,
met "green" experts, previewed products and learned how to
save money while Going Green. Each participant received a free binder—chock
full of "green ideas." Weinstein says that her Green Summit "was
a charge to say everyone can make a difference."
It is
not out of character for Weinstein to wrap her instruction in a university-style
package.
"All
of my career has been about being an educator," Weinstein said in
a recent interview with Networking® magazine. She taught music to
children, before receiving a degree from Queens College and taking a
position as a public school elementary teacher. When she decided to become
serious about home decorating, she attended the Willsey Institute for
Art and Interior Design, and upon graduation was invited to teach Course
1. She went on at Willsey to become a master teacher and eventually executive
director of the School.
Green
University Summit
At
the first Green University event, local businesses shared their expertise
on making Long Island homes more energy efficient and transferring each
individual' s own spirit and energy into better living.
Weinstein
says participants learned about green architecture and building, window
tinting, filtration systems, and solar panels. Michael Garrone Painting
Company talked about the use of low VOC (volatile organic compound) paints.
Owens Brothers Landscape Design spoke about planting shade trees to provide
shelter from the sun in the summertime and evergreens to protect the
home in winter, while lowering the homeowner' s dependency on fossil
fuels and keeping costs down. Representatives of the Lighting Gallery
recommended energy efficient bulbs and the use of dimmers. Peter Weiss
discussed feng shui, using good energy in a home to create balance, order,
good health and good relationships. Other businesses represented at the
Green Summit included E&M Hardwood Flooring, Accent Flooring and
Insulation Systems, Anthony J. Musso Architects, Hudson River Mills,
Liquacoat Inc, RMA General Contracting Corp., Sunstream USA and TriCounty
Window Tinting. Wells Fargo Mortgage Corp. offered special consideration
on mortgages to people who wished to "build green." Weinstein' s
Green University is already looking forward to a second event with a
continuation of "green ideas" and materials.
In addition,
Weinstein announces, "We are exploring a collaboration with the
U.S. Green Building Council," which has formulated the LEED (Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design) standards for energy efficiency and
sustainability. She says she is in the talking stages of an effort to "lend
our talents and resources to create a zero-energy home on Long Island."
Home
Decorating Club
Through
her experiences with clients and interaction with people during workshops
and at speaking engagements, Weinstein realized that people have a thirst
for information and want to improve their surroundings. "People
always aspire to the next level," she notes, "and there are
just not enough people to guide them." That, she adds, was "the
essence or kernel of how the Home Decorating Club started."
Weinstein' s
genuine desire to help people by sharing her knowledge and skills, combined
with the marketing and advertising talents of her friend and colleague
Jack Adler, a multi-talented expert in photography, graphic design, printing
and advertising, resulted in the Home Decorating Club.
"The
club was Adler' s concept," notes Weinstein, "drawing
me out of the ivory tower of interior designers specific to their own
clients and into the big, real world of everybody who owns a home on
Long Island." During the first year, Weinstein' s task was
to use her good reputation with her sources to fundraise for seed money.
Today, members avail themselves of information at little or no cost,
supported by advertising dollars from Weinstein' s valued sources.
The
goal isn' t for club members to hire her as their designer, but
for her to give them the assistance they need to do the designing on
their own. Weinstein has participated in over 600 consultations for club
members, one of their perks, at which they often video or audio tape
her for future reference.
"You
get down to earth quickly. You see the value of what you' re doing
and that is the critical piece to all this. I wouldn' t have felt
this way if we never started the club."
"We' ve
done workshops and events at stores, hotels and catering halls focusing
on topics specific to club members' needs," she adds. Because
the Home Decorating Club is a separate entity from her business, members
are able to have access to Weinstein' s extensive "library" of
sources and receive discounts from local businesses. She also reaches
out to young people. Back in 2001, she signed on to become involved in
the first Suffolk County Community College Home Show, and most recently,
she gave a presentation on "Business Principles and Practices" to
the college' s design students.
"Every
year, the Home Decorating Club makes more sense to me as a way to become
more visible and help businesses on Long Island grow and prosper," notes
Weinstein.
The
pathway to a passion
The
only child of Depression-era parents, Weinstein says she "grew
up fast." She recalls living in a four-room apartment in Brooklyn
when, at age five, she accompanied her aunt on a shopping tour and helped
her decorate her first apartment. Encouraged to seek a "career
with security," she became a school teacher, eventually marrying
an accountant and moving to Merrick as a newlywed. After a few years,
Weinstein' s husband left accounting to follow his dream to build
houses. He partnered with a builder and together they put up three models
in Huntington. That' s when she got her husband' s unexpected
call, "Come decorate them."
Although
she liked decorating, Weinstein wasn' t sure she would be successful
if she branched out to a new career. So she signed up at the Willsey
Institute, and became a star pupil. She credits her husband not for getting
her to go back to school, but for assessing the level of what she was
doing.
"I
never wanted to be a housewife/decorator," she recalls. "I
always wanted to have my own company." In 1973, she founded Natalie
Weinstein Design Associates, and in 1985, moved her company to its current
location at the former vaudeville theatre (circa early 1900s) in St.
James.
"The
creative aspect makes interior design an ever-changing canvas," says
Weinstein. "It' s a sense of empowerment, feeling good about
our surroundings," she points out, just as negative surroundings
make us feel badly—all of which affect who we are and how we present
ourselves to others.
Going
beyond design and decorating, Weinstein' s talents include writing,
speaking and motivating people, and she is known for the inspirational
themes of her lectures and workshops. Her "Long Island Focus" feature
in HOUSE® magazine highlights Long Island' s historic sites
and her love for Long Island. She appears at Home and Garden Shows, and
her often-published design work has appeared in Nite Life and Distinction
magazines and Newsday, The New York Times, and the Palm Beach Life. Her "Designs
by Natalie" column appears weekly in print and online for the Long
Island Press, and she writes a home decorating column in Our Town.
About
10 years ago, Weinstein tested the waters as a radio show host when she
appeared as a guest on the "Ed Fox Money Show" (WLIE). She
and a representative of Century 21 were asked to speak about getting
the most money out of the sale of a home while saving the most money
when purchasing a home. She was not only invited back for a "second
round," but was also cajoled into hosting her own show, the "Home
Show," on Talk 540 WLIE, Thursdays at 7 pm.
Weinstein
is the author of The 100 Most Often Asked Interior Design Questions,
a beautifully illustrated design handbook, based on questions she' s
been asked at numerous workshops and seminars. "People love it," she
says, because it' s a quick guide to a wide array of how-to' s,
like measuring wallpaper and hanging lights, and incorporates a bit of
art history.
Weinstein
says that although she usually works with adults, "a home' s
design affects the children, too." Her first children' s book,
Katrina' s New Room, teaches children about pride of place and responsibility
for it. The book speaks to childhood home memories and gives a template
for children to design their own rooms. Weinstein has a second book,
currently in the hands of Scholastic Publishers, about a boy who has
a problem with clutter, forgets his homework, is messy at school and
misses the bus. In the book, he learns the secret system to focus and
organization that helps him develop a better attitude and the ability
to handle school and life.
Weinstein' s
interests also led her to found and lead the Arts and Antiques Association
of St. James, become a member of the St. James Chamber of Commerce, and
support Long Island' s heritage sites and landmarks, working closely
with the Suffolk County Department of Parks.
"There' s
something that really ignites my spirit and makes me feel good when I' m
transforming someone' s home into a place that makes them feel good," Weinstein
remarks with the ardor and sensitivity she brings to her craft. "There' s
nothing like it. It' s just a great high."