10 Questions With… Sheila Bridges
March 1, 2021
By Edie Cohen
Sheila Bridges is fearless. Especially when it comes to pattern, color, and the truly iconoclastic design of her interiors and products. The former includes residences and offices, such as the 8,300-square-foot Harlem site for former President Clinton. It also encompasses academia where she has gone high, completing projects at Columbia University and Princeton University. As for products, she has created furniture and home accessories sold online and through brick-and-mortar retailers. A clear standout are her designs in Harlem Toile de Jouy. Here, Bridges upends the classical toile de jouy patterns with joie-de-vivre designs that celebrate being Black. Harlem Toile de Jouy started as a wallcovering and grew to include fabrics, bedding, plates, glassware, umbrellas, and enviable clothing. Bridges also has entered into partnerships with Sonos (yes, toile for speakers) and Converse (yes, toile for sneakers). Most rece
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John Rutherford Everett was born on December 27, 1918, in Portland, Oregon, and was the son of Margaret Myrtle Johnson Everett and Monroe Green Everett, a Presbyterian minister who later served as president of Trinity University, in San Antonio, Texas. He received an AB in 1942 from Park College (later University), in Parkville, Missouri, and an MA in economics from Columbia University the following year. Everett studied ethics at Union Theological Seminary, in New York, and graduated with a BD in 1944. The following year he received a PhD in philosophy from Columbia. Everett married a fellow Park College student, Eunice Elizabeth Sloan, on June 13, 1942, in Connecticut. They had one daughter.