Home Spring 2013

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CHIC IN CHELSEA SHINY! AT HOME WITH THE MOROCCAN OIL MOGUL DESIGN BUILDING GUIDE SPRING 2013 Light Lıvely Lig L L Inside New York family homes designed by Deborah Berke, Carrier and Company, Vicente Wolf, and more Untitled-2 1 4/11/13 3:33 PM

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The New York Observer presents: the Home Spring 2013

Transcript of Home Spring 2013

Page 1: Home Spring 2013

CHIC IN CHELSEA ■ SHINY! AT HOME WITH THE MOROCCAN OIL MOGUL ■ DESIGN BUILDING GUIDE

S P R I N G 2 0 1 3

LightLightLightLıvely&&Light&Light&&Light&LightLıvely&LıvelyLıvely&Lıvely

LightLıvely

Light&LightLıvely

LightInside New Yorkfamily homesdesigned byDeborah Berke,Carrier and Company,Vicente Wolf,and more

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Charles Outdoor, designed by Antonio Citterio. www.bebitalia.com

USA Distributor for B&B Italia Outdoor 120 North Street, Teterboro, NJ 07608 Tel. 201 567 2000 - [email protected]

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Charles Outdoor, designed by Antonio Citterio. www.bebitalia.com

USA Distributor for B&B Italia Outdoor 120 North Street, Teterboro, NJ 07608 Tel. 201 567 2000 - [email protected]

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Up to 15% rebate when you purchase three or more Bosch kitchen appliances.1

Quiet, quality, design. Pick three.

Pick invention throughout the kitchen. The Bosch suite of kitchen appliances was invented to make your

life quieter, easier, tastier and cleaner. Our passion for perfection has resulted in the quietest dishwasher

brand in the U.S., and wall ovens with the fastest pre-heat.2 Visit your Bosch dealer to experience our

German engineering, and pick the appliances invented with your life in mind. www.bosch-home.com/us

© 2013 BSH Home Appliances. 115% rebate on 800 Series. 10% rebate on all other series. Offer valid until July 8, 2013. 2Claim based on wall ovens exceeding 4.2 cu ft in capacity.13BFK16-04-108330-1

66 Superstores serving NY, NJ, CT & PAFor the stores nearest you visit

www.pcrichard.com

65 Passaic Ave.Fairfi eld, NJ 07004

www.karlsappliance.com

116 South St.Oyster Bay, NY 11771

www.applianceworldny.com

228 East Pond Rd.White Plains, NY 10601

www.leiberts.com

6 East Main St.Babylon, NY 11702www.plessers.com

Plessers.com

29 First Ave.New York, NY 10003

www.gringerandsons.com

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Up to 15% rebate when you purchase three or more Bosch kitchen appliances.1

Quiet, quality, design. Pick three.

Pick invention throughout the kitchen. The Bosch suite of kitchen appliances was invented to make your

life quieter, easier, tastier and cleaner. Our passion for perfection has resulted in the quietest dishwasher

brand in the U.S., and wall ovens with the fastest pre-heat.2 Visit your Bosch dealer to experience our

German engineering, and pick the appliances invented with your life in mind. www.bosch-home.com/us

© 2013 BSH Home Appliances. 115% rebate on 800 Series. 10% rebate on all other series. Offer valid until July 8, 2013. 2Claim based on wall ovens exceeding 4.2 cu ft in capacity.13BFK16-04-108330-1

66 Superstores serving NY, NJ, CT & PAFor the stores nearest you visit

www.pcrichard.com

65 Passaic Ave.Fairfi eld, NJ 07004

www.karlsappliance.com

116 South St.Oyster Bay, NY 11771

www.applianceworldny.com

228 East Pond Rd.White Plains, NY 10601

www.leiberts.com

6 East Main St.Babylon, NY 11702www.plessers.com

Plessers.com

29 First Ave.New York, NY 10003

www.gringerandsons.com

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THE RESOURCE

200 LEXINGTON AVENUE

NEW YORK, NY 10016

212.679.9500 · NYDC.COM

SHOWROOMS OPEN

Mon - Fri 9am-5 pm

SELECTED SHOWROOMS

AND 1stdibs®at NYDC OPEN

Saturdays 10am-4pm

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SPRING 2013

6 THE HOME OBSERVER SPRING 2013

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Features24 Shades of GrayBehind a Georgian façade in Scarsdale lies a modern house designed by Vicente Wolf.

30 Rock StarFawn Galli injects glamour and whimsy into a Chelsea loft.

36 Painting with LightDeborah Berke carves a masterpiece out of raw space for a young family in the West Village.

42 A Charmed Connection Carrier and Company creates a tailored home in a Robert A.M. Stern building on the Upper West Side.

50 Smooth and ShinyDaun Curry brings a personal touch to the Moroccanoil founder’s Upper East Side aerie.

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COLUMNS

10 In the Shops Ease into spring with a whisper of color on decorative accessories and tabletop wares.

12 Native New Yorker Alexa Hampton is ushering in a new generation of elegant and comfortable classicism.

16 On the Shelves No rest for the stylish! Interior designers are even chic on vacation.

20 Shop Locally Like mini-malls for decor, New York’s design centers have it all.

22 On the Couch No need to weed: This season’s prettiest fl owers take root on fabric.

64 NYObserved The New York City Ballet has some competition in the form of a furniture installation at Lincoln Center this spring.

3022

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monogram.com

You know your jicamas from your rutabagas.Finally, a refrigerator as enlightened as you are. The Monogram® 30" fully integrated refrigerator with glass door masters the art of preservation. Its multizone cooling system provides precise and customizable climate control, allowing you to select specifi c temperatures for even the most peculiar perishables.

For more fresh ideas, visit our luxury showroom in the Architects & Designers Building.

150 East 58th Street | 10th Floor | New York, NY 10155 | 212-223-1699

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8 the home observer fall 2012

editor in chief Rebecca MoRse

art director eRIK basIL sPooNeR

production and creatiVe director ed JohNsoN

copy editor eRIcKa McINtyRe

adVertising/production coordinator LIsa MedchILL

oN the coveR light from a southern wall of steel-framed hope’s windows pours into the living

area of a West Village apartment designed by deborah Berke partners; the firm helmed both the

architecture and interior design work. saarinen executive chairs in white spinneybeck leather

cluster around a custom Berke-designed pyrolave dining table. a red carolina sardi installation pops in the background. plain sawn white oak flooring

throughout the apartment was treated with a dark charcoal stain mixed with white pigment, to dramatic effect. photography by chris cooper.

observer media group

puBlisher JaRed KushNeR

ceo JosePh MeyeR

editorial director KeN KuRsoN

president MIchaeL aLbaNese

director of marketing and eVents ZaRah buRsteIN

marketing director deboRah bRuNdy

controller MaRK PoMeRaNtZ

director of operations aLexaNdRa eNdeRLe

circulation PeteR PaRRIs

the neW york oBserVer321 West 44th streetnew york, ny 10036

212.755.2400www.observer.com

puBlisher, the home oBserVer

betty shaw LedeRMaN

account manager

steveN schoeNfaRbeR

sales assistant Jacob bodageR

contriButors

chRIs cooPeR

JaNe gayduK

eMILy gILbeRt

PeteR MuRdocK

eMILy RIcKaRd

debRa scott

21 SPRING STREETNEW YORK, NY

212.966.2757

WWW.JUSTSHADESNY.COM

THE GO TO SOURCE FOR CUSTOM

AND READY MADE LAMPSHADES

OuR NEW CONNECTICuT addRESS IS:

154 PROSPECT ST. GREENWICH, CT (next to Tiger Lily’s)

203.681.2757

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A&D BUILDING

ARCHITECTS & DESIGNERSBUILDING

WALK RIGHT INM-F 9-5

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10 the home observer Spring 2013

In the shoPs

Save saturation for summer: While a chill lingers, bright colorsfeel a little jarring. With light tints on anything from pendant lights

to napkin rings, spring comes in like a lamb. When color coats something organic—whether Brazilian agate or humble seagrass—

it feels just right for right now: Not bold, but hardly boring.

A WhiSper of Color

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1 clearly Tom Dixon’s $425 Glass Light Top pendant is made from extra thick pressed glass and is available to order at Property, 14 Wooster Street or propertyfurniture.com.

2 abstract The four foot-square Big Square Abstract Painting is $3,250 at Brooklyn’s Fresh Kills (Special Things for Special People), 50 North 6th Street in Williamsburg, freshkillsflagship.com.

3 shiny Kim Seybert’s Constellation napkin rings come in five colors. A set of four, $100, can be ordered at La Terrine, 1024 Lexington Avenue or 280 Columbus Avenue, laterrinedirect.com.

4 Organic Cosmetic heiress Aerin Lauder’s new home line includes a set of four Brazilian agate coasters that is $195 and can be purchased at aerin.com.

5 straw A striped seagrass basket was designed by Nate Berkus for Target. It is 10 inches high and 15 inches across and is available for $31.99 at Target, 517 East 117th Street in Harlem, or target.com.

6 misty Crate & Barrel’s Murano glass Castello Bowl, $55.96, was made in Italy and measures 11.5 inches across and 4.5 inches high. Available at Crate & Barrel, at 611 Broadway in Soho and crateandbarrel.com.

7 Pastel An Aquasilk rug with floral motif measures 5.11 feet x 9.08 feet and is $7,400 at ABC Carpet & Home, 881 Broadway, abccarpet.com.

8 watercOlOred A handmade 16-inch high aubergine glass bottle, $180, can be purchased online through Bunny Williams and John Rosselli’s Treillage, treillageonline.com

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12 THE HOME OBSERVER SPRING 2013

ALEXA HAMPTON

1. The Dexter chande-lier, in antiqued white and gold, designed by Alexa for Circa Light-ing. 2. Alexa Hampton. 3. A New York living room designed by Al-exa Hampton. 4. Leon-tine linens designed for a Mark Hampton LLC project. 5. The Regan Klismos chair from the Alexa Hampton collec-tion for Hickory Chair .

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From the best buildings on Fifth Avenue to Architectural Digest, Alexa Hampton’s work is seen in all the right places.Her fi rm, Mark Hampton LLC, was started by her late father, and she carries on his tradition of classic, comfort-able style, both for her clients and fans of her lines for Circa Lighting, Kravet, Hickory Chair, and Stark.

Where do you live? I live in a pre-war apartment in a build-ing on the East Side.

What do you love about your apartment? I love the windows (3), the lack of nature, and the dirt that collects regu-larly and throughout. I also love the ten-foot ceilings and two wood-burning fi replaces.

On New York design Houses require that their interiors be somewhat appropriate to their exteriors. In New York, interiors are, to an extent, separate and disembodied from the exteriors that con-tain them. The result is that we, New Yorkers, feel we can have any kind of interior design we desire. Our options are unlimit-ed. It’s a very liberating feeling.

Last great purchase From Niall Smith Antiques, I re-cently purchased a pair of beautifully framed bronze medallions. His taste is impeccable!

General aesthetic My style is eclectic. However, I am drawn to classic forms, and I prefer logical spaces to impractical ones. Interiors that combine great beauty with livability are always the goal. Most impor-tantly, though, is that my job is to shepherd the style of my cli-ents from inception to reality.

Best “instant fi x” A great quick fi x is to paint a cleaner trim col-or than what came before. I am currently favoring Benjamin Moore Mascarpone, or Benjamin Moore Mascarpone cut with Super White. It’s like whitening your teeth for your room. It takes years off its face.

Home accessory every-one should have My micro answer is a soft throw blan-ket. My macro answer is a Klismos chair (5).

Favorite bed linens Leontine Linens (4) have been my fa-vorite for over a decade now.

Morning routine Snuggle in bed with my kids (who

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manhattan bronx abchome .com

woolston plaidintroducing

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14 THE HOME OBSERVER FALL 2012

NATIVE NYer

have crept into my bed over-night), shower and dress, walk out of the house, panic thinking I’ve lost my phone (or wallet), fi nd my phone (or wallet) in my pocket, go to Starbucks for two Trenta iced coffees with extra ice and soy milk, and get going to wherever I’m going.

Recent trip I returned home from Switzerland the day before yesterday. I don’t ski, and don’t care to learn, but I do love raclette. I am suspicious of any-one who doesn’t.

Favorite hotel My favorite hotel is Hôtel Le Bristol, Paris (11). They have their own eponymous “salty butter”!

Spring tip The best way to enliven your house is to bring in gobs of fresh fl owers (I

use Ariston Flowers), and new pillows (my best ones are pretty but gutsy patterns that were em-broidered by Chelsea Textiles on brown taffeta).

Best paint color for a spring refresh Farrow & Ball, Light Blue #22 (9) is a bit of an obsession with me, spring or fall.

Fabric for spring I aspire to one day own Lee Jofa’s Silk Tiger Velvet.

Favorite local shopping haunt I have been obsessed with Niall Smith Antiques, Lee Calicchio Antiques, Objets Plus, and Daniel Barney Antiques for 20-plus years. At least I am consistent.

How have your late father’s designs infl uenced and inspired your design perspective and process? After 15 long years since his death, it’s hard to know what germs of his taste, style, and professional practices fl ower in my projects; but, I hope there are many. He is and will al-ways be my design hero. To my mind, he should be yours, too.

ALWAYS IN HER BAG A universal charger (for my Blackberry, iPad and iPad Mini) (10). I am a charger-aholic.

7. Hampton’s Estelle display lamp for Circa Lighting. 8. Lee Jofa’s Silk Tiger Velvet. 9. Farrow & Ball’s Light Blue #22. 10. Blackberry. 11. Hôtel le Bistol, Paris. 12. Alexa’s latest fabric collection for Kravet was inspired by the northeastern coastal landscape.

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charger-aholic.

914.633.5853

Applied to the interior surface of your windows, Sunshield Energy Control Systems’ invisible coating offers the state-of-the-art in protecting your fine furnishings, fabrics and artwork from the destructive effects of sunlight. Their proprietary preservation products have been utilized in the world’s finest homes as well as the most prestigious museum environments. Energy conservation benefits are additionally realized through solar heat and glare reduction. Sunshield’s knowledge and expertise will ensure that your valuable investments will be kept safe for future generations to enjoy.

Sunshield Energy Control Systems

www.sunshieldusa.com

914.633.5853914.633.5853

Applied to the interior surface of your windows, Sunshield Energy Control Systems’ invisible coating offers the state-of-the-art in protecting your fine furnishings, fabrics and artwork from the destructive effects of sunlight. Their proprietary preservation products have been utilized in the world’s finest homes as well as the most prestigious museum environments. Energy conservation benefits are additionally realized through solar heat and glare reduction. Sunshield’s knowledge and expertise will ensure that your valuable investments will be kept safe for future generations to enjoy.

914.633.5853

Applied to the interior surface of your windows, Sunshield Energy Control Systems’ invisible coating offers the state-of-the-art in protecting your fine furnishings, fabrics and artwork from the destructive effects of sunlight. Their proprietary preservation products have been utilized in the world’s finest homes as well as the most prestigious museum environments. Energy conservation benefits are additionally realized through solar heat and glare reduction. Sunshield’s knowledge and expertise will ensure that your valuable investments will be kept safe for future generations to enjoy.

Protect YourFurnishings and Art CollectionFrom Fading

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THE PREMIER DESTINATION FOR THE

DECORATIVE ARTSANTIQUES | BESPOKE | MODERN

JOHN ROSSELLI

BK ANTIQUES

DUANE

ATLANTIC GALLERY

ANDREW RAQUET LLC

BUNNY WILLIAMS

ERIC APPEL ANTIQUES

ROARK

BALSAMO ANTIQUES

LIZ O’BRIEN

SOLAR ANTIQUES

LEE CALICCHIO LTD

LUCCA & CO

ROBERT ALTMAN

JEAN KARAJIAN GALLERY

NIALL SMITH ANTIQUES

C.J. PETERS

DORIS LESLIE BLAU

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16 THE HOME OBSERVER SPRING 2013

On the SHELVES

NO RESTFOR THE STYLISHBeing chic is a full-time job! Spring’s literary crop shows designers being fabulous off duty. Plus: Champagne wishes and caviar dreams courtesy of Georgis, Rinfret, and Shelton Mindel, and more.

Only the best, and all of it: blog-ger Ronda Rice Carman has been bringing beauty to her readers online for years with her blog All the Best (allthebestblog.co.uk). Her stylish musings are now avail-able in hard copy too. Designers At Home sneaks a peek at the homes of interior design’s big-gest names, from Celerie Kemble’s grassy Central Park South family home (pictured, with the design-er, above) and Katie Ridder and

Peter Pennoyer’s Moroccan fan-tasy in Westchester to Vicente Wolf’s minimalist Chelsea loft and Mara Miller and Jesse Carrier’s family apartment on the Upper East Side (see other spaces de-signed by Wolf and Carrier and Company in this issue!). Replete with tips from the designers on create a warm, beautiful home, Carman’s fi rst book is just as en-joyable as her popular blog.

That’s gorgeous, Georgis! From an eclectic art-fi lled Upper East Side townhouse with plush couches and ink-splatter-patterned carpet to a dramatic concrete-and-glass Quogue beach house, architect and de-signer William Georgis sure has made it fabulous, and it’s all laid out on dispaly in his fi rst monograph Make It Fabulous: The Architecture and Designs of William T. Georgis, available this season from Monacelli Press. Georgis speaks the lan-guage of whimsical, decadent, and over-the-top glamour; his signature use of shape, texture and color makes his rooms every inch as much a piece of art as the works his clients collect.

DESIGNERSAT HOME

Personal Refl ections on Stylish LivingBy Ronda Rice

CarmanRizzoli New York,

MAKE IT FABULOUSArchitecture &

Designs of William T. GeorgisMonacelli Press,

$60

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New Logica System

100% recyclable and reusable

EVERYTHING CONCEALED, EVERYTHING REVEALED IN AN INSTANT.

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Boarding now! Michele Keith’s new book Designers Abroad is a fi rst class plane ticket on international holiday with top designers, chronicling the tastemakers’ second (or third...or fourth) homes, from Lars Bolander’s farmhouse on a Swedish island and Mica Ertegun’s villa in Turkey to Juan Montoya’s Bogotá pied-a-terre and Clodagh’s County Cork cowshed. You’ll feel like you’re there, but it’s even better than being a houseguest: no hostess present required.

In the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love; in the summer it turns to Fire Island, the Long Island spot that rose to popularity during the

swinging 60s just as architect Horace Gifford was begin-ning to build what would total 78 mid-century modern beachouses on Fire Island and in the Hamptons. Though Gifford sadly lost his life to AIDS in the 1980s, his distinct

homes are memorialized in a perfect (and seduc-tive) pre-summer book replete with lush images of Gifford’s homes and their beautiful settings.

Aspiring to nothing but perfection? Get inspired with a glimpse into apartments and houses like a glassy Soho duplex penthouse and a Long Island compound designed by Shelton, Mindel & Associates, the architecture and design fi rm known

for the pristine modern homes it creates for bold-faced names from New York to

Palm Beach and beyond. Why settle for anything less?

The grass is always greener across the New York state line, especially in

Greenwich, where everything is verdant, from lawns to wallets. Cindy Rinfret’s style is classi-cally Connecticut, and her second monograph about her beloved town brings us into a world of interiors full of stylish Yankee comfort and classic American elegance.

Stylish Brooklyn-based sisters Hollister and Porter Hovey sound like they might be characters in a J.D. Salinger novel, and the rooms they admire and create are straight out of those pages too, layered with sto-

ries and antiques, personality and fl ea market fi nds, family heirlooms and collections. Together, Hollister (creater of the blog Hollister Hovey) and Porter (photographer and interior designer)

have created a fi rst book, Heirloom Modern, that would make a mini-malist shudder but inspires a way of living that is truly personal and utterly unique.

18 THE HOME OBSERVER SPRING 2013

SHELTON, MINDEL &

ASSOCIATESArchitecture and Design

Rizzoli New York,$60

GREENWICH STYLEBy CindyRinfret

Rizzoli New York,$55

DESIGNERS ABROAD

Inside the Vacation Homes of Top

DecoratorsBy Michele KeithMonacelli, $50

HEIRLOOM MODERN

By Hollister & Porter Hovey

Rizzoli New York,$50

FIRE ISLAND

MODERNISTHorace Gi� ord

and the Architecture of Seduction

Metropolis Books,$60

On the SHELVES

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Shop LOCALLY

Like super-chic malls, design centers contain showrooms with prod-ucts that tend to every inch of your home, from top (lighting) to bottom (carpets), and everything in between (wallcoverings, furniture, bath and kitchen fi xtures, and appliances). It’s a jungle of style out there, and an interior designer is your best guide—but many of New York’s design buildings, traditionally trade-only domains, are also making efforts to appeal to educated consumers. Here’s how.

A&D BUILDING150 East 58th Streetadbuilding.com Monday–Friday, 9am–5pmWalk right in to the A&D Buildling: 33 of its 35 showrooms—like GE Monogram (pictured above right), Poliform, Bosch, Clive Christian, Artistic Tile, and Paris Ceramics—are open to the public, making it New York’s ultimate design resource. Don’t miss the new B/S/H Home Appliance Center, which opens in September and features three major brands: Bosch, Gaggenau, and Thermador.

NEW YORK DESIGN CENTER200 Lexington Avenuenydc.com, Monday–Friday 9:00am–5:00pm, Select showrooms and 1stDibs @ NYDC, Saturdays 10am–5pmThe best of the best have made their home at the NYDC, from Grange, Metropolitan Lighting, Tucker Robbins, McGuire, and Desiron (whose Aeris chandelier is pictured above), to new showroom openings by Julian Chichester and Kindel. NYDC’s Access to Design program has changed the game for retail consumers, providing an insight into the design process by matching consumers with designers and facilitating purchases in NYDC’s trade-only showrooms. On the top fl oor, you’ll fi nd the bricks-and-mortar incarnation of the beloved online shopping destination 1st Dibs, with 33,000 square feet of antiques and 20th-century design that are fully open to the pubic.

306E61 INTERIOR DESIGN BUILDING306 East 61st Streettheinteriordesignbuilding.comMonday - Friday, 9am–6pmA true celebration of the decorative arts, 306E61 is home to the most esteemed interior design and antique merchants in the country, most of which are open to the public, including Lee Calicchio Ltd., Duane, Niall Smith Antiques, Balsamo Antiques, and Lucca Antiques. Merchants like Robert Altman (whose vintage Murano bot-tle is pictured right) and Liz O’Brien make 306 East 61st Street the desti-nation for designers, collectors, and customers with the most discerning taste.

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ONE-STOP SHOPPING

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Let nature inEnergy, happiness, health, vitality and even beauty – discover the benefi ts that nature can bring into your home with a Hästens bed. Handmade in Sweden, with the fi nest natural materials, Hästens beds bring you a deep, energizing sleep. Trade up to nature to refresh your sleep – and your life.

HÄSTENS STORE FLATIRON876 Broadway, NYC 212.505.8022 fl [email protected]

HÄSTENS STORE MADISON1100 Madison Avenue, [email protected]

HÄSTENS STORE SOHO75 Grand Street, NYC 212.219.8022 [email protected]

Enjoy up to a $3,690 credit

when you trade in your old bed

for an all-natural Hästens bed.

From now through May 31st, 2013

hastens.com/letnaturein

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22 THE HOME OBSERVER SPRING 2013

NO NEED TO WEED Urban gardeners, put down your

pruners: The spring’s prettiest blooms have taken root on cotton, linen, and silk. This

season’s fabric offerings reveal fl oral prints for every setting, whether

downtown or Downton. Kathryn M. Ireland’s new

collection for Scalamandré invokes an English country

manor while Donghia’s Rio print might sprout in a modern loft. With a

historic French print from Pierre Frey or Baker Lifestyle’s bright zinnia pattern,

how better to usher in spring?

CHEERY Baker Lifestyle’s Zinnia print (T), pictured in Mauve colorway, leejofa.com

ROMANTIC Pierre Frey’s Le Boudoir de Marguerite fabric (T), pierrefrey.com

ELEGANT Lee Jofa’s 100% cotton Elton Handblock fabric (T), leejofa.com

EXOTIC Manuel Canovas’ Serendip pattern (T), shown in Nuit, manuelcanovas.com

COUNTRY Osborne & Little’s linen Persian Garden (T), osbour-neandlittle.com

ABSTRACTDonghia’s cotton-silk Rio print (T), pictured in Samba Pink, donghia.com

BLOOMINGMaxwell’s 100% cotton Georgi fabric (T), maxwellfabrics.com

BOLDEdit’s Chinois hemp fabric, at Studio Four, studiofournyc.com

DELICATEKathryn M. Ireland’s Downton fabric (T) for Scalamandré, scalamandre.com

On the COUCH

(T) To the Trade

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Though renovated to contemporary perfection, a Georgian-style home in Scarsdale retains its intricate original mouldings and fireplace that date back to the 1920s. Benjamin Moore’s Intense White amplifies the entry room’s scale.

Behind the brick red façade of a Georgian-style house in Scarsdale lies an ethereal contemporary fantasy

concocted by renowned designer Vicente Wolf.BY REBECCA MORSE

PHOTOGRAPHY BY PETER MURDOCH

STYLED BY EMILY RICKARD

24 the home observer spring 2013

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GRAYS H A D E S O F

WESTCHESTER

Behind the brick red façade of a Georgian-style house in Scarsdale lies an ethereal contemporary fantasy

concocted by renowned designer Vicente Wolf.BY REBECCA MORSE

PHOTOGRAPHY BY PETER MURDOCH

STYLED BY EMILY RICKARD

SPRING 2013 THE HOME OBSERVER 25

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The house was a wreck, but the couple could imagine their two young children in its grassy backyard and airy rooms—plus, it was located on a quiet lane a stone’s throw from the village of Scarsdale. It might have been

more efficient to raze it than lovingly renovate, but renovate they did, the careful undertaking allowing them to add a large kitchen and den while keeping original details like columns and mould-ings that date back to 1926. Despite its period charms, says the owner, “we wanted the house to be as contemporary as possible and allow for modern living.” The success of that mix required furnishings with gravitas and proportion to pay homage to the home’s history while complementing the vast scale of its rooms. They turned to renowed designer Vicente Wolf. “I used to keep a binder of homes from designers that caught my eye and whose

style I admired” said the wife. “I had copies of most of his homes that were published in the various magazines I had perused. Once I finally met him, I knew he would be perfect for my house.”

There’s no mistaking a Vicente Wolf interior. His purist’s approach infuses his glowing, serene spaces punctuated with hints of the exotic. “Vicente has the unique ability to mix classic, contemporary, and modern furniture with the unex-pected,” says his client. “He sources extraordinary accessories during his travels throughout the world, which then find them-selves in the interiors he designs.” Many of those items found themselves in Scarsdale, from an Ashanti stool from Ghana in the living room to a trio of bronze Thai mirror gongs above an original fireplace mantle. The tension between the classi-cal architecture and the unexpected was also at play in the

Renowned Sag Harbor architecture firm Bates Masi designed the Brod family’s Bridgehampton residence. Paul Masi created a resortlike atmosphere by linking six glass and wood boxes (each representing a

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left: A sheer curtain provides a dramatic reveal in the home’s foyer. Wolf’s suppliers sourced the 400-pound table in Bali; the 3-inch thick live edge wood slab sits atop a custom base made from mirror and polished stainless steel. The pair of armchairs belonged to the client’s mother. above: Wolf arranged a trio of stone wheel sculptures by the front door. right: Designer Vicente Wolf. below: In the dining room, Wolf installed panels coated with an industrial metallic silver paint usually used on cars.

dining room, where, in a riff on period panelling, Wolf hung cus-tom raised panels slick with an industrial metallic silver paint usually used on cars. Two banquettes clad in smooth metallic silver vinyl pull up to the concrete-topped table alongside more traditional dining chairs. That balance of tonality and texture added interest and intimacy to the large rooms, but there was another priority: Wolf had to bear in mind how a young family lives. “Strong lines and functionality played an important part. Things had to look good and function well,” says Wolf, including the living room, where a layering of velvets and wools on chairs and sofas made a grand room cozy. “The living room, despite being a somewhat formal room, is warm and inviting, and we have so enjoyed using it when entertaining our friends,” said the owner. “We love how the house turned out.” h

DeSigNer

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OPPOSITE: A custom Vicente Wolf-designed chaise upholstered in a Coraggio velvet provides a quiet respite in the living room. The tri-arm fl oor lamp is from Design Within Reach. A VW Home stainless steel Chinese-style armchair sits near a custom mahogany tea table with mirrored accents. THIS PAGE, FROM TOP:

The kitchen was designed by Scarsdale’s JEM Designs. In the living room, square-backed club chairs are clad in a Savel velvet.

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Fawn Galli gives a Chelsea home star treatment befi tting of a family with

seriously melodious connections. BY JANE GAYDUK

PHOTOGRAPHY BY EMILY GILBERT

CHELSEA

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Fawn Galli gives a Chelsea home star treatment befi tting of a family with

seriously melodious connections. BY JANE GAYDUK

PHOTOGRAPHY BY EMILY GILBERT

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WW

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OPPOSITE PAGE: Cole & Son’s Palm Leaves wallcovering adds a playful element to son Simon’s room. The sides of an arm chair and ottoman are upholstered in Quadrille’s Petite Zig Zag. Cowtan & Tout’s Peaceable Kingdom fabric pops on a square pillow. RIGHT: In sister Roxy’s room, oversized butterfl ies fl oat on Timorous Beasties’ wallpaper. The pink bedside lamp was found at the Brimfi eld Antique Show in Massachusetts.

WWWild animal prints, black patent leath-er stools, gold pillows, and a shiny round pendant light like a disco ball—sound like the domicile of a rock & roll crew? It is, but here the mosh pit has toddlers in it, and the animal prints are of butterfl ies and penguins. Glamour reigns nonetheless in the Chelsea loft where entertainment publicist Rebecca Shapiro resides with her husband, a music entrepreneur whose ventures include the beloved, now-shut-tered Wetlands and Williamsburg’s favorite hipster haunt, Brooklyn Bowl.

Shapiro had been saving tear sheets for years to hone in her vision: “I was look-ing for a downtown loft space that was livable for a downtown family,” Shapiro says. She needed something “with an open feeling,” as conducive to grown-up brunches as it was to less decorous play dates—a delicate mix for sure. When the time came to decorate, she enlisted a designer who knew the feeling—the in-terior designer (and mother of two boys) Fawn Galli, who is known for her sig-nature use of color and texture and the beautiful (but functional) family homes she creates. For Shapiro, Galli knew the right answer would be a blend of the tra-ditional and the modern, with a big dose of cool: a formula refl ective of her cli-ents’ personalities, passions, and sense of humor. In the living room, with its tradi-tional seating arrangement of sofas and armchairs, that humor was established with quirky fabrics from a Florence Broadhurst peacock feather print used

as curtains to a Donghia penguin print covering two X-stools.

Rock star glamour was introduced with refl ective surfaces that shine through-out the open living area, like jolts of accent leather in black patent and gold, or that Tom Dixon pendant in the dining area, which mirrors a facing wall of mu-sic-themed art, which, hung salon-style, creates a home that is truly personal. “We have a lot of photographs from concerts over the years,” said Shapiro of her collec-tion. “There’s a preppiness to it.”

The prep continues with punches of shocking pink throughout the three-bedroom, three-and a-half bathroom apartment’s neutral foundation palette of beige and brown. “The sofas and the pillows being brown, and the carpet be-ing brown, makes it very livable and very durable without taking away from the sophistication of the space,” says Galli. Punches of pink include fuchsia pillows and a glassy lacquered hot pink cabi-net. Shapiro’s daughter Roxy rocks a bedroom wallpapered with large-scale powder blue butterfl ies, offset by bursts of pink: a pink headboard, pink toys, and more butterfl ies (pink of course) on the upholstery of what is agreed on by all parties involved in the design process to be the centerpiece of the room: a creamy, oversized Andrew Martin egg chair. The chair was initially brought in “just to try,” says Galli, but Shapiro’s husband declared, “ ‘my child must have this, it cannot go back.’ ”

The clients’ appreciation for sophisti-cated whimsy was music to Galli’s ears: “I like things that are ageless, but speak to the spirit of a child,” she says, “Things that are fun and somewhat adult, but then have a child’s comfort.” The large palm-print Cole & Son wallpaper in son Simon’s bedroom speaks directly to that youthful imagi-nation. In the adult zone—the master bedroom—color has a place too, but slight-ly more muted: the headboard is clad in a fl oral blue-and-brownLulu DK print which pops against elegant Schweitzer linens.

Unique as it is, the Chelsea home had goals common to most New Yorkers with young children: namely, creating stor-age, keeping to a budget, and focusing on durability. Galli prioritized fi nding inex-pensive items that could be easily replaced; Shapiro wanted a livable living room with practical pieces that wouldn’t incite panic when the kids got dirt on them. The solu-tion was to get creative, with custom-built cabinetry providing extra spots to stash things away and fl ea market and online searches to source well-priced pieces with potential. “We’re proud of fi nding things on eBay that look terrible, but are totally affordable,” says Galli, like a pair of mid-century chairs that she had reupholstered in a lush pink Maharam velvet.

A mere six months of online bidding, planning, and shopping resulted in a space that is funky, eclectic, kitschy, and modern, much like the family that lives there. “It’s very much who they are,” says Ms. Galli of her clients. h

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As evidenced by the Shapiro family home, living with kids doesn’t mean living

without style. Rebecca Shapiro (pictured right, with son Simon) worked with Fawn Galli to make chic choices that are attractive to all the home’s residents, big and small (and feline too!). Some takeaway tips:

MIX IT UP The Chelsea apartment sports a high/low mix of fabrics, allowing the unique and precious to puncuate more functional basics. Case in point: sturdy brown Kravet sofas are seemingly indestructible (and impervious to stains), and they allow special fabrics to shine—like a Donghia silk embroidered with tiny Emperor penguins.

WIPE IT DOWN Pick surfaces and materials that are deliberately low maintenance. “White lacquer furniture,” advises Fawn, who introduced such a cabinet, custom-made to serve as the living room’s television media cabinet: it’s easy to wipe down and repels dents from toy cars driving too fast (a similarly sensible cabinet, this one in hot pink, provides additional storage). Moore & Giles’ Domino black patent leather tops two X-stools in the living room: it too can be cleaned of applesauce and crayon marks with the swipe of a towel.

COVER OVER IT Spills happen: Galli suggests buying chairs on the cheap and leaving some budget for reupholstering

(and reupholstering again). Here, she scored two mid-century arm chairs on eBay and covered them in a special pink velvet. Fingerpaint accident? No worries: they can be recovered again someday.

GROW UP To maintain adult-level cool in children’s rooms, Galli advises avoiding kiddie furniture. Bypass transitional toddler beds: “I would just get a regular size twin bed and put a headboard on it,” says Galli.

SUPERSIZE IT An adorable wallcovering in a kid’s room makes it special, but avoid being twee by blowing it up. “The idea of over-scale wallpaper takes it from cute to fantastical,” says Fawn.

ABOVE: A view of the living room. RIGHT: The master bedroom features a headboard upholstered in Lulu DK’s Paradiso fabric by Donghia. The bedside tables are from Bungalow 5, with blue trays from West Elm. Waterfall sconces from Blue Marble Lighting hang next to the bed, which is dressed in Schweitzer Linens.

CHIC, SERVED FAMILY STYLECHIC, SERVED FAMILY STYLE

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CloCkwise from top left: The kitchen’s backsplash is lined in glossy Nemo tiles. In her room, Roxy curls up in an Andrew Martin egg chair upholstered in Mod Green Pod’s Wee Jubilee damask-print organic cotton canvas; the curtains are made of Missoni’s Leeka fabric. In the living room, durable brown Kravet sofas anchor a seating area that includes two shapely chairs found on eBay and upholstered in hot pink Maharam velvet. The pink and gold pillows are made of fabric by Création Baumann and Moore & Giles, respectively. The white glass and chrome cocktail table is from BoConcept. The curtains were made from Florence Broadhurst’s cotton Peacock Feathers print fabric. Designer Fawn Galli in her client’s living room, in front of a custom pink lacquer cabinet made by Elizabeth Bolognino.

DesiGNer

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L I G H T

Light from a southern wall of bold steel-framed Hope’s windows pours into the home’s kitchen and dining area.

West village

P A I N T I N G W I T H

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From the blank canvas of raw space in a ground-up downtown development, Deborah Berke

creates a masterpiece—an airy and sophisticated home for a couple and their two children.

BY REBECCA MORSE PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRIS COOPER

L I G H TP A I N T I N G W I T H

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The Light and the windows, the sunrise and the sunset,” rhapsodiz-es the owner of this west side family apartment, where she lives with her husband and two children, aged seven and ten. “It’s almost not like living in New York City.”

It was a New York City real estate story though: The family bought into the West Village development when it was still in its construction phase. Two sets of friends had independently recommended Deborah Berke, and “the recommendations were so strong we didn’t even interview any other architects. We met with Deborah and decided immediately.”

The immediate appeal of Deborah Berke Partners could stem from the firm’s im-peccable, award-winning work on private residences, buildings (like the Upper West Side’s Laureate), and art galleries (like West Chelsea’s Marianne Boesky Gallery). It might also come from the firm’s “whole vision” approach: Its architects work hand-in-hand with its interiors team to create totally cohesive design narratives. Here, that

narrative started with a blank canvas: raw space, which gave the team “many opportunities to customize the apart-ment,” says Berke. “Starting with a raw interior is wonderful because it allows the client and architect to engage the space in a dialogue about their design vi-sion; the space influences the design and the design can shape the space.”

In this case, the clients’ design vi-

sion was focused on creating a warm, comfortable home. “Most important-ly,” says the client, “the space had to be a home, sophisticated but not precious. We sought a retreat from the city—quiet, elegant, peaceful, serene.” The layout of the apartment set the tone. “Providing a clear, yet fluid distinction between pub-lic and private spaces was important as well because they love to entertain, but value their family’s privacy,” said Buck. “Creating architecturally distinct pub-lic and private spaces also makes sense when the owners aren’t entertaining because it allows them to regulate the degree to which they engage the city.” In the airy open living room, the family can ponder the view beyond those oversized windows. Quiet moments might find them tucked in one of the intimate rooms on the north side of the apartment.

But most time is spent in and around the kitchen, where an exotic zebra wood island punctuates quartz slab counter-

Left: exposed concrete walls in the gallery are puncuated by a limited edition James nares print. Right: a glass cocktail table is from sUite new York, as is the tK8 daybed by thomas Bo Kastholm. a custom wall composition by Carolina sardi floats above a sofa from B&B italia.

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THIS PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Purple Arne Jacobsen Swan Chairs were found at SUITE New York; the hand-dyed, hand-hooked wool & silk Bergen carpet is by Elizabeth Eakins. Architect Deborah Berke. The master bath has a custom walnut vanity by JW Woodworking and a Duravit Vero washbasin. The apartment’s fl oor plan. OPPOSITE, FROM TOP: B&B Italia’s Luis sofa cozies up in the family room. The kitchen countertops are DuPont Zodiaq quartz agglomerate slab; the Series 7 chairs by Arne Jacobsen are fully upholstered black leather.

1. Entry Hall2. Living Room3. Kitchen4. Dining Room5. Seating Area6. Master

Bathroom

1

2

3

4

5

6

DESIGNER

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tops and cabinetry that reflect the light flooding through the windows. “The single most important vision was for the kitchen as a central aspect in the house,” says the owner. Alongside the project ar-chitect Catherine Bird, Berke worked extensively on the kitchen, with a re-sult that is both stylish and functional. “People gather in the kitchen to social-ize and enjoy each other’s company; we made sure this kitchen could stand up to loads of fun.”

The apartment’s decor does too. “When I think back to the initial inspi-ration for our design scheme I think of three words: minimal, subtle, and so-phisticated. So that was our jumping off point. We set out from there on a mis-sion to give our clients the refined space that they would be at home in,” says Bird. The apartment’s neutral palette has shots of color throughout to enliven the space, much of that color flowing from the cli-ent’s art collection, which includes a poppy red Carolina Sardi installation in the living area.

Texture played as important a role as color. The gallery connecting the main living space to the bedrooms is lined with rough exposed concrete. “The structural concrete was used throughout the building and was meant to be covered by a more fin-ished material but after walking through during construction we decided to use the wonderful texture to our advantage,” says Berke. “I love the rhythm of the rough con-crete interacting with the fluid movement of James Nares’ print at the end of the hall.” Woods provide texture too, adding depth and warmth to the space, from American walnut in the family room and master bath to the clean lines of finished plywood in the children’s bathrooms.

But the ultimate warmth comes pouring through that southern wall of windows with their narrow dark bronze sashes and mullions. “The natural light streaming through the southern wall of windows plays an important role in achieving our vision of a light, calm envi-ronment and the bold steel frames work well with the clean lines of our design,” says Berke.

“Light reflected from the river and ad-jacent buildings illuminates and fills the space; the interior is exceptionally bright and animated,” says the owner. “I love the lively quality of the space and that it changes seasonally.” h

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In the double-width living room, a Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams sofa is flanked by two Thomas O’Brien standing lamps. The custom sisal rug is from Turabian & Sariyan.

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A family of four enlists Mara Miller and Jesse Carrier of Carrier and Company Interiors to take two apartmentsin a Robert A.M. Stern building and conjure a sprawling homewith softly tailored style.BY DEBRA SCOTT

PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRIS COOPER

STYLING BY EMILY RICKARD

connectıoncharmedupper west side

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ItIt wasn’t the client’s first experience with interior designers. The couple had wrestled with members of the profession when decorating their last home. “They pushed product on us we didn’t want and veered off budget more than once,” says the husband, a real estate developer. “You want someone who’s going to be collabor-ative instead of shoving their ideas down your throat.”

When they were introduced to hus-band and wife team Mara Miller and Jesse Carrier of Carrier and Company Interiors, there was an immediate aes-thetic camaraderie. The wife had amassed hundreds of shelter magazine clippings, a collection of ideas incorpo-rating color palettes to furniture, that were perfectly in tune with the sensibil-ity of Miller and Carrier’s own portfolio.

“Personalities are so important when connecting,” says the wife.

But most important was the “trust fac-tor.” Each couple (designers and clients) has two young children and the accom-panying need for practicality: Beauty is good. But beauty that takes into consider-ation little feet running through a space is even better. “We’re casual, relaxed people. We didn’t want a museum; we wanted to be comfortable,” says the wife.

Celebrated widely as decorators to such high-profile clients as Anna Wintour (her North Fork retreat) and Jason Wu (his Garment District studio), Carrier and Miller are known for accommodating their clients’ needs rather than branding them-selves with a particular style. “It’s not about fulfilling our vision, but using our de-sign skills to fulfill the client’s vision,” says Mara.

The two met in the mid-90s as students at the Fashion Institute of Technology, where they became romantically involved.

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OppOsite page, frOm tOp: Snuggled next to Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams’ upholstered Regis bed, an Alexa Hampton for Hickory dark walnut-finish bedside table is topped with a custom-cut antique mirror. A ceramic glazed lamp in tonal slate blue is from Crate & Barrel, and the raffia-upholstered bench is from Oly. In the office, a pair of vintage aluminum Parsons-framed tables with signed David Hicks tile tops sit near a custom Thomas O’Brien Hallings secretary; the wall lamp is by Sandy Chapman for Visual Comfort. this page, clOckwise frOm tOp left: The owners at home. A John Derian plate atop a brass tray from Flair Home smiles from a laquered tabouret with gold detail from Mecox Gardens. Stephen Antonson’s Pie’d Pan plaster (edition of ten) takes a hit in the living room. Brother and sister jam below a dog painting by Brooke Bradford Churchill. Madeline Weinrib’s lilac Chi Chi Kari carpet was purchased at ABC Carpet & Home.

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Phillip Je� ries’ Japanese Paper Weave wallcover lines the family

room, which turns into a guest suite with the whisk of pocket

doors; the sleeper sofa is from Room & Board. Club chairs clad

in a Knoll velvet fl ank a set of shell veneer nesting tables the clients

purchased on their honeymoon in Bali. The Wilton Broadloom

area rug is from Studio Four.

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Chairs from Baker’s Milling Road collection pull up to

a country English round Regency table from Guy

Chaddock & Co. The Lancaster Oak bookcase

is from Sarreid. The hand-blown glass chandelier was

created by Ohio glass artist J. David Taylor and purchased

at Liza Sherman Antiques.

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Above: The foyer is painted in Benjamin Moore’s Early Morning Mist. The Modo Chandelier is from Roll & Hill. Blass topiary form lamps were found at AD LIB Antiques & Interiors in Hudson, NY. The handwoven striped rug is from Imports from Marrakesh. Bradley Hughes Moe mirror sports an antique gold iron frame. Left: Mara Miller and Jesse Carrier in their clients’ kitchen. The chairs are Ikea and the wallcovering is a JM Lynne vinyl found at Designtex.

They joined professional forces around the time they were mar-ried in 2002, after embarking on parallel careers at design firms including Bilhuber (him) and Sara Bengur (her).

For this project, the major challenge was to artfully com-bine two apartments into one with a layout that flowed logically without taking on the maze-like aspect that cobbled-together apartments often do. Miller and Carrier separated the space into an adult area replete with a formal living and dining room and a master bedroom suite with adjoining office. A children’s zone, with bedrooms for the son and daughter, is down a long hall de-marcated by what was once a sitting room and now serves as a family room whose pocket doors can be closed off to create a guest suite when grandparents arrive. The family room opens off of the grand entry foyer (that began life as two foyers); As an extension of the foyer – and as the first room encountered – it needed to make a sophisticated impression while maintaining its casual functionality. Miller and Carrier dressed it in masculine, contemporary raiment – square-armed furniture, strong colors, textured wallpaper, and patterned carpeting.

The clients brought along heirlooms that needed to be incorpo-rated into the overall scheme: a wood-framed settee, bookcase and pair of winged back chairs. While these heavy pieces had been out of proportion in their former home, they fit well in the high-ceilinged rooms of the Robert A. M. Stern-designed building with its pre-war scale and cleanly wrought millwork, door panels and hardware.

With these elements setting the tone, the design duo layered in modern touches for balance. “To lighten the living room, every-thing else had to be thinner, more tailored and monochromatic,” says Miller. The palette of mostly whites and beiges, ethereal sheer drapery, and “eye candy” such as a pair of dimuntive chairs on canted tapered legs, transformed the combined living room into the “genteel, pretty room” the designers sought. The only clues that the room was formerly two are the beams and remain-ing supporting column. In order to prevent the double-width expanse from feeling too big, Miller and Carrier came full circle, positioning the space as two distinct seating areas divided by a leather ottoman and defined by a pair of sisal rugs.

The dining area, which anchors the living room, can be used to entertain formally, but with its bookcase backdrop and impressive avenue views, doubles as a library and is mostly inhabited by laptops and homework. The chandelier, a cluster of hand-blown glass balls, is an unexpected folly set against the room’s classicism.

The layout, with its distinct rooms, holds true to the sensibil-ity of an earlier, more gracious era.

“There’s a lot of opportunity for togetherness in a New York apartment,” says Miller. “The trick is not to get sick of looking at everybody else.” h

The layout, with its distinct rooms, holds true to the sensibility of an earlier, more gracious era.

DeSIGNeRS

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smoothupper eAst side

BY DEBRA SCOTT PHOTOGRAPHY BY EMILY GILBERT

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Shiny No split ends here! Moroccanoil founder Carmen

Tal ‘s mansion in the sky becomes a whimsical playground for her

and her three childen, courtesy of Modern Declaration’s Daun Curry.

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Central Park is never enough: New Yorkers yearn for nature in the concrete jungle. Transplanted Manhattanite Carmen Tal, who arrived two years ago from Montreal, is no exception. So when the

founder of Moroccanoil hair products teamed up with designer Daun Curry, it was all about invoking natural elevents—from the whimsical to the sublime.

“I grew up in the countryside in Chile,” Tal says. Before moving to New York, she and her three children lived in a big house with a yard. “Finding ways to reference nature was important to me.”

The globetrotting head of the mega beauty brand whose nutrient-rich treatments have revolutionized the haircare in-dustry, needed a soothing treatment for her home too. (When you go from being a salon owner to head of a multimillion-dol-lar company that expanded from a single product to a profusion of hair and body products in a few short years, serenity is key.)

“People find peace in nature,” says Curry.The founder of design firm Modern Declaration, Curry’s refer-

ences to the outdoors were rarely literal. In the entry hall, Curry created a custom plaster wall finish with a texture that invokes tree bark. Juxtaposed against an ethereal Murano glass sculp-

ture comprised of etched leaves surrounding a mirror, it’s like entering into a silvery jungle. Above an oxidized maple top din-ing table hangs a ball chain chandelier modeled after the South African protea flower. This is nature with an edge. Curry’s trick? Infusing organic elements with an urban material or hue. In the case of a custom rug designed with a malachite pattern, for in-stance, the colorway is neutral rather than an obvious green.

Personal touches abound in the home’s private sanctums. In order to make the transition to New York as smooth as pos-sible, Tal says, “I wanted our bedrooms to be a very personal space that reflected each of us as individuals.” Curry worked with Tal’s three children to uncover the unique aspects of their personalities. For the younger daughter, full of creative ener-gy that is often focused on food, Curry sourced cushioned seats resembling cake slices and installed shelves to hold a candy col-lection. The older daughter revelled in creating an installation to hang over her bed by choosing handmade Limoges hearts, each one different, which Curry sourced from Austria. The pair also shopped together to find vintage Philippe Starck side tables and a light pendant made from recycled bleach bottles that appealed to the youngster’s green bent. Tal’s son helped

Portrait by Marcie richstone

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CloCkwise from top left: In the living room, a mohair sofa is flanked by Paul Laszlo wood-and-brass tables. A built-in seating area cozies up to a wall quilted in individual squares of Lelievre fabric. Willowlamp’s Protea chandelier hangs above a BDDW table; the curtains are of a Holly Hunt fabric. Carmen Tal and her children.

PorTrAIT By MArCIe rICHsTone

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OppOsite page: A Modern Declaration-designed bench sits atop the Espina wool rug from Top Floor. The custom textured plaster wall finish was done by Judy Mulligan of Chester, New Jersey. The chandelier is a custom metal mesh design by Daun Curry. The Murano glass mirror is by Glas Italia. this page,

frOm tOp: The master bedroom walls are clad in Trove’s Askella feather-print wallpaper. The custom feather-and-crystal pendant lamps were designed by Daun Curry. The sculputed wool and silk rug is from ABC Carpet & Home. The bed is dressed in Frette linens. Below, in the family room, Poltrona Frau’s Travalo table sits under the Dear Ingo chandelier by Moooi; it was purchased at The Future Perfect. The Kennedee sofa is from Poltrona Frau. The Zulu carpet is from Masland.

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choose Steven Abrams wallpaper and pistol-shaped side lamps, both of which he found “really cool.”

For the hallway that connects the kids’ rooms, Curry wanted an effect that would take the idea of family photos to the next level. Enlisting the kids, she had each make handprints on large sheets of paper that she transformed into a wall covering. “The whole process helped them tremendously to adjust to so many changes in their lives,” says Tal.

For Tal’s bedroom, Curry designed pendant lighting adorned with feathers. “Getting to know Carmen, I realized the driving force of her success comes from her free spirit,” says Curry. “The feathers sym-bolize that.” Sconces sculpted from vintage Venini glass in Tal’s favorite colors hang nearby. “My bedroom always feels like an oasis,” says Tal. “It’s just very special.”

What Curry calls the “great room” is also a favorite of Tal’s. To hide struc-tural columns, Curry built elaborate bookshelves that also carved the sprawling room into zones. When Tal entertains, the room “provides areas for dining, lounging, and dancing,” the en-trepreneur says. “It’s the perfect setting to relax with my family and guests.”

The pièce de resistance is the terrace with its views of the East River and the 59th Street Bridge. “It’s such a luxury to have such a grand outdoor space in the city.” And, if her tresses become too dry from the elements, the stylist-turned-en-trepreneur can always dig up a bottle of golden argan oil that will do the trick. h

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57 spring 2013 the home observer

Getting Personal Daun Curry’s tips on making a home uniquely yours“Your home isn’t a show house,” says Modern Declaration’s Daun Curry (pictured below). “It should reflect what’s meaningful to you.” Personal touches make a house a warm, comfortable, and intimate place to come home to—as well as a testament to your personal style. Curry, who incorporated many personal elements into Carmen Tal’s apartment, shares tips for your own space:

Make your children part of your design scheme. Tal’s children were instrumental in the design of their own rooms—and in the creation of a foyer wallpaper which bears their handprints in golden paint! Try framing children’s artwork or displaying their collections as colorful installations.

Reflect your passions in your possessions. In Tal’s home, says Daun, “another personal element that I incorporated was her love of animals” with a Hunt Slonem painting of a bunny featured prominently in the kitchen.

Go shopping in your closet for inspiration. Fashion choices can be clues to your style. Note fabrics and patterns you gravitate toward. Are your accessories whimsical or architectural? The tailoring of a jacket or the pleating of a skirt could inspire an upholstery; the graphic or metal finish of a piece of jewelry could be represented on custom cabinet hardware.

Personal touches can make the commute to work too! “Carmen loved the vintage Blenko glass bottles I used in her house,” says Daun, who recently decorated Moroccanoil’s New York offices, “so I incorporated those into the office design as well.”

OppOsite page, clOckwise frOm tOp: A lucite-encased pendant and chandelier in the kitchen were found at SUITE New York and hang near an oil painting of a rabbit by Hunt Slonem. The vintage lucite stools are from John Salibello. Cole & Son’s Hickory-Lichen wallpaper hangs in Tal’s younger daughter’s room, where curtains in a Scalamandre fabric coexist with stools resembling slices of cake from Lisa Perry. In the master bedroom, a vintage Milo Baughman chair is upholstered in gray cashmere. The 1940s etched mirror is from Venfield. In an office area, Lee Jofa wallcovering pops against a Zettle’z 6 chandelier by Ingo Maurer and Jonathan Adler’s Whitter lamp. this

page, tOp: A Fontana Arte table lamp sits on a BDDW credenza with lacquered frame and hand-carved ebony handles. right, in a hallway, custom wallpaper bears the golden handprints of Tal’s children. The custom candle pendant chandelier is from Mark Figueredo. The hot-rolled steel bench is from Blu Dot. Top Floor’s Esperanto wool runner.

DESIGNER

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HOME gallery

The ArchiTecTs And designers BuildingThe Architects & Designers Building is home to the New York metro area’s largest collection of luxury showrooms for kitchens, appliances, baths, tile & stone and home furnishings. With 35 showrooms, featuring thousands of distinctive products, the A&D Building is known in the industry as “New York’s ultimate design resource.” Open to both the trade and the public, Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, the building is located in the heart of the design district at 150 East 58th Street btw. Lex & 3rd Aves. Visit adbuilding.com for a complete list of showrooms and information.

ArTisTic linksArtistic Links are one of a kind works of art to be worn and cherished. The cufflinks are fashioned from early 19th century Japanese buttons made of Satsuma or Arita porcelain. They feature The Seven Lucky Gods of Japan and Japanese Noh masks. A mold is made of each button so that every gold bezel produced is a perfect fit resulting in original and unique cufflinks of extraordinary quality, beauty and value.Please contact us at: [email protected] or call 201-280-6001

empire closeTsEmpire Closets custom woodworking creates one-of-a-kind closet systems, wall units, wall beds, work stations, radiator covers, pantries, garages and more…all to suit the contemporary and modern styles of your home and office. Not only will we help you keep everything organized but we also create a stylish look to your home and office. Call for a free in-home consultation with one of our experienced designers. 718-712-4244 www.officialempirecloset.com

ABc cArpeT & homeA NYC design destination since 1897, ABC Carpet & Home offers choice at the cutting edge of art, beauty, and sustainability with ten floors of vintage, antique, eco, one-of-a-kind, and contemporary collections and personalized design services. Through the preservation of indigenous artisanship, working with global cooperatives, and a commitment to environmental consciousness, ABC Carpet & Home aims to be the catalyst in creating your home from a place of self-expression.

BoschFrom daily meals to weekend get-togethers, Bosch’s cooktops, ovens, ranges and microwaves are there for you. Cook food more evenly and up to 30% faster in a German-engineered convection oven. Use a cooktop that adjusts to the size of your pans and alerts you to boil-overs. Every Bosch cooking appliance is invented to make your life easier and tastier.

dom inTeriors“Dom” - from the Latin “domus” – means “home.” The company, specializing in kitchens and appliances, was launched in 1999. Since then, DOM has evolved from a concentrated hub into a fast-growing network in North America. DOM is committed to ecological well-being and the environment—without aesthetic compromise—through great design. The company works with an international array of architects and designers on individual residences as well as multi-unit projects, and offers complementary design assistance to homeowners and end-users. Our lines include Valcucine, Alpes, Arflex, Davide Groppi, Demode, Edilco, Fiam, Horm, Kristalia, Max Fire, MisuraEmme, Rimadesio, Steel Time, Tacchini and Toscoquattro.

66 Crosby St., New York, NYwww.dominteriors.com

ercole homeSince 1986, Ercole has been one of the most exclusive custom glass mosaic furniture companies in NYC. We specialize in making custom pieces, each designed to fulfill the style, color and vision of our customers. Our furniture provides unique expression to many different home environments, from foyer to bedroom. We offer kitchen tables, chests of drawers, buffets and decorative pieces from vases to mirrors. Visit our showroom @ 142 W 26th St, NYC

AndreAlynn porTrAiTsOriginal Oil Portraiture by CommissionAndrea Lynn by AppointmentAndreaportraits@optonline.netAndreaLynnPortraits.com917.345.6130

elgoTElgot: Specializing in the design and installation of NY kitchens and bathrooms for co-ops and condos. Family owned and operated since 1945. Meet their talented designers, knowledgeable sales staff and see the beautifully crafted cabinetry and the full line of name-brand appliances at their showroom. 937 Lexington NY, NY 10065: 212-879-1200

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HastensAbout Hästens: Celebrating 161 years of exquisite craftsmanship and design, Hästens is Sweden’s oldest, most revered manufacturer of beds and mattresses. Recognizing the company’s implicit association with “quality products and good sleep,” Hästens received the prestigious, Nordic Signum prize in 2013 for best long term branding. Each bed is handcrafted in the Hästens factory in Köping, Sweden by expert artisans, meticulously assembled using all-natural materials including horsehair, cotton, flax, wool and Swedish pine. Hästens beds allow for ventilation, creating the ideal temperature and perfect environment for a restful night’s sleep. Since 1952, Hästens has been the exclusive supplier of beds and mattresses to His Majesty King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden.

Just sHadesThis “go-to” shop for interior designers and set designers, JUST SHADES, is THE source for custom and ready-made lampshades.Their extensive in-stock selection, available in an array of colors and materials, can dress any lamp, whether traditional or modern, tiny or oversized, or unusually shaped. They can also create custom shades with your choice of materials…A staff of expert professionals is always on hand to help you find that perfect shade!

sunsHieldApplied to the interior surface of your windows, SUNSHIELD ENERGY CONTROL’s invisible coating offers high tech protection of fine furnishings, fabrics and artwork from the destructive effects of sunlight. Their proprietary preservation products are utilized in the world’s finest homes and most prestigious museum environments. Energy conservation benefits are additionally realized through solar heat and glare reduction. Sunshield’s knowledge and expertise will ensure that your valuable investments will remain safe for future generations to enjoy.

Sunshield Energy Control Systems“The Intelligent Solution to Solar Control”129 Union AvenueNew Rochelle, NY 10801

interior design Building306E61 – Interior Design Building, which houses 19 spacious showrooms, is the leading New York destination for decorative arts from the 18th, 19th & 20th Centuries, including bespoke collections. Featuring modern furniture, textiles and accessories. The building is located at 306 East 61st Street, (between 1st & 2nd Avenues), in New York City.

lee JofaIn his fourth collection for Groundworks, Thomas O’Brien offers an assortment of lush and saturated velvets along with luxurious silks. From the light and clean soft neutrals, cool mid-tones and signature misty blues to deep saturated claret and viridian these fabrics will add a touch of flair and originality to the rooms that O’Brien’s engaging vision has already helped to create.

Jaguar of great neckJaguar of Great Neck has sold more Jaguars than anyone in the world since 1938. We have the best selection, the best service, the best price. We invite you to experience the excellence of the New Jaguar. Many models now available with All-Wheel-Drive.Call 516-482-5500 or visit JaguarofGreatNeck.com

new York design centerLocated at 200 Lexington Avenue, The New York Design Center is the industry’s premier resource for fine furnishings. Built in 1926, the New York Design Center’s rich history enhances its reputation as a respected resource for imaginative solutions to any design challenge. In addition to nearly 100 of the industry’s finest showrooms, the NYDC houses over 33,000 square feet of antiques and 20th century design from 1stdibs® dealers. The Access to Design™ program assists consumers in navigating the design process and finding a designer. To learn more, visit www.nydc.com.

runtal steam radiatorsRUNTAL ELECTRIC BASEBOARD Runtal unveils their new electric panel radiators. This revolutionary patent pending technology combines high outputs and low surface temperatures with the fine design and outstanding quality that one expects from Runtal. Available in 120, 208 or 240 volts in 100 colors.

www.runtalnorthamerica.com1-800-526-2621

JAGUAR OF GREAT NECK has sold more Jaguars than anyone in the worldsince 1938. We have the best selection, the best service,the best price.We invite you to experience theexcellence of the New Jaguar. Many models nowavailable with All-Wheel Drive. Call 516-482-5500 or visit JaguarofGreatNeck.com

Hamptons Magazine 0113_Layout 2 4/9/13 2:45 PM Page 1ge monogramGE Monogram. Luxury for real life.In the world of high-end appliances, Monogram stands out with its own brand of luxury. Refined but not rarefied, it’s the kind of luxury that makes a statement of quality and timeless elegance. Award-winning technology makes it possible to cook faster, clean easier and enjoy more time relaxing with family and friends. And there’s nothing more luxurious than that. GE Monogram Design Center, A&D Building, 150 East 58th Street, 10th Floor.

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Zarin FabricsZarin Fabrics is the largest resource of discounted designer fabrics and custom upholstery and window treatment services in New York City. Since 1936, Zarin Fabrics has covered windows and furniture with the most beautiful fabrics in countless homes of the most discerning New Yorker’s. As with our founder, Harry Zarin, the third generation is focused on the highest level of customer satisfaction. From window fashions to custom upholstered beds and everything in between, Zarin Fabrics.

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Walter’s WickerAs we enter our 79th year of single family ownership and management, we are proud to present furniture that is at the heart of Walters’ constantly evolving brand. Our classic collections, the pieces that have stood the test of time and are the tried and true design essentials, are the hallmarks of WALTERS WICKER. Alongside the classics are bold new concepts that match the needs of today’s environments. The equation of classic plus contemporary equals a broad array of styles to meet every designer’s needs.

Walters Wicker Inc.979 Third Avenue Suite 538New York, NY212-758-0472www.walterswicker.com

ValcucineFounded in 1980, VALCUCINE produces kitchen cabinetry and accessories. Valcucine is dedicated to providing the best product possible with a focus on aesthetics and creativity. They work to apply technology to increase the product life, reduce the consumption of raw materials and ensure that all the products they produce can be reutilized or recycled. They are committed to sourcing materials that meet the most stringent standards for the release of volatile organic compounds.

66 Crosby St., New York, NYwww.valcucine.com

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Oil

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64 THE HOME OBSERVER SPRING 2013

CO

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Musical Chairs & Folding TablesLong legs, graceful forms, and breathtaking shapes—and that’s just the furniture.

The lithe limbs of the New York City Ballet corps have some competition this season in the form of a furniture installation on the promenade of the David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center. In connection with NYCB’s 20/21: On The

Promenade initiative to bring 21st-century local furniture design into Philip Johnson’s iconic 20th-century theater, Brooklyn-based fi rms Egg Collective, Asher Israelow, and Token created pieces (pictured above in situ on the prom-enade) that reference the intersection between design and dance. For Asher Israelow, that connection was nothing short of galactic: his walnut-topped tables are inlaid with brass star maps depicting the heavens at the moment that NYCB founder George Balanchine’s fi rst choreographed piece in the United States was performed for a small crowd in White Plains. With a nod to traditional red velvet the-ater seating, Egg Collective’s upholstered red benches and

solid bronze tables fi t together in a variety of arrangements. “The material choices and colors were specifi cally chosen to complement the jewel-like nature of the space and its rich material palette—the velvet seats on the inside of the theatre, the red marble stripes on the promenade’s fl oor, the travertine, the gilded ceiling, and the brass handrails,” said Egg’s Hillary Petrie. Classic dance positions were the inspiration for a series of chairs and tables from Will Kavesh and Emrys Berkower of Token. “One thing that’s really im-portant in Balanchine’s work is geometric repetition,” says Kavesh, “and that was something we wanted to work with in constructing these pieces,” the angles and legs of which mimic the placement of the dancers. “It’s about capturing a gesture—like a hyperextended knee.” The furniture can be seen (and used) on the promenade of the David H. Koch theater at Lincoln Center by performance ticket-holders through the end of the ballet season in May. Bravo!

NYObserved

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